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Browser Wars II: CompuServe Strikes Back

securitas writes "Today CompuServe (an AOL subsidiary) launched CompuServe 7.0 with Netscape as the underlying browser. CompuServe started testing Komodo, a Gecko-based client, last year, and is now experimenting with Gecko-based AOL clients. CompuServe's 3 million-member user base is seen as a testbed before turning AOL's 34 million members into Netscape users later this year." Update: 04/16 20:54 GMT by T : Also an interesting story at CNN on the upcoming Mozilla 1.0. RC1 is very nice, as have been most recent builds.

445 comments

  1. compuserve? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought compuserv died years ago. Oh well, live and learn.

    1. Re:compuserve? by ebonic+plague · · Score: 1, Troll

      Compuserve is just one mo shell company that AOL be maintainin so that they can playa-hate on Micro$oft and get press coverage fo theyself (Just like NetScape. If its Mozilla then SAY it's Mozilla. Don't be milkin some played out has-been so you can keep filing lawsuits.)

      This all part a they old theory that people only use IE because M$ somehow forces them too. So they think that they can just switch on them and force them to use something else. First they complain about M$ monoplizin $hit and takin away choice, and then they turn around and do the same thing? Fsck that noise. Gimme an ISP that don't care what software I want to run instead of usin me as a pawn in they corporate bull$hit. That's what I'M sayin.

      --
      Na'am sayin?
    2. Re:compuserve? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you my man, for the funniest thing I have read today.

  2. Now if.... by crumbz · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ..Apple would switch from IE, there would be some progress away from MS.

    1. Re:Now if.... by DrSkwid · · Score: 2

      I don't Microsoft would let their other OS family drop IE

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    2. Re:Now if.... by daviddennis · · Score: 2

      Apple probably understands that the browser monoculture may be unpopular with Slashdotters, but the general public just wants to see pages. So until everything's perfect over on the Mozilla/Omniweb/etc end, they're not going to switch.

      This is totally separate from any payoffs from Microsoft which might show up and influence Jobs, of course.

      I've all but switched from IE to Mozilla 0.99 for sites that won't work in OmniWeb. So far, I haven't found a single site that doesn't work in Mozilla 0.99. (OW has the world's best type rendering and saves me from eyestrain, thus winning my best browser crown even though it won't work with all sites).

      So it might be time for Apple to recheck this issue. Maybe when a Netscape version of Mozilla 1.0 is released?

      D

    3. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate to say it, but from using IE under OS X, the IE team for Macintosh has far exceeded the windows team, and is still superior to Mozilla.

    4. Re:Now if.... by turbine216 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why does anyone think that the key to escaping the so-called "microsoft deathgrip" lies in an alternate web browser? It makes A LOT more sense to say "maybe if Apple would port their OS to X86 architecture, there would be some progress away from MS," or even something like "maybe if the Open Source community could come up with a decent office suite that is actually WORTH the $0 price tag, there would be some progress away from MS." But how in the hell does a browser have anything to do with it? I (and many others that I know) use various Mozilla builds on various Windows versions, and we're still hooked on MS because we like the REAL products, Windows and Office.

      I think this whole "browser war" gets way too much emphasis these days. It made sense 7 years ago when Netscape wasn't free and was trying to compete. Today, who gives a shit what browser comes out on top?? Shouldn't you be more concerned about competing with Microsoft's OTHER software?

    5. Re:Now if.... by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 2

      Well, now that their 5-year contract with Microsoft, part of which agreed that IE would be the default browser on Mac OS, is over, we may very well see a change. But for the past 5 years they were obligated to go IE.

      mark

      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
    6. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > Today, who gives a shit what browser comes out on top?? Shouldn't you be more concerned about competing with Microsoft's OTHER software?

      No.

      Today browsing is absolutely vital for anyone with a computer. If we drop the ball, then the internet will be a proprietary windows-only thing in a matter of years (like dropping html in favor of word format, or that kind of thing).

      No OS will ever be able to take off, as _everything_ that people will use will be totally proprietary.

      Mozilla is the _most_ important application today.

    7. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you see that if mozilla get's a little
      hold on the browser market , "microsofts deathgrip"
      will loosen slightly , if openoffice get's faster
      the grip will loosen even more ,etc..

    8. Re:Now if.... by Bedouin+X · · Score: 2

      My dual 1 gig G4 system runs both IE and Mozilla on OS X without a hitch. I prefer Mozilla simply because I can rely on it being the same on PC and Mac, a distinction that IE is far from being able to claim. It is awesome on OS X though (it actually supports fixed backgrounds in divs! Still not as well as Mozilla though). The tabs keep me going back to the lizard though...

      --
      Dissolve... Resolve... Evolve...
    9. Re:Now if.... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It does make sense if you think in terms of client-server relationships. If there can be only one client, that client will set arbitrary and selfserving defacto standards. With multiple clients, then open standards can proliferate.

    10. Re:Now if.... by Kintanon · · Score: 2

      What's wrong with Star Office? It seems to work spectacularly for me....

      Kintanon

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    11. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So far, I haven't found a single site that doesn't work in Mozilla 0.99

      The Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) site doesn't work properly with Mozilla 0.9.9. When you try to get a stock quote by entering the stock code and pressing 'Go', nothing happens. A popup window is supposed to appear with the quote information; this works correctly in IE, and Konqueror (of all things). And there's plenty more where that came from (it's just that I was taking a look at the site with Konqueror before I read your post).

    12. Re:Now if.... by djwavelength · · Score: 1

      In addition to what has been said about open standards and all, Microsoft is also fighting in court with everything it has to prove that IE is an essential part of Windows. The fate of IE then, is the fate of a part of Windows.

    13. Re:Now if.... by jafac · · Score: 2

      Now if only I could share the same history and bookmarks between my PC-based-Mozilla at work, and my Mac-based-Mozilla at home. . .

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    14. Re:Now if.... by TheTomcat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Today, who gives a shit what browser comes out on top??

      I do.

      If one company controls 99% of web browsing, they could eventually move to controlling 99% of webservers by implementing "features" that only work with their server/browser implementation. I believe that's why MS came up with IE in the first place.

      Sounds conspiracy theorist, right?
      Read this, then.

      They're known for this sort of thing. I used to be a huge MS hater, and I've grown to tolerate them over the past 2-or-so years (since Win2000, really), but it's crap like this that puts me back on the skeptic team.

      S

    15. Re:Now if.... by Corporate+Drone · · Score: 1
      So, like, when DR-DOS and the other MS-DOS clones were pushed out of existence, it didn't affect M$'s ability to tie-in other products with their death grip on the OS?

      remember, whoever controls the desktop (and therefore, by extension, the browser) controls the infrastructure. Microsoft just dropped Hailstorm because of lack of corporate interest? OK, then, let them get their hooks into whatever alternate standard emerges. That embrace-and-extend will be awful interesting to see!

      Wanna ensure that .Net is the only game in town? Make sure that IE is the only interface to first-class .Net objects! Sure, you can code in any language; but with apologies to Orwell, "all (languages) are created equal, but some are more equal than others".

      Control the OS and you control the PC game. Control the browser and you can control the web object game. You don't suppose that lesson's been lost on the 'softies, now, do you?

      --
      mmm... yeah... You see, we're putting the cover sheets on all TPS reports now before they go out...
    16. Re:Now if.... by turbine216 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You've got the right idea, but you're slightly backwards in terms of the execution.

      I fully agree that Mozilla is probably the BEST open-source project to date, but it is by no means the MOST IMPORTANT. A browser is an add-on, a "helper" application at best. True, web services are becoming more and more vital to computing, and everyone who uses a computer really needs a browser. But a "browser war" is not the way to come out ahead in this arena.

      People generally don't switch browsers. That is a fact - cold, hard, and undeniably true. Microsoft has been onto this trend for at least 5 or 6 years now...that's why they bundle their own. So a "browser war" doesn't help anything, because it doesn't get MS off the desktop. That's what I was pointing out in my original post - I'm one of the rare few who use a non-MS browser in Windows...but Microsoft isn't even SLIGHTLY hurt by this fact, because their REAL PRODUCTS - windows and office - are still the best on the desktop for me and probably 85% of the rest of the world's PC's. So how does the open source community hope to gain anything by fighting a pointless "browser war"? Why not just focus on making a better browser AND a better desktop environment, so they have something to BUNDLE it with? That's what will make MS more competitive. But the open source community is distracted by the pointless bickering over whose browser handles java plugins better.

      My point, to paraphrase once more, is that the "browser war" has been blown WAY out of proportion and is becoming a distraction to what open source SHOULD be doing. I'm not trying to downplay the significance of a solid open-source browser.

    17. Re:Now if.... by lynx_user_abroad · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Some history may be helpful here...

      Years ago, our company did all software development on large IBM mainframes. All code storage, design tools, code editors, compilers, test tools, etc. Everything. Every designer had to have an account, storage space, access to a terminal, and processing time on the mainframe. That was reasonable enough.

      But to tie everything together, that meant that everyone else also had to have a mainframe account, many of whom did not otherwise need access to the design environment or need mainframe training. We're talking about sales folk (to check on the projected release date) business managers (availability), technical writers, secretaries (t oaccess email) etc. That was a lot of training, account space, and processing power which could have been better spent elsewhere.

      It was a great boon when we started deploying personal computers (less contention for the 3270 mainframe terminals) and things really took off when we moved to web-based distribution of information. That meant that you could access most of the derivative portion of the environment (project planning, documentation, etc) from whatever computer (PC, Macintosh, UNIX workstationi, VT100) you happened to already have and be trained for.

      You no longer had to have a specific computer running a specific operating system to access the information you needed. Sounds familiar?

      Nowadays, the company has moved back to creating IE-specific web pages. That means everyone in the company has to have a PC running Windows to get any information out of our development environment.

      The funny part is, just after we moved the content to the web, we moved the design tools to UNIX. So now all the designers need UNIX workstations...where IE support is just a bad joke. Care to guess what we do when management says "please review the important corporate information off the (IE-only) web page..."?

      So getting back to the world where you don't have to have a specific application running under a specific operating system to access the corporate information is a good thing. Anything which promotes diversity in that realm is good.

      --

      The thing about things we don't know is we often don't know we don't know them.

    18. Re:Now if.... by turbine216 · · Score: 2

      Oh, you mean like the phenomenally successful .NET strategy?

      You should know by now that any attempts that MS makes in that direction have not and will not be tolerated by their customers. That's why they haven't ever done it.

    19. Re:Now if.... by Kintanon · · Score: 2

      Umm, no, I mean seriously, the guy said that the office suite wasn't worth the 0$ pricetag. I would like to know why, because if I'm about to run up against some glaring lack of functionality in Star Office I would like to know beforehand.

      Kintanon
      Now, go be a fuckhead somewhere else. We're all full up here.

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    20. Re:Now if.... by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I have yet to encounter any msoffice zealot that could actually support their assertion that msoffice competition is somehow lacking. This goes equally well for PerfectOffice, SmartSuite or StarOffic.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    21. Re:Now if.... by Publicus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      SLIGHTLY hurt by this fact, because their REAL PRODUCTS - windows and office - are still the best on the desktop for me and probably 85% of the rest of the world's PC's.

      This is true today, but I think tomorrow, with the possible emergence of .NET and more pervasive web services, that people will be using their browser as a gateway to using office like applications. This is, in fact, the direction Microsoft would like to go. They'd rather get people into a subscription-like system that can be delivered from a central server, instead of having the application installed on the desktop.

      Whether it will ever happen remains to be seen, but I think the reason browsers are so hotly contended is because they determine the protocols that will be bringing these services to consumers in the future.

      If IE dominates, Microsoft gets to choose the standards. If IE does not dominate, perhaps the W3C will, or another more democratic organization. I think that would be better.

      --

      My Karma was at 49, then they switched to words. All that work for nothing!

    22. Re:Now if.... by jlower · · Score: 2

      Apple would switch from IE,

      Check out a recent Apple Ad

      Note that there's no IE icon in the dock. I think this is very significant.

    23. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you read the link or just post it? The article you linked is about the "Hailstorm" piece of .Net. It is totally unrelated to the .Net Framework. As for the original poster, ASP.NET pages render great on IE, Mozilla 0.9.9 and Netscape 6. There are some features that work client side in IE but server side in Netscape but they still work.

    24. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh please. The whole digest authentication thing is overblown. Do you use it? Mozilla and Netscape only just started supporting. It is too new to worry about at this point.

    25. Re:Now if.... by r_barchetta · · Score: 1

      Other people have already made it quite clear how important the browser is in today's OS wars so I won't rehash that.

      Wanna talk Office Suites? Here's my take (and no offense intended). Most of the $0 office suites are already worth their price tag. Realistically they are all probably worth more than their price.

      What we need (and what people are working on) is an office suite that is worth $$$ but still has a $0 price tag.

      -r

      --
      Just because something is free does not mean you have to take it.
    26. Re:Now if.... by Snap+E+Tom · · Score: 1

      For CSS and HTML 4.0, the most common tools, IE for Macintosh is bar none the most standards compliant browser available regardless of platform. It's been highly praised by standards evangelists as the first browser that "got it." It beats IE 6 for PC, and it solidly beats Mozilla. It would be a huge shame if Apple dropped IE.

    27. Re:Now if.... by jrsmith · · Score: 1

      i've seen an alleged sneak preview of the next version of office (called office NGO or something else equally as strange) and it's a web service, run totally from within IE. i doubt they'd work too hard to make it compatable with mozilla or opera...

      i'll probably get modded down for not supplying a link. i'll post one when i get home from work..

    28. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      err. I for one am glad MS came along and kicked Netscape's ass. They had plans to do this exact same thing w/ their server software. IIRC, they got the ball rolling w/ JavaScript (and later plug-ins and whatever else crap they added for no reason at all). If I were to choose which company has hurt web standards the most it would be clearly Netscape at this point. Plug-ins, JavaScript, Java, etc., etc. It could still be said that Netscape is trying to control the web by leveraging open source developers into creating the best web browser which would actually beat IE and then AOL will finally coerce the web to their liking.

      That article to me sounds like a genuine technical misunderstanding and not a coercion. It wouldn't be too hard to imagine the IIS and IE teams working together to implement the security (and perhaps for reuse purposes) and both misunderstanding the protocol and implementing the misunderstanding. I've implemented things from RFCs like this and let me be the first to say that the wording and assumptions can be a bitch at times. This shouldn't be anything to worry about until this becomes very popular and widespread.

    29. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Buzzword.net renders great too. So does phb.org and 31337.com.

    30. Re:Now if.... by sisukapalli1 · · Score: 1

      Staroffice seems pretty good. However, the complaints I hear often are of the type "staroffice doesn't do a good job with fancy word formatte documents", and "staroffice messes up ppt".

      Kinda like driving on the left side of the road. If everyone else is doing it that way, it is great. If everyone is driving on the right side, driving on the left side simply doesn't make sense.

      Better import/export facilities should solve the problem over time. May be if more resources went into openoffice...

      Sastry

    31. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No no, the browser still has plently to do with the switch from MS... Most open-source desktop apps are now more than adequate for day-to-day use (this is my experience anyway), however it's still common to find Javascript-heavy "html'" pages that will not load (yet alone look good) on any gnu/linux browser.

      The more the zombie webmasters are forced to write valid html, the less we (I) will have to reboot to windows just to look at a web page! So hats off to AOL on this one, whatever their motivation may be.

    32. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Diversity, like dozens of component architectures, gui frameworks, log file formats, different convention bindings for every possible scripting language, four or five different ways to handle arbitrary character sets, six+ different output device abstractions, dozens of poorly implemented distributed file sharing protocols, and the remainder of the garbage you call unix.

      Good work, boys.

    33. Re:Now if.... by Planesdragon · · Score: 2

      Last time I tried it (I'm not in the habit of installing random pieces of software) it marked all my punctuated works--words with dashes touching them, like this--as misspellings.

      It also didn't provide enough for me to stop using Word and start using it.

      If StarOffice still had a free version of 6, I'd test it and write up a review. *sigh* There's an older review of Staroffice 5.2 on my website, but it won't tell you anything new--everone allready knows that one didn't work.

    34. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Last time I tried it (I'm not in the habit of installing random pieces of software) it marked all my punctuated works--words with dashes touching them, like this--as misspellings.


      Buy a style manual, dude. There are supposed to be spaces between the dashes and the words.
    35. Re:Now if.... by pmz · · Score: 2

      who gives a shit what browser comes out on top??

      I care a great deal that IE not come out on top. There is much too much at stake, here, for Microsoft to be given any chance at making the Internet proprietary. In fact, Microsoft taking over the Internet is one of the biggest threats to the future of global society. Microsoft taking over the Internet is equivalent, in principle, to Nazi Germany winning World War 2. Imagine the hordes of software projects that will simply be crushed. How many businesses will simply go out of business? How will anyone succeed in truly exercising their right to free speech? Will computer scientists and engineers be given academic freedom? Would we ever be able to trust anything we see on the WWW again? Microsoft will not be a benevolent dictator. In fact, they could end up being the most horrendous dictator the world has ever known (just think about what is at stake, here).

    36. Re:Now if.... by briansmith · · Score: 2

      They are trying to convince Unix users that Mac OS X is Unix. Since Netscape runs on Unix and IE (for the most part) doesn't, it makes sense to have Netscape in the dock.

      If they were doing a "Mac OS X is Windows" compaign it might very well be IE in the dock.

    37. Re:Now if.... by DA-MAN · · Score: 1

      Ohhhh, no IE on the Mac, they must hate Microsoft now. However if you look closely tt still has Word, Excel and Powerpoint.

      --
      Can I get an eye poke?
      Dog House Forum
    38. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure they will drop the browser requirement. That's just plain stupid software engineering.

      Why run office in a browser? Doesn't make sense and is the reason why Java failed in the browser.

    39. Re:Now if.... by Reid · · Score: 1

      Any chance you have popup windows disabled? Edit->Preferences->Advanced->Scripts&Wind ows, "Open unrequested windows". I've forgotten I usually have them turned off and gotten hit by that.

    40. Re:Now if.... by snake_dad · · Score: 1, Offtopic
      Stop bitching about the Karma cap. It gives otherwise maxxed out people at 47 an incentive to post quality.

      yeah. please mod me down.

      --
      karma capped .sig seeking available Slashdot poster for long-term relationship.
    41. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      (I'm the orignal AC)

      > I fully agree that Mozilla is probably the BEST open-source project to date

      Depends of the criterion you use. I'd tend to think that the best projects to date are things like linux, freebsd, emacs, xfree86, apache, samba [etc] which are fully mature products.

      > but it is by no means the MOST IMPORTANT

      I strongly disagree. We have no hope of crunching IE out of existance, but mozilla _must_ become the 2nd browser out there, with a significant market-share.

      Having mozilla installed in a lot of place is not so we can 'win the browser war', but to prevent the net of becoming proprietary.

      > People generally don't switch browsers. That is a fact - cold, hard, and undeniably true.

      People can switch browsers. I did it. At work, we settled on netscape 6.2 / Mozilla. Compuserve users are going to switch browsers. AOL users may switch browsers.

      Switching browsers is still possible (as long as we have the mozilla project delivering solid standard-compliant implementation while web-sites are not completly IE-only).

      If cnn, amazon, ebay, yahoo, nytimes, google [insert favorite high-volume site here] are only accessible from IE (because we dropped the ball on the browser thing), you can kiss good-bye to any hope of the possibility of a MS-free desktop.

      > So a "browser war" doesn't help anything, because it doesn't get MS off the desktop.

      I hate to have to tell it to you, but MS will not be removed from the desktop, at least not this century. The question is not 'can we remove MS from the desktop ?', but 'can we avoid beeing forced to use windows ?' You thinkg that people don't switch browsers, but the truth is:

      * People don't switch office suites
      * People don't switch operating systems
      * Corporations don't switch from exchange

      > is becoming a distraction to what open source SHOULD be doing.

      The next more vital application is an MS-exchange clone. This is (IMHO) more important than having an office suite. It is also much more difficult, but maybe a big player (ibm?) may move into that.

    42. Re:Now if.... by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      Ok I'll feed this troll...
      "maybe if the Open Source community could come up with a decent office suite that is actually WORTH the $0 price tag, there would be some progress away from MS."

      I canvassed 100 people here at work... of 100 people 2 heard of open office and those 2 were linux users.

      Yeah open office sucks... it sucks so bad that NOBODY KNOWS ABOUT IT.

      I will bet that if I go and burn 100 CD's with the latest release for windows that I can get at least 50% to like it without doing anything.

      you cant say something sucks when noone knows about it. Open office is every bit as good as MS office XP. the ONLY place it is laking is in import/export filters... just like MS office sucks in it's filters.

      So prove me wrong. give out 100 copies of the latest Open office build for windows.. and tell me how many of those people say "god this sucks, it's horrible for even being free!"

      I'm betting that you wont get one person to hate it.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    43. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I checked...that option is turned on in my copy of Mozilla 0.9.9. In fact, all the options on that page are turned on. Still doesn't work :-(

    44. Re:Now if.... by CakerX · · Score: 1

      Only if... for the most part I hated MacOS, no command prompt, propreitery, but from what I heard about MacOS X, I like, even to the point if I had the money I'd buy a mac just for OSX. I deffinately think Mac should give up on the hardware end and start porting MacOS for x86, it would be a hit, easy to use (semi)secure *nix interface for the home PC compatible with virtually 99.9% of desktops and workstations out there. Only if...

    45. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Oh please. The whole digest authentication thing is overblown. Do you use it? Mozilla and Netscape only just started supporting. It is too new to worry about at this point.

      "Too new" is exactly the right time to worry about it, before the IE/IIS nonstandard becomes too widespread.

      Clue: this is how the embrace and extend strategy is executed. Class dismissed.

    46. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm... have you ever used Office XP for anything more then viewing a document? Obviously not. Office XP is waay more mature than Star Office. Not that SO is bad, and it fits the requirements of most Office users, but you can do more with an Office XP right click and a smart tag (suck in IE, rock in Office) than spending hours in the SO menus.

      Flame me if you want... it's the truth.

    47. Re:Now if.... by spells · · Score: 1

      Forget about accessing applications through the browser - MS already has. The future is using the net through RICH client applications. Instead of MS Office through a browser, think each Office app with internet capability through web services.

    48. Re:Now if.... by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 2

      I know exactly why it doesn't work, crappy browser detection, and maybe a reliance on document.all. Here:

      Konqueror3 would work because it implements document.all, so it would be identified as IE4. However, Mozilla supports neither document.all or document.layers, and thus their site disables events.

    49. Re:Now if.... by gfortune · · Score: 1

      I'll give you one better, I actually exposed my company to OpenOffice. Keep in mind that this is an entirely Windows shop, client and server. Kinda makes me ill when I think about it too much...

      Guess what? I managed to convert about half the staff with no effort on my part other than making the installer available in the app install share point!
      I actually had people comming up to me to tell me how wonderful OpenOffice was and how much they liked it (like I care).

      Oh, yeah, there was one other victory. In a senior staff meeting, the CEO asked the group how we were doing in terms of software licenses. One of the newly converted engineers piped in, "Well, we know he's (pointing to me) compliant, he's using Linux and OpenOffice!" The CEO just rolled his eyes, because he thinks I'm a bit extreme and a little deranged (again, like I care). That's the price I pay for getting off the MS nipple and starting to eat solid food...

    50. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate to have to tell it to you, but MS will not be removed from the desktop, at least not this century.

      Ridiculous. Do you think you could have predicted in 1900 which companies would be significant in 1999? Oh, I know, things are different because this is now and the world has miraculously stabilised. Things will never change again.

    51. Re:Now if.... by roca · · Score: 2

      If you think that key Gecko hackers who don't work for AOL, like David Baron, Ian Hickson, Boris Bzarsky, Fabian Guisset, and others, are going to let AOL "coerce the web to their liking" (by which I assume you mean ignore or violate W3C standards) then you are sadly mistaken.

    52. Re:Now if.... by pjrc · · Score: 2
      So how does the open source community hope to gain anything by fighting a pointless "browser war"? Why not just focus on making a better browser AND a better desktop environment, so they have something to BUNDLE it with?

      I see this sort of talk all the time, about strategic maneuvers. I just want to throw my two cents in by stating the obvious (or what should be obvious)....

      The large collective mass of unpaid (often part time) free-software/open-source coders don't "focus" on a particular project or goal. Perhaps some small groups might, but talk about the "open source community" somehow "should focus on" something or another for strategic reasons is just silly.

    53. Re:Now if.... by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 2

      Wrong, Mozilla has better standards support than IE5:Mac. Using the very site you linked:
      http://www.westciv.com.au/style_master/ac ademy/bro wser_support/page_layout.html
      http://www.westciv. com.au/style_master/academy/bro wser_support/selectors.html
      http://www.westciv.co m.au/style_master/academy/bro wser_support/text.html
      http://www.westciv.com.au/ style_master/academy/bro wser_support/page_layout.html

      In fact, damn near all of the pages show Netscape 6.0 beating IE5:Mac. Since Mozilla, in the time since NS6.0, has gone from 0.6 to 1.0, it has improved a lot, and thereforce is likely to beat IE5:Mac even more.

      And we haven't even looked at DOM support yet...

    54. Re:Now if.... by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 2

      Argh, the Javascript was knocked out of that post:
      IE4 = (document.all);
      NN4 = (document.layers);
      ver4 = (IE4 || NN4);
      isMac = (navigator.appVersion.indexOf("Mac") != -1);
      isMenu = (IE4 || (NN4 && !isMac));
      NavName = "";

      var checkForms = 1;

      function Show(){return};
      function Hide(){return};
      function LoadMenus(){return};

      if (!ver4) event = null;

    55. Re:Now if.... by leviramsey · · Score: 2
      The next more vital application is an MS-exchange clone. This is (IMHO) more important than having an office suite. It is also much more difficult, but maybe a big player (ibm?) may move into that.

      Is it just me or should IBM do a kick-ass port of Notes/Domino to Linux?

    56. Re:Now if.... by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      The CEO just rolled his eyes, because he thinks I'm a bit extreme and a little deranged

      This is a GOOD thing! if you keep the CEO thinking this you will go very far and basically get what you want.

      start worrying when they atart to understand you.

      Excellent By the way... I think I'll do the same thing next week and see how it goes.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    57. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, calm down. It was a _joke_.

    58. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are exactly right. Another example of this (aside from the link you provided) is the NTLM authentication 'protocol'. Of all of the authentication methods available for IIS, many businesses choose to use NTLM, which locks out everybody but IE. They do this based on the idea that they have "standardized internally on IE", (as if a specific product can be called a "standard".) The average person would have no way of knowing that this is a problem. Even if they bothered to try mozilla, they would probably toss it aside as soon as they discovered that it can't get in to their company's intranet.

    59. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My biggest problem is the spellcheck dosen't spellcheck worth anything. I rely upon Office Spellcheck to catch 98% of all mispellings, and I'll see the rest in my proof read (it's alot less time consuming).

      At least the OpenOffice I used would have found 5 spelling in this post. The worst part is, every apostraphie word would be counted as a mispelling (something I just couldn't live with)

    60. Re:Now if.... by kubrick · · Score: 1

      Last time I tried it (I'm not in the habit of installing random pieces of software) it marked all my punctuated works--words with dashes touching them, like this--as misspellings.

      That's because they are. You're supposed to have spaces in there. (works -- words)

      Hyphenation, on the other hand, should be handled differently.

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    61. Re:Now if.... by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 1

      With multiple clients, then open standards can proliferate.

      Yeah! Fully! When we return to a more level playing field, we won't EVER have to worry about seeing icons that say "THIS PAGE BEST VIEWED BY (insert browser name here)" because that concept is just rediculous!

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    62. Re:Now if.... by Eccles · · Score: 1

      This is totally separate from any payoffs from Microsoft which might show up and influence Jobs, of course.

      I think the payoff is the continued development of the Mac version of Office.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    63. Re:Now if.... by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      That's because they are. You're supposed to have spaces in there. (works -- words)

      Says who? (remember: the english language is living, and so differing sources can differ on the "proper" use. Please provide an authority, and I'll add it to my list.)

      I was using real en-dashes and em-dashes, and I was using them properly. Starofice didn't suggest an alternative use--they just marked them wrong. If a program's going to treat punctuation marks as letters, it had better suggest "proper" usage or not bother.

    64. Re:Now if.... by Abreu · · Score: 1

      Anonymous Coward says:
      I'm sure they will drop the browser requirement. That's just plain stupid software engineering.
      Why run office in a browser? Doesn't make sense and is the reason why Java failed in the browser.


      A Software Engineering department has never had authority over the Marketing and Management areas. Specially at Microsoft.

      Actually all big software houses have made mistakes of this sort at some point.

      --
      No sig for the moment.
    65. Re:Now if.... by Rovaani · · Score: 1
      Why post stupid /. comments? Because no one replies when you're right, but everyone replies when you're wrong.

      You're wrong. But that makes your sig right.
      My head hurts.

      --
      Karma: Good! Napster: Baad!
    66. Re:Now if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DEAR ANONYMOUS COWARD. WAHT IS THIS CRAP COMMING OUT OF YOUR MOUTH? Browsers are free because they are crap and no one should argue about them. so i think you should STFU

      CRapffully crapfully
      SB

    67. Re:Now if.... by kubrick · · Score: 2

      Okay, I've checked Fowler's, and you're right. Usage of spaces in double dashes as punctuation is arbitrary. :)

      I will say that it does seem somewhat archaic, for the very reason that it confuses more word processors than just StarOffice :), so I'm not used to seeing it done like that much recently. Besides, it's easier to parse when reading if it's not all run together -- depending on the font it can look like hyphenation.

      Aplogies for the blanket statement, though. Can I change a 'must' to a 'should'? :)

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    68. Re:Now if.... by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      Okay, I've checked Fowler's, and you're right. Usage of spaces in double dashes as punctuation is arbitrary. :)

      :) Guess I am a writer, then.

      I will say that it does seem somewhat archaic, for the very reason that it confuses more word processors than just StarOffice :), so I'm not used to seeing it done like that much recently. Besides, it's easier to parse when reading if it's not all run together -- depending on the font it an look like hyphenation.

      It doesn't confuse MS Office--and because of that, any program claiming "compatability" that is confused is glossing at best.

      Aplogies for the blanket statement, though. Can I change a 'must' to a 'should'? :)

      Sure. :)

  3. Compuserve goes way back by qurob · · Score: 2, Funny


    I'm 23675.3598@compuserve.com!

    1. Re:Compuserve goes way back by DynamicBits · · Score: 1

      Your post may have been a joke, but I can honestly say i have an account in the 71xxx.xxxx range. Also, I think this article is talking about CompuServe 2000 (Basically AOL), not CompuServe Classic.

    2. Re:Compuserve goes way back by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 1

      You can email me this way

      INTERNET:bob123@aol.com

      and it only costs a measely 10 cents per email!

      mark

      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
    3. Re:Compuserve goes way back by mikeage · · Score: 2

      73267,2746 for me. A real compuserve user had it _way_ before they had internet connectivity: when the numbers were comma delimited, not periods.

      --
      -- Is "Sig" copyrighted by www.sig.com?
    4. Re:Compuserve goes way back by NMerriam · · Score: 3, Funny

      72202,142

      I sadly gave it up a few years ago, when I realized that good, active, moderated, insightful forums were dead...

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    5. Re:Compuserve goes way back by rjamestaylor · · Score: 1

      I gave up my 7[012]XXX.XXXX range id when AOL bought Compuserve. I can't even remember my old id - but it was a Dallas, TX Zip Code :) Had my first account in 1988 as a sophmore in college. It was much more enjoyable than the Internet of its day (newsgroups weren't as compelling as CompuServe weather, forums, AP newswire, etc. I even recall when AOL started the beta WWW preview...(yes, I was a member in 1993-4).

      --
      -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
    6. Re:Compuserve goes way back by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2

      Damn! I had a 7xxxx,xxxx number, but I can't remember it... I dont think I've used it in about 10 years!

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    7. Re:Compuserve goes way back by wesmills · · Score: 2
      103223,3212 ... I came in late in the game.

      Anyone remember when you could get those "Introduction to CompuServe" books off of GO BOOKS for free? They even came with a coupon for a $10 service credit in the back. I think I racked up about $250 in credits, because they didn't place a limit on how many books you could order (just one at a time, but unlimited numbers of orders).

      WinCIM rocked, but nothing beats the ! prompt.

    8. Re:Compuserve goes way back by Jaycatt · · Score: 1

      I was 75330,3310 myself... Funny how we remember these silly numbers, huh?

      --
      "Shared pain is lessened; shared joy is increased. Thus we refute entropy" - Spider Robinson
    9. Re:Compuserve goes way back by compuserf · · Score: 1

      There's still lots of people using WinCim (and MacCim). partly because it's small, fast, stable, and works on old kit. It also works on bad phone lines, down to 300 baud, if set properly. Must be because it's not using DUN.

    10. Re:Compuserve goes way back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      73635,460 was me. Yep, that is a comma.

      ac

    11. Re:Compuserve goes way back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      72766,2320. That must have been 1982? Don't think I even heard of gopher until '89, and didn't see Mosaic unit 92. Heh. The good old days.

    12. Re:Compuserve goes way back by Wolfier · · Score: 1

      103077,1303 for me :)

    13. Re:Compuserve goes way back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow! Starts with 7xx... that's a very SPECIAL account. Oh wow, I could suck your dick over that, man!

    14. Re:Compuserve goes way back by buckeyeguy · · Score: 2

      Yep, same here... 1987, 71331.3nnn...hehe... well anyway, I can't believe Compuserve exists anymore, even as some sort of branding entity. I live a mile from their original headquarters, and even before AOL bought them they had ceased to be an employer of note around here... at most, if the place disappeared now, a few restaurants on Henderson Rd. would go out of business, that'd be about it.

      --
      I'd have a personalized plate on my car, but "toxic bachelor" won't fit into 7 letters.
  4. Browser Wars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Great, but what about OmniWeb?

  5. Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in... by 1010011010 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I hope this spells the end of ActiveX website "enhancements." Having a large segments of people using a standards-based, non-Windows-specific browser will definitely improve the usability of the Web

    --
    Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
  6. In related news. by aengblom · · Score: 2, Funny

    In related news. Prodigy chooses Lynx to form the foundation of it's internet browser. Using Lynx as a client is now in the works

    --


    So close and yet so far from the world's perfect ID number
    1. Re:In related news. by rjamestaylor · · Score: 1

      And Delphi has announced a preview of its TTY service

      --
      -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
    2. Re:In related news. by blonde+rser · · Score: 2

      when will people stop using lynx and start using the superior links, the pretty ascii web browser

    3. Re:In related news. by madenosine · · Score: 1

      when people get over the fact that using lynx or telnet to browse does not make you 31337

  7. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Burgundy+Advocate · · Score: 0, Troll
    --
    Dragging people kicking and screaming into reality since 1996.
  8. I'm not sure... by EvilAlien · · Score: 3, Insightful
    ... that compuserve is relevant anymore.

    AOL (I feel dirty typing that) choosing !IE is, aside from logical business-wise, a significant event in the so-called browser war.

    I don't think time is well spent on discussing the "browser war", but our concerns should be focused on standard vs. proprietary tag/feature/etc support, HTML interpretation "correctness" and other metamatters.

    --
    perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10)'
    1. Re:I'm not sure... by RocketJeff · · Score: 2
      ... that compuserve is relevant anymore.
      3 million customers is always relevant.
    2. Re:I'm not sure... by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

      Just type AOHell or AOLame, you'll feel better. Works for me, anyway.

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    3. Re:I'm not sure... by EvilAlien · · Score: 2
      They are a wholly owned subsidiary of AOL, provide what is essentially a business portal service, as I understand it. That sounds all very uselessly redundant. It caters to people who are business oriented, etc etc etc (COMPUSERVE INTERACTIVE SERVICES OVERVIEW), and too "busy" to figure out how to bookmark CNN/Money, MSN Money, and News.com on their own.

      What I'm trying to say is that the inertia of roughly "2 million busy adults" does not make CompuServe relevant, IMO.

      --
      perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10)'
    4. Re:I'm not sure... by blufive · · Score: 1
      [snip] our concerns should be focused on standard vs. proprietary tag/feature/etc support, HTML interpretation "correctness" and other metamatters.
      Exactly. AOL swapping to a mozilla/gecko based browser isn't just "AOL swapping to !IE", but "AOL swapping to a [much more] Standards-compliant browser"
      [I'm not sure] that compuserve is relevant anymore.
      Compuserve is relevant because AOL is using it/them as an advance guard/guinea pig [delete as applicable]
    5. Re:I'm not sure... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      aside from logical business-wise


      Why do you think that AOL icon is installed with Windows 95/98/Me?

    6. Re:I'm not sure... by Corporate+Drone · · Score: 2, Insightful
      they're not. They're a test balloon.


      what's that? you hated Netscape? Oh, that's ok... just come on board to AOL, where you can keep on using that familiar IE interface.


      hm? you loved it? great! keep an eye out for those "New and Improved AOL, now with Netscape!" CD's in the mail...

      --
      mmm... yeah... You see, we're putting the cover sheets on all TPS reports now before they go out...
    7. Re:I'm not sure... by foonf · · Score: 2

      The AOL and CompuServe clients are now basically the same software. Its a great way to test the water. Since they basically aren't promoting CompuServe anymore, and relatively few people actually use it, if users have major problems with integrated Gecko AOL can find out about it without alienting 50 million AOL users first. And if they still are trying to get a better deal from Microsoft to use IE, its a great way to show them that they can switch to Mozilla/Gecko any time they want to, without completely shutting the door on continuing the present arrangement. And when (if) the time comes to switch AOL proper to Gecko, they can do it very quickly and painlessly, having ironed out all of the problems with Compuserve first.

      --

      "(Man) tries to live his own life as if he were telling a story. But you have to choose: live or tell." --Sartre
  9. No you're not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All Compuserve user numbers are in octal, so there are no 8s or 9s. Nice try, though.

    1. Re:No you're not by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Probably because modems talk in octal? :)

  10. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by qurob · · Score: 1


    Ironically, HTML and the Web were created to prevent that.

  11. I really hope it works out... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We need some competition in this area because things could be a lot better not only for consumers but also
    for web developers. Maybe, just maybe, standards are going to be used more rather than IE specific code.

  12. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by 1010011010 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You said: "ActiveX can be used in Mozilla."

    Actually, that's an " ActiveX Control for Hosting Netscape plug-ins in IE ."

    In other words, you have it backwards. MSFT dropped support for Netscape-style plugins, and this is a way to regain use of Netscape-style plugins in Internet Explorer.

    --
    Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
  13. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by DohDamit · · Score: 2

    Who the hell uses ActiveX? I've gone to all kinds of sites(sans porn...ask me why :P) and some quite the microsoft-oriented POS(iframes, their DOM, etc.) and have yet to install an ActiveX control in at least six months. Seriously, who is really using ActivX controls?

  14. From the office of the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Let me, Steve Case, thank you on behalf of all the shareholders of AOL/Time Warner for giving us all your work for free so that we can make a hell of a lot of money and stop paying Microsoft.

    As a token of my appreciation, I have purchased a new yacht where I have hung a fine wooden plaque commemorating the occasion. Rest assured that I have it hanging in a very prominent place.

    No, no; no need to thank me. The 10s of millions of dollars of free labor that I received are thanks enough.

    1. Re:From the office of the president by elphkotm · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As much as a troll as this is, you exemplify the wrong attitude that has become dominant in the open source world. Beyond the hype, the purpose of open source is to improve software, period. Open source isn't about defeating the evils in the world or getting things for free, it's about moving technology forward. You don't spend a Saturday in a soup kitchen because you get something tangible from it. If Microsoft decides to take the high-quality TCP/IP stack code written by FreeBSD and integrating it into Windows 2000, then let them. By hundreds of people contributing their effort into that TCP/IP stack, they have made Windows 2000 more stable. That, my friend, is the goal in the end, better software. Not because someone paid for it, but because someone decided it needed to be done the right way.

      --

      <Amanda`> I just went out to the parking lot in my bathrobe to exchange warez CDs.
    2. Re:From the office of the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Wow... I'd almost forgotten that. Seriously, thank you.

    3. Re:From the office of the president by bartok · · Score: 2, Informative

      Erm, troll alert?

      Who do you think pays the salaries of about 95% of the developers that made Mozilla? Answer: AOL

      Without AOL's sponsorship of the project, Moz would still be at Milestone 0.5

    4. Re:From the office of the president by ebonic+plague · · Score: 1

      Beyond the hype, the purpose of open source is to improve software, period.

      You may be right, but lookin around this site it seems like a lot of people would rather tear down other people's $hit than improve they own. If people spend this much time hatin on M$ and AOL, its no wonder they software cain't hang. Quit whinin ya'll and spend that time developin.

      --
      Na'am sayin?
    5. Re:From the office of the president by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If a large faceless amoral corporation with money to burn wants it "done the right way" they should cough up the bucks. Helping your fellow man one day in a soup kitchen is NOTHING like working for free just so that Microsoft could turn in into CORPORATE WELFARE.

      The BSD license is more like volunteering your free time to a white slavery ring.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    6. Re:From the office of the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and we'll probably get no help from you.
      The way you type it seems you couldn't code your way out of a wet paper bag.

      Go, out, do something.
      Leave the coding to the rest of us and just stop bitching.

      I'm sure Bill apprechiates your support. Loser.

      Or, maybe I shouldn't be so hard on you. Your probably 11 years old anyway...

    7. Re:From the office of the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The way you type it seems you couldn't code your way out of a wet paper bag. [...] Your probably 11 years old anyway...

      If you're going to complain about someone else's typing ability, make damn sure your own house is in order.

    8. Re:From the office of the president by pyrrho · · Score: 2, Informative

      AOL paid 4 billion dollars for Netscape and then GAVE millions of dollars of development time to Mozilla...

      --

      -pyrrho

    9. Re:From the office of the president by geekoid · · Score: 2

      troll or no, he makes a point.
      Shouldn't the money saved go back into the community?

      We're talking about AOL here, a company that uses propritary protocals to maintain an advertising strangle-hold on its users.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    10. Re:From the office of the president by kinkie · · Score: 2

      the purpose of open source is to improve software, period

      I think that what is the purpose of "open source" depends on whom you ask it to. Everybody has her motivations to do open source stuff. Somebody might do it, as you say, to improve technology, somebody else "to scratch an itch", somebody else for the ego trip or because it's dandy or because he wants to impress a geeky girlfriend (er...right). Somebody else because it gets stuff done, or because it's just fun.

      We can try to explain what it is, but we should not try to constrain it into a particular vision of it. This is actually in my very humble opinion one of its strongest points against closed stuff: there's no "big plan", no corporate masterminds, nothing to fight against. Just plain doing stuff, as frustrating as it might be sometimes.

      --
      /kinkie
    11. Re:From the office of the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should learn the meaning of corporate welfare before you spout your nonsensical drivel.

      If you don't care about freedom, then whatever. That's what non-restrictive licensing is about. If you want to be a fuckhole, that's what being a whine-ass dotter is all about.

      Altruism is definitely not to be found by non-productive members of this "culture" such as yourself, which is why you're frothing at the mouth like a retard.

    12. Re:From the office of the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look, it's geekoid frothing at the mouth again.

      What a surprise.

      Love,
      You stalker

      P.S.

      Learn how to fucking spell.

    13. Re:From the office of the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice, but I prefer to harp on his spelling "apprechiates"

    14. Re:From the office of the president by elphkotm · · Score: 1

      Let's not forget that most of the work on Mozilla is still done by Netscape engineers (although the community aspect is gaining momentum). Mozilla is more than just a browser, it's a ton of infrastructure (XPCOM, XPToolkit, NSPR, JavaScript, etc) that has been GRACIOUSLY donated to the open source community by AOL, with only a GPL license attached. AOL also pays for very high-quality, ad-free hosting and I commend them for that. It certainly could be alot worse.

      As far as the AOL service goes, their customers CHOOSE to use the service. AOL gives their customers what they want, and obviously 34 MILLION users want what AOL offers. Their are certainly many other, very-compatible, easy-to-use competing services.

      --

      <Amanda`> I just went out to the parking lot in my bathrobe to exchange warez CDs.
    15. Re:From the office of the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well - 1 grammer/syntax error vs. 12.
      That's a significant improvement - about the same amount that open source is better than MS.

    16. Re:From the office of the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guarantee that if Microsoft had a similar project as Mozilla, every linux troll alive would cry out with indignation that Microsoft EXPECTED people to work for FREE on something that they would use to extend their monopoly. AOLTW is getting to be one of the biggest horizonal monopolies this country has ever seen, and they're having people work for free on their software. Open Source is about trying to improve the quality of software, but at the expense of what?

    17. Re:From the office of the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My primary goal is not to make better software. It is to make FREE SOFTWARE. The fact that free software is usually better software is just secondary.

      I don't want microsoft using free software in their next OS unless they also release their OS under a free license and make all source code available.

      Please speak for yourself.

      Long live the GPL.

    18. Re:From the office of the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the BSD license is more like saying "this is what I've done, if you like it, do whatever the fuck you please with it, because in the end, it has no value unless it is used." Once you have written code, and you've elected to give it away, wouldn't you rather people be able to do something with it?

      In the end, software exists to be used. If noone uses it, noone gives you feedback, noone wants to improve it. If I am folding BSD code into my app and I find something broken, I'm more likely to start a dialog with the original author than to try to fix it on my own. Two heads are better than one.

      And with that dialog will come better code, both in the freely available form, and in the form of my closed (or open) app.

    19. Re:From the office of the president by joemc79 · · Score: 1

      This makes a great argument against the GPL. The GPL would prohibit the above scenario.

    20. Re:From the office of the president by roca · · Score: 2

      What you're missing is that because it's open source, Mozilla is inherently unhelpful to a would-be monopolist. All the non-AOL hackers working on Mozilla aren't working on AOL-proprietary features, nor are they interested in doing anything to help AOL build a monopoly. Furthermore, anything AOL themselves puts in will be scrutinized, adopted (if it's good) or rejected (if it's merely self-serving). Yes, Mozilla has non-AOL people who have the power to do that. Plus, any code that AOL does put in Mozilla can immediately be taken and used by others for whatever they want. It's pretty hard to use Mozilla to build a monopoly under these conditions.

    21. Re:From the office of the president by mckayc · · Score: 1

      You exemplify why I use the BSD License and not the GPL. What is free in your definition? Free, but only if you're not a corporation or some other company I dislike? No, that's not free, that's called restrictive. I suppose that all the companies out there that use Linux on their embedded devices are turning hard work into CORPORATE WELFARE? Aren't all the Slashbot's cheering when this happens? Aren't they going out and forking out the large sums of money it costs for a Zaurus? But they're stealing open source developers hard work! That's the point, dumbass. You, my friend, are the definition of Slashbot.

      For those of who are unfamilar with the term Slashbot, it's basically a Slashdot user who says words such as 'windoze', 'micro$ucks', etc. They're mindless rabid GPL proponents who rarely have an 'original thought' and pledge their allegiance to Comrade Stallman, their fearless leader.

    22. Re:From the office of the president by flacco · · Score: 2
      Open source isn't about defeating the evils in the world... If Microsoft decides to take the high-quality TCP/IP stack code written by FreeBSD and integrating it into Windows 2000, then let them.

      Speak for yourself, asswipe.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    23. Re:From the office of the president by reallocate · · Score: 1

      ".....free software is usually better software"....

      Why?

      --
      -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
    24. Re:From the office of the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My primary goal is not to make better software. It is to make FREE SOFTWARE.

      And to coerce others into doing the same.

    25. Re:From the office of the president by HydroCarbon10 · · Score: 2

      If you take the limit as price goes to zero of the usefulness of the software over the price of the software you'll find that free software is infinitely better than any software that costs money.

      Math, when appropriately misapplied, can be used to prove anything :-).

      --
      The best way to accelerate a windows box is at 9.8 meters per second square.
    26. Re:From the office of the president by Hadlock · · Score: 2

      AOL also pays for very high-quality, ad-free hosting and I commend them for that.

      i was just wondering where the free opensource community was comming up with the $$ to host probably a terrabyte of past nightly builds of umpteen different builds on different OS'es of 3 or 4 different products, not to mention the bandwidth needs of tens of thousands of copies of nightlies or stable builds being downloaded each day @ a good 20-100KB (or more)/sec. AOL truly roxorz in this respect. free AIM servers roxor too, even if the oscar protocol SUXORZ. enough 1337 for /\/\3. time3 4 5133p.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    27. Re:From the office of the president by jedidiah · · Score: 2

      The entire reason the GPL came into being is because Richards contributors objected to be locked out of changes made by profiteers. Richard did not magically make this stuff up. Nor did he decide to pull this rabbit out of his ass one day.

      "Free" in the manner in which lip service is given to the term implies EQUALITY of freedom.

      That is what the GPL seeks to provide, a little equality.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    28. Re:From the office of the president by jedidiah · · Score: 2

      If you don't like honest terminology, then perhaps you should revise your position. My characterization is correct.

      I reserve my charity for real people and not some limited liability entity with no morals and a charter to screw everyone over.

      Helping the former is NOTHING like helping the latter.

      You're welcome to your folly. Just don't make it into something it is not.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  15. Komodo by terrabit · · Score: 1

    I thought that Komodo was an integrated development environment built on Mozilla?

    Active State Komodo.

    1. Re:Komodo by morbid · · Score: 0

      Isn't that a kind of toilet?

      --
      I'm out of my tree just now but please feel free to leave a banana.
  16. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by tomgilder · · Score: 2, Informative
    microsoft-oriented POS(iframes, their DOM, etc.)
    Iframes are in HTML4. Mozilla supports iframes. IE supports DOM1.
  17. Why the fuck... by Burgundy+Advocate · · Score: 1

    ...didn't they wait for 1.0?

    It's not like it's that far off.

    --
    Dragging people kicking and screaming into reality since 1996.
    1. Re:Why the fuck... by DrXym · · Score: 2

      Because the CS & AOL dev teams have their own schedules to keep. If they waited for 1.0 to appear the CS client development cycle would have been set back by 6 months or more.

    2. Re:Why the fuck... by larien · · Score: 2

      Hell, it's not like Netscape bothered for Netscape 6.x, why should Compuserve?

  18. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Sunda666 · · Score: 1

    Outside windows? That would definitely impress me.

    Unfortunately, I think not.

    --


    ``If a program can't rewrite its own code, what good is it?'' - Mel
  19. Why didn't they wait until Mozilla 1.0? by tomgilder · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    We now have one version of Gecko in Netscape, a different one in Galeon, another one in CompuServ, and then we'll have Mozilla and AOL with different versions again.

    "Great"

  20. Why now? by ShawnDoc · · Score: 2, Funny

    I suppose this is just a test, but why force 3 million users to use a piece of software that is really not yet ready for prime time. I can't help but think AOL/TW is jumping the gun, the version 1RC isn't even out yet. Couldn't they have just waited a couple more months until the 1.0 final release is out and incorporated that into Compuserve?

    I just worry that by forcing conversion a few weeks/months early they will put off a lot of people then they would have had they released something based on final code.

    1. Re:Why now? by ADRA · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hello, we are talking about 3 Million people! Can't anyone else see that this is just a shoot load of beta testers? Compuserve will probably get zounds of customer feedback saying this or that is broken, and by knowing what real users need, the dev teams can fix the bugs really need to be.

      --
      Bye!
    2. Re:Why now? by DrXym · · Score: 2

      Where does it say force? A Compuserve user is only going to get the new 7.0 client if they install it. In other words it's voluntary.

    3. Re:Why now? by nicarley · · Score: 1

      Actually Mozilla Release Canidate 1.0 is out!

      --
      Nic Farley
    4. Re:Why now? by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      Not any worse than releasing Netscape 6.0 based on Mozilla (what was it 0.7?) Now THAT was a half-baked release, the lamest excuse for a .0 release since maybe Windows 1.0.

    5. Re:Why now? by JPriest · · Score: 1

      from mozilla.org: "Mozilla 0.9.9 is our latest milestone release." RC1 is on the way but 0.9.9 is still quite stable, the big deal about the release of RC1 is that it will freeze the API.

      --
      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:Why now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More like 35+ million bucko when you count AOL+Compuserve

    7. Re:Why now? by ShawnDoc · · Score: 1

      Are the people who choose to upgrade to 7.0 told their IE is going to be replaced with a beta build web browser?

      C'mon, which of the following is more likely to be on the flyer for CompuServe 7.0?

      A) Upgrade to new Compuserve 7.0. Great new features! Browse web pages faster with new 7.0 "gecko" powered browser!

      B) Upgrade to new Compuserve 7.0. Use our new "gecko" browser based off of unfinished Mozilla beta code! Enjoy the fun and excitement of being the first to discover new bugs! Watch your favorite web pages get turned into distored nightmares because they were designed using proprietary IE tags! Do your favorite plug in still work? Probably not, with new and improved Compuserve 7.0!

    8. Re:Why now? by uebernewby · · Score: 2

      C'mon, how beta is Mozilla exactly (except in name)? Lots of people, including myself, use it for day to day browsing, both on Windows (where there's a superb alternative available called IE) and on Linux. Not all of them are doing it because they hate Microsoft, but because the damn thing actually works (and comes with a bunch of nifty features IE doesn't have). It doesn't crash (no more than IE, probably less), it renders most pages flawlessly (except the ones that use IE specific code) and it's pretty fast (once it's started up).

      Face it, Mozilla is no longer the promising piece of perennial betaware it was even six months ago - it's a damn fine displayer of webpages (browser) with some extra icing that promises to make it a hell of a lot more.

      --

      News and bla for computer musicians: http://lomechanik.net/
    9. Re:Why now? by ShawnDoc · · Score: 1

      I tried using it for day to day browsing. I'd like to not use IE, but I'm pretty much stuck keeping it open when I use Mozilla so I can cut and paste links that Mozzilla can't handle.

      The first bug that just drives me nuts is that when Mozilla can't find an image it pops a window up that must be clicked before I can continue. I have my hosts file mapping certain urls to localhost. So if I go on a page with lots of advertising I have to close 4 or 5 windows that shouldn't be there.

      I like to read Drudgereport.com but Mozilla for whatever reason has coniptions trying to render that page.

      I've also found myself having to manually dig and find plug-ins that will work with Mozilla. Even Flash, which is probably the most used plug-in on the net made downloading it bothersome. I had to go the the Macromedia web page, search for the plug-in, download an .exe, and then run it. On IE all I have to do is go to a web page with Flash, and it asks me if I want to download it, if I say yes it auto downloads and isntalls for me with just one button click.

      I also have other weird bugs with Mozilla, such as not being able to type an address into the menu bar. I have to shut down Mozilla and restart it to clear it.

    10. Re:Why now? by ShawnDoc · · Score: 1

      Oh, and one more bug. A lot of web sites use a redirect script for downloads. I have repeatedly had Mozilla choke on those. Forcing me to copy and paste the link to IE to download what I want.

    11. Re:Why now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those are almost all problems you mention with the Mozilla UI. Considering that Compuserv is EMBEDDING nglayout into their product, I doubt most of those things are present. I doubt Compuserv users will ever see the Mozilla UI.

    12. Re:Why now? by DrXym · · Score: 2
      Why do you assume it's "unfinished"? NS 6.2 is a very good browser even though it's based off of 0.9.4. Part of the reason is that it has been continuously pounded on for the last year which means its extremely stable.


      If CS took the engine from the 0.9.4 it would be a more than adequate substitute for IE. In six months from now, perhaps they'll run an update that switches to the 1.0 engine assuming that proves itself to be as stable.

    13. Re:Why now? by uebernewby · · Score: 2

      I don't know what version of Mozilla you're running, but none of those bugs sound familiar to me (running 0.9.9). Sure, for some things, you'll need to have IE handy, but most of the time I can surf happily and carefree in Mozilla (the browser where hitting the back button doesn't compromise your system ;-) ).

      --

      News and bla for computer musicians: http://lomechanik.net/
  21. New feature! by Pituritus+Ani · · Score: 2, Funny
    You'll be able to go to web pages hosted by Compuserve using convenient, mnemonic names. For example, you'd type "GO CIS-175" in the address bar to change your password. For the LDOS Forum, you'd type "GO LDOS". For Weather, you'd type "GO WEATHER".

    As an enhancement, there'll be a Java applet with a "!" prompt. For an additional fee, you can type "GO PRO" in the address bar. Doing so will launch a PDP-10 emulator with a full suite of development tools, along with that user-friendly editor, TECO.

    --

    Another proud carrier of the $rtbl flag

  22. Better for MS too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is all part of a special support program for Microsoft Employees to keep them from eating each other in the absence of competition.

  23. Mozilla: the coolest project by Cally · · Score: 2, Funny

    I submit that Mozilla is the coolest Free software project running today! I've been using it since the first naked Gecko builds were available - almost nothing in the way of chrome, just a raw HTML rendering widget (and not a great one, to start with!) and watched it grow and mature in the last three or four (can it really be FOUR years Well I guess it surely can) years... the satisfaction I feel now that it's about to take over the world and crush the IE like a bug is amplified by remembered all those sad Slashdot flamers... "it's sooo bloaaatttteddd!!" they winged, "oooh, it's not as good as Internet Explorer", "I just want a browwwwwwser" they whined... HA! Well SCREW YOU, chaps, I was right and you were wrong. BAAAAhahahahaaha!

    (Cally wanders away to find his medication...)

    --
    "None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free." -- Goethe
    1. Re:Mozilla: the coolest project by johnjones · · Score: 2

      yep I agree

      I hope they base the compuserve tests on a stable branch hopefully 1.0 and not some random date

      regards

      john jones
      p.s. is it just me or is this graph scary window open check out 04/11

    2. Re:Mozilla: the coolest project by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How were you right? It is bloated, its still not as good as IE (have they got event bubbling right yet, didn't think so), and even if all of compurve switches (which most won't) IE would still be the most used browser by many many magnitudes. Mozilla is a decent project, and its almost caught up to the year old version of IE, but I hardly think you are right.

    3. Re:Mozilla: the coolest project by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "it's sooo bloaaatttteddd!!" they winged

      winged? What are you, a Northern Brit or a Fall fuckface?

  24. 3 million my ass by lseltzer · · Score: 1

    I find it hard to believe that Compuserve still has 3 million subscribers. I used to know large numbers of them, but I can think of exactly one person now that I know that uses it.

    1. Re:3 million my ass by SPiKe · · Score: 1

      I was told that all Northwest employees must have a Compuserve account if they have Internet access.

    2. Re:3 million my ass by uspsguy · · Score: 1

      Well, I still have a dial-up Compuserve account. Why?
      1. Because I'm too lazy to change. I don't remember exactly when I started with them but my inital connection was 300 baud text.
      2. They have been dead reliable for me for the last 20+ years. Huge list of local access numbers - 3 different pools available to me in town, never a busy signal, hardly ever a disconnect (when I'm actually using the service), no problems straightening out billing issues, always connect at close to advertised speed, email address has changed exactly twice - one from numbers to real name and once from @csi.com to @compuserve.com. I'm sure I could find something cheaper but why mess with it if it ain't broke?
      Thank God they haven't AOLized good old Compuserve Classic.

      --
      Profanity - The sign of a small mind trying to express itself.
    3. Re:3 million my ass by EvilAlien · · Score: 2

      What's a "dial-up"?

      --
      perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10)'
  25. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Outside windows?

    Who uses other operating systems for browsing anyway? (Besides MacOS, of course)

  26. Forced Download? by Bonker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not likely. A staggering number of AOL'ers are still using versions 3.0 and 4.0 of the AOL client, so I can only assume that similar percentages of compuserve users are doing the same thing. I don't think we can count on all of Compuserve, let alone 34 million AOL accounts, to suddenly be running on Gecko code any time in the near future.

    Forcing an update download on customers is possible, however. Certain online games are now in the practice of forcing a patch on users on a weekly basis. This same model could work for the big ISP's to keep their customers updated with the latest technology.

    It could also play into the hands of pushers of spyware and adware. What better way for LEO's to spy on someone suspected of a crime than to 'push' an update to his AOL or Compuserve account?

    --
    The next Slashdot story will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and slashdot the links early!
    1. Re:Forced Download? by DrXym · · Score: 2

      I haven't used AOL for a while but my understanding is they only force minor updates, i.e. a patch that fixes bugs in 6.0, but not forcing you to switch a whole version, e.g. from 6.0 to 7.0.

    2. Re:Forced Download? by Matthew+Luckie · · Score: 1

      Tell ESR that it is time to upgrade.

  27. browser marketshare parity is a good thing by Infonaut · · Score: 4, Insightful
    While Netscape/Mozilla hasn't been thrilling me of late, I think the only really important thing about the resurgence of the Browser Wars is that with a multitude of truly viable browser options available to users, perhaps we'll start to finally see some adaptation of standards that *work*.

    No, I'm not talking about W3 standards. While those are a good thing in theory, they're only good in practice when BOTH of the major players in the market embrace them in the same fashion.

    For example, while CSS is great for type control (in the main), it sucks for element placement because by the time you go through all of the necessary browser workarounds and browser detects and different versions of the same content, you may as well have just built the damned thing using tables.

    All this talk about how Mozilla rocks and IE blows, or vice-versa, is completely beside the point. We can't have a better Web until the two dominant forces in the Browser Universe start applying standards in the same fashion.

    Of course, O'Reilly would be bummed, because they'd no longer have to publish books like the CSS Pocket Guide (which delineates in great detail the myriad ways in which different tags are supported by different browsers).

    I'm still pessimistic, but overall if Netscape finds a way to regain enough marketshare to become viable again, it may encourage Netscape and IE to compete solely on the basis of features not tied to the rendering engine.

    Hey, a guy can dream, right?

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:browser marketshare parity is a good thing by brogdon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A pleasant thought, but the two browsers began on their divergent compatability paths back when the browsers *were* competing with each other. Netscape lobbied like Hell to get layers included in the W3C standard and then, after they weren't approved by the consortium, left them in the browser anyway, making all of us DHTML coders write two sets of scripts to handle them and IE's DIV tags.

      MS had been playing catch up to all of Netscape's quirks up until that point, but when IE 4 came out they knew they were going to take the lead, so they didn't bother worrying about layers. They were too busy planning all the IE-only extensions *they* would make once they held the lead in the race (stuff like those crappy XML behaviors). Now that the browser war has been won (by the bad guys, of course), Microsoft actually does a pretty decent job of sticking with the W3C and maintaining the standards, since they don't have to worry about the competition getting an even playing field so much any more.

      One could make the case that neither company had the time to wait for the W3C to release new, "official" standards when they busy innovating like Hell in order to get a leg up on the competition. In either case the disparity, I feel, is a direct result of having two browsers in direct, heated competition. I'm afraid this would come back if the browser wars were to start back up again. I really don't want to start writing two sets of code again.

      --


      This tagline is umop apisdn.
    2. Re:browser marketshare parity is a good thing by mooman · · Score: 1
      Of course, O'Reilly would be bummed, because they'd no longer have to publish books like the CSS Pocket Guide (which delineates in great detail the myriad ways in which different tags are supported by different browsers).
      Not to worry. Many (if not most) of us are still putting out apps that are required to be backwards compatible to various older browser versions.

      Books like the O'Reilly guide (Or the Osborne one I use, "Cascading Style Sheets 2.0 Programmer's Reference") will remain useful for quite a while until some (hypothetical) point in the future when the unwashed masses have all finally migrated to versions created after the Great Reconcilliation Of All Browsers.

      But considering how I find even that concept unlikely given that while Mozilla and IE are more closely compatible than the Navigator and IE of olde, they still are different enough that some detection code is still probably needed. And we won't even throw Opera, Konquerer, et al, into the mix...

      I suspect my book will be quite dog-eared by then...

      --
      In the Portland, Ore area and like card games? Check out: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/portlandgames/
    3. Re:browser marketshare parity is a good thing by Baki · · Score: 2

      But since Mozilla is run by volunteers without commercial motives, they won't get carried away as Netscape once was. They will stick to w3c standards, no matter how heated the competition gets.

    4. Re:browser marketshare parity is a good thing by sheldon · · Score: 1, Troll

      "Now that the browser war has been won (by the bad guys, of course),"

      Weird, I thought Netscape lost the browser war.

    5. Re:browser marketshare parity is a good thing by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 2

      Ye olde days of Netscape and IE version 4 are thankfully behind us, to a large extent. Mozilla and IE6 are quite good with standards compliance, Konqueror isn't bad, but Opera sucks for DOM, so I just ignore it :)

      Anyway, if you can get away with not supporting Netscape 4, you'll find developing sites that look good in all browsers a lot easier. I have to support Netscape 4 in my latest project because the main user-base (The people using campus computers to access the site) are mostly using Netscape 4 (Due to that being the only installed browser). However, for my other projects, I just say "Sod Netscape 4" and my life becomes much more pleasant.

    6. Re:browser marketshare parity is a good thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mozilla has volunteers without commercial motives, but don't think it isn't run by AOL.

    7. Re:browser marketshare parity is a good thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other bad guys...

    8. Re:browser marketshare parity is a good thing by driptray · · Score: 1

      One could make the case that neither company had the time to wait for the W3C to release new, "official" standards when they busy innovating like Hell in order to get a leg up on the competition.

      Not true. Take a look at style sheets, for which a draft spec was in place long before Netscape had even dreamt up the FONT tag. The idea that the standards bodies were too slow for fast moving web companies like Netscape is simply wrong. Speed wasn't the issue - it was all about having proprietary technology and trying to own the web.

      Just imagine if Netscape had adopted CSS instead of "innovating" FONT. What a different place the web would be...

  28. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by ADRA · · Score: 2

    DOM1++

    All of Microsoft's programming documentation contains proprietary enhancements to the spec that are VERY IE specific. They make no distinction as to which objects, events, methods are standard, and which are cooked.

    Frankly, I don't care if they are using proprietary extensions, as long as they are VERY clear to people that they are when people read their docs to learn DHTML, etc..

    --
    Bye!
  29. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Sunda666 · · Score: 1

    I do. To tell the truth, even having win98 installed on the computer, I never use it to browse, since I'd probably get some virus that would mess with all that vital information that is on my windows partitions (savegame files, for example).

    I happily browse with linux/mozilla, thank you.

    --


    ``If a program can't rewrite its own code, what good is it?'' - Mel
  30. What browser war? by Morgahastu · · Score: 0, Troll

    Do any of you seriously know any "regular" people who actually have to decide which browser to use? Other then people who use linux. When I use windows there is no question in my mind that I want to use IE. On the other hand on Linux no one browser fits me well so I am often switching between browsers. This "war" of yours is more of a little skirmish.

    1. Re:What browser war? by dnaumov · · Score: 1

      I am suing Windows, there's no reason for me to use that weird browser that doesn't support tabs, themes/skins, is so non-complient with most trivial standarts and is wide-open with it's security holes. Yes, I am talking about MSIE.

      When I use Windows, it's either Mozilla or Opera. Thank you.

    2. Re:What browser war? by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2

      I am suing Windows

      Who's your lawyer?

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    3. Re:What browser war? by JewFish · · Score: 1

      eat browsing with tabs and die!

    4. Re:What browser war? by LinuxGeek · · Score: 2
      When I use windows, there is no question in my mind that I don't want to use IE. I am using mozilla 0.9.9 right now and only use IE when there is no other choice. Lately, that has meant about every two weeks.

      Major security holes just aren't my cup of fur.

      --

      Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see. - Mark Twain
    5. Re:What browser war? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why? Are you afraid someone is going to find out you look at porn? You are not hiding any plans to destroy the USA are you? Then why the fuck do you care?

    6. Re:What browser war? by LinuxGeek · · Score: 2
      Why? Are you afraid someone is going to find out you look at porn? You are not hiding any plans to destroy the USA are you? Then why the fuck do you care?
      Security Freaking Flaws! out the wazoo.

      Why the fuck don't you care? I use windows when necessary for work and to stay familiar with 'technology'. I also have a strong computing security background and don't like taking more risks than necessary.

      --

      Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see. - Mark Twain
  31. Wow, I should use CompuServe... by chuckgrosvenor · · Score: 2

    imagine getting to be a guine pig for the corporation I pay to provide me with hosting. And I get to pay for the benefit of finding their bugs for them.

    Don't get me wrong, Netscape 6.X has come light years in the past year or so, but I'm still not convinced it's ready for prime time yet... no idea how much better the Mozilla releases have been though, but they sound only incrementally better than the official Netscape releases.

    1. Re:Wow, I should use CompuServe... by karmawarrior · · Score: 1

      I don't know. Netscape 4.x wasn't any more complete and reliable as 6.x, and I could make similar comments about certain operating systems installed on a few hundred million desktops.

      It's close enough, certainly closer to "prime time" than the majority of software products I see people putting up with day in day out. So it sounds like a good idea to me.

      --
      KMSMA (WWBD?)
    2. Re:Wow, I should use CompuServe... by sab39 · · Score: 2

      I don't know which version they're using for the CompuServe release - AIUI the AOL beta test used a very old version, not much if any more recent than NS6.2. So the following may not apply to the CompuServe release.

      But...

      they sound only incrementally better than the official Netscape releases

      I wouldn't quite say that's true. I'd say, rather, that each Mozilla milestone release is incrementally better than the last. NS6.2 remains based on 0.9.4 (technically 0.9.4.1 or some such but we won't go into that). 0.9.5 was incrementally better. 0.9.6 was incrementally better again. Ditto 0.9.7, 0.9.8 and 0.9.9. At some point, that loose change starts adding up into real money.

      I used each version in sequence, so I can't judge the total magnitude of the improvement I've seen since 0.9.4. And each milestone does, to be fair, introduce its own share of minor annoyances. The likelihood of finding one or two unfinished or regressed features is higher in current mozilla milestones (hopefully 1.0 will be the exception to that... or maybe the difference will come in the 1.0.1 deliberately-bugfix-only release).

      But it can't hurt to try it, can it?

    3. Re:Wow, I should use CompuServe... by codingOgre · · Score: 1

      If you would like to see real improvement install Redhat 7.2 (which includes mozilla 0.9.2) and play with mozilla for a day. Then install mozilla 0.9.9 and see what a difference there is! It is really quite amazing.

      --
      Space may be the final frontier, but it's made in a Hollywood basement. --Red Hot Chili Peppers, Californication
    4. Re:Wow, I should use CompuServe... by David+Gerard · · Score: 1

      0.9.5 was incrementally better. 0.9.6 was incrementally better again. Ditto 0.9.7, 0.9.8 and 0.9.9. At some point, that loose change starts adding up into real money.

      I really noticed this when using a Debian-stable box recently. It came with M18 (late 2000). I wanted a current browser, so upgraded Mozilla to 0.9.8 (early 2002) from Debian-testing. It was incredible to see a year's improvements in one hit. Much faster, significantly smaller memory usage and leakage, much more stable.

      "Release early, release often." Mozilla puts out a test release every night. People like me (someone who triages the day's new bugs whenever I have a bored hour) hammer on it. Problems get fixed. Particularly since early 2001, when the browser finally hit critical mass and became usable on a daily basis - thus sending the number of testers through the roof.

      IE 5 is an undeniably good browser, but compared to Mozilla it's an experience in pain for me. Opera 6 is nice and has a better UI than Mozilla (though I'm accumulating a list of pages it dies horribly on). Aside from its incredibly fat arse (system requirement is 64 meg memory - I would say 256 meg for a happy life), Mozilla is already a world-beater and will be inconceivably good in another year. These are exciting times!

      --
      http://rocknerd.co.uk
  32. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by ADRA · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The only problem with this is that if people want highly interactive content between pages and active code on the client, there is nothing there. Java is fine and dandy in a 100% isolated environment, so it can't be used as a scripting language.

    ure JavaScript and all extension thereof have the syntax and functionality, but they are missing tons of browser hooks that Microsoft has added to their browser. They are more targeting easy access applications than interactive web sites. Iweb sites were old news with MS long after they ever got traction with web developers. That is why developers use flash for interaction now. It is a lot simpler than java, and a lot more flexable than IE-DHTML..

    On the other hand, the last ActiveX component I DL'ed was Terminal Server Client, which allows anyone to Terminal Server login from a web page. It is very sexy for simple remote network logins.

    --
    Bye!
  33. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by tomgilder · · Score: 3, Informative
    All of Microsoft's programming documentation contains proprietary enhancements to the spec that are VERY IE specific. They make no distinction as to which objects, events, methods are standard, and which are cooked.
    Utter rubbish.

    The IE DHTML references on MSDN very clearly mark which objects, events, methods and properties are standard and which ones are not.

    Their CSS Property Index clearly lists non-standard entries.
  34. New Version 7.1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    welcome 55433.4031
    Welcome To Compuserve 7.1 Powered By Lynx Technologies
    Type GO DOWNLOADAOL for aol version 8
    TYpe GO NETSCAPE for netscape 6.3
    Type GO www.sitename.com for other stuff

    GO :

  35. Netscape sucks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And so does Linux and all other open source software.

    1. Re:Netscape sucks. by workerbeedrone · · Score: 1

      Hard to argue with that logic.

      Where can I get a version of Windows that will run on my 75MHz pentium box?

    2. Re:Netscape sucks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows 3.11 man.... it's like... for workgroups!

  36. Re:I have the way out! NEW VERSION 1.2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks for the guide. However, there is one small problem I have with it. It appears that "Free DOS" is an "open-sores" project written by dirty communist hippies, just like Linux. You should suggest Caldera DR-DOS, IBM PC-DOS or another commercial DOS system that won't infect my computer with open-sores bugs.

  37. episode II by alexc · · Score: 1

    mozilla strikes back

    1. Re:episode II by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe that's

      Episode II: Attack of the Mozilla(s)

  38. Netscape is dead by delphin42 · · Score: 0, Troll

    I wish it weren't true, but it is. At least on windoze machines.

    Getting excited about an announcement like this is like cheering about the flight attendants serving free alcoholic beverages on your plane that's going down in the middle of the ocean.

    --
    -- Adam
    1. Re:Netscape is dead by HiThere · · Score: 2

      I don't know about Netscape. Mozilla is doing quite well, however.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  39. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Redundant

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  40. Who uses CompuServe? by fumble · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is not meant to be flamebait, this is a legit question. *Who actually uses CompuServe nowadays?* Seriously. What does CompuServe's customer base look like? Is it early internet adopters that were too lazy to "upgrade" to AOL (I say upgrade with a grain of salt)? Is it customers that were jaded by poor AOL service and thought that CS might actually be better? hmm ...

    1. Re:Who uses CompuServe? by PanBanger · · Score: 1

      Alot of folks fell for that $300 rebate for signing on with CompuServe. This was (and still is)offered with new computers at Circuit City and the like. I'm guessing that a good portion of CompuServe's costumers are locked into a 3 year contract. After the 2nd or 3rd month, they were probably kicking themselves.

    2. Re:Who uses CompuServe? by Jay+L · · Score: 2

      When AOL first bought CompuServe, it was supposed to be the business brand, with AOL the home brand. Made sense, given where CompuServe Classic was. However, that didn't last long, as few businesses (in the CompuServe sense) use dialups anymore.

      These days, CompuServe is the "discount" brand. It's still $9.95 for 20 hours, $19.95/mo for unlimited use, $199 for a year of unlimited service (about $17/mo). If you're just looking for the forums and other content, it's still $9.95/mo for bring-your-own-access.

    3. Re:Who uses CompuServe? by Spy+Hunter · · Score: 2

      CompuServe was doing some of those $400 rebates on new computers some time ago. That's how we got it. Once you've done that, you're locked in for quite some time.

      --
      main(c,r){for(r=32;r;) printf(++c>31?c=!r--,"\n":c<r?" ":~c&r?" `":" #");}
    4. Re:Who uses CompuServe? by Monte · · Score: 1

      As I see it there are two "faces" to CIS - one, the ISP/Portal aka AOL. This, in my experience, sucks - when I had CIS as my ISP I got way too many random disconnects, busy signals, and sub-56k connects. Could be just a local problem, but el-sucko none the less.

      Next, there's "old" CIS, which is the community of forums. Think of it as Usenet (or alternately the old BBS scene) with moderation. No spam, no flaming, etc. And because the "undesirables" are kept out the community that remains actually has value - if you ask a question about x, it's very likely you'll get a useful answer without getting a flame job or RTFM or a goatsex link.

      Anyway, it's the latter reason I've been on CIS for... hmmm, I guess more than a decade now. I just use the forums (via an off-line reader, makes life much easier) over my cable-modem ISP.

    5. Re:Who uses CompuServe? by buckeyeguy · · Score: 2

      Sure beats the heck out of their old dial-up plan, when at one point (1987/1988?) they were charging $12.95 PER HOUR for 2400 baud dial-up access. And yes, being the geek I was/am, I paid it.

      --
      I'd have a personalized plate on my car, but "toxic bachelor" won't fit into 7 letters.
  41. Why not wait for mozilla 1.0 ? by InodoroPereyra · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If the idea is to do an initial test with a fraction of the AOL users, why didn't they wait until Mozilla reaches 1.0 and Netscape releases a version based on this codebase ?. What if the test fails simply because Netscape is still not stable/polished enough ?. Mozilla 1.0 is supposed to be close at this point in time ... what am I missing ?

    1. Re:Why not wait for mozilla 1.0 ? by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Mozilla 0.9.9 is better than IE6, in my opinion as well as others'. I doubt very much mozilla will fail the test.

      AOL has been using IE for several years, and that's several years too many. Maybe their plan is to test with compuserve, and then use 1.0 for AOL, when it's done.

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
      1 John 4:14
    2. Re:Why not wait for mozilla 1.0 ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a clownish post.

      Mozilla *still* crashes on javascript when trying to launch flash about 1 in 3 times. IE never. And the shear number of flash sites alone makes mozill worthless. It also can't handle forms properly and so many e-commerce sites are unusable.

      AOL has been using IE because MS build a componetized third party accessable engine long *long* before netscape had one. IE was a far superior browser so AOL used it. They are now switching to an inferior more bug prone browser because they finally got a componetized engine for free. Though their cost cutting is a disservice to their customers.

    3. Re:Why not wait for mozilla 1.0 ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mozilla has *never* crashed on me when starting flash. and it hasn't crashed on me when doing *anything* in months.

  42. pet names for netscape by qurob · · Score: 0, Offtopic


    Netscape
    NetScrape
    NutScrape
    NetScab
    NutScab
    NetScoochie

    1. Re:pet names for netscape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Netscape Fornicator
      Crapscape
      Shitscape

  43. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by WeaselGod · · Score: 1

    The mozilla team has produced an activex control container. It doesn't give you near the functionality since its a plugin and does not allow you to script against the activex control but it will allow controls to run in mozilla.

    --
    - WeaselGod
    Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet turbines
  44. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  45. This is GOOD news. by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

    Mozilla is now ready for primetime, and I'm very happy AOL (Compuserve) is finally using Netscape.

    We really can call it a browser war again when AOL switches... 41 million users will make an amazing change, and that will effectivly be 82 million more for Netscape, because it's also 41 million less on IE.

    --
    "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
    1 John 4:14
    1. Re:This is GOOD news. by dnaumov · · Score: 1

      The only problem is that the vast majority of these 41 million users won't know/care that they're now using a different browser. Although it is indeed a very good thing that more and more people are switching. The internet has been made into a pop-up land of security issues for IE users. Other browsers need wider adoption.

    2. Re:This is GOOD news. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't *wait* to see the pop-up land of security issues with netscape when it does take over 50%. Netscape has had it's share of serious problems! You act as if it's never had a bug, badly implmented feature or security breach. And that's simply not true. I opine that the number of problems is proportionate to the number of users and you will see mozilla bugs come to the surface with much more regularity if it's user base actually goes up.

    3. Re:This is GOOD news. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Especially because Netscape is unable to produce a patch. Every bug found means that you get to download another seventeen megabytes.

    4. Re:This is GOOD news. by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

      Get with the times, dude. Netscape, serious problems? no. Your logic about number of bugs to number of users is also insane. Mozilla reports more bugs than Microsoft does because the "Bugzilla" system is more efficient, and they report "bugs" which aren't really bugs.

      For the guy who replied under you: Mozilla is about 10 megabytes, not 17. WE AREN'T TALKING ABOUT NETSCAPE 4.X!!!

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
      1 John 4:14
  46. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  47. True dat! by ebonic+plague · · Score: 2, Funny

    If they still usin Compuserve, they probably ain't interested in upgrades.

    --
    Na'am sayin?
    1. Re:True dat! by ebonic+plague · · Score: 0

      Oh, I get it. You see someone don't write exactly the way you do, and you start salivatin like one a Pavlov's dogs at a classical handbell recital, slippin all ova yo own drool tryin to diss them. You don't even know me and you so sure you betta? That says enough about YOU right there, cuz. At least I am contributin ot the conversation instead of postin offtopic.

      --
      Na'am sayin?
    2. Re:True dat! by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      um no..

      He's saying you should learn english...

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
  48. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    On the other hand, the last ActiveX component I DL'ed was Terminal Server Client, which allows anyone to Terminal Server login from a web page. It is very sexy for simple remote network logins.

    VNC does that just fine with java, and all you need is a link. And it works with any gui browser I have tried (no real point using lynx with vnc is there?)

  49. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  50. Mozilla: the coolest project - engine, maybe by entheon · · Score: 1

    the only cool part of the mozilla project is the engine, and that's only if you're a developer and interested in building your own browser. Mozilla itself is bloat ware and runs about a gazillion times slower than galeon on my ghz athlon. ok, a gazillion is a lot. And what the foobar is up with all those damned side tabs. At least the tabs in IE do something useful and load fast. I say give me a browser that looks good - read not cluttered but still aesthetic - works well, as in standards, and works fast. then maybe I'll be happy. For now I'm a galeon/konqueror and IE person. Once the mozilla project figures out how to get - what exactly is it in there that makes the thing take at LEAST three or four times as long to load as galeon? I don't see it - it's software to work swiftly I'll be happy.

    --
    I'm too lame for sigs
    1. Re:Mozilla: the coolest project - engine, maybe by fanatic · · Score: 4, Interesting

      the only cool part of the mozilla project is the engine, and that's only if you're a developer and interested in building your own browser.

      You're entitled to your opinion, even though it's wrong.

      XUL is very cool. Need a browser with no menus of buttons, as an interface to a web-based application for a control-freak client? I got Mozilla (in the M18 days) to do this with a few hours of messing around in the various xml files (and a very small bit of javascript hacks to stop that damn throbber from exiting). No C or C++ coding at all. And I am not a browser or Mozilla developer - perl coding is my speed.

      Browser came up to a pre-determined URL and user had no visible way to go anywhere else. (Unfortunately, the project was cacelled before I figured how to inhibit the control-* keys, oh well....)

      --
      "that's not encryption - it's a new perl script that I'm working on..." - from some Matrix parody
    2. Re:Mozilla: the coolest project - engine, maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're entitled to your opinion, even though it's wrong.

      Front on, dotter, froth on.

    3. Re:Mozilla: the coolest project - engine, maybe by sheldon · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      "XUL is very cool. Need a browser with no menus of buttons, as an interface to a web-based application for a control-freak client?"

      Congratulations! You have now found the joy of doing something that Microsoft developers have taken for granted for at least the past 5 years.

    4. Re:Mozilla: the coolest project - engine, maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And pop-up artists alike.

    5. Re:Mozilla: the coolest project - engine, maybe by fanatic · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Congratulations! You have now found the joy of doing something that Microsoft developers have taken for granted for at least the past 5 years.

      Interesting. This is done without writing new code? Or do you write some very short VB-script that uses the IE bits integrated into the OS?

      In any event, IE is not what I'd want build apps on (see the 'using back button in IE is dangerous" article, as well 47 other Bugtraq listings...)

      --
      "that's not encryption - it's a new perl script that I'm working on..." - from some Matrix parody
  51. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by WeaselGod · · Score: 0

    Ah, typical blind "If its from MS its crap" sentiments from the zelots. ActiveX controls are about the best technology for producing Web apps (Which are huge in the corperate world). Their only real drawback is that they only run on windows (Well, ATL ActiveX controls theoretically run on Solaris and MacOS if the appropriate MS software is preinstalled) but guess what, since 95% of the desktop market is Windows I guess this doesn't matter. ActiveX controls are a huge step over the antiquated plugin model that Netscape uses, it is kind of nice to be able to script against the control which isn't feasible with a plugin in Netscape. When compared to Applets ActiveX controls are far faster, have far better gui tools, and are just as secure as Applets. With an applet you can gain elivated permissions that allow things like file I/O by making calls to the VM, with an ActiveX control you have to Implement IObjectSafety to be designated safe to do this. With WinForm Controls (the next gen ActiveX control) the corporation will be able to have even more control over security by defining policies in IE that designate just what kind of privlages the control has. Oh, and since the CLR isn't platform specific WinForm controls can theoretically run under any OS. Mozilla is so stuck on rendering HTML according to a standard that they team hasn't realized that browsers are slowly accrueing far mor functionality. Software now runs in a browser, but applets don't cut it and plugins just blow ass. The only technology that can do this effectively is ActiveX (and now winform controls).

    --
    - WeaselGod
    Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet turbines
  52. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  53. Comical. by Zico · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah, I'm sure that all those paying subscribers can't wait to have their services disrupted so that they can be guinea pigs for AOL. I'm sure they have nothing better to do than send Compuserve "zounds of customer feedback" saying that the things they want to do are now broken.

    1. Re:Comical. by Rob+Y. · · Score: 1

      Well, Mozilla 1.0's a hell of a lot better than the crap that was IE3 when they started using that.

      --
      Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
    2. Re:Comical. by HydroCarbon10 · · Score: 2

      If the users are too stupid to use an alternative browser to whatever CompuServe ships with their grandma-friendly gui then they probably deserve to get disturbed a bit...maybe they'll actually be forced to learn how to use their computer for a change. Paying for something does not imply zero learning curve, despite what Microsoft would have so many people believe.

      --
      The best way to accelerate a windows box is at 9.8 meters per second square.
    3. Re:Comical. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      Yeah, I'm sure that all those paying subscribers can't wait to have their services disrupted so that they can be guinea pigs for AOL.

      Hey, a lot of people paid for Windows 95 didn't they? Now there's beta software if I've ever seen it...

    4. Re:Comical. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but half of those paying subscribers were the recipient of the $400 retail store rebate. And think of all the Windows users who are guinea pigs daily...

    5. Re:Comical. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does the quality of IE3 have to do with the quality of Mozilla 1.0?

  54. Just a tad too early. by digitect · · Score: 4, Interesting

    <sigh>

    Don't get me wrong, Mozilla is great and I love/use it, but there are still some very serious issues:

    • Bug 89350 -- Home button should appear on main Toolbar
    • Bug 35268 -- Edit Source using External Editor
    • Bug 96877 -- Address book: Lists lose addresses

    Hope those CompuServe users can hang in there until 1.2 or so.

    (I'd link, but they don't take referrals from SlashDot... here's the Mozilla Bugzilla Home Page.)

    --
    There is no need to use a SlashDot sig for SEO...
    1. Re:Just a tad too early. by ferat · · Score: 1

      You know? I'm not sure I'd label "Home button should appear on main toolbar" as a very serious issue. Its more of a personal UI whine than anything.

      The option to move it would be nice for those that care, but it hardly qualifies as a showstopper for deployment.

    2. Re:Just a tad too early. by Xiphoid+Process · · Score: 2, Insightful

      * Bug 89350 -- Home button should appear on main Toolbar
      * Bug 35268 -- Edit Source using External Editor


      these are serious 1.0 stopping features??? man, you need a reality check

      --
      got drum'n'bass?

      http://mp3.com/vitriolix
    3. Re:Just a tad too early. by Kami-sama · · Score: 0

      Listen, if Bug # 100393 isn't a 1.0 stopping feature, nothing is.

      --
      HELP! HELP! I'm being repressed!
    4. Re:Just a tad too early. by Aanallein · · Score: 1

      these are serious 1.0 stopping features???

      Yes, these are the bugs we whine about nowadays. It's really pathetic. For the longest time everybody could at least rely on being able to seriously complain about 40867 (the view source from post operation bug), but now that's... *sobs* ... fixed.
      We honestly don't know what to do anymore... It's really bad. Sure, there are some minor issues, and we can always work on making things even more standards compliant and adding some other nifty features and polishing, but basically... *wipes away tears* ...basically Mozilla is just the best damn browser out there and we're reduced to these petty (but very important!) bugs. :-)

    5. Re:Just a tad too early. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i want to belive you are joking, but you seem serious

    6. Re:Just a tad too early. by Mumble01 · · Score: 1

      Easy way to get around the Slashdot referral ban...

      In IE:
      -right click
      -select "Copy Shortcut"
      -menu bar "File -> New -> Window"
      -paste URL into Address Bar

      I don't use Mozilla but I imagine it must be similar.

    7. Re:Just a tad too early. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally I hate "Home buttons," so I'm glad it's not on the toolbar.

    8. Re:Just a tad too early. by PlaysWithMatches · · Score: 2
      * Bug 89350 -- Home button should appear on main Toolbar
      * Bug 35268 -- Edit Source using External Editor
      * Bug 96877 -- Address book: Lists lose addresses

      Ok, 96877 is rather serious, but c'mon... the home button not appearing in the main toolbar? Whoopdidoo. In my mind, it belongs on the link bar with the other links. Back is not a link. Front is not a link. Stop is not a link. Home is a link, and so are the items in my Bookmark menu and my favorites toolbar. An option to toggle where it appears would be handy for those who want to change it, but I don't see this as a show-stopper.

      As for the external editor bit, yeah that's a good point, but for 90% of users, will it matter much? No. The average user does not know that you can view the source of HTML, much less edit it as such. And a lot of them don't really care. They just want to browse the web in a pleasant fashion, which is something Mozilla does an admirable job of providing, IMHO.

      </my2>
      --

      Mozilla's a nice operating system, but it needs a better browser.
    9. Re:Just a tad too early. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I don't use Mozilla

      Why ? It is pretty good now.

    10. Re:Just a tad too early. by digitect · · Score: 2

      I don't care if Mozilla can cook breakfast for me, if it doesn't do what I need, it's not useful. Here's some explanation as to why I think these three are serious issues:

      Home Button: My home page is my personal collection of links, dictionary form and Google search form. I start every new browse there. You may argue that this is only personal taste, but Intranets everywhere use this setup. (And oh, BTW, every other browser feels this is an important UI issue.)

      View Source in External Editor: I also write a lot of HTML, and prefer to use the browser to navigate the code. A quick view source is the best way to polish a page, IMO. (This is enough for me to stick with IE while I'm using Windows.)

      Broken Address Book Lists: I don't even use the address book, but I finally convinced my boss to try Mozilla as an upgrade to Netscape 4. (Which had trashed his address book.) Figuring an upgrade may possibly restore his data (it did), he went along with my suggestion. But he still thinks I'm a crackpot for suggesting a browser that won't maintain his address book lists. (He wishes he would have just re-installed NS 4.)

      UI issues are serious issues. Coders may pooh, pooh them, but one of the great successes of Apple is that last 1%. Can't we just fix these?

      --
      There is no need to use a SlashDot sig for SEO...
    11. Re:Just a tad too early. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Home Button

      Maybe this has changed since 3/27/2002, but the home button exists, it is on the link bar rather than the main toolbar. And if that's not good enough, alt-home takes you there as well.

    12. Re:Just a tad too early. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hmm, in mozilla I clicked on a bugzilla link from /., then dragged it up and dropped it on the tab. Worked fine.

      gotta wuv them tabs

    13. Re:Just a tad too early. by Jay+L · · Score: 4, Informative

      None of those would apply, because none of those are in Gecko. The CompuServe client is still a client unto its own right; it sounds like it will just open browser windows with Gecko instead of IE.

    14. Re:Just a tad too early. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Home Page is about:mozilla. So, I'm more than happy not to waste space on a home button. I'd rather have a Font Size +/- menu.

      Go vote for the bug which allows a configurable toolbar. (If that's impossible because of the XUL, then someone fucked up bigtime and XUL should be flushed.) Then you solve your problem without causing one for someone else.

    15. Re:Just a tad too early. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, links to Bugzilla from Slashdot are disabled.

      Now we need the "fake referer" feature! That's a showstopper... I mean, jesus, I gave them about 10 hits trying to get around that shit, rather than 1...

    16. Re:Just a tad too early. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      UI issues are serious issues. Coders may pooh, pooh them, but one of the great successes of Apple is that last 1%. Can't we just fix these?

      UI issues are serious, but your "home page" one isn't universally agreed upon. Hell, I doubt you'll even get 2/3rds majority...

    17. Re:Just a tad too early. by ArsonSmith · · Score: 2

      No it is much easier, double click the link text, then middle click. takes you right there.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
  55. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by DrXym · · Score: 2
    There are ActiveX related projects concerning Mozilla that:
    • Embed Mozilla in an ActiveX container (e.g. VB).
    • Host ActiveX controls in Mozilla using a plugin
    • Add accessibility to Mozilla via automation.
    • Add simple MAPI support so mail/news is integrated with other software.


    Plus Mozilla has pretty good support for drag and drop, clipboatd and shortcuts which are also OLE/ActiveX related activities.

  56. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  57. Naming Issues by user32.ExitWindowsEx · · Score: 2, Funny

    I suppose that it should technically be Browser Wars VI: Netscape Strikes Back, but for all you Mozilla lovers out there, it could arguably be Broswer Wars II: Attack of the (Mozilla) Clones.

    I know I'm stretching the bounds of humor.

    --
    "Evil will always triumph because good is dumb." -- Dark Helmet
    1. Re:Naming Issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Auhmmmm ...
      I: The IExplorer Menace
      II: Attack of the (Mozilla) Clones (stolen from you)
      III: unknown
      IV: A New Mozilla
      V: Microsoft Strikes Back
      VI: Return of Mozilla

    2. Re:Naming Issues by Kami-sama · · Score: 0

      VI should be "Return of the Mosaic". Thanks for playing, though.

      --
      HELP! HELP! I'm being repressed!
    3. Re:Naming Issues by user32.ExitWindowsEx · · Score: 1

      My mistake. It should be Broswer Wars V: Netscape Strikes Back. I will make the appropriate repentance offering of stormtroopers upon the Altar of Jedi Outcast to the great and mighty Lucas.

      --
      "Evil will always triumph because good is dumb." -- Dark Helmet
    4. Re:Naming Issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I like:
      VI: Return of the Gecko

  58. Grr, It looks like only for Compuserve 2000 by weave · · Score: 2
    A few years ago, AOL bought Compuserve, the place where techies hung out, and turned it into their "value" (read: cheap throwaway) brand.

    They quickly came out with Compuserve 2000 and encouraged all "classic" subscribers to upgrade. CIS 2000 was basically just a repackaged AOL using AOL dialups.

    Compuserve Classic has been left out there to whither and die. I've had a compuserve account since the mid 80s (76347,1163).

    They have no updated their "classic" software since coming out with this bastardized AOL clone.

    I was hoping this was going to be a classic update, guess not. :(

    1. Re:Grr, It looks like only for Compuserve 2000 by Jay+L · · Score: 2

      Compuserve Classic has been left out there to whither and die.

      You don't think that's because it's running on hardware that isn't even made anymore, do you?

  59. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Pfhreakaz0id · · Score: 2

    ah, you're actually submitting facts about Microsoft in a Slashdot thread!

    Heretic! though shalt burn in a pool of m$ Shiete for all eternity!

    I was just about to post this when I saw yours. Many of these posters wouldn't recognize MSDN if it hit 'em in the ass.

  60. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by DrXym · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Mozilla is actually more powerful than IE in this regard. Using XPCOM, JS, XUL, XPI packages and more besides, it's possible to extend or modify the behaviour of the browser in any number of ways.


    Unlike ActiveX you're not even confined to Win32. It is quite possible to develop cross-platform components or even whole applications using just JS & XUL.

  61. Mozilla, Konqueror, IE, et al. by vex24 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I realized last night that I'm now completely dependent on the superior feature set of Mozilla's web browser.

    I ran across a web site which had obviously been written to cater to MSIE browsers, and eschew web standards compliance. The pages didn't load (at all) in Mozilla 0.9.9, so I decided to give Konqueror a shot before giving up entirely. Konqueror rendered the pages (kudos to the K-people!) but made me realize why I like Mozilla so much. Pop-up windows, animated gif ads, and the clutter of multiple windows was enough to make me groan more than once while trying to navigate the site.

    Oh, and before anyone posts "Konqueror does that, you moron!" realize that I'm not trying to rain on the K parade, just extoll the virtues of my fair web browser.

    To avoid the dreaded Off-Topic, I'd just like to close by saying that I hope the experiment works, and Compuserve users get a chance to take control of their web browsing experience. Hopefully the privacy and anti-annoyance controls aren't removed when they turn it over to the consumer users.

    --

    People shape laws. Not the other way around.

    1. Re:Mozilla, Konqueror, IE, et al. by sheldon · · Score: 2

      Which website were you trying to view? Just kind of curious what web standard they were apparently violating.

      Microsoft and Netscape will never release browsers that block ads... especially Microsoft. Not because they don't listen to consumers, but rather they're afraid of being sued for anti-trust violations by the p0rn industry.

  62. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    too little too late, corporate america already standardized on IE, netscape is going to choke

  63. Let us all try to realize... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    ...that just because Netscape may be getting back some of the market share does not mean web standards compliance will suddenly be the norm. Keep in mind that before IE was worth using (pre-IE5), Netscape was just as bad as Microsoft is in developing their own web tricks. Anybody remember when frames first came out?

    The only thing Netscape gives the market is another significant mouth to feed for web developers to accomidate code for. Both companies will continue their practices as they always have in order to appear to have the 'better product'. Any browser that releases a version full of options that only comply to the standards will be playing catch up forever.

    1. Re:Let us all try to realize... by roca · · Score: 4, Informative

      > Both companies will continue their practices as
      > they always have in order to appear to have the
      > 'better product'.

      You seem to have forgotten that the Gecko engine is open source. There are plenty of non-Netscape people working on Gecko and we will not deviate from Mozilla.org's stated policy of standards support, nor would we stand by and allow Netscape employees to violate that policy (which, by the way, they have shown absolutely NO sign of wanting to do).

    2. Re:Let us all try to realize... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You seem to have forgotten that the Gecko engine is open source. There are plenty of non-Netscape people working on Gecko and we will not deviate from Mozilla.org's stated policy of standards support, nor would we stand by and allow Netscape employees to violate that policy (which, by the way, they have shown absolutely NO sign of wanting to do). "

      Netscape being open source is irrelavent. I couldn't care less who writes the browser as long as it is a good browser with good features. My issue was that if Netscape is only going to provide features that are part of a web standard, then there will be no new features added by Netscape until they are standardized. This will mean that Microsoft will still be the only company adding new features to their browser that may one day become the standards.

      As I said before, if broswers were only released with standard web features, we would still have browsers no better than NCSA Mosiac's first release. Frames, JavaScript inclusion, stylesheets, and most other "modern" web features were introduced (mostly by Netscape) long before they became standards.

      Sometimes it is better to as for forgiveness then to wait for permission. Things get done that way.

  64. Think of the AOL CDs by sgtsanity · · Score: 1

    If they put it on those AOL CDs, the distribution will be massive.

  65. Slashdot Browser statistics by HitchHik · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How about adding a page to slashdot to show current/past statistics of browsers that are used to access SlashDot? A link from the main page would also be nice!

    --
    -- &&
    1. Re:Slashdot Browser statistics by BruceRD · · Score: 2, Informative

      The stats from users visiting slashdot might be interesting for us, but are hardly going to be representative of the general population.

      The best ones I can find for general UK usage are by a consultancy called Proteus. They look reasonable, though I'd have more faith if they showed Mozilla at somewhere past 0.8!

      Interestingly these show a much higher percentage of Macs than I'd have expected - maybe MacOS X is really increasing their market penetration. (Thinks wishfully)

    2. Re:Slashdot Browser statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because 95% of people who view Slashdot are using IE. A fact I'm sure VA Linux^WSoftware isn't so eager to disclose.

    3. Re:Slashdot Browser statistics by sheldon · · Score: 2

      That's interesting... The numbers pretty much match other figures I've seen.

      Perhaps proteus hosts some Mac dedicated sites, but I would have expected the Mac at 5%, so it's really not that unsurprising. It's too bad they don't break that out by Mac OS version, as I'd be curious to see how OS X is doing... reports I read say not very well.

      The Linux number is still at around a .25%, which has been consistent since I first saw Linux mentioned in browser stats about 3 years ago so there hasn't been any growth there.

      What I think is most interesting is Netscape 6 stats. Despite Netscape 4 still having a small loyal following, they have been completely unable to convince their fanbase to upgrade to 6. I've had some arguments with Netscape fans in the past, pleading with them to upgrade to 6 so they'd finally have CSS support. They all claim 6 is buggy and slow. I'm hoping the AOL commitment to using it will drive development faster.

    4. Re:Slashdot Browser statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because its too embarrassing that over 90% of the users visit slashdot with IE.

      And no, I'm not joking.

    5. Re:Slashdot Browser statistics by HitchHik · · Score: 1

      Actually Slashdot users are usually a bit more on the leading edge than the general Internet population, so it might be interesting how these statitistics look like.

      --
      -- &&
    6. Re:Slashdot Browser statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm -- Netscape 6 + Mozllia is behind Netscape 3. Double Plus Ungood for the AOL/Netscape folks.

    7. Re:Slashdot Browser statistics by Sloppy · · Score: 2

      There isn't an automated way for Slashdot (or any other website) to get that information. For compatability reasons, almost everyone has to include both the words "Mozilla" and "MSIE" in every request, regardless of what browser it really is; it's practically a defacto part of the http standard.

      Tip: One fast and easy way to preempt a lot of compatability problems, in mass for an entire site, is to just have the squid proxy replace the user-agent in every request. Then people can use whatever browser they want to, without bothering the site geek all the time with "how come the internet doesn't work?" requests. So it's not just geeks that spoof, but also the secretaries and PHBs and salesmen who rely on a geek to keep things working.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    8. Re:Slashdot Browser statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because its too embarrassing that over 90% of the users visit slashdot with IE.

      It's probably closer to around 100%, even among users who run OSes that don't have IE. Perhaps you meant "misleading" when you typed "embarrassing."

    9. Re:Slashdot Browser statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I *know* they used to have that statistic shown on Slashdot under one of the menus on the top left.. maybe "about" ? But for probably a year or so it has been gone. As I recall an overwhelming majority of people were using IE.. it was probably an embarrassment to Slashdot and that is why they removed it.

    10. Re:Slashdot Browser statistics by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      I have actually been using mozilla on all my platforms for the past 3 weeks, it's a great browser (finally...).

      I used to do my browsing in IE, but Moz finally matured enough that I can drop in replace it for M$IE and the only thing I have noticed is a huge increase in cookie control, and a huge drop in popup adds.

      I have to admit, I once upon a time doubted they could pull it off; but it looks like they finally have. Kudos to the great job Moz team.

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    11. Re:Slashdot Browser statistics by Muttonhead · · Score: 1

      Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; FirstPost i686; en-US; rv:0.9.9) FirstPost/20020311

    12. Re:Slashdot Browser statistics by mce · · Score: 1

      Looking at the site of my employer, browser statistics depend a lot on the content of the site, but apparently not as much as I thought.

      We're a micro-electronics research centre (covering everything from MPEG-4 standard definition, over ECAD, chip packaging, down to our very own cleanroom). This means that we should have more Unix based visitors than the average me-and-my-cat home page. Our stats confirm his, but still MSIE takes between 80 and 90% (the figures vary on a daily basis), which is way more than I was expecting.

      Fortunately, as of this week, we finally support all gecko based browsers. Hopefully, they will now start to rise above the disappointing 0.9% they got so far.

  66. Sourceforge by dextr0us · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    OT: Arent the sourceforge banners huge?

    --
    "Martha Stewart can lick my Scrotum......do i have a scrotum?" -- Sharon Osbourne
  67. Microsoft to start developing new IE things? by Thunderbear · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Microsoft Internet Explorer has - seen from the users point of view - been virtually unchanged in terms of enhancements and new developments since version 4.0, where Netscape 4.x was fully cloned.

    I am writing this in IE 5.1 for Mac OS X, where the only facility I have found to be different than 4.0 for Windows, is the ability to track online auctions, which is useless to me.

    Mozilla is a refreshing new product, where the new stuff like the tabs, sidebars and navigation bar mean that I can get rid of some of the things that has nagged me the most in both IE and Netscape 4.x.

    Since Mozilla is going to be basically everywhere, it seems that this is going to prompt the user interface stuff in the browsers again. With the new facilities now available in both the major browsers like XSLT we should see a surge in new XML-based services, and that the rest of the browsers keep up.

    --

    --
    Thorbjørn Ravn Andersen "...and...Tubular Bells!"
    1. Re:Microsoft to start developing new IE things? by lux55 · · Score: 1
      Mozilla is a refreshing new product, where the new stuff like the tabs, sidebars and navigation bar mean that I can get rid of some of the things that has nagged me the most in both IE and Netscape 4.x.

      I hope Mozilla does inspire/force other browser makers to compete in terms of the user interface. But AOL/CompuServer are only using the rendering engine anyways, so the majority of Gecko users probably won't even be aware of the switch, and will continue to be content with the AOL/CompuServer GUI they've come to know/expect/love/tolerate.

      Since Mozilla is going to be basically everywhere, it seems that this is going to prompt the user interface stuff in the browsers again. With the new facilities now available in both the major browsers like XSLT we should see a surge in new XML-based services, and that the rest of the browsers keep up.

      I think Mozilla 1.0 marks an important step forward for web application development possibilities, especially in the areas of the XML/XSLT, and also the GUI. It's been a long time coming, but the future of the web browser is looking a lot less like the headache for us developers that it has been for the past few years!

    2. Re:Microsoft to start developing new IE things? by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

      I hope Mozilla does inspire/force other browser makers to compete in terms of the user interface. But AOL/CompuServer are only using the rendering engine anyways, so the majority of Gecko users probably won't even be aware of the switch, and will continue to be content with the AOL/CompuServer GUI they've come to know/expect/love/tolerate.

      I think at least half will notice a speed increase. Some fairly smart people (surprisingly) use AOL and Compuserve. AOL didn't get to be the biggest ISP by snagging all the moms in the US.

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
      1 John 4:14
  68. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Vinson+Massif · · Score: 1

    You obviously don't have a user base purchasing intranet apps.

    Shiny bauble pieces of crap...

    --
    "Remember, any tool can be the right tool." -- Red Green
  69. I did, until just a few weeks ago by ThinkingGuy · · Score: 1


    I had a Compuserve account from around 1991, when you could access its service with just a modem and a simple terminal program (I even used to connect to CS on a word processor). When they were bought by AOL, I should have listened to my friends and canceled it right there, but still, I kept the account, partly as a "backup ISP" and partly out of nostalgia.
    When I decided to get broadband a few weeks ago, I decided to cancel the CS account, which I had hardly used for a couple of years.
    I went to their website, thinking I'd get the number for tech support. But at www dot compuserve dot com, all I found, to my horror, was a "portal"-looking thing, covered with advertising. Poking around their site, there was a link to get access numbers, but no tech support info whatsoever. I ended up doing a Google search to get the CS customer support line.
    Next I called the number and waited on hold for over 40 minutes. Now, I don't mind waiting if I eventually get a knowlegable person on the line. That was not the case. Instead I got a guy who only wanted to upgrade me to "Compuserve 2000" for which he'd send me a free CD.
    "But I use Linux. Will your CD work on my computer?"
    "Um, well, it should."
    Just for kicks, I let them send me the CD, Curiously enough, the setup.exe would not execute on my computer (I didn't try running it under WINE). Called back. Waited on hold again. Asked again to cancel the service. This time the service rep lied to me, saying that my account was in "backup" and that I wasn't being charged for the service. I persisted, and got the account cancelled. She reminded me to remove any files I might have on their servers. It's been over a month ago, and they still haven't deleted my old CS webpage.
    In short, once-great Compuserve has, in my opinion, joined the Dark Side.

    1. Re:I did, until just a few weeks ago by mech9t8 · · Score: 3, Funny
      they still haven't deleted my old CS webpage.

      I quite CompuServe EIGHT YEARS ago, and they still haven't deleted my old CS webpage. Hell of a tight ship they run there. ;)

      --
      Convictions are more dangerous enemies of truth than lies.
      - Nietzsche
    2. Re:I did, until just a few weeks ago by sulli · · Score: 1

      I remember deleting my Compuserve account via terminal dialup many years ago. I suspect this will still work.

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    3. Re:I did, until just a few weeks ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still use compuserve but I have a wierd setup. I have a windows pc that has the nat software and is the proxy. My linux boxes are behind it and thats all I need to connect to the internet.

  70. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2

    I've been using NPWrap for years. It's a NS4 plugin that lets you use ActiveX. My guess is that it would work in Mozilla.

    --
    Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
  71. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I never use it to browse, since I'd probably get some virus that would mess with all that vital information that is on my windows partitions

    Ok. Troll. What sites are you browsing that you are going to get a virus? What a load of bullshit.

  72. Surprise, surprise.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Update: 04/16 20:54 GMT by T: Also an interesting story at CNN on the upcoming Mozilla 1.0. RC1 is very nice, as have been most recent builds.

    You mean AOL Time Warner Netscape CNN?

  73. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by foonf · · Score: 2
    Who the hell uses ActiveX? I've gone to all kinds of sites(sans porn...ask me why :P) and some quite the microsoft-oriented POS(iframes, their DOM, etc.) and have yet to install an ActiveX control in at least six months. Seriously, who is really using ActivX controls?


    I think Windows Update uses ActiveX. Who woulda thunk it?

    Although I can't say for sure as I haven't booted into Windows for more than 15 minutes once in the last year or so.
    --

    "(Man) tries to live his own life as if he were telling a story. But you have to choose: live or tell." --Sartre
  74. Galeon Re:Why didn't they wait until Mozilla 1.0? by foonf · · Score: 2
    We now have one version of Gecko in Netscape, a different one in Galeon


    Galeon is built against the Mozilla milestone releases, 1.2.0 uses exactly the same engine as Moz 0.9.9.
    --

    "(Man) tries to live his own life as if he were telling a story. But you have to choose: live or tell." --Sartre
  75. Re:funny... by rjamestaylor · · Score: 1
    but compuserve does real names now, not those weird numbers

    Rats. I was hoping to be user e

    --
    -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
  76. Revenue with browsers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Where do these companies (M$, AOL (Netscape), et. al.) make revenue in shipping these browsers? One has to buy Opera but the rest are free downloads.

    1. Re:Revenue with browsers by spauldo · · Score: 1

      M$ just wanted to control the browser scene. They make money by pushing IE-centric development tools and limiting the "good browser" to the platforms they choose.

      Netscape made most of its money on server software. Sun inherited all that from them (the iPlanet stuff). When they were forced to allow free downloads of their browser, it wasn't too big a deal for them.

      AOL wants a browser not controlled by microsoft.

      So really, as far as the companies are concerned, the browsers are merely tools to make/break a monopoly. M$ wants to push their "standards" on everyone, AOL doesn't want to be M$'s bitch, and Netscape, as a company, is irrelevant.

      --
      Those who can't do, teach. Those who can't teach either, do tech support.
    2. Re:Revenue with browsers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you!!

  77. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Java is turd.

  78. It's about the perception that MS = Internet! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    It's all about the perception that Microsoft = the Internet. Certainly this won't affect more techie individuals, but most users don't know the difference b/w Windows Explorer and Internet Explorer (actually with recent Windows version, there really isn't that much of a change). This gives MS more mindshare and marketing strength, this allows them to exploit these less knowledgeable invididuals to use other MS technologies like .NET My Services, and ActiveX.

    After all, if a decision making executive, who knows squat, sees that everyone uses IE, might think that since MS makes the dominant web client, they must make the best servers too!

    Besides, I hate all the stupid IE specific sites out there. It gives me pleasure to think all those sloppy web coders and designers quaking in their boots, thinking about recoding their sites - this time, correctly!

  79. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

    The problem isn't so much that MSFT says somewhere that a particular extension is proprietary. It's that the extensions get widely used.

    --
    Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
  80. Tangible by mgkimsal2 · · Score: 2

    You don't spend a Saturday in a soup kitchen because you get something tangible from it.

    MANY things in life are done without regard for *tangible* gain, but people still are motivated out of selfish greed anyway.

    WHY do people spend time helping in a soup kitchen? *BECAUSE IT MAKES THEM FEEL GOOD*. Maybe not *physically* good, but spiritually good. Or morally superior. Or whatever. But we're all always motivated by selfishness.

    1. Re:Tangible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So says the all-knowing mgkimsal2.

      I guess no one has ever done anything because it simply needed to be done. All of the time and money I donate to making sure homeless people have blankets and food doesn't make me happy. I don't enjoy it, I don't feel morally superior, and I have no spiritual feelings. What I do realize is that if living conditions in this country are allowed to become lethal, people are going to be more inclined to cause trouble. They could steal, mug, or what have you. It could be you, it could be me.

      If you give a basic standard of living that is tolerable, people are far more easily placated. This is how our pseudo-capitalist society managed to survive this long without sending children into Canada to blow up their cafes.

    2. Re:Tangible by snol · · Score: 1

      don't bother arguing it, it's purely a question of semantics. The next line is, well if you're doing it to avoid having people cause trouble too, then that's out of greed too. If you're willing to say that genuinely generous unselfish acts are done out of greed (because they make you feel good inside) then there's nothing that can't be put that way, and it becomes pretty much useless to talk about people's motivations because it's all selfish in the end.

    3. Re:Tangible by rnx · · Score: 1


      I think what you are saying here is based on a (common?) misconception about selfishness.

      You always do what makes you feel good. What makes you selfless is that you feel good about
      something you dont benefit from.
      Selfish would be when you only feel good about
      things that benefit you.

      The good feeling is your judgement of the action
      not its benefit.

    4. Re:Tangible by MisterBlister · · Score: 2
      I guess no one has ever done anything because it simply needed to be done. All of the time and money I donate to making sure homeless people have blankets and food doesn't make me happy. I don't enjoy it, I don't feel morally superior, and I have no spiritual feelings. What I do realize is that if living conditions in this country are allowed to become lethal, people are going to be more inclined to cause trouble. They could steal, mug, or what have you. It could be you, it could be me.

      You've invalidated your own post by revealing your ulterior motives for donating time & money -- you want to make things safer for yourself. That is a selfish motivation.

    5. Re:Tangible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Calm down Ayn Rand.

      A mother is motivated by selfish greed to take good care of her children? Someone who jumps in front of a bus to save someone is motivated by selfish greed?

      I find your level of capitalist indoctrination to be disturbing. It bears no connection to reality.

    6. Re:Tangible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't there a bus somewhere you should be jumping in front of...?

      freakn commie pinko

    7. Re:Tangible by aozilla · · Score: 2

      WHY do people spend time helping in a soup kitchen? *BECAUSE IT MAKES THEM FEEL GOOD*. Maybe not *physically* good, but spiritually good. Or morally superior. Or whatever. But we're all always motivated by selfishness.

      Maybe they just don't know any better. Maybe they were just walking down the street, saw "Soup Kitchen Help Needed", and went in to help on a whim. Maybe it didn't make them feel good. Not physically, not morally, not at all. But it made them feel as good as anything else, so they did it again, and again. And then it became a habit. Without thinking, on the way home from work, they would stop at a soup kitchen and help people. They didn't even realize it was a nice thing to do. They were merely conditioned to do it.

      MOST things in life are like that. They're not rational, they're not about physical needs, they're not about tangible gain, they're not about spiritual gain, they're just plain old conditioning.

      --
      ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  81. more mozilla compliant pages? by pstreck · · Score: 1

    Could the rebirth of the browser war make web masters follow the w3c standards more closely. It seems to me that over the past 2 years since netscape lost the browser war more and more web pages do not format well under mozilla. Let's hope that the web masters realize it's not just geeks bitching any more!

    --

    Later,
    Phil
    1. Re:more mozilla compliant pages? by Nosher · · Score: 1

      So does all this make me the only webmaster in the world who actually does consider more than just M$ browsers? Since the first spawn popped out of the fetid womb of The Beast, I've tested stuff in all available mainstream browsers. Sites designed to only work on IE (which let's face it is sadly all-too-common) should be instantly wiped of the face of the World Wide Web. I get heartily sick of the bleating hordes who claim "it's too much work" to code cross-platform: stop using all this proprietary guff and we'll all get a better browsing experience.

      --
      It's too late for me to die young
  82. open office by dollargonzo · · Score: 1

    um...what about openoffice...its like paying for netscape branches when you could get mozilla for free!

    QED

    --
    BSD is for people who love UNIX. Linux is for those who hate Microsoft.
  83. IE Only websites ? by Zapdos · · Score: 2

    I hope they start going away now.

  84. Did you notice how Mozilla hogs memory ? by Geekonomical · · Score: 1

    Mozilla uses a lot of memory in the current build. I hope some work is being done in that area! Sometimes just minimizing and maximising mozilla takes years to render itself alive!

  85. A retort to Malda's Omelette analogy.(Peaceful) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The Omelette" - A retort to Malda's Omelette analogy.

    Let me try to give you an analogy for Slashdot's homepage.
    Yes, please liken something to something in a cliché staid analogy because we the reader are too stupid to understand any overly complex and high level reason why you can't explain yourself properly. Either that or you are full of crap, don't know what you are doing and are lucky as hell to have what you have.

    It's like an omelette: it's a combination of sausage and ham and tomatoes and eggs and more.
    It is a motley collage, a miasma, a montage or eclectic and seemingly unrelated things. It may be a myriad of unrelated things, related at only the most abstract levels. It certainly isn't an omelette.

    Over the years, we've figured out what ingredients are best on Slashdot.
    What critical acclamations have you had that makes you think this is so? Just because you get a lot of hits, and subsequently subject your readership to unwanted bandwidth consuming detritus, doesn't mean you know what's best. It is just like a Reynolds family member claiming they know what's best for them, nicotine and smoke are not unhealthy, and then they die of lung cancer. You are an egotistical megalomaniac. If this site was run based on a meritocratic method rather and juvenile selfishness, it would have serious potential.

    The ultimate goal is, of course, to create an omelette that I enjoy eating: by 8pm, I want to see a dozen interesting stories on Slashdot.
    The ultimate goal is to please yourself, to feed your id. You have no desire to please the community by which you make your living. You are selfish, sheltered and removed from your community. You are on a one way soapbox, a pulpit, and you talk at people. I would probably include you in a list of people I would kill if I could get away with it.

    I hope you enjoy them too.
    I do not.

    I believe that we've grown in size because we share a lot of common interests with our readers.
    Mobocracy is good? You would rather collect people without regard to quality. This means nothing. Budweiser is the most consumer beer, but its garbage. This is analogous to Slashdot, to stoop to your food and beverage analogy. Bud beer. Its good because a lot of people drink it. No, no. Don't bother trying to get critical acclimation. Don't bother, you know as long as you "control" Slashdot, you never will.

    But that doesn't mean that I'm gonna mix an omelette with all sausages, or someday throw away the tomatoes because the green peppers are really fresh.
    So serving rotten food is acceptable how? Its better to keep your silence and let people wonder if you are fool than to speak up and remove all doubt. "Gonna." Pathetic. Simply pathetic. This is a hick like expression, akin to something on the order of, "I'm gonna open a can of whup ass on him for peggin Mary Joe Susie Lee."

    There are many components to the Slashdot Omelette. Stories about Linux. Tech stories. Science. Legos. Book Reviews. Yes, even Jon Katz.
    Jon Katz is the worst thing about this place. If it isn't the wasting of my bandwidth that I pay for, its this that bothers me the most. On a sidebar, I would like to hold you and the rest of the scum who send ad banners to my connection legally liable for unwanted bandwidth usage. This crap half the time doesn't even come from your site. It would be less of an affront if you stored you vile ads on your own site, but you took the easy way out and decided to outsource the production of garbage to similarly-devoid-of-ethics people with slightly more intelligence and infrastructure to provide this illegal content.

    By mixing and matching these things each and every day, we bring you what I call Slashdot. On some days it definitely is better than others, but overall we think it's a tasty little treat and we hope you enjoy eating as much as we enjoy cooking it.
    Grotesque things are often of huge interest to people. This holds true with me in regards to Slashdot. I hate you, I hate Jon Katz, I hate most of the content here. Some of the best stuff is written at -1. You would suppress those who are different while you are "different like everyone else," just another marginally educated half assed "programmer" who on the scale of things lucked out even more so than Bill Gates (reason: I would assume your IQ is probably his divided by 2 or 3 and you aren't working at a McDonald's where you should be). Whenever you have participated in a discussion thread, you are obnoxious, rude and ungrateful. You policies are horrible, you content is basically a smattering of other people's work and you benefit from this. You web page reeks of someone who completes nothing that he starts. Your obsession with anime is a testament to how juvenile you are, your spelling is horrific, you grammar is oft questionable; you are a poor editor Mr. Malda.

    I hope only the worst outcomes for any and all of your endeavors henceforth. I hope your fiancée or if you are lucky, your marriage falls apart. I hope your Jubei breaks. I hope you lose your job. I hope that you fail because you are displacing true talent.

    Answered by: CmdrTaco
    Last Modified: 6/14/00

    I'm hoping to obtain a patent for "Utilizing the methane producing
    capabilities of symbiotic colonic microbes to produce sound pressure waves
    emitted from the anus modulated by sphincter muscle control". I'm sure they won't find any prior fart.

  86. mozilla works fine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    who cares if it's pre-installed?

  87. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by theolein · · Score: 1

    I haven't seen an activeX special anything for about a year now. The ones that I do see are those that used to be plug-ins until MS cut the plug-in interface such as quicktime, flash and java. In company intranets activeX may be used but in the public they have not been used extensively or ever become popular on a wide scale. I think it always boils down to the fact that for a long time any sort of plug-in was just too much hassle to download and so people didn't bother as well as the fact that almost all web coders have been trying to keep a modicum of compatibility on their sites and have thus been avoiding stuff that is IE only.

  88. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by WinDoze · · Score: 1

    Do you think they developed these API's in the hopes that nobody would use them? If people are using them, they must be doing something helpful. Otherwise they'd be DOA.

  89. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many of these posters wouldn't recognize MSDN if it hit 'em in the ass.

    ...and they are the same posters that say "Microsoft has shit developer documentation....

    ...the same people that say "M$ windoz crasez all da time man!"... when the latest version of Windows they have used is 98...

  90. Software these days... by Unanimous+Backward · · Score: 1
    "CompuServe started testing Komodo, a Gecko-based client, last year, and is now experimenting with Gecko-base[...]"

    CompuServe has indeed become a degenerate, running with a bad crowd, like AO... you know who, and now it's revealed CompuServe has been using Komodo, and has started experimenting with Gecko-basing. How sad. This new generation of software... what's the matter with them these days?

    ~UB

  91. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by ADRA · · Score: 2

    lol my bad.. I WAS upset with Microsoft for not listing which extensions were proprietary. Thanks for the correction. I used it before they did that..

    --
    Bye!
  92. Who cares what CompuServe do? by Tim+Ward · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    They pissed me off with lousy customer service years ago so I junked the account.

  93. I wouldn't be surprised if M$ releases a patch... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... that will all of a sudden make mozilla slow as molasses or crash randomly. I remember when I went from NT 4.0 to Win 2000, there was a noticeable difference in Netscape browser performance. M$ have known to do this sort of thing in the past. Anyone remember the old DR-DOS incident?

  94. 3 M or 34 M Netscape uesers overnight! by burnsy · · Score: 1

    I love how these articles imply that overnight 3 M Compuserve users (or 34 M AOL users) will magically start using Netscape.

    I mean come on, how many hits do you still get at your website from people still running IE 4.0 or using AOL 6.0?

    It will take a couple of years to get everyone on the same version and a great deal of things could happen in a couple of years.

  95. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I doubt you will ever see anything like excel running inside Mozilla, in IE it realitivly simple.

  96. Last Post! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Last Post!

  97. Control the browser, control the content by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If one company controls 99% of web browsing, they can then move to controlling most of the content. Not only will we be moving to pay-per-view, but you won't have control of what you have access to. What you see will be systematically slanted.

    Freedom of information is the basis of our political, economic, and scientific systems. (Cf. "A well-educated populace ...," "Unfettered access to information ...," and the accepted norm of open publishing and peer review.) If someone can control this information exchange, they get real power.

    That's why the US has (or used to have) laws preventing ownership of more than some percentage of the newspapers, tv/radio markets, etc.

    You can see parts of this war being played out right now in the electronic music / RIAA / SSSCA battle. If we had no other choice but Windows Media Player (with builtin DRM), how much non-big-label music do you think we'd be listening to?

  98. "RC1 is very nice"? by guanxi · · Score: 2

    Where did you get RC1? AFAIK, it doesn't yet exist. The "recent builds" the post mentions are builds of RC1, but it's not out yet.

    Looking at Mozilla.org and Mozillazine.org, I don't see a mention of RC1 being released.

  99. Mozilla has NOT hit RC1 yet by Aqua+OS+X · · Score: 3, Informative

    A minor correction for story on the home page. Mozilla RC1 is NOT out yet. The branch has been cut and there are builds inching toward the release within the next few days. However the latest "milestone" is still 0.9.9.

    --
    "Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
  100. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by DrXym · · Score: 2
    Excel is an ActiveX document server. It would be reasonably straightforward though rather pointless to host it within Mozilla, by modifying the existing ActiveX control hosting plugin to also support OLE in-place active objects and ActiveX documents.


    The reason it doesn't do this is because there is little benefit to supporting it running in-place, so it launches it as a standalone application.

  101. Mozilla and memory -- I don't get it by chip+rosenthal · · Score: 1

    I swear I'm not posting this as flamebait.

    My LInux workstation is a completely reasonable machine (Athlon 800MHz, 512MB memory, LVD SCSI). I''m running the Gnome desktop. Not too much else happening. I'll start Mozilla and *wham* within moments my machine is on the edge of paging. Just opening up the application to an empty screen sucks 112MB memory.

    Again, this isn't meant as flamebait. If there was some way I could reduce the memory footprint I'd be delighted to use Mozilla. However, I don't think it's reasonable for a desktop application to require a machine to have a gig of memory. What am I missing here? I just don't get it.

    1. Re:Mozilla and memory -- I don't get it by inkless1 · · Score: 1

      you don't mention what version of Moz you are running.

    2. Re:Mozilla and memory -- I don't get it by chip+rosenthal · · Score: 1
      version 0.9.9.

      Interestingly, after the discussion yesterday I reinstalled it but left out the plug-ins. It sucked up most of the remaining memory, but it hasn't pushed me into paging as it had before. This is looking somewhat promising ...

  102. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by ethereal · · Score: 1

    Intranets. Which, unfortunately, won't be as affected by a usable IE alternative, since businesses have internally standardized on Windows desktops and thus Windows-platform-specific intranet content. Internal IT departments don't have to provide a choice - even if large parts of the company have to use *nix machines, they can still rule by fiat that Windows is the order of the day.

    No, I'm not bitter :)

    --

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

  103. AOL Time Warner is the parent company of CNN by madenosine · · Score: 1

    That just says it all, doesnt it

  104. Most important bug of all. by nuintari · · Score: 2, Troll

    Mozilla is slow on my celeron 700.

    I wanna take a rolled up newspaper, find every person on the Mozilla team who thinks its even remotely fast, and HIT EM! Then shout, No!

    --

    --Nuintari

    slashdot : where an opinion can be wrong.

    1. Re:Most important bug of all. by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Upgrade your RAM; that'll probably fix it. How much swap is Mozilla using?

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    2. Re:Most important bug of all. by danny · · Score: 2
      I have a Duron 700 and Mozilla is plenty fast enough - how much memory do you have?

      My main beef is that it's unstable and crashes regularly - I thought I'd fixed that by upgrading to a nightly release (instead of 0.9.9) but now it's started crashing again.

      Danny.

      --
      I have written over 900 book reviews
    3. Re:Most important bug of all. by Nurf · · Score: 2

      Hmm. Yeah, I know it can be slow.

      The weird thing is that it is always fast on my machine. I'm not sure what I do to my linux boxes to speed it up. I just enable DMA on the drives and a few other things. I'm a chronic fiddler.

      I can start Mozilla cold, render the Slashdot root page and exit in under 4 seconds. That is on my 1.2GHz Athlon. My 900MHz Duron was the same speed tho, making me think that the CPU isnt the deciding factor here. The Duron had 128MB RAM,and the Athlon has 384MB, with some IDE drives. I use reiserfs.

      *shrug* I wonder what it is?

      --
      ---
    4. Re:Most important bug of all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a snail on my athlon 700 too... it seems like the older Mozillas were faster, but this latest one you have to wait for menus to redraw and stuff like that. I've switched back to IE for now.

    5. Re:Most important bug of all. by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      I haven't had a Moz crash since 0.9.5 or so..

      are you sure something else isn't messing with it?

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    6. Re:Most important bug of all. by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      I agree, Mozilla still _needs_ some optimizations. I wouldn't agree that you were marked as troll if the story was just mozilla.

      The story is, Compuserve will be using Mozilla rendering engine, trade name, Gecko, in its OWN UI which uses native windows controls.

      The difference is, 80% of so-called Mozilla slowness comes from damn complex multiplatform UI engine.(And it has improved way better) While there are shells around, for both *nix and Windows, you can figure it yourself. Gecko, the html renderer is real damn speedy.

      So, I assume you aren't a troll, just misinformed about what mozilla is and isn't.

    7. Re:Most important bug of all. by danny · · Score: 2
      That's the strange thing - 0.9.7 was really stable, but 0.9.9 and 0.9.9+ (20020411 nightly) haven't been. It could be my X setup - I had to revert to XFree86 4.0.3 when 4.1 wouldn't work for me.

      Danny.

      --
      I have written over 900 book reviews
    8. Re:Most important bug of all. by nuintari · · Score: 2

      I have 256, trust me, that's NOT the bottleneck. My solution is to just use Galeon anyways, faster, less crap. I do NOT need a WYSIWYG editor.

      --

      --Nuintari

      slashdot : where an opinion can be wrong.

    9. Re:Most important bug of all. by nuintari · · Score: 2

      As I said, I have 256 megs, if Mozilla needs that..... it has serious issues. A big thing for Linux is that it runs on anything..... except when it comes to web browsers. They all need a 600+ mhz machine to be bearable, thank god for Galeon. Its useable on my 400 mhz machines. But god help you if you have a 233 mhz laptop....

      --

      --Nuintari

      slashdot : where an opinion can be wrong.

    10. Re:Most important bug of all. by nuintari · · Score: 2

      I swear I have barely any idea what you just said, my point, implied as it may be, is that Mozilla isn't ready for the prime time because well.... its still too slow. and I was replying to an earlier comment, which in my world, sort of spawns off smaller discussions that may be tangent of the original topic. jesus christ, do I have spell it out for everyone? has the world no grasp of the concept of the flow of conversation?

      And yes, Gecko is pretty speedy. Galeon is a life saver for Linux, cause well, Mozilla is still a "piece of slow crap." No offense intended. But I wasn't talking about Gecko, I was replying to comment made about the sluggishness of mozilla. I guess I'm off topic, heaven forbid someone let the conversation evolve.

      Get over it, you just didn't have anything better to say. Quite frankly, neither did I.

      --

      --Nuintari

      slashdot : where an opinion can be wrong.

    11. Re:Most important bug of all. by nuintari · · Score: 2

      I could do that on a windows box, running at 400 mhz. It has that one feature.... its been awhile. It basically holds it in mem, weather a window is open or not.... I canb't remember the name now, but it makes it quite speedy. I have yet to find an equiv for my *nix boxes however.

      I just use Galeon now, Gecko good, Mozilla needs to be kicked in thr ass still.

      --

      --Nuintari

      slashdot : where an opinion can be wrong.

    12. Re:Most important bug of all. by danny · · Score: 2
      Mozilla runs ok on my mother's machine - 200Mhz with 64MB of RAM, a default Redhat 7.2 setup.

      It just crashes too often.

      Danny.

      --
      I have written over 900 book reviews
    13. Re:Most important bug of all. by nuintari · · Score: 2

      Yeah, okay, not fast enough, when IE will open in the blink of an eye. and I hate IE with a passion, ugly, ugly interface.

      --

      --Nuintari

      slashdot : where an opinion can be wrong.

    14. Re:Most important bug of all. by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      You don't get it on purpose I guess.

      Compuserve users won'T see a lizard or a red star in their browsers.

      Its just gecko.dll replacing mshtml.dll on COMPUSERVE APPLICATION. No XUL ui, no geek fantasies. No monster, no lizard. Understand?

      Oh, and based on my everyday use, Gecko is much more modern and speedy renderer than mshtml.dll

      If MS _really_ trusted to their apps, they wouldn't force people to use it by lame excuses.

    15. Re:Most important bug of all. by nuintari · · Score: 2

      You really didn't read anything of what I just typed did you? Don't put words in my mouth, your about as dense as lead.

      Yeah, the original article was about Compuserve using gecko. I understand that, fine and dandy. But did it ever occur to you that maybe, some of us would take the oppurtunity that while, gecko is really fast, and html compliant, and just damned cool in its modular design..... that it is a tad unfortunate that Mozilla itself is such a slow ass piece of shit?

      Again, I was just trying to point that out. You seem to just wanna make yourself look smarter than you are by trying to educate the masses, when in reality, your just missing the point of this thread. However offtopic this thread may be from the original article.

      --

      --Nuintari

      slashdot : where an opinion can be wrong.

  105. my fave by abe_is_fun · · Score: 1

    my favorite browser is Netscape 5.0

    --
    I don't want to be here.
  106. Realize importance by Have+Blue · · Score: 2

    Everyone is saying how this is an old version or it's so few people and so on... That's irrelevant. AOL believes that Mozilla is ready for primetime, and they are putting their money where their mouth is (slowly) by deploying it in a commercial environment. That's as much a milestone as anything else so far.

  107. Browser History by cca93014 · · Score: 1

    In mozilla, is there any way of seeing a reverse chronological list of all the sites you've visited that day?

    NOT threaded by domain; just a plain list???

    I use this in IE ALL the time and it's the one reason I dont run Mozilla as my main browser...

    1. Re:Browser History by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Mozilla 0.9.9

      Open history window:

      Tasks->Tools->History

      Within window:

      View->Group By->None
      Sorted by Last Visited
      Z->A Sort Order

    2. Re:Browser History by cca93014 · · Score: 1

      Thanks very much!

      Is there a shortcut key to get straight to the address bar? Like f6 in IE???

  108. Netscape? When they increase the reliability... by lynmax · · Score: 1

    I like the features of IE 5.0 on my Windows NT and 2000 boxes, so I installed IE 5.0 on my Solaris box.

    I got so tired of Netscape 'memory fault - core dumped' on my Linux box, that I called Microsoft and requested that they port IE to Linux.

    At a former employer, Netscape was the corporate default, but one of the newer Netscape 4.X releases was so buggy that it was impossible to use and debug web pages that we ended up going back to the prior release.

  109. Quick Poll: by Dave_bsr · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Because its too embarrassing that over 90% of the users visit slashdot with IE.

    i'm 1 that uses Moz on linux. anyone else? a do-it yourself poll?

    --


    Who is this Anonymous Coward character, how does he post so much, and why is he always such a whore?
    1. Re:Quick Poll: by JordanH · · Score: 2, Funny
      • i'm 1 that uses Moz on linux. anyone else? a do-it yourself poll?

      Oh! I love Slashdot polls.

      I use CowboyNeal.

    2. Re:Quick Poll: by jonestor · · Score: 1

      Yep, Mozilla 0.9.9 for me.

    3. Re:Quick Poll: by Phroggy · · Score: 2

      0.9.9 on Mac OS X, but yes, I'd say the 90% figure is probably close. 90% of Google queries come from Windows. Mozilla and Netscape 6 are classified among "Other", and outnumbered by Netscape 4; MSIE makes up the rest. http://www.google.com/press/zeitgeist.html

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    4. Re:Quick Poll: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moz 1.0 RC1 on Win2K

  110. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, you were sort of right -- all of their programming examples use shite like document.all and they don't out of the way to encourage you to use the W3C stuff.

    Back in the IE 4.0 days, MSDN had an example client-side browser detection function written in VBScript. DOH!

  111. So MS doesn't have a monopoly after all? by tc · · Score: 1

    So MS is evil for bundling IE with Windows, forcing people to use it, abusing their monopoly etc. etc. And yet AOL can just flip a switch and suddently a significant chunk of users are using Mozilla. Am I the only one who thinks this points up a significant hole in the anti-trust case?

    1. Re:So MS doesn't have a monopoly after all? by Rascalson · · Score: 1

      Um nope try again. They were convicted of abusing there monopoly in the DESKTOP PC OS MARKET!!!!! Here, let me say that again for your so you understand. DESKTOP PC OS MARKET!!!. Got it???

      --
      prisoner# msce18xxxxx. Currently planning my escape.
    2. Re:So MS doesn't have a monopoly after all? by tc · · Score: 1
      Um nope, try again. Having a monopoly isn't, in itself, illegal. What they were convicted of was illegally leveraging that monopoly to foist other products, like IE, on consumers. I'm merely pointing out that it seems like they didn't really have much power to do that after all, if AOL can easily flip a switch and divert users to whatever browser they choose.

      PS. Judging by the excessive bolding and multiple punctuation in your reply, perhaps you need to switch to decaf?

    3. Re:So MS doesn't have a monopoly after all? by inkless1 · · Score: 1

      "Am I the only one who thinks this points up a significant hole in the anti-trust case?"

      in a word, yes.

      AOL doesn't have a monopoly, it doesn't have anything to abuse.

    4. Re:So MS doesn't have a monopoly after all? by Rascalson · · Score: 1

      Yes I have a caffeine problem, and attempted murder is still attempted murder.

      --
      prisoner# msce18xxxxx. Currently planning my escape.
  112. Version 4 browsers are NOT behind us by Infonaut · · Score: 2
    "Ye olde days of Netscape and IE version 4 are thankfully behind us"

    Unfortunately, Netscape and IE 4 are still very much with us. Aside from intranet projects, I've still not yet been involved in a project where I could "ignore" version 4 browsers. Like it or not, browser adaptation rates are slowing year by year.

    This slowing of browser migration is part of what makes the whole browser mess so intolerable. I guess it depends on your outlook, but I simply can't abide leaving 10-20% or more of site visitors out in the cold by targeting post-4.0 browsers.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:Version 4 browsers are NOT behind us by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 1

      True, most of my projects did not require me to attract as many people as possible, which is an advantage.

      When I first started this tactic, I announced on the mailing list that as webmaster, I would not support Netscape 4 in the new design. There was an initial outcry of "oh, but please support Netscape 4, Mozilla's not there yet", but my responce was "If you're volunteering to add Netscape 4 support, welcome aboard". They shut up.

      However, my latest project is to do the new site for the student cinema here at York. Unfortunately, something like 50-75% of the computers on campus only have Netscape 4 installed, and I have to support it. This actually lead me to having a Netscape 4 page and a "notCrappyBrowser()" page for the schedule. I hear the university is trying to migrate away from Netscape 4 over the summer, and I want to be ready to just drop Netscape 4 like a rock if that does happen.

      Unfortunately, if Opera gains significant market share, we'll hit the same problems. For all its advantages, Opera's DOM support sucks to the point where doing anything "DHTML" is almost impossible with Opera. Oh well, at least it does a better job with CSS.

  113. Pixel perfect by driehuis · · Score: 2

    I really don't want to start writing two sets of code again.

    No one wants that. Frankly, I don't care if a web page is "optimized" for either browser. Unfortunately, on many commercial sites that optimization happens at the expense of usability.

    Now, I rarely care if a page renders okay or not. If I care badly enough, I'll fire up my Win95 box and view the page there. If I don't I'll just move on, to the mutual satisfaction of me and the web designer. Fair enough.

    What ticks me off is that sites that want to save money by getting users to use the web for simple things screw up those simple things.

    I recently had the option of either phoning in my electricity and gas meter readings, or reporting them on the web. The utility company's web site renders perfectly in Mozilla. After filling out the form, I found that there was no "Send" button. "View Source" was disabled, but I got hold of the contents and found that the complex JavaScript code did nothing more than hit "submit". I crafted a URL that passed the relevant data as "GET" style parameters and fed it to wget. Inspection of the output file showed me that the utility thanked me for reporting my meter readings.

    Now, let me summarize my findings:
    - there is no server side intelligence to detect using GET instead of the POST the JavaScript implements
    - there is no (zero, nil) parameter checking in the JavaScript
    - it was faster for me to reverse-engineer the web page than it would have been to boot Win95

    This leaves me to wonder: if you don't want to support older browsers but you still want to to save money by having your users use the web instead of phoning in, what's wrong with using a simple <FORM>? Why bother getting the page for the Other browsers pixel perfect?

    Few companies have the resources to support all browsers, but they're hurting themselves by not having a simple page for simple problems. Things like reporting meter readings, posting a consumer question or booking a rental car can all be done trivially using plain ole HTML. It's beyond me why webmasters insist on getting it to look pretty on browsers they hate.

    --

    Bert Driehuis -- All I asked was a friggin' rotatin' chair. Throw me a bone here, people.

  114. WTF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    since when was one of the yahoo.com servers at 209.242.124.241? did they change providers or something?

    maybe they are in the process of switching and just messed up...if you look at 209.242.124.241 and yahoo you can see they have slight differences like the titlebar

    anybody know what is going on?

  115. You don't care if a page renders properly? by Infonaut · · Score: 2
    Now, I rarely care if a page renders okay or not. If I care badly enough, I'll fire up my Win95 box and view the page there. If I don't I'll just move on, to the mutual satisfaction of me and the web designer. Fair enough.

    So what you're saying here is that you don't care if it renders the same on various browsers, right? Or are you saying that you don't care if it renders *at all* in an older browser?

    I agree with your point about getting the basics right, but I'm not sure I understand where you're coming from regarding optimization. If I'm reading you correctly, you're saying that you'd prefer to have pages that perform basic functions properly, but you don't really care what they look like.

    If that's what you're saying, it begs the question of who your clients are. It is possible to build web apps that look good across an acceptable range (4.0+) of browsers, but in the current reality, it just takes a lot of work to make the app look good on most browsers while also providing the necessary functionality.

    I've only had one client ever say, "oh yeah, don't sweat it if 20% of our viewers see a goofed up version of the site." They went against my advice, and we built a site that immediately started getting complaints from the minority that saw the little weird mis-alignments and so on on their browsers.

    While it seems like a small number (oh, that's only 10 or 20% of our users), isn't it the users we're supposed to be designing it for? They ought to get an experience that is visually coherent AND functions properly.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re: You don't care if a page renders properly? by driehuis · · Score: 2

      Indeed, I don't care if it renders properly, as long as it serves its purpose (i.e., renders enough text to allow the user to use the web site). For all I care, the HTML that NS3 and IE3 both accepted (with the addition of basic table support) is good enough for me.

      I know it is possible to make a page render properly in 99% of the browser market share. But that's not my point. Even if enough talented people are around to do it, a significant percentage of that talent base will not want to. Sometimes for good reasons, sometimes for bad ones.

      The argument that you invariably hear when you complain to the person answering webmaster@company.com is that it is too hard to support all browsers. It's their statement, not mine. I've got to operate on the presumption that if they say it's too hard, it's too hard for them. Fair enough.

      What I'm asking of them is that they not worry about what it looks like if they think they cannot support the browser. In most cases, a simple page with one gif and a form will take care of the functionality.

      But nooooo, what you see as an end user is a metric shitload of JavaScript trying to the the right thing but failing horribly. It's the botched attempts to make it work that add insult to injury.

      Heck, I've sent constructive mails to webmasters informing them that their web site didn't work, and that even IE5.5 misrendered it to the point of being useless, and I got "upgrade to IE" back for an answer.

      Webmasters often tell me they don't care if it renders properly on anything other then their system. If they feel that way, what's wrong with presenting everyone who is not using an Pentium IV at 2.2GHz on a 1024Kbps ADSL line with IE 6.0 with a page that renders on Lynx?

      It has often been noted that many web designers don't care about the blind. And why should they? The blind only make up an insignificant fraction of the market. I believe the world would be a better place if the blind were catered for on web sites that offer basic functionality. I'm not asking for braille versions of Flash Pacman animations, I'm asking for all of the market being served at least basic functionality.

      And indeed, I don't care if I have to live without flashy animations as a result of choosing Mozilla on FreeBSD. I just want to report my meter readings, book an airline seat, or be able to look up a telephone number without being forced to walk over to a different PC to boot Win95. And I'm not even blind, and wouldn't want to think about how blind people have to perform those simple tasks. Support for the blind would be thrown in for free if sites that refuse to deal with other browsers at least provide something simple that works.

      It's not as if it's rocket surgery.

      --

      Bert Driehuis -- All I asked was a friggin' rotatin' chair. Throw me a bone here, people.

    2. Re:You don't care if a page renders properly? by a_n_d_e_r_s · · Score: 1

      Well, the web page NEVER looks like the original designer would like it to look since I usually prefer to set up my web browser to use my own fonts since I don't want to try and read 6 pixel fonts.

      In reality it's impossible to render a webpage the same way for different users.

      It's not ever possible to render the web page as a picture and get ot too look the same since the screen resolution and the monitors way of displyining the colors can shift significatly.

      So I wish that webb designer stop going after the impossible dream that never can be fullfilled and as their first priority tries to make sure that the web pages WORKS for the visitors - a goal that is possible to reach.

      If the web then also looks reasonable good is of cource nice - but should not be done so that it stops visitors to be able to view the web site.

      --
      Just saying it like it are.
  116. White slavery? by tlhf · · Score: 1

    Everyone knows that all open source programmers are white.

    1. Re:White slavery? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yo no soy blanco.

  117. Oh no! by Sloppy · · Score: 2

    Does that mean I won't be able to use TAPCIS any more?

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  118. Define using memory by hayden · · Score: 1

    If you typed free and then read the number in the first row under the heading free then this is wrong. This number should be small under all circumstances. Linux will use all available free memory (and even swap pages out of memory that haven't been used for a while) as cache for disk operations. It's quite possible that the kernel decided to swap out old processes (apache, sendmail, databases, all the crap that gets loaded with linux these days) to make room for more cache. This would have happened about the same time you started mozilla because of the increased memory pressure.

    If you typed top and added up the memory used by all the mozilla-bin processes then this is also wrong. All of the code pages used by those processes is shared between them and should only be counted once. Just out of interest does anyone know how to get total size of a process/group of processes (swap and memory resident)?

    I compiled KDE 3.0 while running KDE 2.2, Mozilla 0.9.9 plus a heap of other stuff and never used more than about 300 Meg of memory (not counting buffers and cache). This is still less than what you have.

    While I'm not saying Mozilla is a light browser it's not nearly as bad as you seem to think. It does has bells and whistles (tabbed browsing is a god send). The cost of this is higher memory and CPU load. If this is an issue use something else.

    --
    Nerd: Derogatory term typically directed at anybody with a lower Slashdot ID than you.
  119. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by flacco · · Score: 2
    The only problem with this is that if people want highly interactive content between pages and active code on the client, there is nothing there.

    Just give those people a ball of string to play with.

    --
    pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
  120. Poor bastards! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Oh, those poor CompuServe customers!

    AOL has already demonstrated that it is willing and able to ship horrid software -- Netscape 6.0 was by far the worst major piece of software that has ever been released.

    The debacle of Netscape 6 proves that AOL simply doesn't have the competency to release browser software. The outrageously poor corporate judgment that allowed Netscape 6 to be shipped cannot be fixed incrementally. Only a major housecleaning at all levels within the AOL/Netscape organization (including in the executive team) can fix that kind of rank incompetency -- and that hasn't happened yet.

    CompuServe customers will be at the tail end of a nasty progression: Nav3 was 10 times better than Nav4, and Nav4 was 10 times better than Nav6. I sure hope that CompuServe customers can elect not to install it and use their native IE.

  121. Get'um from Google by mplemmons · · Score: 2, Informative

    For the last couple of months, Google has posted web browser usage stats, as well as OS usage. That's about as unbiased as you can get. Google Zeitgest.

    1. Re:Get'um from Google by JanneM · · Score: 1

      It would be good, except there's only a graph with nodefinite numbers; and that most browsers (inlcuding Mozilla-based ones) get clumped into 'other'.

      /Janne

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    2. Re:Get'um from Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha. They have a top 5 for "anime image searches." Google goes up in my esteem yet again. They rule.

  122. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by 56ker · · Score: 2

    Memo: must make flash anim of a ball of string. - j/k

  123. The Web Designers View by The+Envisionary+One · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I personally have had many problems with designing sites for past netscape browsers. Netscape just has not been the same for the past 7 years. Why don't they just work with microsoft on setting standards for rendering the HTML and have the differences in the browsers be external.

    Things don't change, people do.

    --
    "Do I double click or single click that little X in the corner?" "Single click mom."
    1. Re:The Web Designers View by BenjyD · · Score: 1

      Somebody already did that. Standard protocols good, embrace and extend bad.

  124. Re:Does it matter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the amusing part is I doubt more than 5 of the above posters flaming ActiveX realize its just OLEv2.0.

    just talking aloud I am

  125. you stopped writing cross broswer DHTML? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You must be a fool to not care that %10 of interenet users can't see your work.

  126. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Ah, typical blind "If its from MS its crap" sentiments from the
    >zelots. ActiveX controls are about the best technology for producing
    >Web apps (Which are huge in the corperate world).
    >
    And only a fool will subject his company to the dangers ActiveX controls present. That's why companies are cracking down on lusers like you at work by cutting off your email and web acess at work. Of course then lusers like you then run crying here to post messages about the "mean nasty dictators who won't let you send email or browse the web from work....."

  127. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're a turd.

  128. Netscape is a company by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
    launched CompuServe 7.0 with Netscape as the underlying browser.

    The browser is not called "Netscape."

    1. Re:Netscape is a company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I was not mistaken their current product is known as "Netscape 6.x".....

    2. Re: Netscape is a company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > The browser is not called "Netscape."

      Your statement is incorrect. See the official press release:

      http://www.netscape.com/newsref/pr/newsrelease0808 01.html

    3. Re: Netscape is a company by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1

      You mean the part where it says "This product offers consumers the Internet applications they have come to depend on, including the Netscape Navigator browser"?

    4. Re: Netscape is a company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > You mean the part where it says "This product offers consumers the Internet applications they have come to depend on, including the Netscape Navigator browser"?

      Nope. I mean the first sentence of the press release that clearly refers to it by using the name "Netscape 6.1 browser".

      No official press release would accidentally use the wrong product name in the first sentence. It's clear in subsequent paragraphs that the browser may also be referred to by using the alias "Netscape Navigator". But that does not change the fact that the product's name was clearly and unambiguously introduced in the first sentence as "Netscape 6.1 browser".

      (Official press release.)

    5. Re:Netscape is a company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Netscape is a company

      Netscape used to be a company. Now it's a just a marketing name used by AOL. A search on google for "netscape browser" yields over 200,000 results, but a search for "navigator browser" yields only about 30,000. That doesn't mean "netscape browser" is the official name, but it does indicate what most people are calling it.

  129. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    YES! YES! YES! In addition to that, it's also deserved punishment for those that were gullible enough to buy into Microsoft technology!

  130. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by BZ · · Score: 2

    Sorry, the CSS property index lists proprietary _properties_ but not properietary _values_ of properties. For example, reading that doesn't tell me that "cursor: hand" is a complete and utter IE-ism.

  131. The problem with browser statistics by epsalon · · Score: 2

    Browser statistics are false. There cannot be true browser detection. Many users spoof thier browser as IE on Windows for compatibility problems. Opera does so by default. This makes sites wrongly detect the browser. Also, sites designed to work on with IE will make users of other browsers leave and thus generate much more IE hits. Also, if you are browsing without images, frames or popups you will generate less hits.
    Moreover, if the tracking is based on loading of images or IFRAMEs, then it would not work if those features are off.
    Given this information, there can be no accurate gathering of browser statistics, other than relying on specific browser quirks for checking. (such as IE bugs)

    1. Re:The problem with browser statistics by eulevik · · Score: 1

      This is misleading and wrong. Browser statistics work fine.

      Spoofing is done all the time, the user agent still allows detection of the actual browser.

      http://www.thecounter.com/stats/2002/February/br ow ser.php

    2. Re:The problem with browser statistics by JanneM · · Score: 1

      This is a pretty good link:

      http://www.upsdell.com/BrowserNews/stat.htm

      /Jann e

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
  132. Windows Update by Arker · · Score: 2

    I haven't used it in a couple of months myself, but it was always very heavy on ActiveX. And you've got a few businesses that have been suckered into building a lot with it, a lot of stuff that didn't even need it really. Microsoft pushed it real hard for awhile.

    I'm happy to say they've actually gotten better in that regard. I have successfully removed IE entirely from my machine, and when I go there with Opera, their detection series takes me to this page (hopefully that will work, but you may get redirected) which is actually very friendly and helpful, providing direct links to the same updates, instead of demanding that you install MSIE like they used to do. I get that page with Opera and the user string set to anything except MSIE. Pretending to be exploder gets a couple of empty frames - a fitting response, I think.

    It's definately possible to really dislike Microsoft, the way only someone that's been using their products for nearly 20 years can dislike them, and still not feel like you can't admit they ever do anything right. They do things right sometimes - that's what makes them dangerous.

    --
    =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
    Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
  133. It's the botched attempts to make it work by Tony-A · · Score: 2

    that add insult to injury. The effect is similar to someone misspelling or misusing obscure words. It impresses all right, but not the way intended. Maybe it's just me, but I find all the gizmos extremely irritating even when the do work right, too much like an accident looking for a place to happen.
    With vaious window sizes, font sizes, screen depth and resolution, you will have problems "supporting" even one browser.
    For web-apps, once PDAs become ubiquitous and internet enabled, targeting any one browser becomes suicidal.

  134. just one word by ningcat · · Score: 1
  135. Use Control-L by ggeens · · Score: 1

    Control-Shift-L pops up a window with more options (like open link in new window.)

    --
    WWTTD?
  136. will fail without java, Flash and Shockwave by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    All such attempts will fail until the browser will work fine with Java, Flash and Shockwave.

    At this time Mozilla's enthusiasts forgot about real end-user needs.

  137. How can I configure Apache to annoy IE users? by emil · · Score: 2

    I want a JavaScript window on every page served to an IE browser saying something like "You are running a browser that is not standards-compliant with dangerous and insecure extensions. Please upgrade your browser to Mozilla, Netscape, Konqueror, Opera, or any other more secure solution."

    I want this setting in httpd.conf.

  138. Proxy users get more pressure to drop MS by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1
    According to the eWeek article, the propietary MS replacement for digest authentication doesn't work with proxies.
    the Microsoft-proprietary integrated Windows authentication, which provides wire-level security similar to digest authentication. However, this works only with Microsoft Web browsers and Web servers. It cannot be used if Web clients send requests through a proxy server, which digest authentication can handle.
    This adds to the pressures for large enterprises to drop IE altogether. If the security and stability issues don't push them, then the functionality will. Large corporations and universities generally have enough technical staff to maintain their own modded software, like customizations for Mozilla. Or enough cash to get large site licenses, like for Opera. It's stupid stuff like that which will start to wean even diehard MS shops off of IE and, perhaps, MS-Windows, since IE is one of MS's hooks to try to get into the server room.

    At the very least, more users are going to try Mozilla and Opera. Compuserve would do well to consider Opera, too. The "Continue browsing where I left off" feature alone probably saved me a few hours a week back when I ran Win95/98 and WinNT.

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  139. unfortunately Mozilla is a very hungry dragon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mozilla eats your box alive

    CPU gets gummed up with XUL

    memory leaks result in Mozilla using all available RAM

    caching thrashes hard disk constantly

    video card disrupts causing screwed up screen redraws and vertical line drawings

  140. 7 digit by TheAncientHacker · · Score: 2

    Nah, a real Compuserver user has a SEVEN digit account. (Mine is 76525,11)

  141. Two More Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pure Crap... Opera is an awful browser...

  142. Re:Does it matter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, we (or at least, I) realize that. Not that it's relevant. OLE and ActiveX don't belong on the internet.

  143. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Psh... you're an idiot.

    *hugs*

  144. Re:Goodbye, ActiveX! Don't let the door hit you in by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
    I hope this spells the end of ActiveX website "enhancements."

    When's the last time you saw a website that used VBScript or some other ActiveX-related stuff? The major offenders today WRT usability and (to a slightly lesser extent) interoperability are Flash and JavaScript.

    (The main problem with them is that they tend to be abused...a site I was at a few minutes ago used Flash for its godforsaken site-navigation frame (two evils for the price of one—Flash abuse and frames). Considering that I hadn't yet figured out how to get Flash working in Mozilla (got that done now, but Macromedia doesn't make it easy), this basically allowed you to do little more than view their homepage.)

    --
    20 January 2017: the End of an Error.