Your Ad Here

Firefox Home Syncs Your iPhone With Desktop Browser

Firefox Home Syncs Your iPhone With Desktop Browser

While it isn’t quite “Firefox on your iPhone”, it’s nice to see that the folks over at Mozilla haven’t overlooked iPhone owners. Now the company has announced that its Firefox Home app will be hitting the iPhone soon. This app will allow you to sync your desktop client with your mobile browser, giving you your browsing history, bookmarks, the set of tabs from your recent browsing session and more. Why would it be useful? Well, if you had to leave the house in a hurry to catch the bus, you can easily resume browsing where you left off via your iPhone. There’s also Mozilla’s Awesome Bar, which helps you search for things and offer suggestions for you too. There isn’t an actual release date on this yet, but we do have a video giving you a pretty good idea of how it’ll work after the jump.

Permalink: Firefox Home Syncs Your iPhone With Desktop Browser from Ubergizmo | Hot: Macbook Pro Review, iPad Review

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • email
  • PDF
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Google Bookmarks
  • RSS

This post is tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Reply





  • Proton and Yes team as much as offer Malaysia’s first 4G-connected car, promise more to returnProton and Yes team as much as offer Malaysia’s first 4G-connected car, promise more to return

    The 1st one may only amount to a MiFi housed within the dash (although that does come standard), but automaker Proton and Malaysian carrier Yes appear to have some fairly grand designs on 4G-connected cars. As well as providing a WiFi hotpot for passengers, they eventually hope to exploit the 4G connectivity for a number of automotive-related applications, including vehicle… »
  • FCC thinks ISPs should do a wiser job preventing fraud, theftFCC thinks ISPs should do a wiser job preventing fraud, theft

    Internet fraud and theft are major problems, there appears little question about that -- in accordance with FCC chairman Julius Genachowski , some 8.4 million bank card numbers are stolen yearly. The question, then, is who ought to be addressing the problem. Genachowski this week called for "smart, practical, voluntary solutions," asking internet service providers to position more… »

Categories

Subscribe

Enter your email address: