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AOL Beta Testing Gecko-Based Browser

Bedouin X writes: "MozillaZine is reporting that AOL has released a Gecko client for Windows! Scuttlebutt says that it's based on Gecko .94.2. While I think that the common assumption that AOL including Gecko equals 34 million new OSS users is fallacious (most AOL hits on my site are 5.0), there is no denying that it would be a major - though seemingly inevitible - win and great for a more standard web. Maybe Capital One would quit being the lone holdout of my creditors that don't support Mozilla." Reader SEE also adds a link to a story on CNET.

336 comments

  1. Roll on activeX by samjam · · Score: 1

    Roll on activeX support, then we will have a plethora of freeware and shareware alternative web browsers for windows, no doubt.

    Sam

    1. Re:Roll on activeX by Erik+Hensema · · Score: 2

      Are there any sites actually using ActiveX? I've never ever encountered one. By maybe that's just because I mainly visit OSS-related sites ;-)

      --

      This is your sig. There are thousands more, but this one is yours.

    2. Re:Roll on activeX by samjam · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sorry; I meant roll on the activeX wrapper, then al the Delphi newbies will be knocking out their own browsers that host this activeX (the rendering engine).

      I didn't mean it needed to be able to host activeX itself.

      Sam

    3. Re:Roll on activeX by thesolo · · Score: 2

      Are there any sites actually using ActiveX? I've never ever encountered one.

      Actually, outside of coporate intranets, neither have I, with one exception: MS Windows Update. That is honestly the only site I have ever been to with ActiveX components on it. And that kind of track record is fine by me.

      I simply don't trust running ActiveX components anyway. I equate it to getting into a submarine with screen doors on it; its just not a good idea.

    4. Re:Roll on activeX by jlower · · Score: 1

      Are there any sites actually using ActiveX?

      eBay's picture service uses Active-X and is the source of endless complaints from their users.

    5. Re:Roll on activeX by sheldon · · Score: 2

      I encounter daily sites providing content thru the use of ActiveX controls:

      Adobe Acrobat
      Windows Media
      Quicktime
      Real Player
      Macromedia Flash

    6. Re:Roll on activeX by welshdave · · Score: 1

      Try installing Mozilla, then go to the install directory and type regsvr32.exe mozctl.dll That what you're after?

    7. Re:Roll on activeX by cr@ckwhore · · Score: 2

      There already is an activeX wrapper. Unfortunately, it requires a full installation of mozilla in order to function properly. Its a bit of a drawback when it comes time to distribute an app based on the component.

      --
      Skiers and Riders -- http://www.snowjournal.com
    8. Re:Roll on activeX by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      but not as their sole way of doing so. all those sites, minus Win Media, can be used in mozy.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    9. Re:Roll on activeX by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 2
      Yep, it's produced by a guy called Adam Lock, in fact it's been around for a while.

      The interesting thing about this is - it's binary interface compatible with the Trident APIs: ie it's the same as the internet explorer ActiveX control. This means if you already use the IE ActiveX you can simply replace it with the Gecko one without changing any code (in theory). Hopefully once Moz penetration goes up, you'll start seeing more of this, but to be honest I doubt it.

      Unless it's possible to replace the IE Control with the Gecko one transparently why should apps switch from a rendering engine that is guaranteed to be there, to one that isn't? Makes no sense. So this is good, but for now not all that helpful.

    10. Re:Roll on activeX by great+throwdini · · Score: 1

      I encounter daily sites providing content thru the use of ActiveX controls: [snip list]

      Geez. I'm impressed. Someone here actually comprehends how things work. Thank you.

    11. Re:Roll on activeX by DrXym · · Score: 2

      Netscape/Mozilla/AOL has the equivalent of ActiveX called the Netscape Plugin API. All of the media types you cite are available as plugins. Chances are that AOL will ship with most of these too.

    12. Re:Roll on activeX by jilles · · Score: 2

      Actually windows media can be done as well, apparently there's a netscape plugin for it.

      --

      Jilles
    13. Re:Roll on activeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't activeX dead yet?

    14. Re:Roll on activeX by DrXym · · Score: 2
      The control doesn't require a full installation of Mozilla. It requires Gecko.


      The control is part of the Mozilla distributable but it's also available in the Win32 embedding distribution which is about a 4Mb download.

    15. Re:Roll on activeX by DrXym · · Score: 2

      Actually you should type regsvr32 mozctlx.dll.

    16. Re:Roll on activeX by LiENUS · · Score: 1

      odly enough this works, i used the app wizard in vb6 to generate an application that uses the webbrowser controll
      deleted the msie one
      dropped in a mozilla one with the same name worked flawlesly

  2. New Startup Sound by SomeoneGotMyNick · · Score: 4, Funny

    Welcome!! - You Got Scales!!!

    1. Re:New Startup Sound by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm... sorry. I hope you don't mind euthanasia.

    2. Re:New Startup Sound by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that is the kind of razor sharp wit we need more of on the internet

  3. major - though seemingly inevitible - win and grea by dpilot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When I saw last week that AOL was moving to Mozilla last week, that was the best news I'd seen in a while. It *almost* made up for Dubya's nuclear policy mess or Holling's tramplings. (But not quite, unfortunately, and definitely couldn't make up for both, in any case.)

    Still, I don't see how you perceive an open and standard web as 'inevitable'. Prior to the AOL move, I would have considered a Microsoft proprietary web considerably more 'inevitable' than open standards.

    Most of the public doesn't even truly understand what open standards are or mean, much less feel them important. But these are the same people who take it for granted that the half-inch coarse-thread nut fits on the half-inch coarse-thread bolt, no matter who made each part.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  4. things happen faster when there's money around by Frothy+Walrus · · Score: 0, Troll

    notice how fast AOL took on this project? the Open Source community has been farting around for years with Mozilla and Gecko, not really going anywhere with it (4 years to 1.0 is not good time), but now that AOL has jumped in, things happen immediately.

    having money behind a project must be nice...

    1. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by JPriest · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Farting around not getting anywhere? You know AOL *did* decide to use it.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    2. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by csbruce · · Score: 2

      If you want to compare Mozilla 1.0 to commercial software, I think you'd have to say "4 years to 3.0 is not good time". How long did IE take to get to 3.0?

    3. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Frothy+Walrus · · Score: 1

      are you implying that AOL decided to use it for performance purposes, and not political purposes?

    4. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by JPriest · · Score: 2

      But not to debunk your point, you are still very correct.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    5. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by archen · · Score: 1

      How long did IE take to get to 3.0?

      Quite a bit faster since there was no 1.0 (and 3.0 still sucked IMHO - 4x was okay)

    6. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by csbruce · · Score: 4, Troll

      How long did SpyGlass work on the IE predecessor before being swindled by Microsoft?

    7. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by JPriest · · Score: 1

      I think there are many non-political advantages to using Gecko.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    8. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "very correct" == "correct"

    9. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by sheldon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "notice how fast AOL took on this project?"

      Hmmm... They started this project in November of 1998 when they announced the acquisition of Netscape.

      So it's taken just over 3 years to get to a beta stage. Fast in geological time keeping, but certainly not what we used to call internet time.

    10. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Bedouin+X · · Score: 1

      Sure about that? I ran across this article the other day on Google explaining how to degrade websites and it makes several references to IE 1.0. The article is from 1997.

      --
      Dissolve... Resolve... Evolve...
    11. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by The+Cat · · Score: 2

      not really going anywhere with it

      *cough*

      Realizing it is early, I'll only say this:

      Mozilla is the finest web browser, commercial, non-commercial or otherwise, that I have ever used, even at version 0.9.9

      The Javascript console alone is worth the minimal effort required to install it. Add the other features (tabs, cookies, custom Javascript) and it just puts Mozilla way ahead.

    12. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Bedouin+X · · Score: 1

      Netscape announced this before the AOL acquisition. As a matter of fact, there was wide speculation that the Mozilla project would be shut down as a result. There is an e-mail from Steve Case on mozilla.org addressing this concern. To AOL's credit, they (AFAIK) let the project continue more or less as it was before. I know that there were some layoffs not long ago and many Netscape employees quit early on, but I don't think that these things had a lot to do with a lack of support from AOL. Someone please correct me if they know better.

      --
      Dissolve... Resolve... Evolve...
    13. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Javascript...great. The new supressing of pop-ups is fantastic.

      But the installation of the Java plug-in is a major PITA and not explained in the Mozilla documentation.

      You'd think Sun could get it together on this.

      Also, the Macromedia stuff is a bit problematic, although you can eventually get it to work.

    14. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      First, version numbers don't matter, especially not for an open-source, free-as-in-beer project.

      I think it is great that the Mozilla developers have taken their time to come up with a quality browser, rather than rushing it to the market. Mozilla became usable long ago (although it is not my primary browser, I use it extensively for testing (IE is not my primary browser either)), and it keeps improving all the time.

      You also write:

      "having money behind a project must be nice..."

      If you are referring to the fact that AOL are now roughing up the browser market, it isn't mainly due to money I think. It is rather due to a large customer base.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    15. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Flower · · Score: 2
      You know, I wanted to moderate your post but...

      I couldn't find -1 clueless. Then I looked for -1 uninformed. Nope. Not there. I puzzled this over in my mind and troll doesn't seem to fit, nor flamebait, and overrated is.. well over-rated.

      It just doesn't tell the reader that you obviously know nothing about the Mozilla project. That it has been funded by AOL for years. That most of the initial "farting around" was done by paid, corporate programmers and that the OS community made a lot of useful contributions. Your entire assertation that now there is money behind it completely falls apart because there has always been money behind it.

      The reason you see AOL jumping on the bandwagon now is because, imo, they couldn't get a deal done with MS. For years, they've kept waving the threat that they would move off of IE and it is time to put their money where their mouth is now that they are not being given any real estate on the XP desktop.

      Next time do a little research. Just like that moderator who upped you should have done before wasting a point on your post.

      --
      I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
    16. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by swordboy · · Score: 2

      So it's taken just over 3 years to get to a beta stage. Fast in geological time keeping, but certainly not what we used to call internet time.

      You also have to remember that this browser is competing with IE6 which has taken HOW LONG? If anyone knows me at all, then they know how much I bitch about how Linux couldn't hold a candle to MS products on the desktop.

      I downloaded Mozilla on Monday and I was surprised. There are some things in there that even IE doesn't have. The stability is great. Tabbed browsing is great. Holy shit - I might actually switch.

      --

      Life is the leading cause of death in America.
    17. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by DrXym · · Score: 2

      I hate to burst your bubble, but AOL is the group that have been funding Mozilla all of this time.

    18. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by donutello · · Score: 2

      IIRC AOL was under contractual obligation to use IE on its clients. That contract expired around January 2002.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    19. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you mean "wicked fuck-off correct"?

    20. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >So it's taken just over 3 years to get to a beta >stage. Fast in geological time keeping, but >certainly not what we used to call internet time.
      >
      >

      Is this supposed to actually mean something?

      Internet time is a term created for and by losers hyping dot.com stocks like yourself. It pretty much has *NO* meaning in the Open Source/Free Software movement.

    21. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >If anyone knows me at all, then they know how much I bitch about how Linux couldn't hold a candle to MS products on the desktop.

      >I might actually switch.

      That's what happens when you underestimate the other guy -- they come 'round and bite you in the ass.

    22. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      are you implying that AOL decided to use it for performance purposes, and not political purposes?

      Both you moron. If it wasn't for the political reasons they wouldn't be using it. If the performance wasn't sufficient for their purposes they also wouldn't be using it. This really isn't very dificult to understand.

    23. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was an IE 1.0, it was just not widely distributed. (I saw it on a MS marketing CDROM).

      IE 2.0 was based on Mosaic and was significantly better (although by then "Best Viewed In Netscape" pages ruled the web).

    24. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not long enough. Did you ever use those later versions of Mosaic? Very terrible compared to Netscape.

      In fact it's bizarre that MS would want to steal that piece of crap -- it was pretty much useless on a WWW that had gone frame and table happy. They ended up rewriting most of it anyway, and settling with Spyglass for something like $20M for a useless and unpopular browser. For any normal business with non-monopoly profits, the whole Steal Mosaic thing would look like a gigantic management fuckup.

    25. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by optikSmoke · · Score: 1
      There are some things in there that even IE doesn't have.

      I have noticed that most "alternative" browsers (Opera, Konqueror, Mozilla, Galeon) have many extra features that IE doesn't (or didn't, back around IE5) have, such as tabbed browsing, advanced cookie/javascript/window.open() policies, etc, etc. For me, it's always been that way, and I couldn't go back to using IE simply because things I take for granted in any browser just aren't there.
    26. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by tschluter · · Score: 1

      And this just in from (Seems like AOL/TW is putting even more $$ where their mouth is):

      Mozilla.org has been investigating the large number
      of reports problems associated with attempts at downloading the
      most recent 0.9.9 milestone release.

      Early investigation points to a large increase in the traffic
      and demand for this release. To date it appears that
      approximately 135,000 downloads have been
      successfully completed, plus additional as yet
      uncounted downloads of localizations, stub installers and source code.
      We are uncertain about the additional download requests
      that we haven't been able to support.

      We are looking at options for quickly increasing ftp download capacity.
      AOL/TW has volunteered to provide additional network and ftp services
      to accommodate this unprecedented user demand. We are hoping to have
      additional resources in place very soon, hopefully later today. Please
      bear with us and be patient until we finalize a plan and get this extra
      capacity on-line. We'll post additional details once they have been
      finalized.

      Mozilla.org thanks AOL/TW for its generous response.

      Mitchell

    27. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So it's taken just over 3 years to get to a beta stage.

      Well, mozilla 0.9.9 is just about equivalent (and imho better) to IE 6 (apart from the fact that mozilla runs on more platforms). Now, IE 6 is probably not based on the same codebase as IE 2 (there was no IE 1, since it was based on the spyglass browser), but I think it's safe to assume the current codebase is older than 3 years. So, personally, I think the mozilla team should be congratulated for doing such a great job with such modest resources (in comparison to what no doubt flows into IE).

    28. Re:things happen faster when there's money around by geekoid · · Score: 2

      "certainly not what we used to call internet time"

      no, but it is proper development time.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  5. It doesnt matter anyways... by josh+crawley · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    They're right, Gecko is pretty nice, but big deal. AoL is quite a large part of USA based ISP's but do you think EVERYBODY who has deviated from the de-facto standard of IE is going to change thier website so a bunch of AoL idiots can read it?

    AoL's hated for a reason. Thier service doesnt require the brain power needed to use other ISP's. AoL users are generally regarded as morons. check out comp.security.misc sometimes. Compare AoL comments to non-AoL comments.

    1. Re:It doesnt matter anyways... by volkris · · Score: 0

      Idiots with money... the best kind.

    2. Re:It doesnt matter anyways... by thesolo · · Score: 2

      AoL is quite a large part of USA based ISP's but do you think EVERYBODY who has deviated from the de-facto standard of IE is going to change thier website so a bunch of AoL idiots can read it?

      People will change their sites to fit the proper demographic. If their logs start to show that a large chunk of their hits are coming from Mozilla, they will make a change in their sites, or they will face losing customers.

      If they are smart, they will make sure their site works in the browsers of their target audience. At the very least, they will make sure the site degrades smoothly for Moz.

    3. Re:It doesnt matter anyways... by nijhof · · Score: 1
      They're right, Gecko is pretty nice, but big deal. AoL is quite a large part of USA based ISP's but do you think EVERYBODY who has deviated from the de-facto standard of IE is going to change thier website so a bunch of AoL idiots can read it?

      There are a lot of 'AOL idiots': on my website, www.accordionlinks.com, AOL provides a few percent of the audience, four times more than number two.

      AoL's hated for a reason. Thier service doesnt require the brain power needed to use other ISP's. AoL users are generally regarded as morons.

      If they are morons, it might be easier to part them from their cash, so that might make them a good target audience for some...

    4. Re:It doesnt matter anyways... by peteshaw · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yes! It matters a great deal! Those "AOL Idiots" spend money! And if the customer base jumps from 90% IE 10% other to 70% IE /30% other, it might not make a difference to some homemade page, but it will if you're Sears, or Amazon, (or Capital One). Especially when you are not talking about VHS/Betamax, but rather enforcing a *standard* that will only enlarge your customer base.

      BTW, if you want to bug Capital One about their poor support for Mozilla/Netscape, send an email over to media.relations@capitalone.com.

      I sent them an email this morning. Cheers to the low interest rate card. Cheers to the Frequent flyer miles and great customer service. Jeers to the lousy browser support.

      --
      www.avacal.com -- the home page of pete shaw
    5. Re:It doesnt matter anyways... by JPriest · · Score: 2

      Any buisness not wanting to be the next chapter 11 best comply to standard, else shun 30% of all users in the US. Being on AOL may make you a less likely candidate for a computer security consultant but it does not prevent you from spending money online.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    6. Re:It doesnt matter anyways... by Bedouin+X · · Score: 1

      Been there done that. I keep getting this form reply asking about my OS Version and Browser. I tell them Win2K / Mozilla and they ask for it again! Suckers.

      --
      Dissolve... Resolve... Evolve...
    7. Re:It doesnt matter anyways... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AOL is hated for a reason by techie elitists like you. Most websites are not comp.security.misc - most of them want an audience, and AOL's is too big to ignore. Pull your head out of your arse, please.

    8. Re:It doesnt matter anyways... by karmawarrior · · Score: 2

      Also take a look at http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=89853, the Mozilla bug assigned to getting the bastards to support Mozilla.

      Right now, I'm of the opinion Capital One are within their rights not to support a version 0.x browser. As soon as the 1.0 release candidate comes out (next month), I'll be letting them know that they better allow users of 1.0 in or I'm cutting up my credit cards.

      It's not as if EVERY COMPETITOR OF THEIR'S IN THE COUNTRY isn't trying to get my business.

      Anyone want to recommend any Mozilla-friendly credit card companies out of interest?

      --
      KMSMA (WWBD?)
    9. Re:It doesnt matter anyways... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Discover is Mozilla friendly--I've had no problems logging in and paying my bill, etc. with them.

  6. ha by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Take that, mozilla bashers.

    Was there any reason not to think that a standards-compliant, easily embeddable, open-source HTML renderer wouldn't eventually become a great choice for network software? It doesn't depend on users taking it on themselves to go get and use mozilla (which I agree wasn't too likely), any more than it depends on them going and getting GTK and making their own browsers. What mattered was whether software developers and companies that make and distribute network software found it useful.

    1. Re:ha by krog · · Score: 1

      Was there any reason not to think that a standards-compliant, easily embeddable, open-source HTML renderer wouldn't eventually become a great choice for network software?

      it's awfully convenient that it's the code base for the browser AOL owns, the only remotely viable alternative to MSIE. i think AOLTimeWarnerNetscape finds it useful to give MS the finger.

  7. lots of users by peterdaly · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Like it or not, there are lots of AOL users out there. Even if all 30 million people out their don't upgrade anytime soon, there will still be enough to matter. Each day I browser in Mozilla, more and more sites render correctly on it.

    Most importantly, sites that say "works best in Internet Explorer" may have to reevaluate their stance on the issue.

    Netscape is about to be back in the ring, and just lined up millions of people in their corner. Standards might mean something again soon.

    -Pete

    1. Re:lots of users by forgoil · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Just wait until you can only see AOL approved sites, wouldn't that be nice? Why is AOL cheered when they do what Microsoft supposedly did and is so incredibly hated for? Why should I be limited to a set of software if want to go onto the net? With Microsoft I can say "stuff it!" and installed Debian with KDE. But here you will be forcefed AOLs vision of what they want, and they want !Microsoft, not free software, not GPL, not standard. They want marketshare, they want to get rid of anything but themselves, and if they can get that tool for free, they just like it.

      Separate media, connection, and OS, don't split up OSes...

    2. Re:lots of users by revscat · · Score: 2

      Just wait until you can only see AOL approved sites, wouldn't that be nice?

      What are you talking about? The reason that people are so excited about this is that Gecko is just about 100% compliant with the relevant W3C standards. They're not throwing in proprietary tags in either HTML or CSS, JavaScript is based on the ECMA standard, and so forth. AOL might want to increase their marketshare, but they are going about doing it in the most professional possible (at least in this case.)

      - Rev.
    3. Re:lots of users by JordanH · · Score: 2, Interesting
      • Why is AOL cheered when they do what Microsoft supposedly did and is so incredibly hated for?

      Uhhhhh... Because AOL isn't abusing a monopoly position to destroy potential competition? Next question.

      • With Microsoft I can say "stuff it!" and installed Debian with KDE. But here you will be forcefed AOLs vision of what they want,...

      Oh yeah, that's right, you are required to use AOL and Gecko now... How silly of me. I thought you had any number of choices of ISPs and could still use IE or Opera if you wanted to.

    4. Re:lots of users by numbsafari · · Score: 1

      The point is... they're using Gecko today... and it's opensores, what's to stop them from changing the code in the future to add new "features" that make it work "better" inside the AOL "environment"??? hmmmm.... just you wait... besides, netscape started the browser war to begin with.

    5. Re:lots of users by numbsafari · · Score: 1
      Uhhhhh... Because AOL isn't abusing a monopoly position to destroy potential competition? Next question.
      Right, right... and the FCC didn't just declare that cable operators don't have to share their pipes.. and no one has ever known AOL to be proprietary... I mean, look at how open and standards compliant the current AOL version is...
      Oh yeah, that's right, you are required to use AOL and Gecko now... How silly of me. I thought you had any number of choices of ISPs and could still use IE or Opera if you wanted to.
      Indeed, and when AOL finally blocks out all the other ISPs from using their pipes, and the Bells kill off all the DSL competitors you'll be able to browse with IE and Opera and Konqueror over either a 56K modem or a T1 line... man, I can't wait!
    6. Re:lots of users by Bedouin+X · · Score: 1
      Right, right... and the FCC didn't just declare that cable operators don't have to share their pipes..


      Actually the FCC said that cable companies did not have to share their pipes unless the government ordered them to. Guess who fits into that category...
      --
      Dissolve... Resolve... Evolve...
    7. Re:lots of users by LiENUS · · Score: 1

      numbsafari and when the bells stop selling T1/T3 lines what happens? the entire internet goes away... hmmm that kind of makes there DSL useless

    8. Re:lots of users by roca · · Score: 3, Informative

      They could conceivably do whatever they want in their closed-source Netscape branch. But anything that deliberately breaks standards compliance will never be accepted into the Mozilla core. Mozilla has a strong policy of standards support and there are non-AOL people in groups like drivers@mozilla.org who have the power to enforce that policy, by vetoing checkins or even backing out checkins that have already been made. (I'm one of them.)

    9. Re:lots of users by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Netscape prior to version 6 was never very good with standards. Netscape 4, in fact, is awfully broken, especially when using CSS.

      Standards only began to mean something when Mozilla became usable.

    10. Re:lots of users by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 2

      What's to stop people just using Mozilla or Netscape? Besides, despite AOL switching, IE will still have such a large market share that such a thing would become unworkable.

      I don't want to see a one-option browser market, whether it's Gecko, IE, Opera or Konqueror based. By having competition in the browser market, there's more pressure to support standards in order to get sites viewable by as many people as possible.

    11. Re:lots of users by Darth_Burrito · · Score: 1

      Because AOL isn't abusing a monopoly position to destroy potential competition?

      Not *exactly* a monopoly, but they are most definitely stifling competition in the IM market by breaking anything and everything compatible with AIM. Similarly, when they packaged AIM with AOL, they used their dominant market share to more or less force non AOL users to use AIM in order to IM with a sizeable portion of IM users. It doesn't seem that different to the bundling of IE with Windows.

    12. Re:lots of users by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1
      Not *exactly* a monopoly, but they are most definitely stifling competition in the IM market by breaking anything and everything compatible with AIM.

      No, no, no, no, no, no, no!

      AOL has rightfully blocked IM clients from contacting Oscar, NOT from being compatible with AIM, you just have to use TOC (which hasn't been updated in a while). AOL is in every right to disallow people from contacting their server.

      As far as stifling the IM market, THERE IS NO IM STANDARD. There will be no IM market until there is a standard. Anyone can create their own proprietary IM client, which has been done by Yahoo!, AOL, Microsoft, etc.

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    13. Re:lots of users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and you're giving piles of evidence with that post, aren't you. If IE is better with standards, point us to documents that prove it (and don't shove mozillaquest in our collective faces, everyone knows mozillaquest is made by a mozilla hater who distorts facts to further his own goals)

    14. Re:lots of users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most importantly, sites that say "works best in Internet Explorer" may have to reevaluate their stance on the issue

      I've been using mozilla since M18, and since 0.7 as my primary browser (because that's when it stopped crashing every three pages). And every release large segments of sites with that kind of warningstart rendering correctly. In fact, if you'd ask me for a site that doesn't render correctly in mozilla, I'd only be able to come up with Capital One, because that's what the slashdot article said. (And I don't really care about that one, because my bank's site works perfectly, even though it uses some very complex javascript menu's) Mozilla just works. But then that's why it's 0.9.9 and heading for 1.0.

      In fact, the situation is starting to reverse. A friend of mine was desiging a website that made use of different sections marked by DIV tags with z-order attributes and javascript so that if you clicked somewhere in the main page one of the lower sections would pop up and display a help dialog. Now, he uses the HTML and CSS standards to design his websites, which means he often gets unexpected surprises in the form of something not working as it should. But this time the amusing surprise was that his popup worked correctly in mozilla, but didn't work as the standard dictated in IE 6.

    15. Re:lots of users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Netscape is about to be back in the ring, and just lined up millions of people in their corner. Standards might mean something again soon.

      LOL, remember when it was Netscape vs. Mosaic? Netscape was the big standards breaker on the block back then. They got pushed out of the game by someone who played their game better than them.

    16. Re:lots of users by numbsafari · · Score: 1

      Conceivably, AOL could make it somehow impossible to use any browser over your modem connection (controlled through the AOL drivers) other than theirs. I agree with you completely that there should be an active and competitive browser market, if for no other reason than it will keep the W3C specs moving. The problem is that the W3C doesn't properly enforce their standards and so the browser companies are able to market under the specs while not properly conforming to them. The real problem isn't the companies selling the browsers, it's the W3C's lack of teeth in standards conformance requirements. If the W3C could correct that, you wouldn't have the degree of incompatibility that exists today and the browser wars would never have happened and we'd all probably be much better off for it. Oh well...

    17. Re:lots of users by numbsafari · · Score: 1

      And how long do you think that will really last? I mean, look at what the FCC is doing with the telecom operators? Only a few years ago legislation was passed requiring them to open their pipes, and we all know how that went down. Now, rather than really enforcing the rules, the FCC is just saying,... ahh... who cares! Well, I care, but then, I'm just the consumer. In all honesty, the stipulation that AOL would allow their pipes to remain open will last only as long as the next round of budget cuts after which the FCC will fire the people enforcing it (because it is stupid to have one set of rules for an industry and another for a particular company) and it will be forgotten...

    18. Re:lots of users by numbsafari · · Score: 1

      Hmm.. how many residential users are using a T3? I know several people with T1s in their house, but those people are stupid. Quite honestly, there's nothing stopping the bells from declaring that your domicile is not a place of business and so they won't sell you a T1. More importantly, you'd be surprised how many businesses are using DSL now. Not every company needs to have their web and e-mail hosted in house. Better to co-lo those boxes and then connect to them remotely for a lot less (especially because you save on having to keep the space, physical security and extra admin help for monitoring, you benefit from 24/7 security monitoring and IDS, etc., etc., etc.). That even further consolidates the bells' control over the internet. All they need to do is maintain their own peering relationships and then start kicking off the other, non-bell hosting companies. Now, you can only connect to the internet over DSL (unless you're so big you need the real deal in which case the price is worked out on a business by business basis, and for a lot more than today) and you are forced to host with the Bells and they'll just use the fiber for themselves.

    19. Re:lots of users by numbsafari · · Score: 1

      The problem with your argument is that they most certainly do NOT have to even check the code back into the Mozilla tree, they can maintain their own separate tree of the code. Sure, it's GPLed, and they'll make it available on a POS 486 with a single 56K modem for access.

      So what we're left with is AOL breaking the standards, not checking in their code, and making it somehow the only browser that will run over their pipe which is the only one going out of your house.

      Damn, business is fun.

  8. It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by Numen · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's easy to envisage AOL doing this until one considers that content on the Web has adapted to a large degree to IE dominance.

    What AOL has to consider is its 34million users turning round and saying "the latest version of AOL is broke", if it's not rendering IE specific content correctly.

    Yes I know Mozillas recent [good] record on standards compliance, but as it stands MS is holding the baton.

    In short, I think this is a bluff on AOLs part, as there's too much commercial risk here, and there's no way AOL is going to take those risks (with a relatively dumb userbase), with the possibility of large user unhappiness.

    1. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by csbruce · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In short, I think this is a bluff on AOLs part

      Even if it is a bluff, to be successful in brinksmanship against Microsoft, you must be prepared to go all the way, and you may actually need to go all the way.

    2. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by revscat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What AOL has to consider is its 34million users turning round and saying "the latest version of AOL is broke", if it's not rendering IE specific content correctly.

      While this may be true, the number of sites that utilize MS specific technologies is actually fairly small. But regardless of the percentage that do use broken HTML, if AOL is going to move away from IE they have to do it sooner rather than later. *If* MS comes up with some new whiz-bang HTML "extension" and it catches on, AOL will have less room to maneuver.

      I don't think AOL wants to be dependant upon MS for the browser. The sooner they break away from MS and start using Gecko the better not only for AOL, but the net as a whole.

      - Rev.
    3. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by Erik+Hensema · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What AOL has to consider is its 34million users turning round and saying "the latest version of AOL is broke", if it's not rendering IE specific content correctly.

      While some of them are certainly going to complain to AOL, others will complain to the webmasters. And when enough webmasters make their sites standards-complaint, less users will complain to AOL. Let's hope the number of compliant sites reaches a critical mass before AOL decides to drop Gecko.

      --

      This is your sig. There are thousands more, but this one is yours.

    4. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by colaboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The company that owns the content for a lot of the pages that the 34 million AOL users (and the rest of the net) is AOL. Aside AOLs own pages, there's the entire Netscape portal site, the CNN and related websites, the warner music and film sites, etc.

      Furthermore, what website wouldn't adjust it's pages if not doing so lost visibility to that kind of user base?

    5. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by Numen · · Score: 1

      Actually when you consider the number of sites that rely either upon the IE DOM or IE CSS quirks, the number is considerably higher than one might think.

    6. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by mattdm · · Score: 2

      I've been using Mozilla as my primary browser for about a year. Admittedly, I'm not exactly the AOL demographic, but I almost never come across such sites. Even when I do, they tend to have workarounds in place so that they work with Netscape Communicator 4.x -- and if they've gone to the bother of doing that, they'll definitely go to the bother of making the site work with AOL's browser.

    7. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by Tim+Macinta · · Score: 5, Insightful
      What AOL has to consider is its 34million users turning round and saying "the latest version of AOL is broke", if it's not rendering IE specific content correctly.

      They did this once before, though. If I remember correctly, when AOL made the switch to IE, Netscape had a strong majority of the browser market and IE was still of the very poor quality that you can expect from early Microsoft releases. Websites were targetted to Netscape at the time, there were pages that didn't render right in IE, and yet AOL made the switch.

      The other thing to consider is that Mozilla's rendering is downright excellent these days. I haven't had any problems rendering sites with it for a long time now. Are users really going to be getting a lot of error messages after the switch? And even if they do, why would they blame AOL? Years of Windows use has conditioned people to expect errors all the time which they can't do anything about so they shrug their shoulders and move on.

      AOL has been testing Mozilla with their Compuserve users for awhile now and the tests have reportedly gone well. I don't think this is a bluff.

    8. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by sporty · · Score: 2

      You may have a solution to getting web browser developers to use the same html tags and whta not: give out a random browser with the installation. So now, if you are using AOL and a site looks crappy in one and not in the other, AOL could threaten to drop support :)

      --

      -
      ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only

    9. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by Junta · · Score: 2

      Webmasters will get at least as much complaining as AOL, if not more so. I know a webmaster of a site who regularly gets flamed because the site they manage won't render correctly in AOL 3.0. When asked to at least upgrade to a more recent AOL client or even better, use Netscape, Mozilla, or IE, they get angry and insist AOL's client should be good enough. The truth is, long time users of any software package develop loyalty to that product, and will defend it even when it does act like crap. Of course, AOL users are also typically not that crazy about upgrading, what they have is fine to them, so who knows how much exposure to the fiercely defensive users this will get.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    10. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by hkmwbz · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "What AOL has to consider is its 34million users turning round and saying "the latest version of AOL is broke", if it's not rendering IE specific content correctly."

      It won't happen this way. You see, Mozilla is able to render most pages, and if anything is missing, it is often menus used for navigation (because they are based on proprietary IE-extensions). What happens when an AOL user sees such a site? He sees the contents, but has no idea how to browse the site. Who does he blame? The site of course! He thinks the designer of the site is silly not to have placed proper menus in place for navigation. So he takes his business elsewhere.

      After all, he is using AOL and everything, so it must be the site's fault! :)

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    11. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by d-e-w · · Score: 3, Informative

      AOL users tend to complain to the webmasters. Because AOL is perfect, 'ya know ...

      My website has been blamed for crashing AOL user's computers (simple html + text, no JS), for being full of broken links (due to a site update combined with the AOL cache) and many other odd things that were pretty obviously the fault of AOL.

      We've currently got an AOL cache server out there that apparently hasn't managed to pick up the new version of a page updated on Feb 13th (now that's nuts; usually if a cache server is completely screwed, we can tell the users to wait 24 hours and it should clear up.) The users that hit that server think that we've got mislabeled/mislinked content on our page. And they complain about it. And we blame AOL. And they don't believe us, because AOL is perfect, 'ya know?

    12. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by gotan · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's easy to envisage AOL doing this until one considers that content on the Web has adapted to a large degree to IE dominance

      And with that you're suggesting we should leave it at that and better all go the Microsoft way? AOL is in a position to do this, and now is the best time to do it, because "IE only" websites are few and far between.

      What AOL has to consider is its 34million users turning round and saying "the latest version of AOL is broke", if it's not rendering IE specific content correctly.

      AOL is already getting it's partners to change their websites such, that they render with mozilla/gecko. Also, why do you think they're announcing this move to another browser in advance? If i were a webmaster of some large site i'd already see to it, that it will look fine for AOL-users when the switch happens (well, i'd have made it work with mozilla anyway, but that's another subject). So even AOLs announcement of the switch will clue some webadmins up, that that "IE only" sign on their site might be a bad idea. Also some of the AOL users might love mozilla just for the fact that you can switch off those pesky automatic popup Windows (if AOL leaves that in), since they make surfing the Web a major pain.

      Yes I know Mozillas recent [good] record on standards compliance, but as it stands MS is holding the baton.

      And unless someone changes that it will be so forever. MS is "holding the baton" because 99% of websurfers out there use IE. And AOL obviously has the ability to change this. Now you're arguing, that AOL must continue to go with IE because of some sites that are "IE only". But those sites only exist because 99% of the websurfers are using IE, effectively closing the circle. But i think once AOL switched to mozilla those sites will change their policy fast or face some major problems (as in 30% less traffic).

      In short, I think this is a bluff on AOLs part, as there's too much commercial risk here, and there's no way AOL is going to take those risks (with a relatively dumb userbase), with the possibility of large user unhappiness.

      The alternative is for AOL to make their business dependent on Microsofts IE. Past history has shown, that that it is a bad idea to depend too much on Microsoft Products, because when they want to extend their business into your market it gives them an easy way to kick you out of business and win your customers over.

      I think the AOL executives prefer to take a little risk (i don't think it all that big) to just waiting until Microsoft stabs them in the back.

      --
      "By the way if anyone here is in advertising or marketing... kill yourself." -- Bill Hicks
    13. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by _Stryker · · Score: 1
      A quick search in bugzilla (search for Evangelism) reveals 1450 open Tech Evangelism bugs for things that work in MS IE and even older version of Netscape, but don't work in Mozilla. Many of them are caused by poor sniffing of the browser and use of old DOM such as layers.

      Take a look at all of the DaimlerChrysler passenger car websites such as Chrysler or Dodge. They all use layers and do not render correctly in Mozilla as a result.

      Now consider the fact that 1450 is only the number of such sites that have been reported and that are still open. There have been many reported sites that have been closed simply because the Mozilla team sees no hope of convincing the webmasters to change their site!

    14. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by IGnatius+T+Foobar · · Score: 3, Insightful
      While this may be true, the number of sites that utilize MS specific technologies is actually fairly small. But regardless of the percentage that do use broken HTML, if AOL is going to move away from IE they have to do it sooner rather than later. *If* MS comes up with some new whiz-bang HTML "extension" and it catches on, AOL will have less room to maneuver.

      I don't think AOL wants to be dependant upon MS for the browser. The sooner they break away from MS and start using Gecko the better not only for AOL, but the net as a whole.
      That's exactly the issue, and it's exactly why AOL is wise to move right now. Any sooner and Gecko would have been "not quite ready," any later and you'd risk the complete MSification of the web.

      And what's that "extension?" Personally, I think it'll be a Microsoft-led effort to replace Java applets with .NET applets. It's only a matter of time before Internet Explorer gains the ability to embed .NET applets in web pages. Once that happens, it'll take something the size of AOL's user base being on the 'net to prevent webmasters from using this ultra-proprietary technology and assuming that it'll work for "nearly everyone."

      Yes, I already know that browser-embedded Java isn't a great technology either, but at least it's available on every platform. If we ended up with a Web largely dependent on .NET applets, it's essentially game-over for non Microsoft browsers. Thank you, AOL, for making this switch now.
      --
      Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
    15. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by DrXym · · Score: 2
      In all honesty I rarely see a site that compells me to run IE to see it. Most work fine right now with Mozilla. Consider, how many businesses are that profitable that they can turn away customers simply because "this site is optimized for Internet Explorer"?


      The answer is not very many. Netscape and other browsers probably account for 15% of the market, so e-tailers would have to be nuts to shun that business when it could make all the difference.


      So what about non-commercial sites? Well fortunately most of them work just fine as well. I can see AOL having trouble with a handful of IE-only ActiveX/DHTML/VBScript jerks but you can bet that within 6 months of switching to Gecko, most sites will render properly in any browser. Boo hoo for the jerks who stick with VBScript.


      Evangelism is the key here. This beta program is giving advanced notice to websites that 34 million people are going to be using an standards compliant browser very soon and site owners damned well better ensure their site works in a standards compliant manner.

    16. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by mkmiller · · Score: 1

      'Yes I know Mozillas recent [good] record on standards compliance, but as it stands MS is holding the baton. '

      So, what your saying is that Microsoft (the undisputed heavywieght champion of taking open standards and altering them just enough to only work with their software) holds the baton for standards compliance???!!?!?!?!? WTF?

    17. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by _Stryker · · Score: 1

      I hate to reply to my own posts, but it is even more severe that I noted above. The 1450 that I listed isn't the actual total number of bugs. That is just the maximum that Mozilla will show. I saw this error printed at the top of the page when I went back: "This list is too long for bugzilla's little mind; the Next/Prev/First/Last buttons won't appear."

    18. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by dinotrac · · Score: 2

      What AOL has to consider is its 34million users turning round and saying "the latest version of AOL is broke", if it's not rendering IE specific content correctly.

      The major sites will support AOL right away because AOL is in direct contact with them. Most of the other sites will support it very quickly because the clients (the ones who actually pay the web designers) will not want to surrender that much business.

      Other sites will follow behind because, in time, people will get out of the habit of designing IE only sites.

      The others?
      Who cares. People will judge them as rinky-dink amateur efforts because all of the important sites will work fine.

    19. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by eddy+the+lip · · Score: 3, Informative
      While some of them are certainly going to complain to AOL, others will complain to the webmasters.

      I do web development, and I'm inclined to agree. Users (especially the less sophisticated ones) are more likely to blame what they're trying to view than what's allowing them to view it. It's the page that looks wrong, not the browser. Hence, it's the page that's broken.

      This has been a damned nuisance on occasion because AOL, with the default client settings, will serve up mangled graphics from their cache, rather than the originals that go with the page. The call that we get isn't "AOL broke your page", it's "your page is broken".

      This illustrates another point, that AOL will provide a sub-standard user experience if they feel it's in their best interest to do so. In this case, I really think it is. One wannabe monopoly won't benefit by being beholden to another.

      --

      This is the voice of World Control. I bring you Peace.

    20. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by roca · · Score: 2

      > If we ended up with a Web largely dependent on
      > .NET applets, it's essentially game-over for non
      > Microsoft browsers.

      No, then we just embed Mono into Mozilla (on *nix, anyway).

    21. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That *is* the actual total number; like the message says, it just won't provide the navigation links that let you browse from bug to bug without consulting the list.

    22. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by TandyMasterControl · · Score: 2
      Take a look at all of the DaimlerChrysler passenger car websites such as Chrysler [chrysler.com] or Dodge [4adodge.com]. They all use layers and do not render correctly in Mozilla as a result.

      Proving that the sphere of their gross incompetence is not restricted to cars and trucks alone.
      who cares. Do you think Microsoft's bribes to their CIO can make up for the lost revenue not being visible to 30 million AOL subscribers? I doubt it , but then again I couldn't care less if they can accurately calculate their interests or not. Same goes for the other 1450 fuckwits.
      Mozillans: Tranquility Base here, the LIZARD HAS LANDED.

      --
      Johnny Quest has two Daddies.
    23. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF is wrong with you? The sites' problems have nothing to do with Microsoft, it's because they use proprietary Netscape HTML/DOM (layers) and haven't gotten with the times yet. The fact that Netscape ditched back-compat is bound to cause this sort of pain.

    24. Re:It not the eyeballs, it's the content.... by dtobias · · Score: 1
      What AOL has to consider is its 34million users turning round and saying "the latest version of AOL is broke", if it's not rendering IE specific content correctly.

      Well, from my own standpoint of hating both Microsoft and AOL, but occasionally finding them both to be useful if only to check-and-balance the other and keep either of them from becoming a permanent monopoly, that's a win no matter which way it goes. If AOLers blame AOL for failing to render some sites correctly, maybe some of them will decide finally to drop that sucky service and get a real ISP. If, on the other hand, they blame the webmasters, that will push a few of them to start considering standards compliance a little more. (While most sites work fine for me in Mozilla now, a few still don't; I just tried RCA's site and found the menus overlayed into a horrible mess and the input forms don't work correctly, because of all the jumbled HTML and JavaScript with incorrect syntax.)

      --
      --Dan
      Web Tips
  9. stupid version number version bloat by josh+crawley · · Score: 1

    4 years to 1.00 Isn't good time? Well, what version is linux on? Oh my! we're only on stable 2.4.18 !! Well, thank goodness we can use Linux 7.2 ! Version numbers save us!!!!!

    1. Re:stupid version number version bloat by Frothy+Walrus · · Score: 1

      in order for 3:1 version number bloat to work effectively, version 0.33 (aka v1.0) needs to not be a piece of shit. however, seeing as Mozilla 0.9.8 (aka v2.9.4) still crashes after less than three hours of use, consistently on my machine, and no previous versions have worked any better, version number bloat is not an option.

    2. Re:stupid version number version bloat by josh+crawley · · Score: 1

      I'd check the ram. I've had a linux box that would crash (hard) after minutes of activity. Win2k seemed fine on it. Well, I used gdb to tetermine any soft of problem. nothing. I then finally did a test on the ram (by plugging 1 module at a time into another computer). The first chip (around 3 meg mark was corrupt). FreeBSD also was heavily hurt by this (the installer always crashed).

      I use Mozilla as a browser about 100% of the time (aside from konqueror occaisionally). The program is stable. Check your hardware.

  10. MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by cbr372 · · Score: 3, Informative

    AOL is making a good move by basing its next generation browser on Gecko/Mozilla.

    Mozilla is currently the most standards-compliant browser. In its 0.9.9 reincarnation, I have found it to be fast, reliable and easy to use. I tried the GNU/Linux and Win32 versions.

    My Win32 test included a end-to-end test against the hyped IE 6 browser.

    The test was performed on a standard 700Mhz Duron with 256MB of RAM running Windows 2000 Professional. My conclusive results are as follows:

    Loading

    Mozilla 0.9.9 loaded 17% faster than IE 6 and 21% faster using the -turbo option (C:\mozilla\mozilla - turbo)

    IE 6 loaded 5% faster than Mozilla 0.9.3 when Mozilla was loaded without the -turbo option. This is not a good measure of true performance though - IE loads itself into memory. A better test would be to use Mozilla -turbo vs IE (see above).

    Sites

    90% of sites viewed with Mozilla loaded 100% correctly the first time they were loaded. 5% of the sites test with Mozilla loaded 80% or better when loaded for the first time with Mozilla. 96.2% of sites loaded 100% correctly when refreshed multiple times under Mozilla.

    96% of sites viewed with IE 6 loaded correctly the first time. 98% of the sites loaded correctly after multiple refreshes.

    Reliability

    IE 6 crashed a total of 1 time, claiming: "Illegal operation: Iexplore.exe". The system stayed up and IE 5.5 was able to restart.

    Mozilla did not crash during this test.

    Conclusions

    IE seems slightly more compatible with most sites, but Mozilla seems faster and more stable at most tasks. Undoubtedly future versions of IE and Mozilla will improve and re-testing will be neccessary.

    --
    Cedric Balthazar Rotherwood
    Sun Certified Programmer for the Java Platform +
    System Admin. for Solaris
    1. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by sheldon · · Score: 2

      How about you provide for us a list of these sites you visited?

      My experience with Mozilla did not contribute to the adjectives stable and fast.

    2. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nah, he just made that all up.

      13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 submit

    3. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find Mozilla .99 less stable than IE 5.5 & 6.0, particularly when using Macromedia plug-ins.

      As to the "-turbo" option, I cannot find it documented anywhere. Certainly not in the online help.

      Do you see a problem there?

      Don't get me wrong. Mozilla .99 is a great browser, but it is still a notch below IE5.5/6 on a Win32 platform, particularly Win2K and XP.

    4. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Loading
      IE 6 loaded 17% faster than Mozilla 0.99.

      Sites

      90% of sites viewed with IE loaded 100% correctly the first time they were loaded. 5% of the sites test with IE loaded 80% or better when loaded for the first time with IE. 96.2% of sites loaded 100% correctly when refreshed multiple times under IE.

      96% of sites viewed with Mozilla loaded correctly the first time. 98% of the sites loaded correctly after multiple refreshes.

      Reliability
      Mozilla crashed a total of 1 time, claiming: "Illegal operation: mozilla.exe". The system stayed up and Mozilla was able to restart.

      IE did not crash during this test.
      Conclusions

      Mozilla seems slightly more compatible with most sites, but IE seems faster and more stable at most tasks. Undoubtedly future versions of IE and Mozilla will improve and re-testing will be neccessary.

    5. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by fwankypoo · · Score: 1

      The -turbo option is the same as going into "preferences->advanced->enable quick launch" and it IS documented on the Mozilla web site.

      --
      The time of day is 29:33.
    6. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by Malc · · Score: 1

      I've got another test for you: how long does it take to go back through pages in the browser history? Especially when those pages represent Google searches with a 100 results per page? Yes, IE is instantaneous. Mozilla is slooooow and pegs out the CPU at 100% for a while before it starts rendering those pages.

    7. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by Guillermito · · Score: 1

      Loading
      Mozilla 0.9.9 loaded 17% faster than IE 6 and 21% faster using the -turbo option (C:\mozilla\mozilla - turbo)

      As far as I know, the -turbo option (aka quick launch) means that parts of Mozilla are pre-loaded at Windows startup. That's exactly what IE has been doing since it was integrated with windows. So if someone is going to compare loading times of IE and Mozilla, the -turbo option should always be used.

    8. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's the list for you:

      www.mozilla.org
      www.netscape.com
      www.fuckIE.co m

    9. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a mighty biased list! And even on that list IE came out ahead? I bet if you visited three IE friendly, Moz unfriendly sites IE would be lightyears further than that!

    10. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it was a phuh king joke, you moron.

    11. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by bartok · · Score: 1

      Gues what, when you have Mozilla started without the -turbo option, it's as loaded in memory as it is with -turbo. There is no difference in what's in memory between the two modes when both have an open browser window except for the little taskbar applet in -turbo.

    12. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by dimator · · Score: 3, Funny

      Oh, people can come up with statistics to prove anything, Kent. 14% of people know that.

      --
      python -c "x='python -c %sx=%s; print x%%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))%s'; print x%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))"
    13. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fixed in 0.9.9

    14. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uh, when you run the installer on Windows, it asks if you want to preload mozilla when windows starts (thus invoking mozilla -turbo everytime you boot Windows.

    15. Re:MSIE vs Mozilla/Gecko by Malc · · Score: 1

      Rubbish. It's just as bad.

  11. activeX - superb OS hooks by gruntvald · · Score: 1

    If you want to dig deep into the OS, activeX is the way to go. For example, you can use a pop-up ad to bypass ACL and registry security, and drill down into the account database on Microsoft Money or Quicken, if the user has it installed. You can also run stuff as "Clippy", who has full administrator priviledges on an NT box, regardless of the current users account priviledge.

    1. Re:activeX - superb OS hooks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow- sounds dangerous. Lets leave that shit out.

    2. Re:activeX - superb OS hooks by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1
      Thanks for reminding us all of the reasons NOT to have ActiveX controls in a web browser.

      To all the folks who claim to not see sites using ActiveX scriping, I don't think you are looking hard enough. First, you need to disable all ActiveX in the security settings. Next, go to mail.yahoo.com, log in and witness the browser's warning message pop up.

      Fuzzy

    3. Re:activeX - superb OS hooks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And Netscape Plugins prevent these problems exactly how? The code for those things isn't even signed, which would make social engineering a trojan easier.

    4. Re:activeX - superb OS hooks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem a little confused -- There's a fundmental difference betwee ActiveScripting (aka JavaScript) and ActiveX controls.

      The scripting (in both IE and Netscape) is supposedly sandboxed to restrict access to the browser DOM. However YMMV - there's been lots of script-related holes in both IE and NS4.

      On the other hand, ActiveX controls (and Netscape plugins) are full fledged programs running under the user account and can do anything the user can.

      The (supposed) security problem with ActiveX is that the controls can be automatically downloaded if the user agrees to it. IE4 and later give the user an option to check the certificate. Mozilla has a similar auto-install feature, most most NS plugins require you to run an install.exe.

      Most of what you see at mail.yahoo.com is either javascript (to make the UI work) or Flash adverts. Since you have already installed Flash, it _local_ code running through a plugin (and therefore assumed 'trusted'). MS gives you an option to prompt to run these plugins, with Mozilla it's either On or Off.

    5. Re:activeX - superb OS hooks by 1g$man · · Score: 1

      Aha! Intelligence from an anonymous coward. There is hope yet!

      I find it amusing that people bash ActiveX controls when they happily have their Netscape plugins going. They are in essence the same thing.

  12. Will Intel Fix their site ?? by klosskorban · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Currently, Intel's EDI website only supports IE! not NS 4.x, NS 6, Opera, nothing but IE. I made a rule awhile ago. "Employees/users can only surf the web with Netscape." But Intel makes me look bad when the Sales Reps have to use IE to get Sales Orders from Intel. I tell everyone they can't use IE for security reasons, and they snicker, "sure, buddy Netscape don't even work!". Hopefully AOL will change all this!!!!!! And hopefully that will put me one step closer to expanding our Linux use from the servers to the desktop as well.

    --
    Need help finding the flow? http://www.myspace.com/naturalismandbalance
    1. Re:Will Intel Fix their site ?? by bunratty · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you find a page that doesn't work well with Mozilla, you can file a Tech Evangelism bug report. The Intel site does have bug 113099 reported against it. If this is the bug you're experiencing you can vote for it, or you can go report your bug.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  13. Re:major - though seemingly inevitible - win and g by Bedouin+X · · Score: 1

    I meant that AOL's ditching of IE in favor of Gecko was inevitable. Especially in light of the breakdown in negotiations between the two companies over the AOL client in Gecko.

    Sorry for my convoluted sentence structure. =o)

    --
    Dissolve... Resolve... Evolve...
  14. This could be a disaster by Mr_Silver · · Score: 4, Interesting
    (Note: I'm not trolling, I'm being serious and I'd love people to comment and prove me wrong)

    I'm a little worried that this could all end in a bit of a mistake. Don't get me wrong, I think that standards are a good thing. They're good for developers because they know what they send out, will be viewable in all clients. They're good for end-users because they can use any client and still get the content. However, there is a problem.

    I'm just moved from IE to Opera. For the sole reason that I hate having 15 IE windows open. Thats it. Nothing else and I admit it. However whilst surfing the net doing research I find a good many sites are broken and Opera doesn't show them too well. Hell even my own site doesn't work very well.

    In fact, i'm to the point of going back to IE. Why?

    Because I want that content and I can't get it. Sure, its not my fault that I can't get the content, after all, they've written bad HTML but from an end-users perspective that isn't the issue. They want that information and their browser won't give it to them. Period.

    To the end-user, it doesn't matter if the HTML is badly formed, if people see it not working on browser y and it does on browser x then they will automatically assume that y is broken. ("but x lets me see my page, why can't i on y?", "because the pages are badly written", "well if they're badly written, why can i see them on x?" and so on)

    Now of course the standard geek response is "well its their fault they haven't followed standards". Well yes, it is. But it also sucks for the individual who wants the information on that page.

    "well then, they should go elsewhere". People don't just go elsewhere. They find a few retailers they consider trustworthy and stick with them. Or what happens if that content isn't available elsewhere? Then you're stuck. It also doesn't help when they see their friends using browser x and having no such problems.

    Which means that I've come to the depressing conclusion that AOL might even be forced to return to IE. Or they'll put pressure on Mozilla developers to try and cope with dodgy HTML.

    This certainly doesn't help standards, but when there is a large mob of people phoning up the tech support lines complaining that their favourite websites no longer work, AOL may start changing their mind.

    --
    Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    1. Re:This could be a disaster by klosskorban · · Score: 1

      Yah After a year+ I left Opera and went to Netscape. But I never knew what I was missing, I had never seen a javascript drop down menu, Opera doesn't support them. But Mozilla handles bad HTML GREAT. I have seen JS that works great in mozilla, but crashes IE. The switch to gecko will cause less problems not more !!

      --
      Need help finding the flow? http://www.myspace.com/naturalismandbalance
    2. Re:This could be a disaster by Fweeky · · Score: 2

      I find Opera's fine for all the sites I visit, in fact for the types of site I visit it tends to do a better job than IE beacause of the improved CSS support.

      For sites that do screw up, there's always that handy little "Switch between author mode and user mode" button in the corner of every document that will fall back to a perfectly usable unstyled page.

      And when I come across the odd site that overloads on DHTML or whatever, I just load IE, or go away. Spending 3 seconds to load IE, copy the URL and paste it into IE isn't exactly the hardest of workarounds.

    3. Re:This could be a disaster by mmcshane · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I agree, it is possible that this blows up in AOL's face. From my point of view, who cares? Maybe AOL loses 10 million customers - no skin off my nose. What I like is that I can now say to my boss, "In a year or so there are going to be 30 million AOL users forced into using the Gecko rendering engine. We need to write good front end code." And that statement won't be 100% true but the concept is right and even better, it will work.

      For the record, while Opera's layout engine and CSS support is excellent, it's DOM (Javascript) capabilities are very poor.

    4. Re:This could be a disaster by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 2, Insightful

      explain to me what the hell Opera has to do with how well Mozy renders?

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    5. Re:This could be a disaster by Ami+Ganguli · · Score: 2

      Have tried the same sites with Mozilla instead of just Opera? I only use Opera occasionally, so I don't really know how it does, but Mozilla has been pretty good for quite some time.

      I think web developers are slowly moving to W3C standard HTML because new IE and Netscape both support them. It's easy code to a common subset of HTML that works on both IE and Gecko - no more browser sniffing. That makes life a lot easier.

      In my case, I remember running into IE specific web sites quite often a year ago. I don't think I've had that problem at all in the last couple of months. My on-line bank even showed a warning that they didn't support NS6 (even though it worked fine) up until a couple of months ago. But with their latest site re-design the warning is gone.

      --
      It is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail. - Abraham Maslow
    6. Re:This could be a disaster by EllisDees · · Score: 2

      What content can you not get to, exactly?

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    7. Re:This could be a disaster by psamuels · · Score: 1
      But Mozilla handles bad HTML GREAT. I have seen JS that works great in mozilla, but crashes IE. The switch to gecko will cause less problems not more !!

      Ummm, I know about what the RFC's say about being liberal in what you accept. But personally I would rather that the most popular browser in the world be the most picky parser. Why? Because that way I don't get screwed by web designers who make silly typos and don't notice because they user $BROWSER_OF_THE_MONTH and I don't.[*]

      Just like I'd prefer that everyone use standards-compliant browers without a lot of extensions à la Netscape 1.1 (for its day) or any flavor of MSIE. Because I don't want designers using those bleepin' extensions.

      [*] ObBrowserPlug: For most uses I'm very happy with links, a sort-of clone of Lynx with more features, saner defaults and fewer bugs.
      --
      "How can you claim that you are anti-crack, while still writing a window manager?" — Metacity README
    8. Re:This could be a disaster by ethereal · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The answer is: Market Share

      No company is going to leave its web site unavailable to 34 million people, not when they can make the site standards-compliant and work in both IE and AOL. Netscape 4.x is a different matter, granted - you almost had to have two copies of your site for a while. But if AOL uses Gecko, then the web's back to only one site for everyone, and all of us using non-IE browsers will benefit from that. AOL's 34 million newbies could be the best thing that's happened to the web in the last couple years (betcha never saw that coming :).

      --

      Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

    9. Re:This could be a disaster by roca · · Score: 2

      Opera's problem is that it doesn't support DHTML, in particular the full W3C DOM1 and DOM2 standards.

      Mozilla is very picky, but it (and IE) support a number of W3C standards that Opera doesn't.

    10. Re:This could be a disaster by leomekenkamp · · Score: 1

      A disaster? not imho not very probable. As another poster mentioned before: after years of Windows crashing on them users see a broken site and just move along to another site. And when some manager of one of those broken sites sees the page-view numbers go down the drain (-34 million is bound to have some inpact), he will probably take action. Besides, it would be interesting to know how many AOL readers visit pages outside the 'mainstream' web-sites, as those sites are afaik 'alternative-browser' friendly. Even MS these days!

      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
    11. Re:This could be a disaster by Alpha600 · · Score: 0

      It's no wonder if your page doesn't render correctly. It's not the lack of features or some MS-standard - you just have awfull mistakes.

      see http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww .ewtoo.org%2F%7Esilver%2F&charset=%28detect+au tomatically%29&doctype=HTML+4.01+Transitional& amp;ss=&outline=&sp= for more

      How do you expect
      15: <center>
      16:
      17: <table border="0" width="700">
      18: <tr>
      19: <td width="800" valign="top" align="left" colspan="3">
      20: </center>
      to work?

      b4n

      --
      why are newer posts modded up, while older with same content are classified as redundant?
    12. Re:This could be a disaster by MeNeXT · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I dissagree



      It reminds me a few months back I went to site that required FLASH(since it was big co I will not advertise their site). There was no other way to view the site without FLASH. So I sent them a little email asking them if they were promoting flash or their product. The site now supports HTML. I do not think that my email made them change their attitude but sales would have a hard time explaining to management why they lost a client due to flash.


      I think that this would apply to any website. Companies are creating websites to make $$$$. If they feel they are loosing sales trust me they will support standards.

      --
      DRM? No thanks, I'll just get it somewhere else...
    13. Re:This could be a disaster by revscat · · Score: 3, Informative

      There are a couple of things to take into consideration here:

      For the most part, web designers crave standards. The absolute number one bitch of web designers is having to code for the quirks in different browsers. By having one of the major players in the market switch over to standards compliance, a *huge* load is taken off of the development time. Developers have been clamoring for more compliance for years. (And face it: IE is a very standards compliant browser; making the switch will all not be that drastic.) While it might take some time to make the switch, it will be well, WELL worth it to do so because you can just code to the standard.

      AOL is in the business of delivering content over the internet. Currently the tool used by their customers to view this content is controlled by a competitor: Microsoft. It just doesn't make business sense for AOL to be dependant upon MS for such a core element of their business model.

      AOL is a huge entity with enough clout to pressure commercial sites to change their ways. If a significant percentage of your customer base are AOL users, and AOL has changed a few things, you will either change your site or lose the customer. Most businesses will change their site.

      In short, I think this is absolutely a win-win situation for the industry and the consumer. AOL is less dependant upon MS, developers are (more) happy because they don't have to code for Nutscrape specific quirks, and the end user will get a more consistent browsing experience.

    14. Re:This could be a disaster by hkmwbz · · Score: 2, Interesting
      "Because I want that content and I can't get it. Sure, its not my fault that I can't get the content, after all, they've written bad HTML but from an end-users perspective that isn't the issue. They want that information and their browser won't give it to them. Period."

      Conversely, I can say that they want that information, but the site fails to deliver it to them (because it doesn't show up "in AOL"). So they go elsewhere instead.

      It could actually strike both ways, but since they are "using AOL", my guess is that most people will think there is something wrong with the site and not with AOL.

      If the user doesn't go elsewhere, he or she might write the webmaster and ask "what's wrong with your page all of a sudden"? The webmaster will then perhaps say that "we are not compatible with AOL, you have to download IE". It is far easier to just open another page than to start downloading the latest version of IE. (Yes, IE might already be installed on the PC, but the regular AOL user might not know that there's a world outside AOL - believe me, I've seen it many times).

      "This certainly doesn't help standards, but when there is a large mob of people phoning up the tech support lines complaining that their favourite websites no longer work, AOL may start changing their mind."

      Or they all mail the webmaster and then get angry because they are told to use something "not AOL", which is basically bad business for the site.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    15. Re:This could be a disaster by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      Yes, exactly! This doesn't force webmasters to create a new set of pages for each browser. Now they can actually do it *once*, and it will work in most browsers. IE has decent enough support for standards in addition to it proprietary extensions, remember.

      This will actually benefit webmasters as well as open standards supporters who want "one web, any browser".

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    16. Re:This could be a disaster by great+throwdini · · Score: 1

      Opera's problem is that it doesn't support DHTML, in particular the full W3C DOM1 and DOM2 standards.

      There is no such thing as DHTML. You are very much on-target with the comment about DOM support.

      I personally gave up on Opera early because of that lack of support and the slow pace with which its developers notified people of its deficiencies in specific, actionable terms.

      I'm certain they're more forthcoming now about Opera's capabilities, but back with the early 5.x series, there were no definite answers to be had. Scratch my interest.

    17. Re:This could be a disaster by Mr_Silver · · Score: 1
      Actually I was talking more about www.fourteenminutes.com.

      I'm well aware that the site there is shit. It has got godaweful mistakes and I really can't be arsed updating it because no-one visits it anyway.

      There are far too many mistakes on other people pages which make the content totally unreadable and this is my point. If you specifically want some information and you can't then you're stuffed.

      Maybe I should think about updating the ewtoo.org code though :o)

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    18. Re:This could be a disaster by Mr_Silver · · Score: 2
      explain to me what the hell Opera has to do with how well Mozy renders?

      Both Opera and Mozilla are stricter when it comes to the HTML over IE which will try and guess what you're doing if you haven't done it quite right.

      You could have put any standards enforcing browser in there. I have all three installed, I just chose Opera for the comment.

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    19. Re:This could be a disaster by ftobin · · Score: 2

      Hell even my own site doesn't work very well.

      Your site does not validate. Your complaint is hence analogous to the stating "My program does not work well", when in fact it it has syntax errors and doesn't even compile.

    20. Re:This could be a disaster by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      ok, but being a standards complient browser, and actualy rendering content are 2 diffrent things.

      Opera does not use Gekko so saying that Opera sucks on pages that you have noticed does not mean that Gecko sucks.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    21. Re:This could be a disaster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey - most Opera users seem to be under some delusion that their browser is completely standards compliant, and that they are being tortured by "MS-HTML". So it's in Opera's best interest not to speak too loudly about the browser's faults.

      Actually that also holds true for most Mozilla users, but at least one has bugzilla to find where the demons lay.

    22. Re:This could be a disaster by TheAwfulTruth · · Score: 3, Interesting

      And what makes you think that if AOL 8 becomes the dominant broswer that the coin won't just flip and people start using AOL 8 extensens that AOL is SURE to install? Steve Case doesn't care shit for the internet. AOL IS THE INTERNET as far as he's concerened. He will take mozilla and make it as proprietary as IE and more so. Extend the hell out of it and people will start ading those extensions to their websites. Then those of you using the vanilla Netscape or other browsers will be just as out of luck as the IE users...

      It will happen. Anyone not blinded by the OSS glare can see that coming a mile off. Netscape and Mozilla will irreparably fork as soon as AOL 8 is fully in place.

      --
      Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
    23. Re:This could be a disaster by hendridm · · Score: 2

      > when some manager of one of those broken sites sees the page-view numbers go down the drain (-34 million is bound to have some inpact

      You people keep talking as if the 'net will make some huge transition from IE to Mozilla over night when AOL 8 is released. As stated before, most users will probably not upgrade if what they have is working, and if and when they do upgrade, it will not be all at once...

    24. Re:This could be a disaster by moyix · · Score: 1

      Okay, everyone always says that Opera has the best gosh-darn CSS/HTML support they've ever seen, but in the pages I write (which I always check for HTML/CSS compliance), I've had nothing but problems. On my main page the background color of the top "Links" box doesn't show up, and in this simple HOWTO, Opera changes all my text to fixed-width after the first blockquote. Perhaps the version I'm using is just too old (Opera 5.0 for Linux - 20010510 Build 024), but I really don't see why everyone gushes about its compliance.

    25. Re:This could be a disaster by moyix · · Score: 1
      I've just tested it with the most recent linux beta (6.0 Beta 1), and while the main page does, in fact, render correctly, the HOWTO has a new problem: it fails to recognize the
       tags I put inside blockquotes. Let me note that *even Netscape 4* manages to do this correctly. It's improved, but it isn't the best, as far as I'm concerned.
    26. Re:This could be a disaster by Troed · · Score: 0
      Why don't you try 6.0beta for Linux or 6.01 (or 6.02beta) for Windows then?


      ...

    27. Re:This could be a disaster by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      It's well known that Opera isn't really good at Javascript.

      Maybe, just maybe you should try out the browser in question before you start spewing FUD. In case you didn't notice, it's Gecko (aka Mozilla) and not Opera.

      I use Konqueror all the time and Mozilla as a fallback.

      Maybe I find 3 or 4 sites per year (of daily use) that don't work in neither browser, but that's about it.

      And usually those sites are targeted for the eyecandy-loving AOL crowd anyway, so they'll make sure it will work with Mozilla LONG BEFORE the beta-stage is completed and Mozilla is introduced into production use.

    28. Re:This could be a disaster by rseuhs · · Score: 2

      Nothing at all, he was just trolling.

    29. Re:This could be a disaster by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      Just for the fun of it I tried this site with Mozilla 0.9.8

      No problems, everything's fine.

      But this "AOL will fail switching to Mozilla because my site doesn't render well in Opera" - thread is becoming so incredibly stupid that I feel embarassed that I post to it.

      P.S.: Newer versions of Mozilla also support tabbed browsing, so you don't have to clutter your desktop with browser windows.

    30. Re:This could be a disaster by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      Well it could happen but I'd doubt it. Case is not nearly as evil as gates is. Time will tell whether you are right or I am.

      Also AOL has a long way to go before it becomes dominant. 34 million is a lot but it's a pittance when compared the hundreds of millions of IE users.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

  15. Commercial risk? Not really. by NetWurkGuy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The really dumb AOLers will stick with AOL and its browser because they don't know how to use anything else. The somewhat smarter ones will fire up IE, (so conveniently bundled into Windows for them by MS), as needed, but stick with AOL as their ISP -- no real loss for AOL either way.

    --
    "Obtuse Anger is that which is greater than Right Anger" - Lewis Carroll
  16. UMM... by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

    is the writer of the blurb dumb?

    it DOES equal 34 million new OSS users. AOL is Beta esting to REPLACE IE. no more IE for the AOL client means no more IE hits from AOL users.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    1. Re:UMM... by riggwelter · · Score: 1

      Not, it doesn't mean 34 million new OSS users, the point was that most AOL users don't upgrade to the latest version!

      --
      Listening for the sound of the coming rain...
    2. Re:UMM... by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      every AOL user I know certainly does.

      what, do you think that there are still many AOL5.0 users or somthing? or even 6.0

      sure it may take a year or so before they all upgrade, but they will upgrade, especialy since there is realy no reason not to.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    3. Re:UMM... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2

      No, it doesn't. AOL didn't get to be a huge company by being suicidal. Distributing AOL CDs with a gecko-based web browser instead of IE isn't suicidal, but not allowing AOL users to browse with IE would be.

      Some customers are going to switch to the new browser. Some are going to install it, then use IE anyways. Some will try to browse with a Win32 version of Lynx.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    4. Re:UMM... by numbsafari · · Score: 1

      No, you are dumb.... the point is that just because AOL releases a new version of their software doesn't mean that people upgrade immediately... that's why mentioned that the majority of his site's hits from AOL users are from people running AOL 5.0.... not everybody in the world is like a linux admin, who upgrades his kernel the moment linus finishes compiling it.

    5. Re:UMM... by athakur999 · · Score: 2

      I think the point the writer was making is that not all AOL uses will jump on this new version. As the blurb mentioned, most of his AOL hits were from people using 5.0, even though 7.0 is available these days.

      --
      "People that quote themselves in their signatures bother me" - athakur999
    6. Re:UMM... by Junta · · Score: 2

      He isn't dumb, he pointed out that most AOL users don't bother to upgrade, why do you think he referenced the fact that most AOL hits he sees are 5.0, which is not the newest version?

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    7. Re:UMM... by great+throwdini · · Score: 1

      He isn't dumb, he pointed out that most AOL users don't bother to upgrade[.]

      Let's cut the AOListas a little slack. The 'average' person on the Internet don't bother to upgrade unless helped, forced, or tricked.

  17. UK Natwest Slashdotters - do your bit! by mccalli · · Score: 5, Informative
    I have tried out the latest Mozilla browser, and could switch to it full time apart from a few things (poor streaming media being one).

    However, the major hold up is that my bank refuses to allow me to use it - the site became inaccessible to modern Netscape/Mozilla browsers curiously enough at about the same time the whole thing went .asp-based.

    UK Natwest-using Slashdotters - do your bit! I have, I've mailed their feedback section asking when a Netscape greater than 4.x will be supported, pointing out the new AOL announcement. I added Mozilla in too, but this is a mainstream place and hammering on at their Netscape support is likely to get you further.

    Query form is here and then select "Feedback" from the drop-down.

    Cheers,
    Ian

    1. Re:UK Natwest Slashdotters - do your bit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Screw Natwest and switch to Lloyds TSB. Their online banking website is excellent - it works just fine in every browser I've tried (including NS4.x) and doesn't rely on fancy JaveScript crap... it's not flashy or fancy, it just works well and is easy to use.

    2. Re:UK Natwest Slashdotters - do your bit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ian, you'd better go to Bugzilla on mozilla.org and post this as a bug in "Evangelizm" category.
      URL:
      http://www.mozilla.org/quality/help/bugzilla-hel pe r.html
      About 6 months ago I posted a lot of such cases and many of them are fixed now. The guys who work on Evangelizm guys know their job very well.
      Now they got one more excellent argument!

    3. Re:UK Natwest Slashdotters - do your bit! by bunratty · · Score: 2, Informative
      However, the major hold up is that my bank refuses to allow me to use it - the site became inaccessible to modern Netscape/Mozilla browsers curiously enough at about the same time the whole thing went .asp-based.
      You should enter these problems as Tech Evangelism bug reports. After you've done this, a Mozilla evangelist will contact the site maintainer and help them fix the site.
      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    4. Re:UK Natwest Slashdotters - do your bit! by mccalli · · Score: 2
      You should enter these problems as Tech Evangelism bug reports [mozilla.org].

      Excellent - had no idea about this category of bug. Consider it done.

      Cheers,
      Ian

    5. Re:UK Natwest Slashdotters - do your bit! by thaig · · Score: 1

      I also hate having to switch to IE for this and I have written to them too but not received any acknowledgement.

      One of the problems will be that they use activex for some parts of their authentication. Linux people like me will have trouble with that.

      They do cater for Mac users and I'm not sure how.

      Here's the feedback page if you want to make a complaint:

      Regards,

      Tim

      --
      This is all just my personal opinion.
  18. One question: by iceT · · Score: 4, Funny


    Could this mean a AOL client for LINUX?

    --
    -- You can't idiot-proof anything, because they're always coming out with better idiots.
    1. Re:One question: by slaughts · · Score: 2, Informative

      > Could this mean a AOL client for LINUX?

      No. As they have stated many times, there are far too many possible configurations of Linux for them to try and support.

    2. Re:One question: by sconest · · Score: 2

      From reading this, the answer is "no".

      --
      Guvf vf abg n EBG zrffntr
    3. Re:One question: by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Probably not. Linux is still a bit of a niche desktop market, and AOL doesn't see it as cost-effective to support.

      It's an economic thing called "marginal cost." To release a client for YipeeOS, they need to write the client, debug the client, test it on a wide variety of hardware/software configurations, and then distribute the new client alongside the AOL client for Windows (increasing burning time and making the install process ever so slightly more complicated). AOL's current policy is to provide free tech support to all customers, so they also have to write a knowledge database for that client, and train at least a few techs in using it.

      It was worthwhile for them to release a Macintosh client, and at some point the beancounters will have to admit that it's worthwhile to support Linux. At the moment, I think AOL's best option would be to release an unsupported Linux client (for download rather than CD-based distribution). I know there are people out there who would use it.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    4. Re:One question: by ethereal · · Score: 1

      Um, no there aren't. They just have to target 80386+ glibc2 systems and maybe the latest PPC machines. There aren't any proprietary software companies that support every single Linux configuration; it's silly to say that somehow AOL would have to. They could just check the system libraries, etc. before installing, and refuse to install if the system is deficient. Many proprietary products on Linux already do this - ClearCASE 4.1, for example. Heck, it's not like the latest AOL will work on Windows 3.1 any more, so why should we expect it to work on a libc4 or libc5 Linux system?

      A better reason is that the market for the easy-to-use Internet on Linux systems is currently vanishingly small. Maybe if there was a big push into Linux-based "web appliances", it would be worthwhile for AOL, but the last time they tried that it wasn't an astounding success.

      --

      Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

    5. Re:One question: by travail_jgd · · Score: 1
      Maybe...

      If you mean AOL for any distrobution in general, probably not. But I wouldn't rule out a custom AOL distro -- sold as part of an "AOL PC". It would make a lot of sense for them: a cheap computer (like the walmart.com $400 PC) combined with a free OS/applications and preloaded with AOL almost seems like a "can't miss" deal.

    6. Re:One question: by jilles · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not that simple and all application vendors are faced with this problem. Most vendors solve it by simply requiring red hat linux to be installed, reliefing them of the need to test with other distributions. Differences between distributions include version differences in among others kernel, compiler, libraries, x windows, desktop environment. Each of these may have version specific bugs that may or may not influence other packages. It's nearly impossible to test for all possible combinations. In addition, all distributions are updated frequently and typically have a lot of changes between versions. It's nearly impossible to keep up with that.

      Support also is difficult since there are so many distribution specific problems that may prevent a program from working as intended. Imagine a user calling and asking "I can't load any site with AOL 7 on linux" or a similarly vague question. A good heuristic to approaching such a client would be to figure out whether the network is configured correctly. On windows that is easy since all versions of windows have a control panel with network settings and there are only minor differences between the different versions. On linux each distribution allows multiple ways of configuring the network and there are likely to be significant differences between each distribution and even among different versions of the same distribution. Almost certainly a proper solution to any problems with the configuration will require editing text files and work on the commandline. Not a problem for advanced users but a nightmare for the average AOL helpdesk staff and AOL user.

      --

      Jilles
    7. Re:One question: by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 2
      It was worthwhile for them to release a Macintosh client, and at some point the beancounters will have to admit that it's worthwhile to support Linux.

      I believe that Macintosh had the original AOL client. Then at some point they made a Windows one, because Windows was becoming the "standard".

      My point is that there was never a time when AOL said, "well, we need to create a Macintosh client", because that client always existed. They just had to deem it worth maintaining(which they do at a slower pace than the windows version), and that's not as expensive.

      mark
      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
    8. Re:One question: by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2

      There was a DOS based client (V1 or V2). It was based on GEOS. I ran it on my 10MHz 286 back in the early '90s. Man that was slow... 1200Baud (not bps) modem, 10MHz 286, non-accelerated framebuffer graphics.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    9. Re:One question: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Differences between distributions include version differences in among others kernel, compiler, libraries, x windows, desktop environment.

      The kernel only needs to be 2.4.x. The libraries glibc2. The compiler gcc. All these are met by all "new" distributions (even the "old" slackware").

      The rest are inconsequential to what really amounts to an overglorified PPP client. There's no reason whatsoever that the client requires graphics -- for users who don't know what they're doing it should simply support dial-on-demand. Problems solved, graphics not included.

    10. Re:One question: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, correct me if I'm wrong, but what does mozilla have to do at all with Linux? Pretty much nothing, directly.

      That's an awful strange leap of logic. It's like asking why Subway is showing all these commercials featuring Jared -- could this mean they're going to buy up Jenny Craig?

      Absurd, really. I honestly can't figure out why the parent was modded up.

    11. Re:One question: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe that AOL actually started with funding from Apple. Not only was there a Mac client, there was an Apple II version (and a Commode 64?). Anyway, back in the 80s and early 90s, AOL had a huge userbase among Mac users, and almost no userbase on DOS.

    12. Re:One question: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are really talking about something else other than the AOL client then, which has been a GUI program with built-in services since day 1.

      Unless you are thinking you can somehow lure AOLs massive userbase back into your VT220-equipped cave.

    13. Re:One question: by Mr.+Fusion · · Score: 1
      It very well could. I've discussed this with an employee of AOL Time-Warner, and employees who receive e-mail accounts must check their email using the AOL client. Most of their workstations could use Linux very easily, resulting in more stability and productivity, but in my branch, every single one to my knowledge has some form of Windows installed on it. Why? Because the AOL client will not run on any other x86 platform. Sure, they can still check our mail through AOLMail, but then they can't save their e-mail or bookmark it for later. Netscape 6, although a great solution for both e-mail and gecko, cannot access the proprietary AOL content we normally can through the client.

      By releasing a Linux or Unix version of the AOL client, a transition to Linux would be more feasible. Plus, current employees would be less opposed to the change because they would not have to switch over to a foreign interface. (Face it, although there are some great advances in Gnome and KDE, the average post-Windows user is still going to look for the exact same icons on the start menu and the taskbar.) Microsoft would have a fit, but then again, they throw a tantrum if you've activated WinXP too many times.

      Of course that's just my opinion, I could be wrong.

    14. Re:One question: by mebob · · Score: 1

      Didn't something like that get leaked not to long ago ...Called Gamera SD story here granted it wasn't intended for direct use by the end user on just any linux install... but for a linux based AOL box. It looks like AOL is finally making some smart changes. I'm not one of those relentless anti MS people, but the sound of a linux based based PC for AOL users dosn't sound too bad..

      --
      =1000101
    15. Re:One question: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Day 1 was early 80s on an Apple II. GUI clients didn't exist.

    16. Re:One question: by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      Each of these may have version specific bugs that may or may not influence other packages. It's nearly impossible to test for all possible combinations.

      Oh, come on, this is like saying "each PC has components from so many different vendors it's impossible to test all possible combinations."

      A standard X11-app will work on almost any Linux-system.

    17. Re:One question: by jilles · · Score: 2

      There's no such thing as a standard X application other than applications that only require an X server (almost any X application requires more than just that). That's the whole problem: some applications require kde 1.2 others absolutely need kde 2.x others require neither but need Gnome 1.2 or Gnome 1.4. There's no linux distribution being shipped today that supports all four of these. so any requirement with regards to just these four desktop environments you make already limits the amount of linux distributions you can target with your application. Gnome 2.0 and KDE 3.0 are around the corner and in a year there will be two additional desktop environments to take into account.

      --

      Jilles
  19. Capital One by Neon+Spiral+Injector · · Score: 1

    They still haven't fixed their site?

    I cancled my card because I could no longer make online payments after I dropped Communicator from my machine.

    1. Re:Capital One by cswiii · · Score: 1

      I'm about this close [==] to doing that myself.

    2. Re:Capital One by bunratty · · Score: 1

      According to Tech Evangelism bug 89853, this problem hasn't been fixed yet. From reading the bug report, it does look like they're trying to solve the problem. Probably the prospect of AOL using Gecko will motivate them some more!

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  20. More money wont help by HanzoSan · · Score: 2, Interesting



    Considering Microsoft most likely spent double the money and took twice as long to get IE6 to the level that its at. Lets see, 1,2,3,4,5,6,7 years. Mozilla 1,2,3,4 years.

    4 years vs 7 years, Mozilla did in 4 years what took Microsoft 7 years without the hundreds of millions of dollars Microsoft most likely put into IE.

    So now that AOL is fully backing Mozilla, if Mozilla were to get hundreds of millions of dollars in funding (which at this point its the best so why bother?) It wouldnt speed up development because Mozilla is pretty much the best.

    Whats left to develop? All AOL can/should do is make the code 100 percent bug free, optimize everything, perhaps improve the lame XUL or replace it with native interfaces for Windows, Linux and so on. Now that the money is availible theres no need to use slow as hell XUL.

    Last the Mozilla team can make sure their browser supports ALL the standards and has the fastest rendering engine, Mozilla 2.0 can improve, but with a strong bug free very well written base, IE is going to be left in the dust no matter how much money they try to spend to fix bugs in their poorly designed and badly written IE.

    IE is horribly designed, its worse than netscape, its been patched over and over and over year after year until it became good, also its been intergrated into windows itself so it doesnt seem bloated.

    I think this is the end of days for IE.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:More money wont help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      > I think this is the end of days for IE.

      Not with 100's of millions of users not knowing what Mozilla is.

      Not with IE being intregrated to Windows.

      Not with future development of IE (mozilla have tabs? hah, we'll put it in too).

      IE is still supported by a lot more sites..

      Former Netscape 4.x users won't forget easily how bad ns 4.x was.

    2. Re:More money wont help by kawika · · Score: 2

      > Whats left to develop? All AOL can/should
      > do is make the code 100 percent bug free,
      > optimize everything, ...

      How can a post have a line like this in it and not be rated "Funny"? Come on guys, we're talking AOL here!

    3. Re:More money wont help by HanzoSan · · Score: 2



      Alot of opinion and no fact. Why dont you try saying facts.

      Face it, not everyone likes IE better than Netscape 4x, I didnt, which is why i always used it in the first place.

      People who switched to IE, did so because when you get windows98, IE is just there, theres no reason to go download netscape 4x because 4x isnt really that much better.

      You act like Netscape wasnt even in the same league and i disagree.

      Mozilla is better than IE, People dont use whats better, they use whats there.

      AOL will put Mozilla on about half of all the Desktops in the USA, and thats going to really give IE competition because word of mouth will spread it like it spread AIM.

      --
      If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  21. hypocrisy by defunc · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    it just hurts my eyes to see the hypocrisy that exists here about AOL. just because AOL is using Gecko makes them suddenly lose the propriety behemoth that they are. i wonder what would have been the reaction should it have been Microsoft who had decided to use Gecko.

    --
    .defuncrc
    1. Re:hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i wonder what would have been the reaction should it have been Microsoft who had decided to use Gecko.

      A large number of open-source zealot suicides maybe ;)

    2. Re:hypocrisy by Salsaman · · Score: 2
      "i wonder what would have been the reaction should it have been Microsoft who had decided to use Gecko"

      We would probably have said "Great, Microsoft are finally following open standards."

      But that is not likely to happen, ever, even though MS (or anyone) is perfectly free to use the Gecko codebase.

    3. Re:hypocrisy by psamuels · · Score: 1
      i wonder what would have been the reaction should it have been Microsoft who had decided to use Gecko.

      I just think it would be hella cool to see a Microsoft CAB file containing "COPYING" and/or "COPYING.LIB". (:

      --
      "How can you claim that you are anti-crack, while still writing a window manager?" — Metacity README
    4. Re:hypocrisy by roca · · Score: 2

      No matter how evil AOL is, it's hard for them to abuse Mozilla. Mozilla is open source. Mozilla is committed to supporting W3C standards, and there are a number of high-profile non-Netscape contributors committed to keeping it that way.

      Even if you hate AOL so much that you won't even download your own Mozilla source and build it, this is still good news for you. If AOL does start using Gecko, it would be the BEST NEWS EVER for Konqueror and Opera. A lot of broken Web sites would need to clean up their act, which helps everyone who want to see standards compliant sites.

    5. Re:hypocrisy by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2

      There would have been dancing in the streets of Slashopolis. I would have run through the streets in a state of undress, shouting wild shouts of exultation and blinding unwary bystanders.

      Yes, AOL is a huge behemoth, but in this case not a proprietary one. If I grok Mozilla rightly, the Gecko engine is what decides how to display html/xml. Since it follows the standards better than IE, it will lead to pressure for a more standard-compliant web. Had Microsoft also adopted Gecko, it would have led to the same pressures.

      Of course, Microsoft would never actually do that, because they'd have a tough time spinning the implication that their technology was inferior to a competitor's. Also, the IE rendering engine is supposedly too inte-muh-grated to be ripped out of the OS like that.

      Finally, the fact is that Gecko is open source, which means that anyone, anytime, can fork the code and create a competitive new browser. This leads to competition in the marketplace, which leads to goodness all around.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    6. Re:hypocrisy by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      Please understand that this benefits both AOL and users of alternative browsers/software. AOL get a browser they have full control over and can do more with. People who support open standards get a giant company on their side.

      There is no hypocrisy. People aren't cheering over AOL, but over Gecko being put to good use, and actually making a difference!

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    7. Re:hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you know they dont?
      :)

    8. Re:hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      would you fucking slashdot niggers stop calling everything you don't like "proprietary"? And if you have to, can you learn how to spell it? And if you accuse people of hypocrisy, can you at least point the hypocrisy out?

      how did this shit parent get modded up? more fucking slashdot niggers.

    9. Re:hypocrisy by j7953 · · Score: 2

      Huh? There is no hypocrisy. AOL is regularly bashed for trying to build a closed-off network, seperated from "the real internet." They're bashed for not using a standard dial-in procedure, forcing everyone to log on using there software and making use of AOL impossible on systems not officially supported by AOL. They're also criticized for not using an open email system, and lots of other things.

      Using a standards-compliant, free browser is, however, not a bad thing.

      In fact, criticizing AOL for using Mozilla would be hypocritical. You can't bash them for not using open standards and then, when they eventually do, criticize them for doing so.

      Also note that it doesn't mean that everyone loves AOL now. The above points (non-standard dialin etc.) are still valid, but why shouldn't people applaud when they make a first step towards being more open? Personally, I still don't like AOL, but this doesn't mean I dislike every single decision they make.

      --
      Sig (appended to the end of comments I post, 54 chars)
  22. Slashdot Code of Conduct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    1) Anything Microsoft does is BAD.
    2) AOL users are all morons.
    3) If AOL or its users do something that goes against Microsoft, then they're suddenly GOOD.
    4) Be nice to Junis

    1. Re:Slashdot Code of Conduct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "AOL users are all morons."

      Not all of them. Just most.

    2. Re:Slashdot Code of Conduct by SilentReproach · · Score: 1
      It's sad but true. I must confess that in the past, when an AOL user has complained about a problem with one of my web pages or web apps, I respond with a hearty, dogbertian choice of:

      a) that's because AOL sucks
      b) upgrade to 6.0 or 7.0 and see if it goes away

      Now, when someone calls and says that they have the newest AOL/Gecko implementation, I'll likely sit erect in my chair and try to think of a way to make my stuff work with AOL.

      That's right, call it elitism, slashdotism or what you like. It's embarassing when I put it that way, so I prefer to call it defending the digital free world from Microsoft's Evil, which probably has some merit.

      What more can I say, Mozilla appears that it's about to burst into the mainstream, and it will receive from me any support I can offer. I love the improved rendering and stability, and now Mozilla tabbed browsing is here and kicking butt! Now, can we just have a button like Opera to open a fresh tab ? Really, if you've used Opera for a while you know why this is cool.

      --
      Religion is the opium of the people. Evolution is the opium of scientists.
    3. Re:Slashdot Code of Conduct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      can we just have a button like Opera to open a fresh tab

      That's what CNTRL-N is for. It's been there all along. Not tabbed, but same concept.

    4. Re:Slashdot Code of Conduct by qurk · · Score: 1

      Ctrl - t for a new tab.

  23. At least by anpe · · Score: 2

    AOL users will be able to surf slashdot.org without suffering from widening pages :-)

  24. No IE until version 3.0 ? you missed something. by Quazion · · Score: 2

    if you install Windows NT 4 with service pack 3, which i still have floating around in sealed packs then you would have noticed that it include's a Internet Explorer version 2.x with which you cant connect to neither www.microsoft.com or windowsupdate.microsoft.com to upgrade it to a later version you will first have to install some new version of IE from somewhere have fun ;), the reason you cant connect is that you get some ASP error, although i dont understand that cause its server side not ?

    If people force me to use windows, then please let it be NT 4.0 its the best windows around if you ask me.

    Quazion.

    1. Re:No IE until version 3.0 ? you missed something. by einer · · Score: 1

      I remember this. If you didn't have another browser on a disk you were almost hosed. Netscape.com worked fine, so you had to d/l Navigator and then use Navigator to d/l IE5. Is this an example of irony?

      Andrew

    2. Re:No IE until version 3.0 ? you missed something. by Quazion · · Score: 2

      I went over this with a guy from work, and he said installing service pack 6a would install atleast 3a or plus (maybe 4 or something) so you could download a new version.

      But yes this is an example of irony. i love it! =D

  25. I'm glad the janitors believe that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The whole subscription thing is disturbing, as the Editors stand by the fact that there is no financial difference to them whether a user subscribes or not. They still receive the same money, either from ad-views or subscription.

    There makes a HUGE difference to them if people subscribe or not, since many people block out the ads (I encourage everyone to do so). I haven't seen a /. ad in weeks.

  26. And you still have a job? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I made a rule awhile ago. "Employees/users can only surf the web with Netscape."

    Wow. Your company's management is even more stupid than you are!

    1. Re:And you still have a job? by klosskorban · · Score: 1

      Well since I switched them off of IE we haven't had a single Porn Exploit!!! There aren't any buffer overflows running commands on our system. I think the Stupid person uses an unsecure OS (M$) and then surfs the web with their file manager. Also using Netscape now will make the switch to Linux desktops in the future go smoother, users hate change! Next move switch them to StarOffice 6 (when its done).I'm taking it one step at a time.

      --
      Need help finding the flow? http://www.myspace.com/naturalismandbalance
    2. Re:And you still have a job? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words you will be out of a job soon. Nothing you've said has anything to do with Netscape Vs IE. It has to do with good network management. Getting people to use inferior software to fit your personal philosophical adgenda is downright wrong. Don't you dare come looking for a job at my company when you get fired...

    3. Re:And you still have a job? by klosskorban · · Score: 1

      If only you could see where I work. When I got here there were 150 user running Windows98 and some NT 4.0 servers slowly dying a painful death. I mean MSSQL, Exchange, IIS It was a mess! I was hired to "FIX" the Company. They wanted Top Technology at the lowest cost. Since I'm a lot more familiar and comfortable with Linux, it was an option. Given the Cost, Stability, and Security, it was the logical choice for the servers. (You can't argue that logic) All the Desktops run 98 and office 97, Holly Hell do they crash a lot. But what choice is there for a stable Corporate desktop. NT? (old, insecure, unstable, and slow), 2000? (not new, expensive, insecure, still unstable but better, still slow ), XP? (Do I even Have to go there? "Where would you like your cartoons today", and $$$$$EXPENCIVE$$$$$$ ). Linux? (best desktop OS ever but, not enough support for business apps yet, Crystal Reports type stuff). So the best choice is to wait a year and switch to Linux when corporate America is a little more ready. In the meantime I'm getting them off the M$ centric environment. But I can argue with you because you think that if its not M$ then its bad for business. You know what's bad for business, "Spending $800 per desktop to do what my computer at home does better for free!!"

      --
      Need help finding the flow? http://www.myspace.com/naturalismandbalance
  27. This Will Show Who Really Has The Power by north.coaster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If AOL really does switch browsers, then some interestings may happen that will show us who really has the power to control the Internet. The key issue is whether or not the owners of the non-conforming web sites will fix their sites. If they do, then that would prove that Microsoft does control the net (yet). On the other hand, if the owners of non-conforming sites do not fix their pages, then that proves Microsoft is already in defacto control.

    Now some readers are probably dismissing this as too simplistic:

    Can AOL really change the net? You gotta be kidding! It's not that simple!

    I'm not kidding. I think that it really does come down to AOL vs. MS. The Internet is driven by content, and if a abrupt change by one company (AOL) can reverse the non-conformance trend that Microsoft has been pushing for several years, then that will illustrate just how influencial AOL (by way of it's web brower) can be.

    Of course, if AOL's current test is just a bluff to try to improve their business position with Microsoft, then that will prove that MS is already in control.

    And that would mean that the sucess of .NET is almost certain.

    /Don

    1. Re:This Will Show Who Really Has The Power by j7953 · · Score: 2
      the non-conformance trend that Microsoft has been pushing for several years

      Microsoft is not pushing for non-compliance. Granted, they don't discourage it, but the single reason why my own website (and, I suspect, lots of other sites) is not HTML-compliant is the hundreds of bugs that Netscape Navigator 4.x has.

      I have a version of my web site that is fully HTML 4 Strict compliant and doesn't even use tables for layout, but I won't publish it yet due to the CSS bugs of Navigator 4. When you want to be standards compliant and Navigator 4 compliant, you can chose between no design (i.e. no style sheet for Navigator) or no standards.

      I suspect that as soon as the market share of Mozilla/Netscape 6 rises considerably, many web sites will become more standards compliant. Though of course this won't stop the people who really push for non-compliance: marketing departments who don't understand the media and demand pixel-precise layout.

      --
      Sig (appended to the end of comments I post, 54 chars)
  28. Hmmm AOLInstant Browser by Carnivore24 · · Score: 0

    I know it probably will never happen(because AOL has blocked Trillian from what Ive heard) but I wouldnt mind seeing AOL develop something like their Messenger but a browser. You could select any type of browser you want whether it be Mozilla, Netscape, Opera, etc...from within the browser itself using the AOL software to connect it all together.

  29. Not when using the mail client by mgkimsal2 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    I don't think the latest mozillas have crashed on me when browsing, but when I have the mail client up, it crashes about once per day. I have a mix of IE6 and Mozilla and Opera in day to day use, and Opera is far more "stable and fast" than either of the other two, but less 'compatible' (only slightly ime).

  30. And I read... by inerte · · Score: 1

    AOL Beta Testing Gentoo

    And I thought...

    OH MY GOD THE DAY HAS COME.

  31. AOL RULES ! MAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am glad to see that AOL is finally catching up with the rest of the world. IE 5.5 and IE 6.0 are the biggest pieces of crap to code for...

    1. Re:AOL RULES ! MAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you insane?

  32. Re:major - though seemingly inevitible - win and g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Umm, what in your opinion did PRESIDENT BUSH (NOT "dubya") do so wrong nuclear-wise?

    Do know that that the nuclear readiness report is required to be written every six years? Do you even bat an eye knowing that one was written during President Clinton's time? Even if Gore had won, this report would still have happened, with the same content.

    Battlefield nuclear weapons have been around for 50 years.

    So where's the beef?

  33. alright! by anal-johnson · · Score: 0, Funny

    now AOL can be even slower!

  34. But is it Mozilla? by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Mozilla uses the Gecko rendering engine, but Gecko doesn't comprise the whole of the Mozilla code. Heck, Gecko is even used in projects unrelated to web browsing, like Komodo. Can anyone tell us how closely the beta-tested browser actually resembles Mozilla/Netscape?

    --

    You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    1. Re:But is it Mozilla? by sconest · · Score: 2

      If you're talking about Komodo from ActiveState, then they're using XUL (I don't think Gecko is used IMO)

      --
      Guvf vf abg n EBG zrffntr
    2. Re:But is it Mozilla? by DrXym · · Score: 2

      AOL will likely use a subset of Mozilla similar to the existing embedding distributions that go out nightly in ftp.mozilla.org. That means it will have run with a subset of DLLs and a subset of the chrome.

    3. Re:But is it Mozilla? by questionlp · · Score: 1
      According to ActiveState's More Information page on Komodo:
      Komodo is built on the Mozilla platform. Portions of Komodo were created using source code governed by the Netscape Public License (NPL) and the Mozilla Public License (MPL). The source code for the portions of Netscape 6 governed by the NPL and MPL is available from under those licenses. more info

      Komodo 1.2 was built off the Mozilla 0.9.5 branch as of 16 October 2001. Mozilla patches for each Komodo release are available from the ActiveState download server.

      Unfortunately, they don't say exactly which portions of Mozilla they use.
    4. Re:But is it Mozilla? by roca · · Score: 2

      XUL is implemented by Gecko.

  35. How's the Mozilla footprint these days? by ChrisWong · · Score: 0, Troll
    Mozilla is the bulkiest, slowest browser available for Linux. I mean that not as a troll, but as a fact from which I am asking this question. I check it out every few months, but have been disappointed with its bulk. Can anyone tell me what the trend is with the memory footprint? Are there measurable improvements?

    There are possible replies that have nothing to do with my question, but will probably come up anyway:
    • "The rendering speed is great!": yeah, but the UI is a slug.
    • "Galeon bla bla bla ...": I am not talking about Galeon, but Mozilla. Besides, Galeon's footprint is not that small either.
    • "Use a lightweight browser ...": I already have links, lynx, Konq, Opera and Dillo. This is a question about Mozilla.
    • "Get a REAL computer! Memory is cheap!": let me call attention to my PayPal account, where you can deposit funds for my next computer purchase. Seriously, even on a fast PC a slow browser will still look bad relative to its competitors.
    • "Standards compliant, open source, bla bla": yeah, but it's still a dog.
    1. Re:How's the Mozilla footprint these days? by FredGray · · Score: 2
      Mozilla is the bulkiest, slowest browser available for Linux.

      It runs acceptably on my laptop, which is a Pentium/MMX 233 MHz with 128 MB of memory. I think that's on the low end of what most people would call a "computer" these days. It takes 22 MB to start it up and load the slashdot front page. The only issue is that it takes 20 to 30 seconds to start up. I'm running version 0.9.9 as packaged for Debian unstable.

      Of course, I still prefer Konqueror. :-)

    2. Re:How's the Mozilla footprint these days? by ChrisWong · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't call a half minute startup time "acceptable". While I have 128MB of RAM too, I resent having to surrender so much of it to a single program. With other big apps (KDE, XEmacs, Java) competing, I can ill afford another bulky app. I would rather use Konqueror or Opera. I see some indication of progress on the footprint front. Still, there is no indication that it will relinquish its title of "bulkiest and slowest". So regardless of the machine I use, it will continue to compare poorly to its competition on that score.

  36. here are the features that aol will add.... by zerogravitas · · Score: 2, Informative

    http://mozilla.org/xpapps/MachVPlan/MachV_NavPlan. html

    Thank god they are fixing the lame-ass bookmark organizer.

    --
    Have a NICE day.
  37. One Answer by Captain+Large+Face · · Score: 1

    I have enough Linux CDs around my house without subscribing to AOL.. Then again, I suppose I could sharpen up the edges and use them like Shuriken to protect my Laptop.

  38. Re:Plea for help from the masses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's the bug? Your post looks fine except the first paragraph has a period in front of every word.

  39. Re:major - though seemingly inevitible - win and g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't waste your time. People like him are too stupid to understand. There mindset is that if Bush does something, it must be bad.

  40. Re:Plea for help from the masses by lux55 · · Score: 1

    Wow I just opened /. in IE after wondering what everyone was talking about with this widening thing.

    With Moz so sweet now, I open IE very seldom, and only to check if some site I made in Moz works in IE. I can't wait for the calls at work from our clients who use AOL wondering why their sites are broken now. I'll walk over to the HTML dudes and say "I told you so" with a grin.

  41. There already is an ActiveX control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    If you mean an ActiveX control by which you can embed Gecko in Win32 apps, there already is one.


    It even uses IE API making it a drop in replacement for the IE control.

  42. Re:major - though seemingly inevitible - win and g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PRESIDENT BUSH (NOT "dubya")

    Presidents are elected. Dictators are appointed.

    So, what did Dictator Bush do wrong? He instructed the military to make plans for nuking our allies. He suggested that nuclear first strikes would be OK.

  43. Doing nothing will be a disaster by gotan · · Score: 2

    A lot of sites that AOL-users visit are either owned by AOL or by one of their business partners. AOL is actively working to get those sites W3C compliant before the switch. Also AOL is switching 30% of userbase over to mozilla. If they manage to get the point through to their customers, that it's not their browser, but the website thet's broken, that means Admins of "IE only" sites will get a lot more complaints and a lot less (like 30%) traffic. That turns the tables, now it's the webmasters of such sites that have a problem, not the occasional geek browsing with mozilla.

    Also i find it notable, that you didn't make an attempt at getting your site standards compliant when you fond out it won't render properly with other browsers (at least you don't say so). You prefer to switch back to IE (cluttering your screen with IE-Windows again) and apparently try to convince the rest of the world to do likewise.

    Your argumentation ultimately leads to the conclusion, to accept the Microsoft way and forever follow in Microsofts footsteps (either by just using IE, or by following their crappy implementation of html). The longterm perspective of this is to let Microsoft have their way. But that is not a good idea, because AOL realized, that the Microsoft Way may well lead to their own ruin (when MS decides to use their leverage to extend into the provider-business). So AOL better does something about it while they can.

    --
    "By the way if anyone here is in advertising or marketing... kill yourself." -- Bill Hicks
  44. Is this what you're looking for? by Malc · · Score: 1

    http://www.iol.ie/~locka/mozilla/mozilla.htm

    It can only handle the simplist of ActiveX controls, and there's no scripting. If you want that, get coding!

    1. Re:Is this what you're looking for? by sbrown123 · · Score: 1

      No scripting? Well what will the script kiddies do? Dosent anyone think of the script kiddies? They will be deprived of their virus writing capabilities for browsers with this kind of change!!

  45. It's here.. by StarGryphon · · Score: 1

    And the beast shall come forth surrounded by a roiling cloud of vengeance. The house of the unbelievers shall be razed and they shall be scorched to the earth. Their tags shall blink until
    the end of days.- Mozilla, 12:10

  46. nuclear-wise by dpilot · · Score: 1

    No, I don't have the opinion that everything Dubya (Were you so strict about Clinton-isms? I wasn't.) does is wrong. In fact, he may be our last, best hope against Hollings. (Senate Dem.)

    Certainly a nuclear review can be required every six years, that's not the issue. The issue is coming up with downscaled uses of nuclear bombs. The issue is battlefield nukes. The issue is the resurrection of the neutron bomb. Who wrote the review, and who drove the content?

    These things make nuclear war feasible. For over half a century nuclear war was so ugly as to be unfeasible. When Carter discontinued the neutron bomb, I disagreed with him. I have since changed my opinion.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    1. Re:nuclear-wise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are so special about tactical nuclear weapons, aside from the scary name? If I had a nuclear hand grenade, equivalent to a stick of dynamite, and lobbed it at some cave entrance in Afghanistan, would that start a nuclear war? I hardly think so. In fact, a large portion of the current American weapon package is already nuclear, especially in the Navy. (Look up ASROC, a nuclear powered depth charge for use against submarines.)

      50 years. We've had downscaled nuclear weapons for at least that long. And if their use would have saved American lives, I for one have no problem with it. There is a huge difference between tactical and strategic nuclear weapons. Tactical versions are really no different from a conventional air-dropped iron bomb, or an artillery shell. Strategic weapons are for deterrence only. There's a reason why we haven't had an all out nuclear exchange, and never will. Nobody wins. Yes, it's a stupid system, but it's the only one feasible, until everyone eliminates their stock piles, or better yet, stops fighting period.

      The nuclear readiness review is not a battle plan in any real sense. War games, scenarios, that's all. Nobody is planning to follow it tomorrow, or even next week, in an unprovoked nuclear strike. Also, President Bush has never questioned the standing no-first-use policy of the American military.

      The Department of Defense wrote the review. They have the nukes, and are the citizien-soldiers charged with using them. They better damn well have a plan if the need aries to use them. Who should have written it? Congress? SCOTUS? Perhaps the Bush administration, as in all likelihood they would order any attack. I don't understand your views here.

    2. Re:nuclear-wise by PD · · Score: 2

      Would that start a nuclear war? Well, yes.

      And what would be the point of a nuclear hand grenade, with a yield of .5 lb TNT? Real TNT is a far superior material for that: it's more reliable, it's less delicate, it requires less maintenance, theft isn't an international issue, it isn't radioactive, and it leaves little pollution.

      Even for the purposes of bunker busting, I can't see using nukes. Even if we have to keep soldiers stationed outside bunkers for a year, it beats using a nuke on it.

    3. Re:nuclear-wise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what if the use of bunker busting nukes invite a tactical nuclear exchange above ground killing tens of thousands of US personnel and hundreds of thousands of worthless civilians. Were you planning on living forever or something, you thumbsucking liberal sissy? So what if tactical exchanges prompt strategic nuclear powers to go for a first strike because they can't know if one is coming for them or not. Just how much longer do you think the human race can go before it needs radical mutations, you treehugging seed eater?

      Aww let him have his nookular handgrenade. Sooner he uses it the sooner we're rid of him. How else can he defend his second Amendment right to bear a fullauto 7.62mm assault rifle if he doesn't have his fucking nookular handgrenade!
      ???!!!???

      If you think about it, it's a lot like Mississippi.
      If they secede again, why on earth would you want to stop them? Give them the door and a fucking bonus for leaving -as long as they promise to stay gone.

    4. Re:nuclear-wise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So long as they take California with them. And Florida, and New York too. Aww, let's just throw in Michigan while we're at it.

      You don't like my country, there's the fucking door!

  47. Mozilla with Capital One by FrostedWheat · · Score: 1

    Maybe Capital One would quit being the lone holdout of my creditors that don't support Mozilla.

    Huh? I've been happly using Opera (Linux/Windows, from version 3) and Mozilla (again, both Linux and Windows) since 0.9.4 with Capital One's website. Works perfectly.

    1. Re:Mozilla with Capital One by G00F · · Score: 1

      ah, I just checked with Opera 6.1/Mozilla 0.9.8 and got redirected to this:
      https://service.capitalone.com/non_complian t.html

      Do you have your browser set to report as IE ? That defeats the purpose and causes more harm than good. Makes it look like more people are IE then there really is.

      --
      The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive
    2. Re:Mozilla with Capital One by cswiii · · Score: 2

      I'd be interested in knowing how you managed this -- even by changing my browser information in prefs.js, it still doesn't let me in.

    3. Re:Mozilla with Capital One by FrostedWheat · · Score: 1

      Ahh true... I just changed the browser's ID and checked, got that page.

      And your correct, it does do more harm than good this way.

  48. AOL might "save face" with this.... by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2

    I think what will happen with the AOL 8.0 client due later this year is that when you install the client, it should give you the option of keeping Internet Explorer or installing the Mozilla-based browser for Windows 98/98SE/ME/2000/XP users.

    Having two big web browsers installed and trying to have the system decide which is the default may cause some compatibility problems, and I don't think end users--especially the AOL crowd--wants to deal with THAT! (I think people forget that AOL users are often not as computer-savvy as the normal readers of Slashdot.)

  49. whoopie... by mediajunkie · · Score: 1

    As a developer that already (roughly) conforms to standards enough to create a decent user experience, personally I could care less about what browser what company uses... if we're on the topic of AOL conforming to standards, I'd much rather see them fix their "evil proxies" and "email" issues than trying to appease the open source community or trying to save a buck by avoiding msoft licensing fees.

  50. Can't find the download... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sitting here at my girlfriend's computer which we've setup on the coffee table, reading Slashdot. Headline: "AOL 7.0 Gecko Beta".

    Cool!

    Will logon to AOL (girlfriend is loyal AOL user since 1994) and check it out. I logon, give requisite information to get into beta program, and then get "AOL 7.0 Refresh II" option. From reading the docs, I conclude that this is just a bug-fix release for the standard IE client. No mention whatsoever of Gecko or Netscape or Mozilla.

    What's the deal? Has anyone actually downloaded this new client?

  51. Re:major - though seemingly inevitible - win and g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sadly, another zealotous moron who can't count. Gotta love Slashdot.

  52. It will happen... by inkless1 · · Score: 1

    Several years and a couple jobs ago I fought against our web dev teams moving to a completely IE-centric development for intranet/internet. It appeared we were moving from NS over to IE and everyone wanted to use every flash-bang thing MS was willing to throw at them. What I was trying to point out was that we had just made one browser change, and definately could again.

    Since then, MS has made it's business "moves" into the browser market even stronger and won the AOL deal. I stopped browsing the HTML and DHTML newsgroups because I got tired of these newbie web monkeys who defended only writing for the latest version of IE because "it was the defacto standard".

    One of the points I brought up was that AOL controls such a huge percentage of the web browsing demographic that if they ever changed their browser again, the "standard" would hardly a standard anymore.

    When AOL and Netscape got joined at the hip, I figured people would listen. Nope.

    Of course AOL will eventually move to Mozilla. They didn't buy the company just for a web portal. Case has never been particularly kind in his words to Microsoft (two companies that want to own everything, go figure they might not get along).

    MS isn't doing itself any favors with it's ridiculous implementation of the HTTP standards.

    Moz gets better with every build.

    I'm not saying it will be tomorrow...heck it might not even be later this year.

    But sometime, somewhere, some hackneyed developer is going to be rewriting his stupid IE-only javascript-enforced for submission because their AOL customers can't submit the form.

    Remind me to just post a "told you so" on the old newsgroups.

    inkly

  53. Serious software companies don't ship open source by Col.+Klink+(retired) · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I like this story. Jupiter Media Metrix analyst David Card (who?) doesn't believe they'll really ship it, since "serious software companies don't ship open source."

    This guy is apparently unaware of that AOL already relies on OSS like AOLserver.

    --

    -- Don't Tase me, bro!

  54. Re:Plea for help from the masses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fucking twit. Mozilla is slow and bug-ridden; Internet Explorer remaining the king of browsers for render times and load times on ALL machines (even lower-end).
    Shut the fuck up, you naive teenager.

  55. Re: Prove me wrong by eples · · Score: 2


    This certainly doesn't help standards, but when there is a large mob of people phoning up the tech support lines complaining that their favourite websites no longer work, AOL may start changing their mind.

    Or they can start complaining to the individual sites that their pages are non-standard - and the sites will adjust. They have before, and they will continue to do so.

    If you were in charge of the site's operation, would *you* want to handle a deluge of calls and e-mails from AOL users who are admittedly using a standards compliant browser to view your non-functional site? Do *you* want to put the embarassing text at the bottom of your homepage that reads "AOL Users - this site will not work for you" ?!

    eBay, Amazon, Yahoo? No. They'll adjust to comply to the standard.

    --
    I'm a 2000 man.
  56. Re: Prove me wrong by Mr_Silver · · Score: 2
    Or they can start complaining to the individual sites that their pages are non-standard - and the sites will adjust. They have before, and they will continue to do so.

    I think you're crediting too many people with some intelligence. The site works for their mate using one browser and doesn't for them using another.

    Tell me, what are they going to assume? That it's the site at fault or their browser? I'm reckoning that people will say to themselves "well, it works on my mates browser, therefore it can't be the site, must be my browser".

    Yes its wrong. But remember to these people HTML is four letters than doesn't mean very much.

    I have no doubt that eBay, Amazon and Yahoo will adjust. Actually, I don't think they will need to adjust because they're already compliant.

    I'm talking about the 80% of stuff out there that isn't mainstream, run by people because they have a passion about something, not because they are a paid up day-job web designer.

    --
    Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
  57. not to mention! by QuantumG · · Score: 2

    That 84% of statistics are made up on the spot.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  58. AOL and standards by aonaran · · Score: 1

    It's cool that they are MAYBE going to include a more standards complienat browser but when will AOL wake up and offer other standard internet services like SMTP servers?

  59. no, you are by Big+G · · Score: 2, Informative

    It take approximately 2 YEARS for 80% of users to upgrade to a new browser. So in March of 2004, there will still probably be 6.8 million AOL users with IE based clients.

  60. You'll be a Mozilla user by the end of the weekend by Tony+Shepps · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm just moved from IE to Opera. For the sole reason that I hate having 15 IE windows open.

    OBOY do I know what you mean, and that's exactly how I used to browse. I'm about to make your life a WHOLE lot easier.

    Go download Mozilla and install it. Go to Edit->Preferences. Double-click on Navigator. Click on Tabbed Browsing. Select "Load links in the background" and "Middle-click or control-click of links in a Web page". Also select any of the other boxes that you think you might be interesting. Click OK.

    Now go to any site you browse frequently. Use control-click or middle click to open new tabs in the background whilst your main site window does not change.

    After two minutes with this feature, you will not be able to live without it. Guaranteed.

  61. Don't fix it, editors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like the page-widening bug. According to Taco on that IRC thing they had regarding subscriptions, only a few hundred people at most browse at -1. So the fact that crapflooders, liars, and trolls (you are all three) whine and scream about their "hated" Slashdot presenting unreadable pages makes me happy. Why the hell should the maintainers accomodate idiots like you? I'm sure they're having a hearty laugh at your expense, you Internet-addicted loser.

    The solution to the "bug" is simple: go away and never come back. Then you won't be so disturbed by this dreadful editorial hypocrisy ever again. Or could it be that you (gasp) actually LIKE Slashdot?

  62. Look at it this way by G00F · · Score: 1

    Look at it this way, you will have a bunch of people using standard compliant browsers who are generaly thought of last, and even blocked from using websites! This will make using the web with all non IE browsers so much better. One standard, one code, any browser!

    While I do consider aol one of the major evils (even more because of tw) they do have lots of very smart and good people working for them. (btw, pretty much the entire IT dept is anti ms, its all sun and sgi's, and maybe linux too)

    btw, I posted that aol was doing this on more than one occation, and everyone here said ya right.

    --
    The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive
  63. Fixed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jamie has posted a message that the fix has been made and will go live on the next code refresh.

  64. on sites that don't support mozilla. by peterjm · · Score: 2

    I run junkbuster as my proxy server, and it has the neat feature of setting the User-Agent string. I've encountered a few sites that falsely claim to not support my browser (and would I please upgrade to something on a windows machine..), so I've taken to changing my ua string to "Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 5.01; Windows NT 5.0)".

    no complaints yet, except hotmail freaks out and displays a 2 inch textarea for message editing.

    1. Re:on sites that don't support mozilla. by Mammy-Nun · · Score: 1

      I've found this to be true as well.

      Opera lets you set the UA string to: Opera, Mozilla 3.0/4.76/5.0, and IE 5.0. All but a couple "Use one of these browser" sites I've surfed render fine under Opera 6.

      Not surprisingly, this doesn't work for registering a Passport account: "Microsoft .NET passport no longer supports your browser." not sure how its making this determination...

  65. There is room for new features by FooBarWidget · · Score: 1

    Look at Galeon: it's probably the best browser in the world (IMHO). It has way more features than both Mozilla and IE have. I especially like the advanced tabbed browsing (way better than Mozilla's).
    Now if Mozilla implements all features Galeon has, then I'd be really happy.
    Then they can really tell the public: "Mozilla is better than IE!".

  66. Details on AOL Browser versions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Not alot of people know about this web site, but it's damn handy for a bunch of reasons. I like to check it periodically to see the march toward newer browser versions, it gives you a really good window into how fast people at large are upgrading.

    Link

    It used to have AOL versions percentages as well, but they've reformatted the page to focus it purely on web browser versions. My recollection is that it takes about 12-18 months for a new AOL version to become the dominate version of AOL software used with about 10-15% of people who never upgrade.

  67. Re:Standard Web by mtnharo · · Score: 1

    While IE may be a "standard," it is only because sites made for IE work poorly, if at all, with other browsers. A standard, in the traditional sense, is one that any vendor can implement, such as the html, xml and other standards approved by the w3c. IE conforms to a MS-modified subset of those standards. Thus, sites using the MS version of the standards do not render properly in any other browser. If AOL does switch to Mozilla/Gecko, any sites that have IE-only html/javascript will be alienating a huge number of potential clients. The majority of these will rewrite their sites using w3c compliant code, thereby opening the doorway for true competition in the browser market, and ensuring that no one corporation can "own" the internet, as MS is attempting to do. AOL will not have this sort of ownership of the internet, since they will not control the standards, but merely be using pre-existing ones that are open for any developer to use.

  68. Re:Serious software companies don't ship open sour by ptrourke · · Score: 2

    I'm guess that Jupiter Media Metrix analyst David Card has never heard of Darwin.

  69. Re:hypocrisy wait for the other shoe... by TheAwfulTruth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I predict that when AOL controls the server AND client, they will take off into an AOL proprietary universe over the next few years. There wil then be the internet and there will be AOL. I mean it's practically that way now. But because they didn't own the browser in the past they had to stick with web standards and people could use other browsers to get to their network. As soon as AOL 8 is completely installed (Still a couple years at least for full conversion) there will be no reason to stick soley with standards any more. They will be a embracin' and a extendin' with the best of them...

    --
    Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
  70. That is one of the very reasons not to use IE by G00F · · Score: 1

    activeX is one of the reasons not to be using IE.

    Sure it has soem thigns that could be good in a very controled enviorment. But we are dealing with the internet.

    --
    The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive
    1. Re:That is one of the very reasons not to use IE by 1g$man · · Score: 1

      But the environment is very controlled. The user chooses what ActiveX controls to use on the system. They aren't automagically downloaded and installed.

      The same goes for Netscape plug-ins. They are in essence the same thing, except ActiveX controls are infinitely more usefull (a well-defined API which can be used by any application).

    2. Re:That is one of the very reasons not to use IE by essdodson · · Score: 1

      By the way it is called the Internet, not internet.

      --
      scott
  71. Re:Standard Web by fathed · · Score: 1

    This will not allow "true" competition in the browser market. You still have all of the underlying technology in the client OS, Microsoft's "enhancements" are specific to the most widely used desktop OS. Mozilla still does not support ActiveX.

    I understand that there are reasons for that, and we have the w3c to give us a specification, but if technology exists before the specification is complete that can make the web a more enjoyable and fullfilling, then piss off w3c, your standards don't please me.

    I do not want to re-write my site, and lose features because AOL decided they should do something with Netscape. How much did AOL buy Netscape for? Can't just waste the money.

    I don't think that AOL should be allowed to sue MS as long as they are using MS technology.

    --
    Intelligence is a matter of opinion.
  72. Opera works fine on the Captial One website by rudy_wayne · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Mozilla is nothing more than a slightly-less-crappy version of Netscape Communicator.

  73. Re:Standard Web by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On my site, you must run Windows, with IE 5.5 or greater, and have DirectX installed, if not, piss off.

    Let me guess... you don't make money with this site. If you do, your tune will change.

  74. Maybe why most AOL browser hits are version 5.0... by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1

    AOL's Mac client for Classic and X are both only at 5. Not to mention AOL 6 and 7 add nothing except an annoying interface change.

    --
    Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
  75. Why this is a good idea by AirLace · · Score: 2

    It seems not a single poster got what the parent post meant, so I'll give up my mod points to clarify what he means.

    Although I haven't used Microsoft Windows for a few years, I remember back when ActiveX came out it was primarily a replacement for "custom controls." It was only adapted for use on Webpages later, (thankfully) with limited success. The primary idea behind implementing Gecko as an ActiveX component would be that any cretinous (or otherwise, I guess) Visual Basic "coder" could drag-and-drop a Gecko component onto a form and embed an instant browser into their program. I guess it's a good idea.

    This has nothing do do with supporting ActiveX controls on a webpage within Gecko/Mozilla.

  76. Fill out your taxes online? by Craigory · · Score: 1

    Intuit (makers of Quicken) have a nice online tax filing system, but no support for linux browsers whatsoever. The site stops you with a list of supported browsers. They list Netscape 6.0 on Mac machines, so probably all they have to do is realize that they already support Mozilla/Galeon in Linux. You can file a complaint here.

  77. I don't think so by bbqBrain · · Score: 1

    AOL users do not make up the majority on the internet. Why would anyone develop a website with AOL-specific extensions that most web users couldn't even see? I agree that AOL encourages its customers to consider its service as equivalent to the interenet, but I doubt it's executives are dumb enough to believe that.

    I consider this a defensive move on AOL's part. AOL-TW is facing off against MSN, and both sides know it. (I heard from a reliable source that MS has posters in its buildings publicizing this conflict.) Anyway, it wouldn't be very smart for AOL to piss off MS and continue using IE as their browser. That certainly detracts from any credibility they may have had.

    --

    One of the reasons that I became a lawyer was to avoid ever having to hire one. -SPYvSPY
  78. Load times by Spy+Hunter · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Is anyone else out there having horrible performance with Mozilla on WinXP systems? If I use Mozilla's quick start option, when I load other programs WinXP always swaps Mozilla out to disk. Then when I try to bring Mozilla back up it takes LONGER to swap it all back in than it does to start in the first place! If I leave a mozilla window minimized, then run several other programs, then switch back to Mozilla, it freezes for something like 5-10 seconds while the hard drive crunches. Often WinXP brings up the "this program is not responding" dialog during this process.

    --
    main(c,r){for(r=32;r;) printf(++c>31?c=!r--,"\n":c<r?" ":~c&r?" `":" #");}
    1. Re:Load times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If I use Mozilla's quick start option, when I load other programs WinXP always swaps Mozilla out to disk. Then when I try to bring Mozilla back up it takes LONGER to swap it all back in than it does to start in the first place!

      Perhaps you should purchase some memory? Something like 256MB is barely enough for nice eXPerience. Mozilla shouldn't take more than 35MB even while using mail and javascript debugger.

  79. History Lessons (slightly OT) by ArhcAngel · · Score: 2, Informative

    After reading the posts on this topic I decided A little history lesson was needed to understand why AOL is doing this. WAY back in 1995 AOL approached Netscape and offered to design and support the Netscape portal netscape.com and in return AOL would use the Netscape browser in it's client software. Netscape laughed at them and said running a portal was easy and anybody could do it. Netscape WAS interested in getting their browser into the AOL client so they began negotiations. Meanwhile AOL decided to begin secretly negotiating with Microsoft to use IE. At the time IE was doing poorly and wasn't making much headway against Netscape so Microsoft rolled out the red carpet for AOL. They supplied API's tools and whatever else AOL wanted to make IE work with their client. Netscape finally came to an agreement with AOL to include AOL IM with the Netscape browser. The same day AOL announced their partnership with Microsoft to use IE in their client. This did not sit well with either MS nor Netscape. The inclusion of IE in the AOL client tipped the scales for IE and topled Netscapes browser dominance almost overnight. Netscape folds and gets bought by AOL. MS has a 5 year deal to have IE included in the AOL client (1995-2000). After the contract expires MS and AOL negotiate as to whether AOL will continue to use IE. MS, however, now has a new toy called MSN network and AOL doesn't like it at all. MS doesn't want to let AOL get installed automatically with every new copy of XP. They fight and argue and both go home angry. AOL decides that it is time to get a return on investment of Netscape. Netscape is almost ready and has been steadily improving the last year. BAM! AOL switches and now IE's share of the browser market drops over 30% BTW, AOL/Time Warner owns some of the biggest properties on or off the net. You don't think they will make sure those sites are compliant?

    --
    "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    1. Re:History Lessons (slightly OT) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One slant on the story that I've heard is that Netscape refused to produce an embeddable version of their browser for AOL, and instead insisted on popping up a new window with Netscape logos all over it.

      IE was already built to be embeddable, and you could eradicate MS's trademarks from the browser. Those technical reasons were just as important as the AOL icon included in every Windows install.

  80. You are a Tool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad Slashdot doesn't have a filter for those born yesterday. Perhaps just filtering out AOL users would work?

  81. Re:major - though seemingly inevitible - win and g by volkris · · Score: 1

    President Bush was elected.
    Read the news occasionally. There's more to the world than what appears on slashdot.

  82. Big Deal by hendridm · · Score: 1

    Neither does Mozilla's web site.

    1. Re:Big Deal by ftobin · · Score: 2

      Good point. However, in their defense, it is of some comfort to know that the site validates as HTML 4.01 Transitional if you mandate it be verified as such (they are missing the DOCTYPE on the page). On the other hand, the original site still doesn't validate even after selecting HTML 4.01 Transitional (the closest it possibly comes to).

  83. Re:major - though seemingly inevitible - win and g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's probably because, in general, that mindset is right.

  84. Re:major - though seemingly inevitible - win and g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, wasn't the vote something like five votes to four?

    He lost the US as a whole. He lost Florida, as the recounts prove, he one just one vote, and unfortunately for America, it was the one that mattered.

  85. Re:major - though seemingly inevitible - win and g by jrnchimera · · Score: 1

    Oh for crying out loud! GET OVER IT! Bush won the election for and square. He was not appointed - all the votes got counted. Too bad you whiny liberals can't seem to understand this. Also, recount after recount of the votes AFTER the election confirm that indeed, Bush won the election.

  86. HSBC works fine in Galeon by horza · · Score: 2

    Subject says it all. Natwest have always been the most inferior of UK banks, with minimal primitive services. I also recommend changing banks.

    Phillip.

  87. AOL's browser isn't their big software problem... by aquarian · · Score: 2

    AOL's biggest software problem isn't their browser. It's their crappy dialer and TCP/IP software!

    I'm glad to hear they've switched to Mozilla. It's a great hedge to IE dominance, and a boost to standards-compliance.

    What frustrates AOL users the most is flaky network connections, and mangled network settings. Their regular dialup software is bad enough, but what they give you for DSL is really the pits. If they paid a little more attention to this they'd have a much happier user base, and save a lot of money on tech support calls.

  88. MSN.com by borgquite · · Score: 1

    In that case it's a good thing that Microsoft made this decision last year or else they'd be blocking those poor AOL users :)

    --
    ' Ore stabit fortis a fine placet ore stat '
    - found on a park bench
  89. Re:Serious software companies don't ship open sour by GauteL · · Score: 2

    Does he mean companies like IBM? They are a pretty major software company as well as a hardware-pusher.

  90. Re:activeX - superb OS hooks (ActiveX!=NS Plugins) by Mammy-Nun · · Score: 1

    Netscape plugins don't download, install, and run themselves - they must be installed.

    The kind of functionality provided by ActiveX is better left to Java applets - which are signed, run in a security context, and only have access to a sandbox.

    What's funny is that all the stupid license agreements people have to accept have trained people to instantly press "Yes" to any dialog:

    ActiveX: An unsigned applet is contained on this page. Do you wish to load it?"

    User: [Yes means it worky, No means it no worky] "Yes"

    ActiveX Control: "Please wait while I null sectors 0-3244040300000000000 of drive 0..."

    Mammy

  91. Re:PAGE WIDENING CRAPFLOOD! SUCK IT DOWN! by CraigEwert · · Score: 1

    Actually, I'd like to see a patch that hangs MS IE; then the ball would be in their court. Isn't the rule:

    A) If the page looks like crap, its the website's fault

    B) If the browser crashes, its the browser's fault

    Inspecting my internal ruleset, that's what I'm finding.

  92. Re:major - though seemingly inevitible - win and g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nuking our allies? Are you out of your fucking mind??? None of the countries that were mention conerning the readiness report could even remotely be considered our allies. That is unless, you're a Chi-Com referring to Iraq.

  93. Re:major - though seemingly inevitible - win and g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    News Flash!! The Presidential Election is NOT decided by the national popular vote and is irrelevant.

    It's designed that way so that large population states won't have too much sway over the election. The Florida recounts were just about recounting the ballots over and over again until the Gore won. Funny, they didn't bother to recount the ballots in the Republican counties in Florida, the overseas military ballots, on top of the premature announcement that Gore won the state before polls closed in western Florida. The SCOTUS stopped it because it was clearly a scam where different standards were being used to try to maximize the number of Gore votes. Even the 'recounts' by newspapers after the election was finalized showed Bush won. Only the foaming at the mouth liberals kept on manipulating the counts until they got the result they wanted. Get over it. If you don't like it, vote in the next election.

    Nice map

  94. Galeon is bloat by HanzoSan · · Score: 2



    Mozilla has alot of features that peoplee actually use, both are bloat but Mozilla is useful bloat.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac