Startup behavior versus new window
I am trying to emulate the expected behavior I have from Chromium based browsers. I want my two email accounts to open on startup but then when I open a new window, for just the blank tab to open (Firefox home). There doesn't seem to be a way to do that. I can make them my "home" pages so that they load on startup, but then when I open a new window, it opens both of my home pages as tabs in that new window. Any help? See attached screenshot, is there something I'm missing or is this behavior just not possible in Firefox?
Gekozen oplossing
Hi alexsoko, Firefox doesn't have separate settings for startup page and home pages, as you discovered. Two common workarounds are:
(A) Pinned tabs
If you "pin" the two email tabs, they will be restored at startup (assuming you don't delete history at shutdown). More info on this feature: Pinned Tabs - keep favorite websites open and just a click away.
(B) Customized shortcut
This is based on Windows and I don't know how "shortcuts" work on Linux
Your Firefox shortcut command line can be modified with URLs to open when you launch it.
For example, if you right-click the shortcut and click Properties, then the Shortcut tab, the "Target" field usually looks similar to this:
"C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox\firefox.exe"
You can add on URLs like this:
"C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox\firefox.exe" -url "https://mail.google.com/mail/#inbox" -url "https://outlook.live.com/mail/"
Hopefully one of those will be useful.
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Gekozen oplossing
Hi alexsoko, Firefox doesn't have separate settings for startup page and home pages, as you discovered. Two common workarounds are:
(A) Pinned tabs
If you "pin" the two email tabs, they will be restored at startup (assuming you don't delete history at shutdown). More info on this feature: Pinned Tabs - keep favorite websites open and just a click away.
(B) Customized shortcut
This is based on Windows and I don't know how "shortcuts" work on Linux
Your Firefox shortcut command line can be modified with URLs to open when you launch it.
For example, if you right-click the shortcut and click Properties, then the Shortcut tab, the "Target" field usually looks similar to this:
"C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox\firefox.exe"
You can add on URLs like this:
"C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox\firefox.exe" -url "https://mail.google.com/mail/#inbox" -url "https://outlook.live.com/mail/"
Hopefully one of those will be useful.
Both of these were pretty close to the desired behavior so I consider this solved! I ended up creating a desktop launcher for what I wanted and pinning it to the bottom panel using the linux version of the second thing you suggested (in linux the command that gets passed to the terminal is just: firefox https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox https://mail.google.com/mail/u/1/#inbox). The pinned tabs worked well too, but could annoyingly be unpinned just by clicking and dragging which is too easy for me to accidentally do if I'm dragging something to a new window that is near the pinned tabs in its original window.
Both were pretty close so I consider this solved! The second solution was actually a bit closer to what I wanted as pinned tabs can be unpinned possibly accidentally just by dragging. I just created a launcher for firefox that passed the command: "firefox https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox https://mail.google.com/mail/u/1/#inbox" which launches firefox with those two tabs open and pinned them to my bottom launcher. Thanks for your help in leading me in the right direction!