Pip Firefox



Editor’s Note: We updated this post on July 11, 2019 to mention that the Picture-in-Picture feature is currently only enabled Firefox 69 Beta and Developer Edition on Windows. We apologize for getting your hopes up if you’re on macOS or Linux, and we hope to have this feature enabled on those platforms once it reaches our quality standards.

Have you ever needed to scan a recipe while also watching a cooking video? Or perhaps you wanted to watch a recording of a lecture while also looking at the course slides. Or maybe you wanted to watch somebody stream themselves playing video games while you work.

  1. Automatically download and install geckodriver that supports the currently installed version of firefox. This installer supports Linux, MacOS and Windows operating systems. Installation pip install geckodriver-autoinstaller.
  2. Once Firefox is updated, playing a PiP video is super-easy. Start playing a video on a page, and then hover your mouse over it. A small blue “Picture in picture” button should appear over the video; click the button and the video will swap to PiP mode.

Play any video in your Firefox browser, like this one. Click the Picture-in-Picture button that appears over the video, and it’ll pop out. Cruise around to other tabs or even outside of Firefox. The video stays put! Repeat steps 1-3 to have as many picture-in-picture videos as you’d like. The latest version of Firefox, version 71 has finally been released and includes a highly requested featured called Picture in Picture Mode, ‘aka’ PIP. This awesome new feature lets you watch video content in a floating window while performing other tasks on your computer.

Firefox multiple picture in picture

933sh drivers download for windows 10, 8.1, 7, vista, xp. We’ve recently shipped a version of Firefox for Windows on our Beta and Developer Edition release channels with an experimental feature that aims to make this easier for you to do!

To remove the firefox package and all its dependant packages, sudo apt-get purge firefox. Sudo apt-get purge firefox-esr. In order to remove the specific version of Firefox which was installed manually, you can simply delete the folder in which Firefox files have been extracted. Install Firefox using yum.

Picture-in-Picture allows you to pop a video out from where it’s being played into a special kind of window that’s always on top. Then you can move that window around or resize it however you need!

There are two ways to pop out a video into a Picture-in-Picture window:

Firefox Picture

Via the context menu

Pip

If you open the context menu on a <video> element, you’ll sometimes see the media context menu that looks like this:

There’s a Picture-in-Picture menu item in that context menu that you can use to toggle the feature.

Many sites, however, make it difficult to access the context menu for <video> elements. YouTube, for example, overrides the default context menu with their own.

You can get to the default native context menu by either holding Shift while right-clicking, or double right-clicking. We feel, however, that this is not the most obvious gesture for accessing the feature, so that leads us to the other toggling mechanism – the Picture-in-Picture video toggle.

Via the new Picture-in-Picture video toggle

The Picture-in-Picture toggle appears when you hover over videos with the mouse cursor. It is a small blue rectangle that slides out when you hover over it. Clicking on the blue rectangle will open the underlying video in the Picture-in-Picture player window.

Note that the toggle doesn’t appear when hovering all videos. We only show it for videos that include an audio track that are also of sufficient size and play length.

The advantage of the toggle is that we think we can make this work for most sites out of the box, without making the site authors do anything special!

Firefox

Netflix Pip Firefox

Using the Picture-in-Picture player window

The Picture-in-Picture window also gives you the ability to quickly play or pause the video — hovering the video with your mouse will expose that control, as well as a control for closing the window, and closing the window while returning you to the tab that the video came from.

Asking for your feedback

We’re still working on hammering out keyboard accessibility, as well as some issues on how the video is displayed at extreme window sizes. We wanted to give Firefox Beta and Developer Edition users on Windows the chance to try the feature out and let us know how it feels. We’ll use the information that we gather to determine whether or not we’ve got the UI right for most users, or need to go back to the drawing board. We’re also hoping to bring this same Picture-in-Picture support to macOS and Linux in the near future.

We’re particularly interested in feedback on the video toggle — there’s a fine balance between discoverability and obtrusiveness, and we want to get a clearer sense of where the blue toggle falls for users on sites out in the wild.

So grab yourself an up-to-date copy of Firefox 69 Beta or Developer Edition for Windows, and give Picture-in-Picture a shot! If you’ve got constructive feedback to share, here’s a form you can use to submit it.

Happy testing!

About Mike Conley

Pip Firefox Shortcut

Engineer working on Firefox for Desktop

Firefox Pip Subtitles

About Andreas Bovens