Mozilla .6 Released
jensend writes: "Mozilla's .6 milestone has been reached. This should bring the functionality of Netscape 6 without the marketing stuff and performance hit. Details at Mozilla .6 Release Notes."
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Exactly. The IRC client doesn't compile into your kernel. Likewise, the IRC client in Mozilla is no more integrated into Mozilla than an IRC client is integrated into the Linux kernel. It's just some extra XUL and JavaScript code that comes along with Mozilla when it ships. Think of it as getting a Linux distribution and seeing all of the binaries that come along with that distribution. Now think of Mozilla the same way. Is a development platform. You can write code and run it on Mozilla.
Prevent email address forgery. Publish SPF records for y
Mac OS
Mac OS 8.6 or later
PowerPC 604e 266 MHz or faster processor, or G3/G4
64 MB RAM
36 MB of free hard disk space
Windows
Windows 9x/ME, Windows NT 4 or Windows 2000 Intel Pentium-class 233 MHz (or faster) processor
64 MB RAM
26 MB of free hard disk space
Linux
Red Hat Linux 6.x and 7 with X11 R6 [Note: Mozilla is certified and fully supported on Red Hat Linux, but will run on other Linux distributions, such as Debian 2.1 (or later) or SuSE 6.2 (or later). The libraries glibc 2.1 (or higher) and libjpeg.so.62 (or higher) are required.] Intel Pentium-class 233 MHz (or faster) processor
64 MB of RAM
26 MB of free hard disk space
Not the memory requirements 64Meg of RAM.
If you are using an old P100 with 32Meg of RAM. Don't complain that it is slow. Read the hardware and software requirements first and DON'T complain.
I don't want a lot, I just want it all!
Flame away, I have a hose!
Only 'flamers' flame!
All I do is create a symbolic link from the mozilla/plugins director to the blackdown
jre/plugin/i386/javaplugin.so file and it works
find. I was unable to get sun's 1.3 javaplugin.so
to work though
The difference between Canada and the USA is that in Canada healthcare is a right and gun ownership is a privilege.
<rant>
Perhaps we should focus on more important tasks such as security, speed and _actual_ functionality and stop developing fluff like see through windows, skins and all in one clients!
</rant>
AF-Design, web development.
I've been running NS 4.5 for as long as it's been out, and I've been able to tolerate the glitches and problems.
.6.
I think it's finally time to start giving the upgrades a serious look, and right now I'm trying to decide what exactly the difference is between NS 6 and Mozilla
Is there anything that this Mozilla is missing that would make me need to use another browser? I need support for several different people's emails, the occassional secure page, cookies, and all the other goodies that the web has now (shockwave, flash, java, etc.)
Keep in mind that I'm running Win95 on a P100 (which has been very good to me for the past 5 years).
I just want to know if there's one good reason that this new Mozilla won't cut it for me. If not, then I'lll go for it.
> Why the hell does Mozilla need an IRC client??
Because Netscape is now AOL's equivalent of MS's "integrated desktop", the average AOLer is happy to be spoonfed, and AOL is happy to oblige them on that.
Look forward to Galeon and its ilk, if you want a barenaked browser.
--
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
I have been using only M18 for a month (.06 is downloading while I type). Except for some problems with dialog boxes that won't go away, I have had no major problems. Sometimes it will crash and burn (twice when trying to render /., probably caused by a rogue banner), but it mostly works well.
It is also quick enough, at least. I have a list of behaviors that I am still deciding about. I do not know if they are bugs, if they bother me because they are different from IE or if I just find them wrong. The velocity problem applies here too. I am not yet sure if mozilla is slightly slower than IE or if it just renders HTML differently.
I do not remember having any show-stopper problem in ANY site (besides not having plugins I didn't bother to install).
Both at work and at home I mostly forgot IE.
I hate skins. I like simple, well conceived user interfaces. And I am not alone. Unfortunately, this is not the ideal of the everyone. There are people that like those ugly cool desktops (with Jennifer Lopez as a background image, Enlightment with a StartTrek look, and translucent terminals)
Even latest apple OS sacrified usability to coolness factor [For instance, scollbars don't hilite when you click on them, or transparency of window title bar make non-focused windows more wisible (on the default background) than the focused one]
At least, skinnability works in both ways. If all the ugly coolness is made via a skin system, then it is possible to download a skin that don't sucks [ModernGray, in the Mozilla case]
Sure, it would be (IMHO) better to have a hard-coded usable default GUI first, but at least we are not locked in a hard-coded unusable default GUI...
</rant>
Cheers,
--fred
1 reply beneath your current threshold.
You ought to have done a bit more reading before jumping off the cliff, there sonny.
I actually did some work to find out the details of this bug. It started from some guy who just untarred everything and tried to run it as a user, and it failed. Upon further investigation, it turned out that when being run for the first time, mozilla creates some files in it's binary directory, which naturally a user has no write access to.
The workaround is deceptively simple: run mozilla as root or whoever owns the directory first. Then after the required files are created, you can run it as any user you choose and no problems will occur.
I did that and am now replying to your misinformed post using 0.6 as a regular user. Good day.
Considering IE 5.x runs well on such an old machine (under W95) . . . . it might be nice for Mozilla to do the same.
I installed it, and it works fine when I tried mozilla as root, but for non root users, mozilla locks up hard core when I hit an SSL site. Wierd...
I'm surprised nobody has mentioned this - I just downloaded the installer version for windows, and it's 6,666 Kb.
;-)
I also thought it would be IE that had that size
Mike.
Tales from behind the Lagom Curtain
Actually the latest Mozilla Nightly builds render large pages a lot faster than IE 5 on My P2-400 128 MB running Win2k.
I had been using Netscape 6 since it was released and I honestly don't see any difference between it and the .6 build.
My complaint is that Mozilla is SLOW. And every time I complain about this, people ask me "have you ever check out the latest night builds? They're a lot better!". Well, I don't think so! I've been testing night builds for a long time now and they're dog slow.
I just hate it when the "New Message" window takes 3 seconds to appear, among other things.
I have replaced Netscape 4.76 for Mozilla mainly because it doesn't crash as much, but I certainly haven't deleted 4.76.
Flavio
Actually I am writing this with the Mozilla beta.
..., but not the SOCKS preferences.
:) on linux
...
When you start it for the first time, it will copy most of your netscape profile: the mail folders, bookmarks,
At first glace it makes a good impression. Thou I can't see any speed advantage over netscape 4.75.
Maybe my machine is simply fast enough - Dual PIII 700
After viewing some pages it eats up 40M RAM, netscape 4.75 needs only 28M
To use java it wants to download a plugin from netscape. So far I didn't try it.
more to come
Why the hell does Mozilla need an IRC client?? Whatever happened to the idea of doing one thing and doing it well? If I want an IRC client, I can find a good one that works and fits my needs!!
</rant>
Sorry. Just tweaks me when I see this crap and think about the bloated mess that is Mozilla...
-bluebomber
The Daily Build
After Netscape 4.0, 4.01, 4.02, 4.03, 4.04, 4.05, 4.5, 4.51, 4.51, 4.52, 4.53, 4.54, 4.55, 4.56, 4.6, 4.61, 4.62, 4.63, 4.64, 4.7, 4.71, 4.72, 4.73, 4.74, 4.75, and 4.76 (none of which were particularly stable), what on god's green earth would make you think that a Netscape 4.80 would be a stable program? Did you just start surfing the web yesterday, or did you just somehow miss the last 4 years of the horrid quality of Netscape browsers? What is left to patch?
Um, the whole point of XUL was to have a cross-platform GUI. With that came "free" skinnability. People who skin and program aren't necessarily mutually inclusive! There are plenty of artsy graphics people who love to skin and show off their work, who haven't touched a line of code in their life. And there are plenty of programmers who will continue working hard on mozilla, and not spend their time working on skins. It's not like everybody on the Mozilla project has now decided "Hey guys, this skin stuff is really cool. Drop everything! Let's create skins instead!". And while skins may have the potential of creating confusing user interfaces, they also have the potential of creating much better, or customized ones. Instead of bitching over some programmer's brain-dead UI, you can make your own, or rely on some Really Smart UI or graphics guy to make one for you. If you don't like skins don't use them! That's why there is such a thing as "default" skin. Many people probably won't even change this skin, let alone realize that they can.
It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
One Java plugin issue: When applets launch, System.out messages are spilled into the applet box, which is probably regarded as a "feature" by many /.'ers (including me, when I am putting together my own applets), but I think most non-Java-programmer users would regard this as a "bug".
Anyway, Mozilla is excellent and I highly recommend that everyone check it out. I am ready to delete NS 4.73 in its entirety.
The announcement points people to the nightly builds directory. Someone on the mozilla site should change that!
Thanks for the info, and perhaps someone should moderate your comment up so that it shows up right under mine for people who are threading.
I really hate it when systemadministrators fuck up good machines like this. You can use the plugin on IE just as well. The default jvm included with netscape is just about the lousiest version out there (the IE version is way better than that) so I don't follow your argument. As far as standards are concerned netscape 4 implements the html 3 standard pretty well (not perfect though). It might even outcompete ie 3 in that area. However, the rest of the world has moved on and netscape 4 is pretty lousy at all the other relevant standards.
I agree that Netscape (or really mozilla) did the right thing by kicking out their crappy JVM. If they had done that four years ago, applets might have actually become popular.
Jilles
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Erm, NO! I mean mutually INclusive: The set of people who skin and the set of people who program aren't necessarily mutually INclusive. Which was the assertion the poster was trying to make: that since these people are one in the same, skinning necessarily means taking time away from programming.
"Yep. You do."
I know you are but what am...oh nevermind.
It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
I have yet to see java working in Mozilla under Linux. I periodically install it, but I always get errors starting up. Today when I tried I got the following error:
There was an error trying to initialize the HPI library.
Please check your installation, HotSpot does not work correctly
when installed in the JDK 1.2 Linux Production Release, or
with any JDK 1.1.x release.
Could not startup JVM properly!
java_vm process: could not start Java VM
INTERNAL ERROR on Browser End: Could not read ack from browser
System error?:: Resource temporarily unavailable
Now I'll have to go and delete it from the plugin directory. Anybody else have this experience? Does anybody know what I need to do to fix this? It looks like it may be trying to use one of the other java runtimes I have installed rather than the one that it installed. I couldn't find a bug report about it.
This version is not a Milestone release, it is a Netscape/Mozilla compatibility release, for developers doing stuff that is supposed to be compatible for both Mozilla and Netscape versions.
--
I would be a paid subscriber if Taco and Hemos weren't such cunts
I found the problem. I hadn't deleted my profile, which was buried in that really annoying "Documents and Settings" tree.
Bugzilla bug 62592
Doesn't matter as I have to reinstall everything anyway. My root filesystem went belly-up on Sunday, causing many major things to either disapper or become corrupted. May be due to an IDE/DMA bug, a hardware failure, or dual-booting into Windows. I'll be doing a thorough disk scan tonight,
As another poster mentioned, and as pointed out in the Mozilla roadmap, Mozilla 0.6 is a build from the Netscape branch, not the Mozilla trunk. It's something for people who want to extend or develop for Netscape 6 with some added fixes and updates from the trunk.
I'm personally going to stick with Mozilla trunk nightlies, considering the mess that was the NS6 release. I imagine Moz0.6 incorporates many fixes, but the trunk nightlies are just beautiful at this point. Speed is nearly (if not already) equal with IE5 in Win9x, and the speed under Linux seems to be increasing slightly. At this point, there seem to be more regressions than new bugs cropping up.
Go to the nightlies directory and grab the latest build for your platform. Scroll down to get the absolute latest build for your platform, and be amazed. I should note that, at least in my experience, using the installer seems to allow some strange bugs to creep in - grab the main tarball/zips if you can and be blown away. It's become a good browser at this point.
Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
I'm in windoze now, and I can say that it definitely loads more slowly than IE5.5. The delay in opening windows is almost annoying enough to prevent me from using it. The quality of the browsing experience (tm) offsets the delays. Be ready to close and open the beast regularly though because it still eats ram like a ... a ... ram eating app. With three browser windows and a mail window open I'm over 45MB now ... just opened another window and it took about 8 steamboats ... memory now at 47.5MB ... it's almost enough from keeping me using. I'm so fscking sick of Netscape 4.7x though and I'm loathe to switch to IE so I guess I'll just stick wit it.
:wq
However, Netscape has yet to release a Solaris build, or an HP-UX build, or anything aside from a Linux 2.2 build. Now I see that the Mozilla folks are taking the same approach - which is disappointing.
Is there any reason for this? I mean, they're building a Solaris 2.6 nightly every day and it works beautifully (on 2.7, for me). Are they ever going to officially release a version or is the onus going to be on admins to compile their own version for anything other than the 3 big platforms? This kind of approach seems awfully shortsighted. I thought part of the whole point of Mozilla was platform independence and the ability to easily build a new port.
I'm not flaming the Mozilla folks here, I recognize quality work when I see it, but I'm just curious why they don't have a Mozilla 0.6 (or a Netscape 6 - yes, I realize that's a different story) for Solaris.
--
When you find Mac-specific bugs, report them!! My impression is that for all the emphasis on cross-platform, the Mozilla core only really pays attention to Win32. and to a lesser extent, Unix. If users don't report and vote for those bugs, they'll never get noticed or fixed.
Sun is helping them with the porting for it:
http://www.sun.com/software/solaris/netscape/
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Mozilla has really come along way. Ive been using the nightly builds for the past 3 months (upgrading daily, missed very few builds) and the quality of Mozilla is really improving
.6 and tried it out. The first thing I tried to do is install the Java plugin from netscape. Amazingly enough, went without problem. This has been kinda tricky, even in the last few nightly builds. PSM (to enable SSL) installed nicely, but thats nothing new. Then I fired up Mozilla mail and the filters still work (my filters died for some reason a few nights ago)
Ive now just gotten
In conclusion, Mozilla is very stable. Its not perfect, it might just crash on you, but it does it, and does it well. I have not used any other browser in several weeks. I get all my email (including a subscribtion to linux-kernel mailing list among others) through mozilla mail, and it filters it nicely and loads the spool (sometimes over 1500 messages) quickly. Even if your not ready to throwout Netscape just yet, give Mozilla a try. Im glad that this Milestone is stable, the past Milestone (M18) was really awful, and I recommended against it and told others to just use the nightly builds. This one seems to finally be the one to work, and work well.
Linux: Because a PC is a terrible thing to waste.
James Brents
As to flash, runs fine, don't know what your talking about.
and the last part of your argument, well thats just mean man! If you find this sort of stuff irking you, don't run it! or if you care, which its obvoius you do, then try to help in some way, either by downloading nightly builds and submitting bug reports, or actually changing the code to your liking (i don't, but i don't whine about useless things and complain when they don't get fixed when all the tools are laid out before me either)
Lemure, wtf! Don't you mean Lemur?
If Netscape released a MUCH faster and MUCH more stable version of Netscape 4.76, I'd love it. Three more minor feature requests to make it "perfect":
If you think about it it's pretty amazing -- what Netscape considers good enough for release barely makes a blip on Mozilla's charts. Makes you wonder what Netscape was smoking when they shipped.
In related news it seems that the WaSP have changed their minds about Netscape 6.
Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
Matt Barnson
Matthew P. Barnson
I learn what I think when I read what I write
Sometimes I don't understand. Why should a brand-new browser run well on such an old machine?
Those are mail/composer/newsgroup prefs. I have them fine. Maybe you didn't install the full version.
No doubt you can get RPMs somewhere which bypass this as well.
Certainly, the nightly builds, which I have been using for at least six months, and which have been my only browser for the last three, write user-related settings into your home directory, with the software itself just needing to be "on path" somewhere.
Similarly, the Windows version which I use on NT installs in a perfectly fine multi-user way, with my settings associated with my profile, and the executables in a shared location.
Andrew.
Mozilla 0.6 has skins for one and only one reason -- to make porting easier. By rendering the widgets with the browser's page renderer, you don't have to write a whole new batch of front-end code for Windows, X, Mac, OS/2, Be, etc.
A side effect is that it makes it easy to replace thw widgets with a new set, since your widgets are in a browser-renderable format instead of your OS libraries. Thus, with a dozen lines of code to create an interface less clumsy than copying over interface files, you wind up able to easily skin Mozilla.
In short,"'skin'-ability" didn't cost developer time in Mozilla, it saved time to focus on security, speed, and actual functionality.
There's no "we" in team, only "me"
I've been using the Mozilla nightly builds for months and www.jibjab.com works just fine. This site uses lots of flash animation. I've just done the install by hand of the flash files into the mozilla plugins dir.
RedHat 7 versions of nightly builds are available. There are also builds for RH6 there, and those work on at least Suse 6.4.
Benny
Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
From the release notes:
If you are installing Mozilla on a multi-user operating system such as Linux, Unix, or Windows 2000, you should install it separately in the user directory of each user who plans to use Mozilla.
Forget it, I'm not even going to try this. The last thing I want to have to do is have a HUGE program installed once for every user on the machine. Sure, at home, I'm mostly the only user, but not entirely. And at work, we can't afford that kind of disk space in everyone's home directories.
Why is it so hard to get a Mozilla with SSL working with a true multiuser install? I mean, hell, Quake 3 has a true multiuser install nowadays. Older browsers never had trouble with it. I like what I've seen of Mozilla, but I'm not going to consider it a viable option until the thing works on my Unix system like a Unix piece of software, not like a hacked-over piece of Windows 95 or MacOS 7 software.
-Rob
The site doesn't do a good job of telling you WHAT to download (it just points you to the uber-confusing nightly download directory).
Here's what I know. The build comments page points you to a Linux, Mac and a Windows version. These all live in the same download directory from 12/6/2000.
Hope that helps people out.
here (Mozilla screwed that up, not me. Honestly!)
Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
(and I don't mean some strange version of the TSR game....)
Have they fixed the X Windows system Drag and Drop protocol? I use an external program to do my downloads, and with NS4.7x I could drag a link to the program and start the download. Mozilla M18 won't do this: It copies the data to the X clipboard, but then doesn't notify the target application that it needs to read the clipboard.
www.eFax.com are spammers
The new 2.0.1 version looks real nice. The jittery display while loading Slashdot is gone, it now understand E*Trade's protocol-less relative URLs, and no longer gets confused by localhost:10000. Give it a try.
Oh, and for those who wonder: yes, it does Java, Javascript and NS compatible plugins. And it handles those mazes of nested tables from hell perfectly well, unlike netscape.
Well, yes. Still, the 1.1 JVM that ships with IE is so out of date as to be worthless, and you have to download the Sun plugin anyway.
No wait, I've just got a message from Bill telling me that nobody needs Java 1.2 or greater.
All I want is a "Netscape 4.8X". A slightly more stable version of 4.76 (which is a LOT better than 4.70) and with some of the motif gui bugs fixed. Then I'd be set for life... or at least another 18 - 24 months.
Mozilla supports 255 alpha layers in PNGs. Once the web designers find that out, we'll see a major leap when they design for Mozilla.
Maybe IE should catch up on that one too?
Stop the brainwash
As far as performance, does anyone here have experience with previous versions of mozilla on old equipment like I have? I want to see what others say before I install it.
Mas vale cholo, que mal acompañado.
I've created a Links Panel for Mozilla (works with nightlies, Moz0.6 and NS6) and I've wrapped up the History Panel RFE from bug 32594
Other packages/projects can be retrieved from mozdev.org and a very cool forum reader called Forumzilla
Enjoy!
--
Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
marotti.com
Does anybody else have this:
I have five top level nodes in the edit preferences dialog:
* Appearance
* Navigator
*
*
* Advanced
The ones between Navigator and Appearance have no labels. When I open them, the child nodes have no labels. When I select any of these, I seem to get random widgets on the panel to the right (well, maybe it's the controls with no labels).
Is this common?
Another mozilla landmark was reached recently, at least for those of us who use SGI's IRIX. There is finally a working IRIX build, after being broken for about a year. Check out this page for a script and the latest information, and go get an IRIX mozilla at long last.
.6 yet.
Posted with nightly build ID 2000120521 under IRIX 6.5. Haven't tried
"I believe that the cult of the particular brings only death - for it bases order on likeness." St.-Exupery
To be on the safe and official side i have replaced all IE boxes with Netscape 4.76 and Java plugin 1.2.2 because that is the only standard that works. Ever try running a real Java application under IE? It doesn't work! It will crap out, cause problems or simply run slow or not at all.
The move to a true JVM is a blessing, it just shows ignorance on your part in that microsoft re-packages it. Would it make you feel better if netscape renamed it to javigator and installed it for you?
--
I know no-one here admits to running Windows...
/., Blink, Microsoft.com and MSN.com (just to add it to their logs ;).
I've just installed this on my NT machine - it installed first time without problems, and seems to work pretty good on the whole. Not had time to do much real testing, but i'm impressed so far. It copes with
Quicker than i'd been lead to expect too - i can't say as i can tell much difference in speed from IE 5.5.
(-1: Admitting to running Windows)
PigPog.
btw, is there a way to only get the browser for mozilla? I don't need, or want anything else.
Those who don't know me, probably shouldn't trust me. Those that do know me, DEFINITELY shouldn't trust me.
Look forward to trying this...congratulations mozilla and netscape (and others) for keeping the dream of freedom-based computing platform alive.
Treatment, not tyranny. End the drug war and free our American POWs.
See my user info for links.
Anyway, download JVM plug-in here:
Mozilla is great and all, but every version I run into problems with Shockwave flash files. I am a frequenter of the simple humor on www.joecartoon.com and it Never loads the site correctly. Has anyone else run into this problem?
Wow! I managed to get Mozilla .6 just before it was announced on /. and before the servers are /.'ed.
.6 to my local leafnode (no, don't bother...it's behind a filtering router). Nozilla read fine the grouplist, I subscribed and even read 3-4 postings. Then everything got stuck, mozilla eating up all the cpu-time it possibly could and I had to -9 it. I tried a few times with roughly the same result. I didn't bother to check the mail functionalities.
Anyways, contrary to previous milestones and nightly builds, this version installed smoothly on my laptop (running Debian) - and seems to run moderately fine. I have tried on some otherwise troublesome URL's, which look surprisingly good.
There are small rendering glitches, such as when writing this text in the "Comment" textfield on slashdot. If I fill out a line, ending a word exactly on the last character in the field, then the "space" before the next word will be in the beginning of the next line. It looks funny, but is hardly annoying.
The browser looks slick, as does the mail&news component. However mail&news seems to be something I will leave with pine for a while. I tried to connect Nozilla
So while it may not be ready for prime-time on all fronts, then it cirtanly seems to have replaced Netscape as my browser. Ohh, wait - Mozilla IS netscape. Nevermind, it is a fine product thus far.
-- "Life is a bitch - and she hates me..."
Phew - very long page of release notes (and quite difficult to make out the relevant information).
Seems there are still quite a large number of bugs in it, but I can't give first-person results as I couldn't see a download link. Can anybody point me in the right direction?
Richy C.
--
Hah! A Microsoft troll complaining about Linus adding extra features and bugs to his code. How long did W2K take to come out, and how many open issues did it have? Would the kettle please refrain from commenting on the colour of the pot. Thank you.
The "nested tables from hell" is NOT the problem with Netscape. The most insane nested tables by themselves will render just fine. I've been following this particular problem for several years and have it pinned down pretty solidly. The bug (which has likely been in all Netscapes since at least 3.04, but to my knowledge has only *seriously* _manifested_ in 3.04 and 4.6x) is actually this:
If you have a lot of links *inside* tables, and IF those links consist of a lot of characters, then it triggers a resource leak which can become fatal. If you cut down on the number of links inside the tables, or halve the number of characters in each link, the leak doesn't occur.
It wouldn't surprise me if the bug is in Mozilla as well (since it's apparently in the rendering core) but only manifests in certain builds.
~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
I doenloaded the Linux version, it seems fine. I'd like to say that the nightlies are still better.
I had Mozilla 0.6 crash on me a time or two trying to import my Netscape profile and then installing Java. I don't have this problem with the nightlies.
Here's a tip: I got a nightly working perfectly with Flash, Java, SSL, etc., now I just untar the new nightlies over the old one. That keeps my themes and plugins intaact.
I use Mozilla for 80% of my browsing, and Konqueror for the other 20% (Like when I know I'm going to hit a pdf file - konqueror is just amazing with its plugin architecture.)
Mozilla's REALY fast now, I honestly don't notice much dofference between the speed of Mozilla and Galeon/Skipstone anymore. It's also roughly equivalent to the speed of Netscape 4.76 on my dual-466/256MB RAM. This hardware is okay, but I wouldn't call a dual 466 anything to screem home about anymore.
Anyway, the nightlies are awesome, mozilla is great. I never use Netscape anymore. Honest. Is it ever nice to have a standards-comliant Open Source web browser. It really makes Debian complete. And at the rate Konqueror is moving forward pretty soon we'll have 2!!
Cheers,
Ben
Netscape had the -install option to install a custom colormap, and IE autdetects this...
This really makes Mozilla unusable on 8 bit displays (i.e. like on my Ultra 5).
More votes on bug #22337 might help...
For those that want to finally kill off Netscape 4 and use Mozilla. Actually, it's alot easier then people make it out to be.
/home/username , if you're the only one that uses your machine. Or make a mozilla group.
/home/username/package
/usr/bin , or somewhere in your path. Then make a symlink called netscape that points to it.
1. untar the package somwhere. (duh!). But here's the tricky part. If you want to install software though it(plugins, themes, etc.) you have to have write acess. So do two things. Install it in
2. set two envioment variables. MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME and LD_LIBRARY_PATH. Both should point to where you installed Mozilla, eg.
3. copy mozilla-bin to
Have fun. I've been running nightlies for awhile, with varying success. Some are really good, then you get one the next day that's just dog slow. Then three days later it's ok again, with a couple more bugs fixed. So if you get another nightly, don't delete your old mozilla install before you try it for a few minutes.