When you use nightly, you’re using an unstable application that is likely to have many bugs that cause freezing or crashing. Reading the changelogs is a necessity when using unstable software. Using nightly builds of any application requires additional care on the part of the user.
Just because it requires it doesn’t mean most will follow it. Voting requires being informed, most people aren’t. Driving cars requires paying attention, many people are on their phones while driving.
The manufacturer isn’t responsible for people being on their phones tho. What should they do? They can just warn you, and notice you about best practices.
Until the next dumb shit Mozilla does without telling its users.
Except I’ve heard about every change from here. And as I read the nightly changelogs, it’s not that hidden actually.
Yes, you’re the exception, not the rule.
The things I said apply to the people that need to use FF nightly/dev. And those people should know their stuff.
If you need to use nightly, you’re already the exception to the rule. That means you need to read the changelogs.
No you don’t. Why do you need to read the changelogs?
When you use nightly, you’re using an unstable application that is likely to have many bugs that cause freezing or crashing. Reading the changelogs is a necessity when using unstable software. Using nightly builds of any application requires additional care on the part of the user.
Just because it requires it doesn’t mean most will follow it. Voting requires being informed, most people aren’t. Driving cars requires paying attention, many people are on their phones while driving.
I could go on. You’re describing an ideal.
The manufacturer isn’t responsible for people being on their phones tho. What should they do? They can just warn you, and notice you about best practices.
Which most people don’t follow, which is exactly the point I’m making.