The Web Serial API landed in Firefox 151, allowing you to connect directly to microcontrollers, dev boards, 3D printers, power meters, and other serial-connected hardware from the web.
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The Web Serial API landed in Firefox 151, allowing you to connect directly to microcontrollers, dev boards, 3D printers, power meters, and other serial-connected hardware from the web. Here's how it works:
Finally... When WebUSB so I would not need Chromium to configure keyboard?
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The Web Serial API landed in Firefox 151, allowing you to connect directly to microcontrollers, dev boards, 3D printers, power meters, and other serial-connected hardware from the web. Here's how it works:
@firefoxwebdevs
This is what we want!
Not stupid soccer widgets appearing without consent and AI Slop,
but actual features and improvements to the browser!!!You are on thin ice still but more of this and no bs please.
Maybe you might even stop alienating your userbase then
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Finally... When WebUSB so I would not need Chromium to configure keyboard?
@hrw @firefoxwebdevs
No they really need to focus on AI Slop and soccer and weather widget that appear without consent first -
The Web Serial API landed in Firefox 151, allowing you to connect directly to microcontrollers, dev boards, 3D printers, power meters, and other serial-connected hardware from the web. Here's how it works:
@firefoxwebdevs ok, this is actually great news.
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The Web Serial API landed in Firefox 151, allowing you to connect directly to microcontrollers, dev boards, 3D printers, power meters, and other serial-connected hardware from the web. Here's how it works:
@firefoxwebdevs not a security nightmare at all...
/s
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@firefoxwebdevs not a security nightmare at all...
/s
@tasket @firefoxwebdevs How exactly is it a security nightmare when it needs explicit user consent?
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@tasket @firefoxwebdevs How exactly is it a security nightmare when it needs explicit user consent?
@niutech How many users understand what is being asked of them?
How much will these prompts proliferate?
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The Web Serial API landed in Firefox 151, allowing you to connect directly to microcontrollers, dev boards, 3D printers, power meters, and other serial-connected hardware from the web. Here's how it works:
@firefoxwebdevs WHAT THE FUCK! STOP FUCKING COPYING CHROME'S HELLSCAPE NIGHTMARES! -
The Web Serial API landed in Firefox 151, allowing you to connect directly to microcontrollers, dev boards, 3D printers, power meters, and other serial-connected hardware from the web. Here's how it works:
@firefoxwebdevs This is really cool and I've been waiting for this feature for so long. I'm excited to use it but I still don't understand how. The permission is required but what triggers the popup to grant the permission?
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@firefoxwebdevs This is really cool and I've been waiting for this feature for so long. I'm excited to use it but I still don't understand how. The permission is required but what triggers the popup to grant the permission?
@hisold requestPort needs to be called from "user activation", like the click of a button element.
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@hisold requestPort needs to be called from "user activation", like the click of a button element.
@firefoxwebdevs I just tried it again in a onclick function of a button. It just errors navigator.serial is undefined every time I click the button. Same when using the click event.
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@firefoxwebdevs I just tried it again in a onclick function of a button. It just errors navigator.serial is undefined every time I click the button. Same when using the click event.
@hisold and you're definitely on Firefox 151 (desktop)?
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@hisold and you're definitely on Firefox 151 (desktop)?
@firefoxwebdevs 151.0 (64-Bit) on the worst operating system of our time: windows.
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@firefoxwebdevs 151.0 (64-Bit) on the worst operating system of our time: windows.
@hisold @firefoxwebdevs Hello! If you go to about:policies, do you see some policies set there? If so, for security reasons we turn off WebSerial. You can turn it back on by going to about:config and setting "dom.webserial.enabled" to true, or by setting the DefaultSerialGuardSetting policy (reference: https://firefox-admin-docs.mozilla.org/reference/policies/defaultserialguardsetting/ )
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@hisold @firefoxwebdevs Hello! If you go to about:policies, do you see some policies set there? If so, for security reasons we turn off WebSerial. You can turn it back on by going to about:config and setting "dom.webserial.enabled" to true, or by setting the DefaultSerialGuardSetting policy (reference: https://firefox-admin-docs.mozilla.org/reference/policies/defaultserialguardsetting/ )
@hisold @firefoxwebdevs I'd also mention that it's a good idea to update to the latest 151.0 dot release - there are a few WebSerial fixes in there, one of which is Windows-specific. Let us know if you're having more trouble, thanks!
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The Web Serial API landed in Firefox 151, allowing you to connect directly to microcontrollers, dev boards, 3D printers, power meters, and other serial-connected hardware from the web. Here's how it works:
@firefoxwebdevs This is a great kit t-shirt, it seems to not be on the mozilla spreadshop, is this available somewhere?