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First Reviews of Mozilla 1.0 Roll In

Since the announcement of Mozilla 1.0's release, at least a few journalists have been quick to turn the beast over and poke its belly. Tina Gasperson's review over at NewsForge makes an interesting contrast to CNET's review; strange how they give a rating that would barely merit a "C-" after describing Mozilla's robustness, standards compliance, speed and convenience features.

20 of 846 comments (clear)

  1. Reviewer Wrong? by _Quinn · · Score: 3, Informative

    Reviewer: "However, the release notes say you should not use your Netscape profiles, because you could lose your search settings or become the victim of an ever-growing bookmark file that might freeze your system. I've been using Mozilla 1.0 since the release announcement, with my Netscape profile, and haven't experienced these problems. Yet."

    Release notes: "Do not share a profile between Netscape and Mozilla builds."

    e.g., not in the same directly, not import, yes?

    -_Quinn

    --
    Reality Maintenance Group, Silver City Construction Co., Ltd.
  2. You would think that CNET had competent authors by akiaki007 · · Score: 4, Informative
    But...once you are done with the full review and read "The Good, The Bad..." section...take a look at this.
    The bad: Incompatible with some sites built for Internet Explorer; chat client doesn't work with the big commercial IM systems, including ICQ, Yahoo IM, AOL IM, and Windows Messenger.

    Last time I checked. ChatZilla was a IRC client, not a friggin chat program to be used with AIM, ICQ, etc. While that would be something nice to add, it's already been done and I don't see why the author would mention this. IRC is much cooler than IM anyhow!
    --
    "Time is long and life is short, so begin to live while you still can." -EV
  3. it doesn't surprise me that CNET gave a 7 by peteshaw · · Score: 4, Informative
    Think about it. CNET has never strived to achieve a benchmark for impartial reporting, they collect advertising revenue. So one of there biggest caveats is to not piss off 'the industry' as they see it. So they give all these least common denominator reports that don't have any useful information. They just gave a Netscape a review, and gave it the lowest possible score they could justify given that it was faster, more stable, and more W3C compliant than the big IE.


    Think I'm wrong? By contrast, PCWeek, eWeek, and lots of other industry rags tend to be more impartial, and will generally call a turd a turd and a gem a gem, not vice versa.


    But then there's audience too to calculate in too. I dare say that if Microsoft were to behave nicely and come out with a superier product that was priced fairly, some one here would find something to bitch about.

    --
    www.avacal.com -- the home page of pete shaw
    1. Re:it doesn't surprise me that CNET gave a 7 by tempest303 · · Score: 3, Informative

      try again, friend. ;)

      from the site:

      Longer bars indicate better performance, with the fastest browser scoring 100.

      The Java test was the only one that IE won!

  4. IE 6 gets a C too by zmokhtar · · Score: 4, Informative

    Don't worry to much about the 7 out of 10. They gave IE 6 the same score.

    --
    Why aren't we told when editors moderate our posts?
  5. Make Mozilla Cooler in MacOS X 10.1.5 by toupsie · · Score: 5, Informative

    Mozilla is nice on MacOS X but it does not take advantage of the Quartz type smoothing like OmniWeb or Chimera. However, if you install Unsanity's haxie program called Silk, it will allow Mozilla (or IE) to use the Quartz text smoothing along with your other Carbon apps. Well worth the download and it doesn't appear to slow down the system -- which I expected. With Quartz text smoothing, MacOS X becomes the most visually appealing, web browsing platform -- which it should be.

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
  6. Mozilla did as well as IE in the ratings by dlevitan · · Score: 5, Informative
    strange how they give a rating that would barely merit a "C-"

    Actually, they gave it the same rating as they gave IE 6, Netscape 7 PR 1, Netscape 6.1, and one more than Opera 6. So in reality, Mozilla ranked as well as the "best" browsers from MS.

  7. Re:Built for IE! by gambit3 · · Score: 5, Informative

    IIRC, and I think there was a Slashdot story about this, I remember reading that one of the conditions that M$ put forth as a requirement for them to continue developing Office for the Mac, was that Apple had to stop using Netscape as the default browser, and replace it with IE.

  8. Re:On first glance.... by brsmith4 · · Score: 5, Informative

    it uses 3 times the memory space as IE. I thought it was supposed to be more efficient?

    Yes... Do you know why??? Because most of IE is integrated into the explorer UI. Most of the bulk of Internet Explorer lies there. When you fire up mozilla, it has to start everything, the rendering engine, its own UI, etc. If you take that into account, Mozilla is far more efficient. Think of it this way: take the time that it takes the explorer shell to start and add the time that it takes for IE to start. Also, add the memory usage. Then compare to mozilla. Have a nice day.

  9. best thing never mentioned: keywords for bookmarks by tswinzig · · Score: 5, Informative

    The coolest thing in mozilla is that I can associate a bookmark with a keyword (even just a letter or two), and go to that bookmark through the URL bar with that keyword, even with search terms.

    E.g. I have this bookmark for dictionary.com:

    http://www.dictionary.com/cgi-bin/dict.pl?term=% s

    For keyword, I have it set to 'd'. I can lookup a word by typing "d " on the url bar, and hitting enter.

    I do similar things for Google (http://www.google.com/search?q=%s), for IMDB (http://www.imdb.com/Find?select=All&for=%s), and especially for various customer searches with our database search engine at work.

    This feature saves me TONS of time every day. This alone is enough to keep me using Mozilla as long as it remains stable.

    Then you add in the oft-mentioned tabbed browsing, popup blocking, standards compliancy, skinnability, programmability, etc., and it just gets better.

    And don't forget, the perfect complement to tabbed browsing -- saving a group of bookmarks as one item ! Perfect.

    And what about how much more consistently Mozilla handles links for new windows? MSIE has two shitty behaviors to choose from, which drive me crazy. Either you open up a page in a new window each time , or it tries to re-use windows that are already open, usually picking the one I don't want. Even when clicking on bookmarks, it uses this bizarre behavior. I don't know when they added this 'feature', but it drove me bonkerz.

    Jeez, I haven't even gotten to the email client! All the things that drive me nuts in Outlook/Outlook Express are fixed in Mozilla's mail client. It only lacks a couple things I like (Eudora's "redirect" ability, for one).

    Finally a mail client that lets me use IMAP without constantly reminding me that I'm looking at a remote message. (What's this outlook crap with drawing a line through a deleted message? I like for the message to disappear, and the focus to move to the next message... thanks mozilla.)

    Not perfect, but mozilla is getting there.

    --

    "And like that ... he's gone."
  10. Re:mentions the good, the bad, but never the ugly by cjpez · · Score: 4, Informative
    Or even . . .
    • View
    • Apply Themes
    • Get New Themes
    :)
  11. BBC story by Brown · · Score: 4, Informative

    The BBC has a story on the 1.0 release of mozilla, including the background of Mozilla and the principles of OpenSource.

    It seems to be a generally favourable overview: "Mozilla is quick, stable, and virtually free of the default links to manufacturers' products that feature so prominently in commercial browsers". Also mentioned is the recent release of OpenOffice. Includes some quotes from Mitchell Baker of mozilla.org.

    Chris

  12. Get the latest beta of America Online by yerricde · · Score: 5, Informative

    We need to find an ISP willing to distribute Mozilla instead of IE.

    Thirty percent of people who connect to the Internet do so through America Online. After AOL's contract with Microsoft (bundling IE in exchange for bundling an AOL icon on the desktop) expired, AOL switched CompuServe to Gecko, and the next version of the AOL client is headed that way as well (AOL keyword: beta).

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  13. The thing I really like about Mozilla... by Trogre · · Score: 3, Informative

    ... is it's standards compliance.
    Try the cool demos, using nothing but fully w3c-compliant HTML/CSS code.

    Try that with IE. Honestly, IE still won't even support transpartent PNG's, effectively rendering (no pun intended) it useless as a serious web browser. No matter how popular it is.

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
  14. Re:best thing never mentioned: keywords for bookma by snake_dad · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'd like to mention the possibility to create a bookmark for a group of pages, that you have currently open in separate tabs. Just open several tabs, load one of your favourite news sites in each of them, and create a bookmark, and check the "File as group" checkbox to be able to open all of them in one single mouseclick. I love it.

    --
    karma capped .sig seeking available Slashdot poster for long-term relationship.
  15. Re:Mozilla: useless for the intranet by jonabbey · · Score: 5, Informative

    They are still working on NTLM. Look up bugzilla bug 23679 for details. Or copy the following URL and enter it into your browser (to work around bugzilla's slashdot referer filter): http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=23679

  16. Re:I think it's great. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 3, Informative


    Opera is not nearly as good. Apparently, you can start only one instance of Opera. You can start several instances of Mozilla. Each instance can have several tabs. You can save all the tabs in an instance in one bookmark (group bookmarking). That is an extremely useful feature.

    For example, suppose you are doing research on backup systems. You may load 10 or 20 tabs that show backup software reviews and manufacturer web pages. You can save them all and shut down your system. Ten days and many other research projects later, you can bring the backup research pages back by loading that bookmark.

    You can save multiple Opera windows to a file, but the interface is quirky, and the system is not nearly as useful.

    Here's how one person uses group bookmarks:

    When you have several tabs open, go to Bookmarks|File Bookmark... and check the box that says "file as group". Name your bookmark, and each time you open that bookmark all the tabs you had open will reopen. You can even later add bookmarks to the group as if it were a folder. I love that to read my daily comics I don't have to select endless bookmarks or cycle through a list, I just click on the item labeled "Comix" and a dozen tabs open up.

  17. Re:Built for IE! by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 5, Informative

    That used to be the case.

    They made a deal that expired. There is now no deal, and no contract requiring Microsoft to produce Office:Mac. Kevin Browne of Microsoft's Macintosh Business Unit keeps telling people that there's no reason MS is going to stop making Office:Mac. There doesn't need to be a contract. There just needs to be goodwill between the companies.

    Interview
    Keynote

    Of course, Apple switching to Mozilla might easily count as an end to the goodwill between the companies.

    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  18. Re:Newspeak by rifter · · Score: 3, Informative

    Microsoft has, indeed admitted in open court that:

    1) There are hidden API's

    2) They refuse to disclose them as they feel it will negate a competitive advantage such nondisclosures afford them.

    As for URL's, for starters, /. had an article on this recently, though salon seems to have broken the referenced link and it has been tough tracking it down. I believe it is cached here.

    The fact MS API's are not documented is better documented than that, however. One should probably peruse the findings of fact. There was also an article on ZDnet (surprisingly) on this as well.

    I found a Microsoft KB Article on undocumented API's as well as a perl tool pertaining to them with just a cursory google.

    For the paranoid, I am sure a little more diligence would indeed turn up the very court documents in which the quotes were made, but really, the fact Microsoft hides code from developers has been discussed ad nauseum in the press ever since DOS, and has not only never been contested by Microsoft, rather the reverse, Microsoft has always said this is a necessary part of its business strategy.

  19. Re:Built for IE! by Gerv · · Score: 3, Informative

    (usually spacing in tables where there should be none).

    http://www.mozilla.org/docs/web-developer/faq.ht ml

    Question 2.

    Gerv