

Below you will find instructions on how to enable Silverlight in Chrome and Firefox. In the newest release of Google Chrome (v42), you can still use Silverlight but you have to explicitly enable it. Lastly, for what it's worth, I have never been able to get the "about:config" suggestion to work. However, Microsoft will support Silverlight until October 2021, so in Internet Explorer will continue to work well. My next project is to install Windows Firefox ESR via Wine (v.2.3-staging since it "emulates" Windows 7), then install Silverlight as a plugin It doesn't work now, as that config is removed. Before Firefox updated to 52.0, Silverlight worked in Linux Midori, as it picked up my Pipelight/Silverlight configuration.

Silverlight is installed systemwide in Windows, thus, it works. The ESR versions were based on 10.0, 17.0, 24.0, 31.0, 38.0, 45.0, 52.0 and now 60.0 The only reason why you could not use Firefox 49.0 or later versions on Windows is because the CPU you have does not support SSE2.

I see the comment regarding Midori & Webkit, and in my simple way of understanding, it looks like Midori picks up whatever is installed systemwide. In regard to Midori, I am able to run both Flash & Silverlight in the Windows version (not Linux) It asks to "Activate," but that can be changed in "Add-ons" to "Always Activate" įor what it's worth, I was able to get both Flash & Silverlight working in Firefox ESR on Windows (not Linux) I installed ESR into a separate directory (obvious) and created a "clean" profile specific to ESR Once I created the profile, I was able to install the Silverlight plugin. The Win64 Firefox still only allows the 64-bit Flash Player and Silverlight Plugins.
SILVERLIGHT IN FIREFOX 60 ESR MAC OSX
You should be able to use the Firefox 52.0 ESR to use Silverlight and other Plugins as if you were using Firefox 51.0 and older whether on Windows, Mac OSX or Linux. James wrote:The Firefox 52.0 and later Releases on Windows, Mac OSX and Linux only allows the Flash Player Plugin to run.
