22-10-2025 07:12 AM - edited 17-11-2025 05:56 AM
Update as of November 17 - we are temporarily pausing this feature in Firefox Labs, as we have uncovered the issue of persisting Lists. We have a fix coming up around December 1, and we will resume again at that time.
Hi! I’m Amber from the Firefox team.
We’re testing a new idea: simple, built-in productivity widgets on your New Tab page. They’ll be there on every new tab to keep you on-task, or on a break. (Previously available in Nightly & Beta, they are now available in Firefox Labs in Release!)
This early experiment includes:
✅ Lists - jot down your reminders, errands, or priorities for your browsing activities
⏰ Focus Timer - track your study session, deep work research, or quiet break time
And everything stays local, is never shared with Mozilla, and it’s easy to turn on and off.
Feedback is welcome to inform our next steps! Would you like to see more widgets? Which ones? Notes, Quotes, fun ones or helpful ones? Sync for optional backup? Drop your thoughts below.
- Amber & the Firefox team
19-11-2025 11:47 AM
Thanks for opening this discussion — I feel the same way. Two concrete points that make this a security and privacy issue:
Search vs navigation must be separated. A New Tab search box should always do a search; entering what looks like a URL (or IP) in that box should be treated as a search query unless the user explicitly switches to the address bar.
Private windows behave differently. A setting I changed in about:config stopped the handoff — but it still happens in private windows. That inconsistent behavior has caused me to accidentally navigate to potentially malicious or internal URLs I only meant to search for.
If it helps the devs, I put a short analysis and a reproducible example on my site (this is my website): https://inatbixindir.tr — the page summarizes steps to reproduce and a suggested UI change: keep search-box results contained to search and only let the address bar handle navigation.
Please consider adding an explicit, persistent “Search box only” mode for New Tabs (with a clear toggle), and make sure it applies in private windows too. Thanks!
17-11-2025 06:12 AM - edited 17-11-2025 06:19 AM
Hello
About, widgets.
For information purposes.
https://connect.mozilla.org/t5/ideas/get-weather-and-clock-built-into-the-home-screen/idc-p/110609/h...
About, browser.newtabpage.activity-stream.improvesearch.handoffToAwesomebar.
Yes, under, about:privatebrowsing, it doesn't work.
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/private-browsing-use-firefox-without-history
Always use private browsing mode or to Never remember history, it works.
19-11-2025 11:33 PM - edited 19-11-2025 11:40 PM
Hello
Ever wish you could peek at a page before you click?
Preview webpages in Firefox with link preview.
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/use-link-previews-firefox
On-device AI models in Firefox.
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/on-device-models
23-11-2025 01:14 AM
Exciting update! Having widgets like Lists and Focus Timer right on the New Tab page could really boost productivity, similar to how I find small tools in an Online Earning Game help keep tasks organized and progress on track.
23-11-2025 08:13 PM
With Firefox testing new customizable New Tab widgets, tools that simplify everyday tasks are becoming even more useful. Educational resources like Percentage, which helps students calculate grades through easy graders, GPA tools, and final score predictors, would fit perfectly into such productivity-focused spaces. Integrating smart, quick-access widgets like these could make the New Tab experience more practical for students and professionals alike."
23-11-2025 08:40 PM
"With Firefox testing new customizable New Tab widgets, tools that simplify everyday tasks are becoming even more useful. Educational resources like Percentage, which helps students calculate grades through easy graders, GPA tools, and final score predictors, would fit perfectly into such productivity-focused spaces. Integrating smart, quick-access widgets like these could make the New Tab experience more practical for students and professionals alike."