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Older versions of firefox add ons
Older versions of firefox add ons











older versions of firefox add ons

According to the developer, the add-on files are hosted on the cloud through the help of WaterFox development team. The add-on is nearly 40 MB in size but packs only the catalog and not the actual add-ons.

older versions of firefox add ons

You can also enter caa:list in the address bar to view the Classic Add-ons Archive instead of clicking on the icon.

  • After the installation is finished, it places an icon in the toolbar, clicking upon which you get to browse and install all the classic add-ons as if you are using the Mozilla Add-ons website.
  • Click on the Install Now button to proceed with the installation.
  • The familiar add-on installation window will appear.
  • Alternatively, you can also press Ctrl+O and select the XPI file.
  • Drag-n-drop the downloaded XPI file on the Palemoon browser window.
  • Launch Palemoon (or Watefox or Firefox) browser.
  • Download the latest version of XPI file from the Github web page of Classic Add-ons Archive.
  • How do I Install Classic Add-ons Archive? You can install it in Palemoon, WaterFox and Firefox (versions 56.0 and below). The add-on for the catalogue is called Classic Add-ons Archive. Older extensions are no longer available from Mozilla website.įirefox add-ons developer with a nickname JustOff has decided to take the matters in his own hands and created an add-on that catalogues thousands of the older add-ons. As of now, the older extensions are available from the Mozilla website, but in the future they will be removed from there. Now you can install the newer extensions only that are developed using the WebExtensions API. Starting from version 57.0 (when Quantum was first introduced), Firefox no longer allows you to install the older add-ons. Some developers were so annoyed by this move that they completely gave up the development of the extensions (for example, an excellent download manager, DownThemAll extension was abandoned by its developer). By switching to the new form of creating the browser add-ons (WebExtensions API), Firefox basically killed off thousands of the browser extensions that were developed in the past 15 years. Last few years have seen dramatic changes in the Firefox browser development – Quantum was released, WebExtensions API was adopted and options are no longer shown in a separate window.













    Older versions of firefox add ons