The UI for Fenix is dated. Some things need a little bit of love and others just don't make sense at all, like when you paste a URL, you can't see the URL or the Paste and Paste & Go options because the system pop up gets in the way.
Material Design and by extension Android moved away from pop ups and toasts and adopted elements like bottom sheets.
The custom share sheet is a nuisance and there's not even a way to get to the native share sheet.
Firefox for Android works, but it doesn't look or feel like a modern browser that was designed for modern Android.
So being that Android design has evolved so much since Fenix last got a lick of paint, I'm wondering, has anyone heard of anything in the works? Seen any commits or mockups? Screenshots? A mention on Matrix or the mailing lists?
I've given up hope. The burden of maintaining the engine has left them with no bandwidth to pursue any major UI-related improvements. Check the comments on the "Idea" I posted to Mozilla Connect
Those custom/unusual UI elements are probably there for backwards compatibility. Firefox's latest android release supports Android 5.0, whereas Chrome's latest release supports Android 7.0
A lot of new Android UI elements are simply missing from the older versions, especially 5.0, so Firefox re-implements them itself AFAICT. Because of this I can't see Firefox updating the look/feel of their app, more custom components will just have worse performance on older devices as time goes on
This is not right, the material libraries are a part of AndroidX, which has the current minimum SDK version 14 (Android 4.0.1), and will soon move to minimum SDK version 19 (Android 4.4). Compose, which is completely feasible to build the UI for Firefox for Android, has the minimum SDK version 21 (Android 5.0) iirc.
If I had to guess, I'd say that the Firefox for Android simply has not prioritized adopting Material You.
That's super interesting. One of my friends on mastodon is still using Android 7, so the necessity for backwards compatibility is definitely a thing. An unfortunate thing but a thing nonetheless. That said, doesn't Android itself provide the backwards compatibility enabling designers and developers to focus on modern apps? Otherwise wouldn't everything just look like a throwback?
Google does this via Play Services, but I wouldn't be surprised if the same devices they're worried about compatibility with don't have Google Play either.
Saw someone open a PR with this fully implemented a couple of months ago.
Goddamned PM faffed about "UI research necessary before we make changes", linked them to a bugzilla post closed in favor of a JIRA ticket only internal users could view...
And then closed the PR, denying the change. And we wonder why Mozilla has been struggling so much lately.
I'm confused, what type of research is required by Mozilla to implement an OLED friendly theme in Firefox? I don't like them myself, but it doesn't seem like something that needs masses of research hours.
Can we please get bookmarks to remember your most recently used folder? Whenever I want to open a bookmark, I'm forced to start at the root folder and navigate around to find the folder and bookmark I want. If I just used a bookmark from some subfolder of my bookmarks, then I go to open a new one, the bookmark folder should be the last one I used. Instead it always starts at root.
It's incredibly annoying. All other browsers (including Firefox on iOS) get this right. There have been multiple requests / bugs filed for this for years, but so far nothing.
You can read about why they have the current share sheet instead of the native one in this GitHub issue. There doesn't seem to be activity on the issue, but with the expanded functionality of the share sheet in ?Android 14? maybe the decision can be re-evaluated.
As for the design, I don't really see the issue. Could you share screenshots to explain the issues?