hoodsmom
Guess Who!
I thought I posted this today, but I guess I forgot to hit the post button.
The Tagxedo (word cloud) web app depends on the Silverlight plug-in. I believe that the current version of Firefox will be the last major browser to support the Silverlight plug-in. My understanding is that FF 52, due for release in March, will no longer support Silverlight or other NPAPI plug-ins. Assuming the developer keeps the Tagxedo.com website up, here's what you need to do to keep using Tagxedo. Download a copy of the current version of FF from Mozilla's website and save it. When FF 52 is released, you can reinstall the old version of FF for use only when plug-ins are needed. Understand that after FF 52 is released, FF 51 will have security vulnerabilities because it won't be getting security updates, so be careful and surf only to sites you are pretty sure are safe. If you are geeky and paranoid, you can try Firefox ESR (Google is your friend), which will support plug-ins until sometime in 2018 and will get security updates. I tried it and there were issues with my extensions (Firefox ESR, now at v. 45, is **meant** to be "older" than the current version (51) so it had problems with extensions I had updated). Unless you are really worried about security, I didn't see the advantage of using Firefox ESR vs. just being very careful when you surf with FF 51. But I did download FF ESR for safekeeping. If you are very attached to your FF extensions, you may also want to duplicate your current profile for use when using FF 51 in the future.
The Tagxedo (word cloud) web app depends on the Silverlight plug-in. I believe that the current version of Firefox will be the last major browser to support the Silverlight plug-in. My understanding is that FF 52, due for release in March, will no longer support Silverlight or other NPAPI plug-ins. Assuming the developer keeps the Tagxedo.com website up, here's what you need to do to keep using Tagxedo. Download a copy of the current version of FF from Mozilla's website and save it. When FF 52 is released, you can reinstall the old version of FF for use only when plug-ins are needed. Understand that after FF 52 is released, FF 51 will have security vulnerabilities because it won't be getting security updates, so be careful and surf only to sites you are pretty sure are safe. If you are geeky and paranoid, you can try Firefox ESR (Google is your friend), which will support plug-ins until sometime in 2018 and will get security updates. I tried it and there were issues with my extensions (Firefox ESR, now at v. 45, is **meant** to be "older" than the current version (51) so it had problems with extensions I had updated). Unless you are really worried about security, I didn't see the advantage of using Firefox ESR vs. just being very careful when you surf with FF 51. But I did download FF ESR for safekeeping. If you are very attached to your FF extensions, you may also want to duplicate your current profile for use when using FF 51 in the future.