Slashdot Mirror


Review of Mozilla's 2002

An anonymous reader writes "MozillaZine is currently featuring an article looking back at the last 12 months of the Mozilla project. It's amazing to see how far things have come in 2002. A year ago, there was no Mozilla 1.0, no Netscape 7, no Phoenix, no Chimera and no shipping AOL clients using Gecko (Mozilla's rendering engine). An interesting read."

129 of 271 comments (clear)

  1. Mozilla's future's so bright by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    I gotta wear shades.

    Long live the bayesian spam filtering!

  2. Chimera by selderrr · · Score: 5, Informative

    is hands down the best OSX browser I've ever seen. Fast, light, at least as reliable as IE,moz,icab&omni, and most of all : extremely userfriendly. I don't give a rats ass about 90% of the features in IE or mozilla. I don't need no fsking integrated email client and security bollocks.

    Chimera provides exactly the features I need, and none more, none less. big kudoos to the chimdevs. If you read this : u guys rock !

    1. Re:Chimera by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One feature lacking from Chimera I can't seem to find is to stop animated GIFs. Mozilla has it and I'd like to see it added to Chimera as well. I can't stand reading pages with dozens of animated gifs all going off at the same time. ugh. :-)

    2. Re:Chimera by Shuh · · Score: 3, Informative

      If you're using Chimera now and miss MOUSE GESTURES, there is a freeware "input method" you can install that will give you gesture support in any Cocoa program: Bitart Cocoa Gestures Highly recommeded by this Chimera/Gestures user....

    3. Re:Chimera by Shuh · · Score: 3, Informative
      One feature lacking from Chimera I can't seem to find is to stop animated GIFs. Mozilla has it and I'd like to see it added to Chimera as well. I can't stand reading pages with dozens of animated gifs all going off at the same time. ugh. :-)
      ~/Library/Application Support/Chimera/Profiles/default/xxxxxxx.slt/user. js

      If you don't have a file there, make one and put this in it:

      // Don't play those animated gifs over and over.

      user_pref("image.animation_mode", "once");

    4. Re:Chimera by otis+wildflower · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I'm also a big fan; there's really no reason to go with OmniWeb anymore as Chim handles pretty much every website I visit better. Chimera also imho handles tabs better than Opera for OS X, and I like that it integrates with OS X proxy settings (though I'd like the developers to make that a little more obvious in the doccys ;)

      Obvious features I'd like to see though:

      more OSXisms, like glowing borders around selected textareas (ala omniweb)

      Better theme support, including a theme/preference for 'Textured' (aka brushed metal). This stuff can be done with external apps like InterfaceBuilder, but it should be easier.

      UserAgent quick-selects and customization within Preferences, ala Opera

      SOME added mail functionality, such as include full webpage as attachment. I like 0.6 adding send link, but I want send page as well to mail copies of 'registration required' pages.

      more stability.

      better 'threading' behavior: I notice that tabs behave 'blocked' by other tabs' slowness or failure to load pages. Each tab (and browser window obviously) should download and behave independently of any other.

      more features, including autofill, more keyboard shortcuts, etc.

      better documentation

      better interface into 'Helper Application' settings, such as RealPlayer and QuickTime. Ideally Chimera would ask me before it loads something that runs within a helper app whether I want to save or run. This should be configurable and is pretty much a standard item in modern browsers. 0.6 addresses this a bit, but I'd prefer to have an additional option to choose per-click, in order to best avoid rogue code.

      Integrate Privoxy :)

      Better performance and stability :)

      I don't change web habits often, but I have gone from Mozilla web+mail to OS X Mail + Chimera and I'm quite happy with the switch. Chimera should be the only web browser ANY OS X user ever needs, from Grandmas to Geeks. And, of course, being an OS X program, it needs to be pretty, easy to use, and very very powerful. In fact, as it stands now, it IMHO should be the standard OS X browser distributed by Apple, but only when it's a bit more stable (it crashes often on the NYTimes site, and particularly when closing tabs or going from one site to another by cmd-l, typing a new url, and hitting enter when a different page was already loading).

      I only hope that moving to the 1.2 (or any other post 1.0) branch won't be too painful or duplicative of work.. I already don't like that the kill-tab behavior is 'backwards' and that throws me when I use Moz..

    5. Re:Chimera by pHDNgell · · Score: 2
      I just tried it again...it's pretty nice, but it's missing a couple features that I've made pretty core to my daily browsing (as far as I can tell, anyway).

      In particular:

      • Integrated search in the open bar
      • Keyworded bookmarks
      I also make pretty good use of the privacy menu bars in mozilla (editing cookies, etc...). Being able to limit cookies to n days is a great thing.

      --
      -- The world is watching America, and America is watching TV.
    6. Re:Chimera by pHDNgell · · Score: 2

      Yes, I was just looking at my build a bit more and found the keyworded search. I figured I'd come back here to see all the people telling me I'm wrong. :)

      I figure keyworded search makes up for lack of the search integration, I might be using this browser after all.

      --
      -- The world is watching America, and America is watching TV.
    7. Re:Chimera by unixbob · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hopefully you have fed these requests back into the Chimera development team.

      We frequently ask for graphic designers and documenters and testers for our OSS projects. Positive and constructive feedback such as otis' comments are just as useful because they help developers understand which parts of their app are useful and well received, and where there is room for impovement.

      --
      The Romans didn't find algebra very challenging, because X was always 10
    8. Re:Chimera by bdash · · Score: 3, Informative

      Chimera also imho handles tabs better than Opera for OS X, and I like that it integrates with OS X proxy settings (though I'd like the developers to make that a little more obvious in the doccys ;)

      The Chimera documentation about proxy settings states:

      Proxy Servers

      Some organizations block direct connections to the Internet, for security or other reasons. In these situations, connections are required to go through proxy servers, which are intermediate servers that redirect connections to their final destination.

      Chimera normally gets information about yor proxy server settings from the Network System Preferences pane (see the "Proxies" tab there). If you switch network locations, or change the proxy settings, Chimera will pick up those new settings without restarting.


      It then goes on to describe how to enable Proxy Auto Config support in Chimera by way of several hidden preferences.

    9. Re:Chimera by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As a Mac user who uses Chimera as my main browser I can say the following safely.

      Chimera is *SLOW*. Every time I switch back to phoenix I'm awe struke at it's speed. The Chimera team really should fold considerable chunks of the phoenix code into themselves, or something rather drastic.

      Alternatively Phoenix should release a version that has "apple look and feel", but I get the impression there might be an under the table deal between Apple and Netscape to leave Chimera as the only viable browser.

      I love phonix, I just wish it was about twice as fast.

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    10. Re:Chimera by bdash · · Score: 2

      For a little bit of detail about setting hidden preferences in Chimera, see the Chimera documentation.

    11. Re:Chimera by pi_rules · · Score: 2

      I can't stand reading pages with dozens of animated gifs all going off at the same time. ugh. :-)

      Ugh... I know what you mean. I end up on sites sometimes with articles surrounded by flash advertisements too close to the content. I've resorted to sticking post-it notes on my screen to block the darned things out while I try and read.

      Head to www.activepdf.com for an example of something -not- to do. They need to whack their flash monkey upside the head with a baseball bat.

    12. Re:Chimera by selderrr · · Score: 2

      it's not chimera itself that is slow... it is an unfortunate example of several slow technologies coming together : quartz (display pdf) is not exactly blazingly fast. OSX itself isn't superduper speedy when it comes to user response times. The Apple hardware, although fast at numbercrunching video, is outperformed in GUI tasks by x86.

      When platform freaks start going bananas about MHz myth not applying to apple due to it having a better OS, I only have to compare browsing speed between my Powerbook G4@667 and the P4@900MHz next to it. According to the myths, the G4 should at least be capable of keeping up with, perhaps even outperform the PC. In practice, in reallife experience, it crawls.

      sad but true

    13. Re:Chimera by abischof · · Score: 2
      better 'threading' behavior: I notice that tabs behave 'blocked' by other tabs' slowness or failure to load pages. Each tab (and browser window obviously) should download and behave independently of any other.
      That would be bug 110718 - "CTRL-T, CTRL-N, and some menus / apps don't work / respond when current tab / page is loading." There's a patch already pending approval :).
      --

      Alex Bischoff
      HTML/CSS coder for hire

    14. Re:Chimera by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 2

      Now that Safari is faster than Phonenix (677 g4 vs 1ghz+ p4), how stupid does this comment make you feel? heheh

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
  3. I used IE by Apreche · · Score: 5, Informative

    for the longest time. I would load up Moz if I was browsing in pop-up land, but it was slow and used a lot of memory (and my cpu sucks) so I used IE for my daily browsing. Then I discovered phoenix, holy crap. I wrote a whole thing about phoenix's amazingness in my journal, so there's no reason to repeat it here. But it has made a significant positive impact on my daily routine.

    --
    The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
    1. Re:I used IE by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 3, Informative
      "for the longest time. I would load up Moz if I was browsing in pop-up land, but it was slow and used a lot of memory (and my cpu sucks) so I used IE for my daily browsing. Then I discovered phoenix, holy crap."

      If you haven't done it yet, check out Opera as well. Although I find phoenix very alluring, Opera is still king in the low resource / high speed / high efficiency department.

    2. Re:I used IE by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And in the price department, too. A few CPU cycles isn't enough for me to justify spending money at a browser, especially when great software like Galeon and Phoenix exists.

    3. Re:I used IE by mat+catastrophe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sadly, I too use IE most of the time. Mostly because my box simply doesn't handle the newer Mozilla based browsers well. (If anyone has any 72-pin chips lying around, you can get in touch with me, seriously).

      Where was i? Oh, yea, I think that Mozilla is a superior browser, it's more (what's that buzzword?) robust than IE and it seemingly does things right. But even phoenix is a little slow to load for me, and although I am about to check out the Beonex Communicator, I don't have much faith it'll run any better.

      Which brings me, finally, to the point of this post. Developers have always been forgetful of the simple fact that not every one in the world gets a new computer, or even an upgrade, every six months. It's nice to see a "lite" browser, but only if it's really light and not just "requires only a Pentium3/64MB RAM" - that's not light at all for me, or about two-thirds of the people I know. We use older machines because we either love them or can't afford anything new and shiny.

      And if none of this makes sense, blame the alcohol my liver's still dealing with.

      --
      sig not found
    4. Re:I used IE by alienw · · Score: 2

      Phoenix is slightly faster and has a far better rendering engine. Not to mention it's free.

    5. Re:I used IE by Erwos · · Score: 2

      Sure, and if you have no CPU cycles to spare, then what?

      Opera runs fine on my P166MMX. Try Mozilla and see what happens...

      -Erwos

      --
      Plausible conjecture should not be misrepresented as proof positive.
    6. Re:I used IE by riscthis · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I wonder how feasible it would be to use IE's ActiveX / Install-On-Demand features to easily offer the download of Mozilla/Phoenix/etc to the user's machine?

      e.g. the first time a user browses to a particular site, they are met with a dialog stating "We believe this site will display better in Mozilla. Would you like to download and install Mozilla now? (This will take roughly x minutes at your current connection speed.)"

      If the user clicks "Yes", the new browser automatically downloads, installs and launches with the original site displayed. If the user clicks "No", the dialog never appears for that site again.

      No heavy-handed tactics, just a simple one-off question for the user.

      After all, people already use this mechanism to download browser plugins (or some adware/spyware etc) so it should be very familiar.

    7. Re:I used IE by alienw · · Score: 2

      Actually, I prefer it to Opera on my 200-MHz i-Opener. With tabs, it seems a bit faster and does not occupy half the screen with banner ads and useless toolbars.

  4. Red star on that zeppelin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Check out the zeppelin logo on Mozillazine www-pages!

    A red star is painted on that zeppelin! RED STAR - why the hell? Communists in China and Russia are using red star -logos even today. So does this mean that Mozilla is the communist choice?

  5. I finally dropped IE for Moz this year... by Kethinov · · Score: 4, Informative

    Mozilla is coming along nicely. I've recommended it as an alternative to IE to all my friends and family. No popups and tabbed browing has me hooked :)

    --
    You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
    1. Re:I finally dropped IE for Moz this year... by Phil+Wilkins · · Score: 2

      Indeed. Although I've actually switched to Phoenix. I think the turning point was the back and forward buttons on my intellimouse working.

      Now all I need is a decent mail program.

  6. I just started .... by craenor · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Using Mozilla, and I love it. There's only one small problem. I really miss being able to click my mouse wheel and move the mouse up and down to scroll through the page faster.

    1. Re:I just started .... by scrytch · · Score: 2

      Using Mozilla, and I love it. There's only one small problem. I really miss being able to click my mouse wheel and move the mouse up and down to scroll through the page faster.

      There's the aforementioned patches, and it does work in K-Meleon out of the box. I take back all my badmouthing of K-Meleon -- it was worth the wait (it is still a hell of an insular cathedral of a development group though)

      --
      I've finally had it: until slashdot gets article moderation, I am not coming back.
    2. Re:I just started .... by mini+me · · Score: 2

      It will then be implemented within 2 months, I'm sure about that.

      This is a joke right?

      It has been in Bugzilla for as long as I can remember. There is the mozscroll project to implement this functionality, but it's progress has been very slow.

      I was not satisfied with the time it was taking to bring middle-click scrolling to Phoenix so I wrote Autoscroll. It only took about 15 minutes to have a working implementation, although it has progressed since then. There are a few quirks that show up now and then, but as it has already been stated on here, it isn't production quality yet, but is still very usable.

      I look forward to seeing what mozscroll brings to the table, but until then Autoscroll fulfills my needs and by the sounds of it, many others.

  7. You can! by friedegg · · Score: 5, Informative
    --
    Google doesn't index user sigs, so stop trying to "Google Bomb" with them.
  8. Technical advancement not the issue. by Skyshadow · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I use Mozilla. I mostly like Mozilla.

    But, starting with 1.0, technical advancement just is no longer the issue for Mozilla. Open Source projects have the proven capacity to nominally pace their commerial counterparts' new features and to do so with a much more sane and better-written approach.

    No, the problem is really one of adaptation: Once it's build, once it's available, how do you make people come and use it? Let's not fool ourselves; even OSS's favorite son (Linux) didn't succeed in the arena that Mozilla must, and Linux can't really help Mozilla where it needs it.

    This is going to be the key question in the next five years: How do you even distribute better software? How do you even *give away* better products? We've already *seen* the "download and use it" scheme fail when competing against a product which is already on the desktop.

    And don't kid yourself: We can't count on AOL's massive firepower on this one. This is the wrong time to expect AOL to help us; they're not in any position to make big changes. Besides, Netscape is not Mozilla.

    This is something we have to answer and answer well in the coming year, and I mean the next couple, not the next ten.

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    1. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by oscarcar · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I have one word for you: Broadband

      That will change everything about distribution.
      How much you want to bet that the vast majority of people using Mozilla, downloaded it on a broadband connection?

      Limited bandwidth is definitely the biggest "barrier to entry" in this market.

    2. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ...even OSS's favorite son (Linux) didn't succeed in the arena that Mozilla must...

      Over five years ago, people were proclaiming that Linux "had failed" to make a dent in the server market.

      Don't count the game over until it's really over, and perhaps not even then.

    3. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by rmohr02 · · Score: 2

      Well, at college I can download a Mozilla nightly build in about two minutes. At home, it takes half an hour, at least. But no matter where I am, I use the newest nightly build. I just download it overnight, and install in the morning at home.

      Of course, I'm already hooked on Mozilla. People not hooked may not be willing to spend half an hour downloading a browser, and they certainly won't do it every night.

    4. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by ostiguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Its just software. Its not about global conquest.

      If AOL adopts it, and then within 1 yr 20% of american web surfers are using the gecko engine, then everyone will need to adhere more closely to standards, and life will be grand.

      Get worked up over standards, not about achieving global dominance.

      ostiguy

    5. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by Soul-Burn666 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      XP has a built-in zip functionality? Didn't know that......

      I know XP has a built-in image viewer, yet most people prefer downloading ACDSee instead.

      XP has MSN Msngr in it. Yet people prefer ICQ.

      --
      ^_^
    6. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by ryanvm · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is something we have to answer and answer well in the coming year, and I mean the next couple, not the next ten.

      Why? What will happen if Mozilla stagnates? Will people stop working on it in their free time?

      My point is that the beauty of Open Source is that you really don't have any competition. If you're doing it for free, nobody can run you out of business.

      This is why when asked about Microsoft, Linus generally responds that he doesn't give a shit what they do.

    7. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by pyrros · · Score: 5, Interesting

      No, the problem is really one of adaptation: Once it's build, once it's available, how do you make people come and use it?

      It goes like this:

      x: here's a CD with mozilla
      o: what does it do?
      x: it's an internet browser, like IE, without the pop-up ads, and a mail client like outlook minus the viruses.
      o: cool, i'll try it!

      OK, it's a bit optimistic, but you CAN get your windows-using friends/relatives/coworkers to try mozilla without too much effort. I bet that almost half of them are going to WANT to try it once they hear about pop-up blocking, and a good number of them will like tabbed browsing. They might even like type-ahead or gestures or google search in the location bar.

      We are not talking about stuff like standards compatibility, personal data encryption, or being open-sourse that your average windows user could not care less about. Mozilla has cool features, and is reasonably easy to use. Sure, it's a little slow, but that is becoming less and less of a problem, as cpu speeds go up and mozilla gets more optimized/ less bloated (think phoenix).

      Getting people to use linux is not as easy by a long shot: young peolpe who have plenty of free time and a desire to try things are instantly put off by the lack of games (and no, things like winex, don't cut it), while older people are VERY afraid to change their working enviroment (learning windows took them long enough, they sure as hell ain't changing now) no matter how much more stable/fast linux is. Plus, when trying to get people to use linux you probably have to help them back-up their files (think mp3), install linux and get it to a working shape, which takes a LOT of time, both yours and theirs.

      Mozilla on the other hand takes 2 minutes to install, 5 minutes (with mailnews) to configure and one minute to tell people to middle/ ctrl click to open tabs.

      So yes, i do believe that mozilla has an easier job than linux in getting to the end-users desktop.

    8. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by c0dedude · · Score: 2

      We could try the AOL approach, give out free CD's full of software... That would be really cool! Like browsers, games etc... It won't make much money, but it'll really raise awareness.

      --
      Since when has this country used intellectual elite as a pejorative term?
    9. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by Hobobo · · Score: 3, Informative

      Besides, Netscape is not Mozilla.

      Netscape and Mozilla are almost the exact same thing--the only real difference is logo and the 50 AOL shortcuts that Netscape installs. Other than that, each version of Netscape is from a Mozilla build, and the programmers working on Netscape are basically the same ones working on Mozilla.

    10. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by Telex4 · · Score: 2

      Well, yes, I'd agree with what you're saying, but you miss something here, which becomes more significant when you mention Linus' ambivalence towards Microsoft and politics. There is more to Free Software than just developing some software for a small community. The idea is to:

      a) promote Free Software to the world, both to help them (if you believe in FS you'll believe in this), and to help ourselves, as it means more people will provide commercial services for us and more people will get into developing Free Software

      b) ensure that we can always use Free Software, i.e. that the hardware vendors don't lock us out (as many already do to some extent, but nowehere near Palladium levels), and that we can inteoperate with others

      Now b) becomes more significant with Mozilla, because unless IE sees some serious competition, and lazy web designers start recognising web starndards, web standards problems can only get worse. There's no point in having a great browser if it can't display most web pages properly.

      So whilst it's not important that Mozilla "dominates", it's important that it remains high-profile enough to promote free software, and the rights of free software users.

    11. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by RayChuang · · Score: 2

      I have my doubts that AOL can switch people from IE to Mozilla on Windows 9x/ME/2000/XP platforms with the AOL client, given that you'll end up with two large browsers on your hard drive. That unfortunately can lead to confusion and possible compatibility problems. =(

      Which does remind me--has Real Networks released a version of RealOne that works with Mozilla 1.x or Netscape 7.0x? I know that RealOne requires IE 5.0 at minimum in order to work.

      --
      Raymond in Mountain View, CA
    12. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by ostiguy · · Score: 2

      We live in an age where 40gig drives are the smallest you can buy new. And in an age where our landfills are choked with AOL cds. I don't think distribution and or storage of moz by aol will be a problem.

      Also, some of us don't think real networks has released *anything* that "works" for years.

      ostiguy

    13. Re:Technical advancement not the issue. by Decimal · · Score: 2

      And don't kid yourself: We can't count on AOL's massive firepower on this one. This is the wrong time to expect AOL to help us; they're not in any position to make big changes. Besides, Netscape is not Mozilla.

      This is something we have to answer and answer well in the coming year, and I mean the next couple, not the next ten.


      How about small courtesies, like letting the user remove that annoying "M" image / webpage link in the upper right hand corner of the Mozilla browser?

      --

      Remember "Bring 'em on"? *sigh
  9. and the MUA functionality is still broken by Lazy+Jones · · Score: 2

    AMAZING! Still doesn't sort headers properly when you change mailboxes etc. etc. ...

    --
    "I love my job, but I hate talking to people like you" (Freddie Mercury)
  10. Mozilla is great for web development by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I like the sample demos that the 1.0 start page used to show for mozilla.

    Even more so, tabbed web browsing is great for testing various web applications.

    Finally, I love the HTML composer... it's great for composing little slashdot messages ;)

    --
    --------
    Free your mind.
  11. Re: Validation by bunratty · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's so much easier to simply validate against the W3C standards instead of checking to see if your pages work in every browser. If a page validates and works in the earliest version of IE you're trying to support, it should work for almost all visitors you're targetting.

    --
    What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  12. Thank you Mozilla for Galeon! by grendelkhan · · Score: 2

    Especially the 1.3.X series of both browsers (using a 1.3 alpha build of Moz with 1.3.1 build of Galeon). You've made my GNOME 2 experience richer, and given me the best combination of tabbed browing and smart toolbar I could ask for.

    --
    Wu-Tang Name: Half-Cut Skeleton Get your own Wu-Na
  13. And the French are using. . . by kfg · · Score: 2

    Red,White and Blue stripes.

    You had a point in there somewhere, or what?

    I'm sorry, but sympathetic magic doesn't work.

    KFG

    1. Re:And the French are using. . . by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 2
      > Red,White and Blue stripes.

      And so do the Russians, for that matter.
      <grin />
      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  14. 1.7 % Market Share by zulux · · Score: 4, Insightful


    In the last part of the article, it mentions that Mozilla based browsers have 1.7 % of the market share. I would advise web-sites that depens on internet sales not to discount this share. Most of these people, represented in the 1.7 % are rich people in the computer field , web-savy and spend time on the internet. Percisely, the best target audience.

    The IE crowd is filled with old grandmom who play solitare and who think that the Internet in on their "Hard-Drive" - you know, the "Hard Drive" that sits under their Packard-Bell monitor.

    Microsoft can keep those users.

    --

    Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    1. Re:1.7 % Market Share by tradervik · · Score: 3, Informative

      I just checked our site stats for 2003 and "Mozilla 5" has rocketed up to 5.7%! ;-)

    2. Re:1.7 % Market Share by rmohr02 · · Score: 2

      What site? I'm assuming most of the sites run by slashdotters will have a greater share for Gecko-based browsers than, say, Yahoo. But Yahoo wouldn't be a good indication either, as most of the people who are "enlightened" enough to use a Gecko browser don't need/want a portal.

    3. Re:1.7 % Market Share by KnightStalker · · Score: 2

      hmmm...

      $ wc -l access_log
      2433667 access_log

      $ grep Gecko access_log | wc -l
      96362

      Almost 4% since yesterday morning! :-)

      --
      * And remember, it's spelled N-e-t-s-c-a-p-e, but it's pronounced "Mozilla."
    4. Re:1.7 % Market Share by mikeage · · Score: 2

      And "free" zealots can keep you.

      You're wrong on two accounts. Number 1, if you really are some uberintelligent computer expert, you probably also don't make stupid impulse purchases online. Suppose you make triple the purchases of Grandma... no.. better yet...10 times. Do you still even approach the sheer numbers of the herd?

      Secondly, why are you being such an elitist jerk?

      --
      -- Is "Sig" copyrighted by www.sig.com?
    5. Re:1.7 % Market Share by NineNine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most of these people, represented in the 1.7 % are rich people in the computer field , web-savy and spend time on the internet.

      I disagree. I'd say that the 1.7% (closer to 0.5% on my sites) are mostly college kids who don't buy anything... exactly the kind of sufers I *don't* want.

    6. Re:1.7 % Market Share by zulux · · Score: 2

      Do you honestly think that the sales they've made through Mozilla browsers (the 1.7% you talked about) is more money than the other 98.3%?!

      No (obviously) , what I'm saying, is that any web-site that makes their site IE exclusive is pising away a good group of rich customers; The kind of customers that know what they want and won't return half the items after they broke them.

      I'd take an Apple/Unix customer any day over a Dell user - Dell people are concerned with cost, Apple/Unix people are concerned with value.

      There is a theory that one the reasons that Honda trumps GM in reliability, is that a typical Honda customer is college educted and will take care of the vehicle, while the typical GM bubba runs the car into the ground and only adds oil when the idiot light comes on.

      I own a GM vehicle, and it's been extremly reliable, (190,000 miles of worry-free driving) possibly because I've taken care of it the way a typical Honda owner does.

      Sites that piss away the Mozilla crowd are just a stupid as an airline that pisses away the Business crowd.

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    7. Re:1.7 % Market Share by Svenne · · Score: 2

      My stats. What can I say? The same results, almost; 6.7%

      --

      Slagborr
  15. Re: Validation by tradervik · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Which earliest version of IE? IE on Win 95, Win 98, Win Me, Win NT, Win 2000, Win XP or IE on the Mac? All of these platforms represent significant portions of my company's client base.

  16. a year ago by re-Verse · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I could tell people "I use Mozilla" and most people would look at me like i was speaking greek (except the greeks, they'd look at me like i was speaking inuit).

    Now I tell people i use Mozilla, and Some of them actually know what it is, or have heard of it. Not to mention that since there is a 1.X release out, i can confidently install it on a friends or clients machine without a lot of worry of weird crashes and bugs.

    Once Mozillas spam filtering becomes easy and useful, I can see myself converting a LOT more people a lot more easily than i already have. So far i've converted about 25 diehard IE users... and i wonder how many they have converted.

    1. Re:a year ago by PovRayMan · · Score: 5, Informative

      My greatest accomplishment was converting my Dad to Mozilla from Outlook and IE. To easily sum up the story here are a few key points.

      1.) He was able to import his Outlook stuff into Mozilla Mail no problem.
      2.) All he needed was a spelling checker plugin for the mail client (Got one from Mozdev) and it was 100% perfect for him.
      3.) Mozilla "Imported" his many hundreds of bookmarks which he definatly needed.
      4.) The built in popup blocker has worked wonders for him.
      5.) He has Mozilla sit in the system tray so he doesn't notice any load up delays.

      When I was converting my Dad to Mozilla I showed him how much better it is and he definatly agreed. He asked a few questions about how to make some things work and I got him up and running no sweat. Ever since he got klez because of Outlook (Partially his fault, yadda yadda yadda..) he believes that Mozilla Mail is greater since he now doesn't worry (for the most part) about mail viruses.

      So if you wanna convert someone, start with a family member.

    2. Re:a year ago by SailorBob · · Score: 2
      Ever since he got klez because of Outlook (Partially his fault, yadda yadda yadda..) he believes that Mozilla Mail is greater since he now doesn't worry (for the most part) about mail viruses.

      That's probably the best thing to emphasize to people. Use Mozilla Mail, don't ever get an e-mail virus again. I use it, my office uses it and my girlfriend uses it. We've all gotten plenty of virii in the e-mail, but never been infected.

      --

      Woopty Doo Basil, what does it all mean?!

  17. Is the road to success as a standalone? by budGibson · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To me, the most significant point in the article was Mitchell Baker's note supporting phoenix. In it, he lists one of the reasons for supporting phoenix as an experiment to see whether mozilla can succeed by building core browser functionality that others adapt.

    This is where OSS succeeds right now in mainstream implementations, as a base that a value-added integrator can then modify for clients to achieve a lower cost solution. It is hard for OSS to market directly to end-users. OSS is not close enough to end-users to know how to modify interface and other features to suit their needs. However, value-added integrators are.

    With microsoft, value-added integrators face high licensing fees and the danger that microsoft will try to eat their lunch. In OSS, this is less an issue.

    However, there is one problem with this view. There's plenty of reason for value-added integrators to use mozilla. What is the reason to contribute back? In the end, I suspect the interest for contribution to mozilla is with platform providers, e.g., AOL, who do not want access to their platforms controlled by their competitors. Note, a number of OSS projects have moved to corporate sponsorship congruent with this view, e.g., Gnome, Mozilla, and even Apache.

    So, mozilla might find its real success as a neutral technology that can be adapted across a number of platforms by value-added integrators. It will have to look for support to corporations whose interest is in having neutral access technologies for their platforms.

    1. Re:Is the road to success as a standalone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
      To me, the most significant point in the article was Mitchell Baker's note supporting phoenix [mozillazine.org]. In it, he
      Mitchell's a she!
    2. Re:Is the road to success as a standalone? by budGibson · · Score: 2

      Oops!

    3. Re:Is the road to success as a standalone? by T.E.D. · · Score: 2
      However, there is one problem with this view. There's plenty of reason for value-added integrators to use mozilla. What is the reason to contribute back?


      The best reason of all - self interest. If an integrator makes a change/bugfix to Mozilla and they don't contribute it, then they will have to take upon themselves the burden of reinstalling their change upon every new version of Mozilla that comes out. Software being what it is, the baseline will randomly drift away from the one their change was designed for, and they will have to make up the difference and manually apply it to every release. Yuck.

      That's why in the real world folks fight like hell to get their changes and fixes into the official baseline.
  18. Re: Opera by bunratty · · Score: 2

    I'd recommend sticking with Opera 7, even though it's still in beta, if you want to try Opera. It's way more standards-compliant than previous versions. Opera 7 even has better CSS2 support than any other browser according to some.

    --
    What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  19. Browser good, Mail/News not so good by tradervik · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The browser is excellent. At work, I use both IE and Mozilla (mainly because Windows launches IE when I click on a URL link in Outlook and I haven't been able to find out how to change that). Mozilla does a better job rendering complex pages. Take a page with a big table that uses CSS to control the layout. Mozilla is able to display the table progressively (i.e. display the rows as the data arrives at the browser) while IE seems to need to wait for the entire table to arrive. IE also crashes trying to print out that page if the table is big enough to take more than 2 or 3 paper pages.

    Mozilla also has tabbed browsing, a popup blocker, etc. etc. The only area I have noticed where Mozilla still lags is in some DHTML (JavaScript/DOM) stuff. For example, pages that implement animation using DHTML can be much slower than IE.

    The Mozilla Mail/News client, on the other hand, has not been so successful, in my opinion. For example, the last time I tried to use it, it would do strange things when I tried to insert blank lines between quoted lines in a reply.

    1. Re:Browser good, Mail/News not so good by Bake · · Score: 2

      ... because Windows launches IE when I click on a URL link in Outlook and I haven't been able to find out how to change that)...


      If I use Outlook and click a link in an email it launches Phoenix to that particular URL. I simply had to set Phoenix as my default browser for this to work.

      I do however experience an issue similar to yours in using the MSN Messenger, where it launches IE, default browser be damned, for checking my hotmail account or sending new emails using hotmail.

    2. Re:Browser good, Mail/News not so good by jesser · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The Mozilla Mail/News client, on the other hand, has not been so successful, in my opinion. For example, the last time I tried to use it, it would do strange things when I tried to insert blank lines between quoted lines in a reply.

      Yeah, replying to e-mails using the Mozilla mail client is painful. Not enough to stop me from using it, but enough to get me to swear occasionally. Most of the problems involve working with blockquotes: adding reply lines in the middle of them, merging them, moving text in and out of them. A quick bugzilla search brought up 178899,155609,144998,115498.

      --
      The shareholder is always right.
    3. Re:Browser good, Mail/News not so good by SailorBob · · Score: 2
      The Mozilla Mail/News client, on the other hand, has not been so successful, in my opinion. For example, the last time I tried to use it, it would do strange things when I tried to insert blank lines between quoted lines in a reply.

      Am I the only one who's noticed that mozmail doesn't seem to ever delete anything? My trash folder in moz is supposedly empty, but for some reason is 70MB! All the files in my mail folder just keep getting bigger and bigger no matter how much I "delete".

      --

      Woopty Doo Basil, what does it all mean?!

    4. Re:Browser good, Mail/News not so good by abischof · · Score: 2

      You have set Edit -> Mail and Newsgroup Account Settings -> Server Settings -> "Empty Trash on Exit" to checkmarked, right? If that's already set, you could try a fresh installation of Mozilla (sometimes cruft from old profiles can confuse more recent versions).

      --

      Alex Bischoff
      HTML/CSS coder for hire

  20. mozilla...jwz...The Fork. Three degrees! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    No, the problem is really one of adaptation: Once it's build, once it's available, how do you make people come and use it?

    http://www.jwz.org/doc/lemacs.html

    See users switch. Switch, users, switch! See RMS fume. Fume, RMS, fume.

    If you have to brainstorm ways of getting users to switch to your very-slightly-different application, the game is already over and you lost.

    No popups, no Javascript, no 0wN0RZing. When Mozilla gets better than IE 3.0, call me. And please shut up about the tabs. Hide task bar much?

  21. Mozilla and Mac OS X by The+Glory+of+Witty · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Mozilla for Mac OS X is a nice browser and it gets better everyday, but I still think that in terms of speed it lags behind Internet Explorer. Chimera on the other hand is the fastest web browser I've ever used and it renders websites just about as well as IE. Its light, its fast, its cocoa, if you are using OS X you owe it to yourself to at least check out this amazing browser. I feel that its the most exciting thing happening on the OS X platform right now. Now all we need is for Chimera to reach a final version so Apple can bundle it with OS X and new Macs that are sold. Think about it: Apple's license with Microsoft has expired, so they don't even need to ship IE anymore, although I'm sure they will continue just because IE is the standard. Chimera is a cocoa product which is exactly what Apple has been emphasizing for its speed and usability. Whatever the case is, the future looks bright for this amazing browser!

  22. Re: Validation by Dirtside · · Score: 5, Insightful
    That's not good enough. Even a browser which is supposedly standards-compliant can have bugs which cause wierd display glitches, even if your code is letter-perfect. Mozilla 1.0 (I think, might have been 1.1) had a strange bug where certain combinations of COLSPAN and WIDTH settings would cause the final cell in each row to be wider than it should -- even if the W3C HTML validator said the code was perfect, and the code worked perfectly in every other browser (including pre-1.0 versions of Mozilla) I tested, including three versions of IE, old Netscape 4.7, and so on.

    The bug was eventually fixed, but simply writing and testing it once wouldn't have worked.

    It's so much easier to simply validate against the W3C standards instead of checking to see if your pages work in every browser.
    Yeah, it's so much easier, but you're ignoring reality. Browsers have bugs, and if you don't test it in the browsers that are *actually* in common use, you're asking for trouble. Even if it works in an early version of IE, Microsoft (and even the Mozilla project) have broken things in later versions which worked in earlier versions.
    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  23. Re: Validation by Dave2+Wickham · · Score: 3, Informative

    Except - of course - where IE acts retarded. For example, with CSS text sizing - without a doctype it's one size too big, and on IE5 it's too big with a doctype.

  24. A trick to speed up Mozilla v1.2.1 and previous... by antdude · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Paint Timeout is too high in the current stable versions. This is why Phoenix works so fast in rendering. Hopefully, the next stable version will have this fix. Here's the copy of Mozilla thread in newsgroup:

    -------- Original Message --------
    Subject: Re: Great performance tuning pref setting
    Date: Wed, 25 Dec 2002 18:16:37 +0100
    From: Markus Hübner
    Organization: Another Netscape Collabra Server User
    Newsgroups:
    netscape.public.mozilla.win32,n etscape.public.mozi lla.performance
    References:

    Olaf Dietsche wrote:
    > Markus Hübner writes:
    >
    >
    >>Jonathan Arnold wrote:
    >>
    >>>>>http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_ bug.cgi?id=1 80241
    >>>>>is highly interesting!
    >>>>
    >>>>Can't wait for the pref additions to try it out, looks interesting.
    >>>
    >>>It's in Moztweak.
    >>>
    >>
    >>cool - but it would be really needed to tune the default value.
    >>the "standard mozilla user" doesn't have Moztweak nor does the typical
    >>Netscape (Gecko embedded browser) user.
    >
    >
    > Well, every user has an editor. You can put the following line
    > into prefs.js or user.js:
    >
    > user_pref("nglayout.initialpaint.delay", 500);
    >
    > I tested this with various values, but couldn't see any difference
    > until I tried:
    >
    > user_pref("nglayout.initialpaint.delay", 0);
    >
    > This is in sync with:
    >
    >
    > Regards, Olaf.

    Thx for the pointer to mozillazine, Olaf! :: markus

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
  25. And no Mozilla in Playboy! by DCowern · · Score: 5, Funny

    Mozillazine had a blurb about it. Here's the full text:

    MOZILLA'S MO BETTA

    [Mozilla.org Logo]

    Microsoft's Internet Explorer is the most popular web browser in the world. But it's not the best. That title belongs to Mozilla, a volunteer-built browser that offers everything Explorer has going for it, plus a bunch of great features. Here are three reasons to switch. One: You can set a preference to prevent pop-up windows. Two: You can right-click on any banner ad and select a menu item that prevents the originating site from sending images to your browser. Three: You can open links as "tabs" that appear along the top of your browser window. Don't be fooled by the new Netscape 7.0. It lacks a built-in pop-up killer and will fire a barrage of AOL ads every chance that it gets.

    Playboy, January 2003, p.36

    This _has_ to be good for mainstream acceptance when such non-tech-oriented magazines like Playboy laud Mozilla so greatly. Maybe if other general living and style magazines adopt such a positive attitude, we'll see a surge in Mozilla adoption. Hey, maybe its wishful thinking but if nothing else, it's increasing awareness.

    P.S. -- Consider this proof that I *DO* read the articles. :-P

  26. Re:Konqueror = Deadzilla by bogie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No offense to Konq but doesn't really measure up to either Mozilla or Phoenix. For quick and dirty web browsing it may be fine, but only a diehard kde user(and I am one) would think of saying it trumps Moz/Phoenix. Of course to each his own, but I think most people would disagree. I certainly don't feel the need to make a list, but if I did the fact that konq only runs on linux makes it a non-starter for both the majority of home users and of course corporate users who usually have a mix of windows, linux, and Macs.

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
  27. Re:No Chimera? by goneaway · · Score: 3, Informative

    That's something different and still maintained (at least in Debian) although it's nothing to write home about. The current version is 2.x and still has some rendering problems that need to be resolved.

    --
    your = it belongs to you. you're = a contraction of you and are. Got it now?
  28. Mozilla should save its state. Mozilla crashes all by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 2


    I often need to research several topics at the same time. For example, when a customer calls I may need to open a new topic. I open several instances of Mozilla, each with several tabs on one topic.

    However, when Mozilla crashes, all instances of Mozilla browser and all instances of Mozilla mail disappear.

    It would be great if Mozilla would save its state after every operation, as Opera does. It would be necessary that each instance maintain its own state file. Then the topics could be reloaded after a crash, or after re-booting the computer.

  29. 2003 is the year of Mozilla's dead.... by KAMiKAZOW · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is not a troll post!

    2003 is the year of Mozilla's dead.... at least of Mozilla's current form.
    The reason? AOL Communicator! I downloaded a beta version from www.datakill.com and I think, it has a bright future.
    The reasons:

    1. It seems that AOL is finally going to push Gecko to the masses (It's branded as AOL product, not Netscape)
    2. AOL Communicator is split up in single applications (ac_mail.exe, ac_im.exe,...) - no ''all in one'' like Mozilla or Netscape.
    3. (And that's my peronal favourite, 'cause that's what I prayed for since ages) AOL Communictor is written using wxWindows!
      Yes it's true. Finally they got rid of the sluggish XUL interface and still being multi-plattform.
      Phoenix (or whatever the future name will be) has helped, but Phoenix' interface is still somewhat slow compared to native Windows apps. Phoenix' GUI toolkit is also not fully aware of Visual Styles (skins for WinXP) - the menus look ''old school'', while the other apps have flat/skinned menus.
      AOL Communicator (thanks to wxWindows) uses native widgets everywhere.
      Quote from the included copyright-notice.txt:

      AOL Communicator uses the following libraries and modules:

      wxWindows libraries Copyright (c) 1998 Julian Smart, Robert
      Roebling. The wxWindows source code, available under the
      wxWindows Library License, Version 3, can be found at
      http://www.wxwindows.org.

    While the beta version does only consist of an eMail app and the Instant Messenger (compatible with AIM and ICQ), AOL is also developing a browser component.
    If you have a look into the file ''AOL Communicator\locale\cat\ac_help.mo'', you can find the following strings (BTW, ''Photon'' is the codename for the Communicator):

    About Photon Browser

    Photon Browser is not currently your default browser.
    Would you like to make it your default browser?


    Oh yes, I can't wait for the final release. I hope there will be an open source version of it (without the AOL specific stuff like AOL Mail or the Instant Messenger - called Mozilla 2.0 or something like that), to allow porting it to other platforms.

    Oh, BTW... I did an experiment and it worked: You can move the mail folder from Mozilla's profile directory to AOL Communicator's profile directory. All your mails stay intact.

    Honestly, I don't know why the Mozilla/Netscape developers waste their time in creating a new toolkit (the one that Phoenix uses), if they should better convince their bosses from AOL to open the source of the Communicator.

    PS: Thanks for reading this post and (hopefully) not modding me down as ''Troll'' :)

    1. Re:2003 is the year of Mozilla's dead.... by BZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, lessee...

      1) AOL Communicator is a pet project of a AOL VP who hates Netscape and wants the division to disappear. It's not clear to me how he thinks Gecko will get maintained after that.

      2) Mozilla developers developed XUL because it makes UI development a lot faster and easier than using WxWindows.

      The real problem Mozilla is facing right now, imo, is not the UI toolkit but the fact that Gecko is likely to be very much obsolete in 2-3 years unless a good deal of major work happens in the very near future...

    2. Re:2003 is the year of Mozilla's dead.... by KAMiKAZOW · · Score: 2, Insightful
      2) Mozilla developers developed XUL because it makes UI development a lot faster and easier than using WxWindows.

      Sorry, but developers of an end-user application (Mozilla/Netscape) should focus on the end user, not other developers.
      1.) In some situations (not always, but IMHO too often - when Phoenix/Mozilla displays large images or complex tables) the context menu takes a few seconds to appear. From a user's perspective, this is not acceptable (I hope you don't have simmilar expieriences, because that's very annoying).

      2.) If XUL is so great, why are there so many projects to get rid of it? (Geleon, K-Meleon, Chimera,...)
      IMO this does only fragment the development of Mozilla. If Mozilla used a GUI toolkit with good performance from the beginning, those projects wouldn't be neccessary.

      Personally, I don't care if it's wxWindows or some other toolkit. My point is, that Mozilla should've used a toolkit that looks fammiliar to the user (not like some alien app as Mozilla with the Modern theme) and has good performance.
    3. Re:2003 is the year of Mozilla's dead.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The real problem Mozilla is facing right now, imo, is not the UI toolkit but the fact that Gecko is likely to be very much obsolete in 2-3 years unless a good deal of major work happens...

      May I ask why?

  30. Market Share by loconet · · Score: 2

    " By the end of the month, some industry researchers were reporting that Mozilla 1.0 had already achieved a 0.4 percent market share."

    Anyone knows what is the market share for Mozilla and/or phoenix now a days?

    --
    [alk]
    1. Re:Market Share by loconet · · Score: 2

      Found these stats, that say that as of December 16 2002, Mozilla has 1.1% market share.

      --
      [alk]
  31. Wrong direction, guys by Tablizer · · Score: 4, Informative

    From O'reilly's, "Creating Applications with Mozilla", Page 326:

    "Currently, remote Mozilla applications are not prevalent because development focuses on making the client applications as stable and efficient as possible. Therefore, this area of Mozilla development is largely speculatative. This chapter argues that remote applications are worth looking at more closely."

    The Mozilla developers are focused on making another VB instead of providing remote HTTP-friendly GUI apps. That is where the real need is. The developers are getting away from webbiness, but that *should* be the focus of a browser.

    I don't get it.

    1. Re:Wrong direction, guys by Tablizer · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What the hell is a "remote mozilla application"?

      I believe they mean a server-centric application where the client is Mozilla. It would not be conceptually much different than a web app, but you would be allowed to use XUL's GUI widgets and have GUI-like functionality like not having to redraw the entire page just to change one item on it.

      The server may have nothing to do with Mozilla, other than sending Mozilla-recognized commands or markup to the client. But the server could be runing PHP, Java, ASP, ColdFusion, or whatever.

    2. Re:Wrong direction, guys by Micah · · Score: 2

      That's correct. I've done some playing with this (remote XUL apps) and I really think it has great potential.

      Unfortunately, there are some bugs to be worked out. I was going to create a new app I'm working on in XUL, partly to have a "better" interface and partly to thumb my nose at Microsoft and hopefully get more people to try Mozilla. But I ran into some problems and it's back to standard HTML/CSS. :( Maybe next year...

    3. Re:Wrong direction, guys by Micah · · Score: 2

      I would be interested in hearing some of the lessons you learned in your XUL trials.

      For one thing, I got excited about using the HTML composer to allow people to write messages. But apparently that is only available in chrome apps (which are installed locally, not fetched via HTTP). When I reverted to plain-text boxes, I discovered that I could not even get XUL to do the equivelant of wrap=soft in HTML -- the user had to press a hard Enter at the end of every line! That is probably the biggest "killer", for now anyway, for this particular application. Making it look and feel nice to users is of utmost importance.

      Also, Mozilla seems to have fairly unstable support for changing some properties dynamically. Some things that worked great in Mozilla 1.0.1 don't work right at all in any recent build (since last August I think). Here is a test page that I put up. When you move the mouse over the image, it's supposed to increase/decrease the opacity. Works great in 1.0.1, but in recent builds it just works the first time the mouse touches it, then the opacity just stays the same. I filed a bug on this -- Bugzilla #185432. Not an issue for my afformentioned application, but I believe Mozilla+XUL could be huge in the edutainment market, and this kind of thing makes it almost worthless for that. They need to get this kind of thing working reliably in all builds.

    4. Re:Wrong direction, guys by Micah · · Score: 2

      Hmmm, no I haven't tried an HTML textbox. That would likely work, I think!

      Still, for now, I'm thinking it's probably wisest to stick to HTML/CSS. BUT... I think I'll keep looking at XUL, and maybe use it to provide an alternate interface to the same site, as soon as I can. That may be the best of both worlds! Still encourage Mozilla use, but don't limit yourself to a small fraction of the Internet's users (though hopefully it will be a large fraction by the end of this year).

  32. Likely explanation... by mahlen · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I believe that much of the website design for Mozilla.org is/was done by Shepard Fairey, of Obey Giant fame. He has a fondness for early 20th century Soviet propaganda styles that suffuses much of his work.

    Also, there is a "revolutionary" quality to much of the Mozilla work, which the red star also harkens to.

    mahlen

  33. Re:Mozilla should save its state. Mozilla crashes by rmohr02 · · Score: 2

    Look at Recall. Also, there are plans to include automatically saving the current tab session continuously with MultiZilla.

  34. Playzilla by Jack+Zombie · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Youre not understanding the Playboy article: its promoting Mozillas qualities as a porn browser, not as a general use browser; just notice the features they highlight in the article and consider what kind of audience Playboy has. I guess we can assume you wont ever read in a general living, or style, magazine about how great Mozilla is when you want to jerk off to pictures of scantily dressed girls.

    Oh, and heres a link to the Pornzilla project -- theyre the ones whove been putting pressure on the developers (and contributing some code too) to make Mozilla a wonderful browser for all the perverts out there.

    --
    "You should never doubt what nobody is sure about." -- Willy Wonka
  35. Re: Validation by dbaron · · Score: 5, Informative

    It seems like you're suggesting that validation assures standards-compliance. Validation does not ensure standards-compliance.

    HTML Validation only ensures that you've met certain constraints of syntax and containment, but it doesn't ensure that you're following the standard. If you're using one of the Transitional doctype declarations, it doesn't ensure that you're avoiding deprecated features. More importantly, it doesn't show if you're depending on a bug in the browsers you're testing in. For example, a browser that doesn't implement section 14.3 of the HTML 4.0 spec correctly (pretty much any browser other than Mozilla, right now) might load stylesheets that the HTML spec says shouldn't be loaded. Thus you'll have valid markup, and your browser will load your stylesheets, but any standards-compliant browser will treat some of your stylesheets as alternate stylesheets and not load them. (This happens if you specify different title attributes on the LINK element linking to the stylesheets, since it makes some of the stylesheets alternate stylesheets.) Similar traps can happen in other ways and allow you to write perfectly valid markup that means something other than what you think it does and what you intended it to do.

    CSS validation has similar problems. (It also has the problem that the validators themselves have rather significant bugs, since there aren't any mature implementations of CSS parsers using which one can build validators like the SGML parsers on which HTML validators are based.) For example, MSIE for Windows treats the height property on block-level elements incorrectly: it treats it as min-height and allows the height of the block to be larger if the contents overflow. This is incorrect, so there are pages that are displayed nicely on MSIE for Windows but have lots of overlapping text on any CSS-compliant browser. Likewise, you could be writing pages that work fine at your default font size or window width but display very badly at others.

    In other words, validation tools for HTML and CSS are nowhere near smart enough to be a substitute for really knowing what you're doing. (Does anyone rely on lint to verify that their C programs are bug-free?)

    (I actually wrote this post before on slashdot, but way too late in the thread for anyone to notice it. I'm afraid I'm doing the same thing again, though...)

  36. My Mozilla Experience in 2002 by f0rt0r · · Score: 3, Informative

    First, I started using Mozilla when I did my first experiment with migrating to alternate OS's last July ( FreeBSD was the OS ), and I when I found there was a Windows version of it, I was hooked. Here are my list of pluses and minuses that stand out in my mind: 1. Tabbed Browsing - I do a lot of research on the web, mostly because I have yet to find a highly portable electronic reference that I can take with me anywhere on any computer I happen to be using. What I do is open a 1-2 Google windows, run my searches, and then examine the hits to see if any of them have what I am looking for. I am pretty sure this is how I 'accidently' found slashdot :). Having the resulting 8-12 web sites I am referencing in a tabbed interface is VERY convenient. 2. Privacy Control - The control over stored passwords, cookie storage, javascripts, popup windows, etc. replaces multiple applications I used to use for these features. These are nothing short of outstanding features IMHO. 3. Miscellaneous - I am discovering more cool features as I go along. 2-3 weeks ago I discovered image-blocking, which kills most ads except for the flash ones, but then again. I have not and do not plan on installing flash anyhow. Minuses: 1. Data portability - I have a dual-boot workstaion at home (in addition to my servers ), and my work's laptop that I try to keep the bookmarks and email in sync so I can access the same information wherever I am at. Note: I am looking at researching a web interface for my qpopper server, that would help with the email sync.). So far this has been a total pain in Mozilla. First, I have yet to find any email import/export tools, and the "Manage Bookmarks" tool doesn't work the way I would like it to. What I mean is when I import bookmarks, I would like it to do a differential import. For example, say I have a bookmark folder called "java" on two computers. They start off in sync with the same too url's in the folder. If I add a url to the folder on computer A, export it, and then import it to computer B, I would expect computer B's corresponding folder to now have the original 2 url's plus the 3rd one I added to A. Instead, Mozilla (1.2.1 even ) will add a horizontal divider to the bookmark list, create a copy of the 'java' folder and the 3 url's I imported. I can fix this manually, but why should I have to? To be safe Mozilla could let me choose how it handles the import, to give user to get the desired results. I could copy bookmark files between them, but this could potentially erase bookmarks that I put on computer B that were not one computer A at the time I was importing bookmarks from computer A to computer B. 2.Support Forums - To tell you the truth, I can't tell if these even exist or not. I was looking for help on the email import problem and followed the Mozilla's web site link to it's newgroups forums. I shouldn't have wasted it my time. None of the forums looked to be end user support ( Q&A ) related, and when I posted to one that seemed to be the closest thing to this ( after searching it to see if the question had already been asked ) I got flamed for posting in a developer-only group even though there was no indication that that is what it was for ( i.e. the word 'developer' or similiar were not in the newgroup name. What is worse yet is that not one of the flames said "YOu idiot, you should have know tech support questions get posted here !", so after all the time they spent flaming me, I still have no idea where I should have posted my question. How about they put up a nice web-based searchable and archivable set of Mozilla forums with each forums focus clearly identified by the title ( or the forum description text ). Sorry newgroup-lovers, nothing against newsgroups, but my experience with them has been nothing but negative. 3. Bookmark Sorting - Why can't I have all my Bookmarks sorted in alphanumeric order? Inside of bookmark manager I can do this, but once I leave the manager window my bookmarks go back to being unsorted. Maybe there is a big sign on the toolbar saying "click here to sort your bookmarks", but I am not seeing it. 4. Memory Hog ( Windows Version ) - This has been mentioned before, but I would like to note that it seems to have been fixed now that I am using version 1.1 on my work laptop, older version seem to get unresponsive after being open for extended periods of time and when I checked resources in use, it averaged about 32MB. I have not experienced any lagginess with the Linux versions, but then again that may be because Linux is such a zippy( fast ) OS anyhow. In conclusion, I could have included a list of things I would like to have added to the browser, but the topic is 'experience', and there you have it. Where I disgressed by saying "fix this, add that" was me just clarifying why I thought the problem was a problem. So please, no "off topic" flames. Also, this is my second post on slashdot...ever. Hopefully you find this post informative. I expect that by my sixth post to have graduated to " In Russia, Mozilla Browses You!", but I am not quite there yet. Peace.

    --
    I can't afford a sig!
  37. Re: Validation by bunratty · · Score: 3, Informative
    Yes, of course, all programs have bugs. Notice I never said that validating the web page guarantees that the pages work on all browsers. I said that after your page validates, it generally will work mostly correctly on the browsers people use most. If a browser has a bad bug, many people will avoid it, making it less likely that your users will see the glitch caused by the bug.

    In my experience, I have removed serious structural errors from web pages, in pages that I wrote as well as in pages that other wrote, far more easily by validating the HTML instead of trying to check in different browsers. After validating, you can always go the extra mile and check the page in other browsers, but usually you don't even need to.

    --
    What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  38. Re:My Bad, this post has zero formatting by f0rt0r · · Score: 2

    Yikes, the post was in nice paragraphs in the editor, it came out as a stream of text and space characters. Next time I will use preview...so much for my second slashdot post. I will be more carefule next time.

    --
    I can't afford a sig!
  39. Re: Validation by bunratty · · Score: 2

    I didn't say validating a page will guarantee it will look exactly the way you intended it to on all browsers. I said it would help ensure that it works. If your page breaks when the font size changes by one size, you've got bigger problems than invalid HTML!

    --
    What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  40. That's the ticket! by Eric_Cartman_South_P · · Score: 2
    Just wanted to say "Kudos" to you! I've done the same with my family. Once at a time, getting IE out of the box is nice. Once person at a time using open source to browse the web. Sweet!

    Happy new year.

  41. dangerous mistake in reasoning by g4dget · · Score: 2
    All my purchases on BN.com for a while were made through IE because their web site didn't work reliably with Mozilla: the purchase would fail after typing in all the information. Very frustrating. They probably had near 100% IE usage at the time.

    Does that mean that they should have just ignored Mozilla? Quite to the contrary. Instead of the several thousand dollars I would have spent on books over that period, I only spent a few hundred--on books I couldn't easily get on another web site. When I did need to order from them, I'd drag myself over to my Windows laptop after looking long and hard elsewhere. And I still don't trust their web site and avoid it when I can.

  42. Tired of IE users. by DeadSea · · Score: 5, Informative
    I got tired of folks visiting my website using IE. I use Mozilla when develop and I code to standards. There have been numerous cases when I've had to regress something because IE doesn't do it right. In any case, I did a popunder ad for Mozilla for those that are using IE.

    From this I found a few interesting things. The first, which is encouraging, is that it seem to be working. The percentage of people who visit my site using Mozilla started rising sharply. I went from about 1% to almost 5%. The second thing, which is curious, is that a lot less people are actually using IE than you might think. My server logs show that about 80% of my visitors use IE, but only about 40% get the popunder. My conclusion is that there are a lot of browsers out there that fake the user agent, or many people have found a way to disable popunders in IE. (have javascript disabled, or some such).

    If you want the code to do the popunder so you can advertise mozilla on your site, its easy to grab the Javascript from my home page, just view source.

    1. Re:Tired of IE users. by Micah · · Score: 2

      Hey cool, that's great! I think I might use a similar technique for a new web app I'm developing, which will NOT have mostly tech-savvy users.

      And off-topic, but gotta ask... you're a Miller in the Conestoga area of PA, so I suppose you have Mennonite connections?

    2. Re:Tired of IE users. by DeadSea · · Score: 2

      Can the moderator that marked this a troll explain themselves? These are factual numbers that I pulled from my server logs. You can check my site, I actually have done the mozilla ad, and I have the stats to back up my results.

  43. number is probably wrong anyway by g4dget · · Score: 2
    It's very hard to figure out what browser "market share" is anyway. In fact, it's not even clear that it is a well-defined number. Many users probably have access to multiple browsers. If you make your site work only with IE, they may shop there, but less frequently than they otherwise would. Maybe they'll be able to access it from their home PC but not their wireless PDA, etc.

    If there is a number at all, I'd say IE usage is probably in the low 80s, with the rest split among Mozilla, embedded browsers, and a few other players. No serious business can design only for IE, and no serious business has to anyway.

  44. Crashing caused by buffer or virtual memory probs? by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 2


    Mozilla doesn't often crash, as you say. It crashes (for me) only when there are a lot of instances of Mozilla running with a lot of tabs and I am typing rapidly or choosing menu operations rapidly. The crash problem seems to be caused by a buffer of operations being overrun.

    The crashing may be associated with the known problems of Windows XP when the OS is operating close to the limits of installed memory, and it beginning to use virtual memory.

  45. Re: Validation by bunratty · · Score: 2
    In other words, validation tools for HTML and CSS are nowhere near smart enough to be a substitute for really knowing what you're doing. (Does anyone rely on lint to verify that their C programs are bug-free?)
    No, of course not. I'm not suggesting relying on validating documents as a substitute for knowing what you're doing. But most major problems with web pages that I've seen have been caused by serious structural problems. Those problems are more easily and effectively solved by validating the page than by trying the page in many different browsers. If a page does not validate, it's likely that it will break in some browser -- just like if a C program has syntax errors, it's likely to need work when you port it.
    --
    What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  46. Question by ubernostrum · · Score: 4, Insightful
    You don't seem to like XUL. In your original post you praised this new thing for ditching XUL. Yet in the article you linked to, we find the following:
    Communicator utilizes the Gecko engine and XUL user interface language found in Mozilla, but it was developed entirely in-house and is not open source, according to AOL.
    And you ask people not to mod you down...
  47. Re:Chimera screenshots by Znonymous+Coward · · Score: 2

    Screenshots (remove any spaces from URL)

    http://chimera.mozdev.org/screenshots.html

    --

    Karma: The shiznight, mostly because I am the Drizzle.

  48. I like Netscape 7.01 but there's one problem by RayChuang · · Score: 2

    Netscape 7.01, which is based on Mozilla technology, is actually a very nice browser.

    Well there is one problem though: it has a bad habit of expiring "cookies" in only a few days. Whenever I save settings for online message boards under Netscape 7.01 it would stop saving that cookie after at most 4-5 days; does anyone know how to stamp out that problem? =(

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
    1. Re:I like Netscape 7.01 but there's one problem by Ben+Hutchings · · Score: 2

      In Preferences, on the Privacy&Security/Cookies panel, there's a setting for maximum lifetime of cookies.

  49. Re: Validation by Dirtside · · Score: 2
    But if your code validates, and doesn't appear correctly in somebody's browser, it is the *browers* fault, NOT yours.
    And your boss is going to care... why, exactly? If you write perfect code that doesn't display properly in any version of IE, do you think they're going to accept the excuse that "It's IE's fault, it's buggy?" No, they're going to tell you to fix it so that it looks right in IE. I agree with you -- it is the browser's fault that it doesn't render things properly, but the people in charge don't care about that. They just want it to look right for their customers. Be realistic.
    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  50. Re:moron the NYT by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 2
    That links to a "Post with no data" page.

    In other words, friendly_fire, you've linked to one of your own pro-MS posts at the NYT?

    This is just as I've suspected all along -- you're nothing more than a ringer, trying to make pro-OSS people look bad by association.

    Back on topic: I think Moz rocks, the only time I use MSIE anymore is to see what's broken in it that I have to do workarounds for after creating standards-compliant pages. Pretty ironic considering that MS was first to market with a CSS implementation back in '96, and now there's huge chunks of the CSS-2 spec they don't even implement that make CSS really powerful.

    For example, say you want to make all text inputs and textareas have a background colour of light yellow, but you want submit and reset buttons to be silver-grey. Using attribute selectors in Mozilla (see the CSS-2 spec), you can accomplish this with 2 lines of CSS only, with no additions to your markup required:
    input[type="text"], textarea {background-color:#FFE; }
    input[type="submit"], input[type="reset"] {background-color:#CCC; }
    In MSIE, you have to do this with class selectors and then assign class attributes to all your input and textarea tags.

    And yes, tabbed browsing is da bomb -- it's completely changed how I use the Web (for the better).
    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  51. Slightly different approach by ThinkingGuy · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm doing something similar on my webpage: a simple Javascript that will display a friendly warning message to IE users:

    var strBrowser = navigator.userAgent;
    if (strBrowser.indexOf("MSIE")> 0) {
    document.write("<p><strong>");
    document.write("Warning: you appear to be viewing this page with Microsoft Internet Explorer, which has numerous bugs and ");
    document.write('<a href="http://www.nwnetworks.com/iesc.html"> security holes.</a>');
    document.write(" It is recommended that you upgrade to a more secure browser, ");
    document.write('such as <a href="http://www.mozilla.org">Mozilla,</a&gt ; ');
    document.write('<a href="http://home.netscape.com/computing/download/ ">Netscape,</a> ');
    document.write('or <a href="http://www.opera.com">Opera.</a>');
    document.write("</strong></p>");
    }

  52. Re:2003 is the year.... (-1, blatantly pro-XUL) by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 2

    > If Mozilla used a GUI toolkit with good performance from the beginning, those projects wouldn't be neccessary.

    Then you run into porting issues. You wind up either (a) having to port your interface code or (b) not porting to platforms that you otherwise could. Since Gecko parses XUL directly, all you have to do is compile Gecko for your target platform and -- ta-daaa! -- you've got the GUI. In addition, XUL makes it dead easy for non-C++ types to write interface enhancements. XUL has the potential to do for GUI application development what HTML did for document creation.

    (Which is quite possibly the very reason why so many C++ developers slag it so much...?)

    Since one of the stated goals of Mozilla is to provide a browser that behaves the same way on as many platforms as possible, XUL seems to me a very good thing. It's already fairly mature, and just because you see a widget behave in a certain fashion doesn't mean that's the only behaviour it can have. If you don't like any of the available themes, learn XUL and write a better one.

    If you think XUL is too slow, dig into the Mozilla source and figure out how to make it run faster.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  53. Re: Validation-We're our own worst enemy. by Dirtside · · Score: 2
    Realistically has that attitude ever solved a problem? Treat the symptom, not the illiness.
    No shit, Sherlock. I don't think that having to write separate code for separate browsers is a good idea, either -- but I do think that if you write your code according to the standard, and only check it with an HTML validator, you're asking for trouble. It would be nice if we could all be idealistic 100% of the time, but when 95% of your website's users use a browser that doesn't conform to standards, you have two choices: 1) Only reach 5% of the audience, or 2) Reach 100% of the audience, at the cost of encouraging standards noncompliance. It would be nice if we could all be moral and pick #1, but unless you own the company, you're going to end up with #2 -- the one that your non-technical boss demands. I write all my code to spec, but if something doesn't work in IE, I don't have much of a choice.
    Realistically have the individuals who've adopted such an attitude ever had to clean up the resulting mess? Realistically will they ever have to face the music?
    Nope, managers don't have to deal with it. That's what us programmers are for. If they had to deal with it, they might not ask for it, eh?
    Realistically what effect does all the above have on humanity getting the most out of its technological progress? Or having progress for that matter?
    This is the same as the first question, just phrased differently, to try and seem more profound. See above.
    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  54. Well, uh... by Kjella · · Score: 2

    Youre not understanding the Playboy article: its promoting Mozillas qualities as a porn browser, not as a general use browser ...maybe it's not general use, but it sure is a general *audience* with everything from rednecks to PHBs to horny teens. And once installed, you'll start using it for other browsing too.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  55. Re:Crashing caused by buffer or virtual memory pro by mackstann · · Score: 2

    ah..well.. you use some funky terms. virtual memory means all memory space addressable to the kernel, which is physical ram + swap space. swap space is not virtual memory, all memory is. it's always using virtual memory.

  56. Good product, but bad support by Kanasta · · Score: 2

    Good product, but bad support just like commercial counterparts.

    There are so many tiny 3yr old+ bugs in there now. These are mostly minor things which are really annoying - focus locking problems, missing accelerator keys, things that are always pushed 2 releases after the current one. Things that make a program 'polished' instead of just 'works'

    It may take someone to spend 1-2 days to fix one, but nobody wants to do it. Not fun? But I thought we had at least SOME paid employees of AOL working here.

    You'd think someone in charge would want to clear out a few of these problems quickly, but maybe we don't have any project managers volunteering there.

    Are all big projects doomed to become things we love to hate?

  57. Mozilla great but... by tjensor · · Score: 2

    I like mozilla - I'm using it right now. Tabbed browsing is what sells it for me. But you cant get away from using IE all the time - there are some sites that I have visited that just dont come out right in Mozilla. Now Iknow this is because he site author has used MS-specific stuff, but it means that for now at least its impossible not to keep a copy of IE around for those sites.

    --
    <fnord>OBEY</fnord>
  58. Win XP has problems when beginning to use swap mem by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 2


    It probably is not a good idea to be extremely demanding about the language used in Slashdot posts. I was typing very fast. Anyhow, I think that everyone knew what I meant: Windows XP seems to have problems when RAM begins is full and the OS begins using hard disk swap space.

  59. Re:Win XP has problems when beginning to use swap by mackstann · · Score: 2

    i know, it was an anal post, the main reason i mentioned it is because *alot* of people seem to think that virtual memory == swap.

  60. Linux users cost conscious by mgkimsal2 · · Score: 2

    I'd take an Apple/Unix customer any day over a Dell user - Dell people are concerned with cost, Apple/Unix people are concerned with value.

    I certainly would take an IE/MS user over a Linux user most days, simply because Linux users ARE NOT concerned with 'value', unless that value is measured in how much stuff is Free and free. Linux users (not saying Unix, but Linux) are far more concerned with money/cost/price than anyone else I've ever met.

    P.S. Those Apple people who can't burn or even watch VCDs are concerned with value for money?

    1. Re:Linux users cost conscious by frankie · · Score: 2
      P.S. Those Apple people who can't burn or even watch VCDs are concerned with value for money?

      Umm... which Apple people can't burn and watch VCDs? It works for me.

      p.s. What exactly does your rant have to do with Mozilla anyways? It's free and it's good, which are qualities appreciated by most computer users -- Mac, Linux, or otherwise.
  61. Setting Moz as your default browser by Sits · · Score: 2

    You don't mention which version of Windows you are on but this may help:

    In IE go to Tools -> Internet Options... -> Programs and make sure that "Internet Explorer should check whether it is the default browser" is unchecked.

    In Mozilla go to Edit -> Preferences -> Advanced -> System and make sure that http and HTML documents are selected.

    If you are using Windows 2000 (possibly with service packs) go to Control Panel -> Add/Remove Programs -> Set Program Access and Defaults and make sure Use my current browser is set.

  62. Mozilla help forums by Sits · · Score: 2

    The fact you could not find a forum to post your question is is not so surprising (there is a whole debtate on the "Mozilla is not for the end users" speech).

    Personally over the years I've found that mozillazine is the most helpful place to go for non developers. There tend to be enough people there who are friendly to both tech and non-techs (thus you end up with a group of people who know the answers and are willing to tell you them ;). I used to hang out in the #mozillazine irc channel myself when I had the time and before my University blocked irc...

    Concerning the memory hog alegations under Windows I feel your pain. For whatever reason Mozilla always seems to be swapped out of memory when left idle for a few minutes which doesn't help it's responsiveness. Hopefully the phoenix (it's still beta but coming along nicely) will help to solve the memory issues.

  63. Re: Validation by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 2

    Well, you got 2 replies [1 + this 1], & 4 mods. I meta-moderated 1of the informative-moderations, & felt that it was fair. So, you have 6 people who saw this, & probably more. Rest assured, your thoughts made a difference--at least to me.