Shortly afterwards, the Mozilla Foundation invited Garrity to head up the new visual identity team. The release of Firefox 0.8 in February 2004 saw the introduction of the new branding efforts. Included were new icon designs by silverorange, a group of web developers with a long-standing relationship with Mozilla. The final renderings are by Jon Hicks, who had worked on Camino.[265][266] The logo was later revised and updated, fixing several flaws found when it was enlarged.[267] The animal shown in the logo is a stylized fox, although "firefox" is usually a common name for the red panda. The panda, according to Hicks, "didn't really conjure up the right imagery" and was not widely known.[266]
I have a 64 bit windows OS, but Firefox is a 32 bit browser. I was trying to use the 64 bit version of nunit, which was giving this "Cannot fine firefox binary in PATH" error. I resolved this by using the 32 bit version of nunit. Basically, there are two exe files in the nunit folder, nunit.exe and nunit-x86.exe. If you are getting this "Cannot fine firefox binary in PATH" error, most likely you need to use the 32 bit version of nunit - the Nunit-x86.exe.
Firefox 64 Bit For Mac Os X
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