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It's working elsewhere on the site using the same CSS as far as I can tell. It works in Chrome. Here is the full page: anthonyotislawrence.com

Here's the part that's not working:

<a class="socialBox linkedIn">
    <h3>LinkedIn</h3>
    <p>linkedin.com/anthonyotislawrence</p>
</a> 
<a class="socialBox facebook">
    <h3>Facebook</h3>
    <p>facebook.com/anthonyotislawrence</p>
</a>

and the CSS

.socialBox {
    display:block;
    min-width:200px;
    padding:4px 0 4px 55px;
    height:40px;
    line-height:20px;
    background-repeat:no-repeat;
    background-position:left center;
    position:relative;
    -webkit-transition: all .5s ease-out;
    -moz-transition: all .5s ease-out;
    transition: all .5s ease-out;
    text-decoration:none;
    margin:30px 0;
}
.socialBox.linkedIn {
    background-image:url(../images/linkedin.png);
}
.socialBox.facebook {
    background-image:url(../images/facebook.png);
}
.socialBox:hover {
    left:15px;
    cursor:pointer;
}
.socialBox:hover p {
    text-decoration:underline;
}
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2 Answers

up vote 15 down vote accepted

It looks like FF wont transition default values. They have to be declared on the original element before it will transition to the new properties.

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add a event to do transition instead of using default all property transition onload

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6  
This answer would probably be better if you gave an example of your proposed solution. – Sean M Jul 3 '12 at 21:57

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