A very poor attitude (by Mozilla or any software vendor), if true. If
an update is going to change settings then those settings should never
be exposed to users in the first place whether in a graphical config UI
or in some non-informative text listing (e.g., about:config). If you
don't want your users to tweak your product then don't let them. If you
are going to allow them to tweak your product then don't undo their
efforts. Settings, preferences, and other config exposed to the user
are there for a reason: to permit customization. Updates should not be
discarding that customization.
Imagine how many users would get pissed off and start looking for
alternatives if updates to their word process discarded their templates,
paragraph spacing, fonts, the words they added to the dictionary, or all
those other user-configurable settings. What would be the point of
defining rules in your firewall if they're just going to get discarded
on a later update.
Any program that is altering existing configuration is misbehaving.
Yes, new settings show up so obviously there were no old settings to
keep for those new ones. Yes, old settings go away so the user loses
that configurability in the program. But settings that existed before
that still exist after an update should ALL remain the same as they were
before; otherwise, just discard ALL settings and force users to start
ALL OVER with each new update. Punish your users for customizing your
product on their hosts. See how long your customers remain loyal to
your product when you decide to be so rude.
I don't know what other preferences or about:config settings might've
gotten changed. I experienced this one. Are you saying that every time
you get an update to Firefox that you actually go through your described
exercise to retest that your product's behavior is the same as before?
Hell, we don't even do that manually in Software QA. That's what
automated test tools are for to do all that regression testing. You
don't go through that entire exercise so don't be telling others they
should be going through it. Users don't don't do regression testing.
If something changed from the old behavior, especially for when their
settings have been discarded or altered, THAT is when users experience
that change. That's what happened to me. And despit what you claim,
that's just how you find out about the changed behavior, too.
By the way, I would change "very few users tweak" to "a low percentage
of users tweak". I certainly wouldn't want to be surrounded by an angry
mob with knives the size of which were Firefox users that tweak. Very
few Firefox users visit this forum, too. So you're talking about the
same low count of users visiting here that are also the low count of
users that tweak. In this community, that would mean there is a high
percentage of tweaking users here. Even for the drive-by users wanting
help just once and getting told to make a change in about:config, yep,
they've just become tweakers, too.
Sorry, but your advice is just as much a smack in the face of users as
Mozilla making changes to existing settings (that still exist after an
update). Mozilla: Slap, ha ha ha, we changed some settings. You: Slap,
ha ha ha, now go regression test the product to see what settings of
yours were changed. Neither is going to be tolerated by users.
This is the first time over several version of Firefox that I've been
nailed by Mozilla altering my settings. Of course, it really means that
this is the first time that I've *noticed* my settings got changed. I
can't tell you when Microsoft changed my Word settings because I never
noticed they did. CCleaner has retained my settings through countless
updates. If Acronis changed settings or altered my backups just
because I updated their True Image product, do you think I'd keep using
them? Every update would be a moving target.
So far, I've noticed this just once so I'm hoping it was just a glitch.
Yet that Mozilla just introduced their PDF Viewer in FF 19 and I just
experienced this preference getting changed after updating to FF 19 sure
makes them look linked. Hopefully Mozilla doesn't discard by
preferences or other settings in v19 or in later updates.
> Followup-To: mozilla.general
Rudeness ignored. I don't punch holes in threads or create new threads
without context. This is still an issue regarding Firefox and
mishandling of preferences by its update.