With the version Firefox 109 release, you added this new button without the option to change its position or move into the overflow area. Please let use move it. I can remove/hide almost every other UI element in the browser, why not this?
The "Terry" workaround is the way to go. You still have the stupid 'puzzle piece' that is useless you have to look at, but my ABP, Cookie Manager and Javascript-switch icons I use constantly are right there without headache now. See the novaboy post right above on page 23. Now I'm Happy!
I just recently 3? years ago switch to tabs on the side (TreeST). The bottom, mind blown. Why can't this be an option. A Simple option, So I can try it.
Even Mac OS X used to allow you to put the dock (usually at the bottom, I prefer right side) at the top of all craziness if you're willing to get your hands into the terminal. I could never understand why A. it got removed and B. isn't just an option to begin with.
I like that firefox is consistent across all platforms, however it's beginning to have more and more bells and whistles taken out. that I then have to have extensions and modifications for. There was one day I found my pinned squares suddenly getting rearranged by ad squares.
The default for almost all current browsers, is tabs above the url bar (at the very top of the window). Several years ago they used to be just below the url (or just below bookmark bar if enable).
When FF moved them to the top, you could undo the change by unchecking "tabs on top". then in later versions of FF that option was removed, forcing the tabs to be on top.
i have used stylesheet (.css file) to correct this ever since to option was removed. And have had to modify it about three times over the years so that it would keep the tabs where i want them.
2. In your FF profile folder (FF url - about:support - click "open directory" under profile directory), create a folder named "chrome". In that chrome folder, create a new text file named userchrome.css
3. open that userchrome.css file and past the following:
I am not a 'coder' and that all looks like "coding." Why don't you write an extension or add-on or whatever the appropriate searchable thing is in Add-Ons, a script to remove the puzzle piece for the non-technical person. I would be interested in that too. Thanks.
Removing the simple elegance of managing and accessing addons via the overflow menustrips away one of the most user friendly aspects of the browser, and has got to be one of the most inane things that Firefox has done. I've used Firefox from the beginning, but you guys just keep hacking away at it. Fix this one or you've finally lost me, and it sucks.
I assume you last post was meant for me. Unless your "write an extension" comment was for FF directly.
I am not a coder either. the script in my last post was a copy and past from instructions i found on the web. I am not the right person to ask for writhing an extension or script. I am not even sure what exactly you are asking for. If I did know, I an still not the right person for the task.
You asked for a script to remove the "puzzle piece" icon. That is exactly what i put in my last post.
Just follow the instructions. create a new text file, copy and past that script text from my last post into said text file, and then name it as instructed. Finally, place it in the correct folder. If you have trouble, follow the link for more detailed instruction (that is were i found the info). Or if needed, just let me know. I am glad to help.
I have a .css file in my profile folder that i have been modifying every time FF forced something else on us that I don't want. I just search the web for a solution, copy and past the needed script text into my .css file, and voila, my FF is back to normal.
I wouldn't mind this button at all as it's a great option to have as a feature. I can totally see other people having a need for yet another way to discover the extensions/addons interface. As I have already cemented in to my muscle memory both the path through system menus and the keyboard shortcut, I would strongly prefer to have the option to remove it from my UI in favor of more space for thing-I-care-about. However having it welded to the UI immovably feels overly prescriptivist and flagrantly offends my sensibilities and had me in a fit of yelling magic words at my screen. It is unfortunately just one more reason "Mozilla" is becoming a four-letter word around my desk.
Yeah this is a user design disaster. I'm imagining having to walk somebody over the phone how to remove this yeah that's not gonna happen with text. I might stand a chance to tell them how to edit toolbar and drag it off. It's the kind of thing that should be in the overflow or settings menu.
Too many things these days insist on notifications and I suspect that's why it was put where it was as it will want to notify the user. Of what I have no idea. But I'm struggling to get work done having to click 100 notifications off my screen every day that are more useless than helpful through the built-in notifications in operating systems. Then comes along malicious websites that can get you to click "notify me" and now you have spam masquerading as system level notifications. all because of web browsers insistence I'm having notifications baked in for ALL websites? Other than Facebook, Gmail, Twitter I don't see how it's useful.
With the release of 112 today, nothing has changed. I think the button is here to stay whether users like or not. That said, if Firefox is still listening, why not compromise a little and just move it to the overflow menu?