![]() This was largely a political decision, not a technical one. The thing they did drop was XUL and low level access for extensions, copying the "well-defined" extension API from chrome. In fact, they did not drop XUL to this very day. For starters, they did not drop XUL with Quantum. ![]() Unfortunately, to be competitive on performance and reliability given Mozilla's funding required dropping XUL :( Quantum delivered a lot of performance wins, and work continues at a rapid rate on reliability.
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