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Chimera Developer Considers Dropping It

The Infamous Grimace writes "Chimera's developer is seriously considering dropping it, since 'Safari has already won.' This would be unfortunate, indeed. I still use Chimera at times, although it's true that Safari has become my browser of choice." I cannot use Safari regularly, it lacks too many features and has too many bugs. Of course, how long will this remain so? But even if Safari adds tabs and fixes bugs, will they add all the features I need from Chimera/Mozilla, like remembering form passwords, site navigation bar, more fine control of security and privacy? I guess there is always Mozilla if Safari doesn't fit the bill ... but Chimera is so much faster and Mac-like. Update: 01/22 19:54 GMT by P : The web site has been updated: "Chimera's not going [away], regardless of whatever I post on this blog."

36 of 238 comments (clear)

  1. unlikely demise by ubiquitin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Dave Hyatt's weblog, the Confessions of a Mozillian, indicates that there is a sizeable team working on Chimera, so I wouldn't expect everyone to just walk out the door all at once. Sure, development on it may become less of a priority, but that doesn't mean the fat lady has sung. Also, the overwhelming response to the safari announcement was for tabbed browsing. It is quite possible that Apple simply won't cave in to the demand for tabbed browsing in which case you can have my chimera when you pry it from my cold dead hands.

    --
    http://tinyurl.com/4ny52
    1. Re:unlikely demise by Rip!ey · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ...there is a sizeable team working on Chimera...

      Even if there was only one person working on the codebase, it is open source. No one person/corporation/entity can effectively 'kill the code'. The code is free to live.

  2. Somebody's mad at Apple by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's obvious it will only ever be a marginal product on a even more marginal platform.

    So, not only does Chimera suck, Mac OS X sucks harder. Am I translating that right?

    I was very excited at first by Chimera, but by 0.3 I'd uninstalled it and stopped participating in the mailing lists. I thought Chimera was going to be the OS-X native (look & feel, native text widgets, services, full-on ATSUI, etc.) version of Mozilla, but instead it became the dumbed-down version of Mozilla with a nice OS X GUI but drastically reduced functionality (at last glance there was still no button to close a tab).

    Now it seems this direction was chosen in order to lure Apple to use it as the default browser on OS X. Since they decided not to, what purpose does Chimera serve? For a dumb browser, we have Safari.

    If I may suggest, there is a market for a non-dumb browser on OS X. OmniWeb still has a decent following but it can't compete with Mozilla for standards. Re-tasking Chimera to be the OS X -native version of Mozilla might be a good direction for the project - quite a bit of the hard work has been done already.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  3. Safari, shmafari - think about webcore. by cryptochrome · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't think Safari should be the Chimera developers main concern as competition. What they should be worrying about is what's IN Safari - specifically, webcore. Because it's going to make it MUCH easier for people to create browsers with novel interface features for the mac. Including tabbed browsing, even if safari itself doesn't.

    My advice to the chimera developers - either focus on bringing the unique features of the mozilla platform like XUL apps that are not so easily replicated, or quit and spend your time someplace else.

    (And IMHO, the value of tabbed browsing is not so much organizing pages but preventing clutter. The main problem with the desktop metaphor is it doesn't take many open windows before it's practically unusable.)

    --

    ---If you can't trust a nerd, who can you trust?

  4. Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    What kind of an argument is *that*? I mean, so far Mac OS came bundled with the 90%+ browser from Microsoft. How was that easier to beat than a (relative) newcomer browser?

    Of course, if one actually reads the article ...

    "I'm torn about what to do with Chimera. It's obvious it will only ever be a marginal product on a even more marginal platform. AOL and Netscape have no interest in supporting it. Who aspires to be number two in an already over-commoditized space? Working my ass off for 3% just isn't any fun any more. Safari has already won, the rest is just to see by how much."

    This is not about evil Apple killing off independent developers, but about someone who just lost interest in his pet project, IMO ...

    "Perhaps what is more disappointing is that my fifteen minutes of fame are just about up and I've really got nothing to show for it."

    I know exactly how you feel *sigh*

    b.

  5. Re:Nooooooo! by usr122122121 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Of course, I find something I love and *Apple* of all companies threatens to kill it, indirectly.
    Plain and simple: Apple does not have the power to kill off the Chimera project. Apple can create another similar product, but it is up to the end user to decide.

    Plus, I think everyone is missing the mark a bit: both browsers are free. These organizations/companies aren't going to be shut-out financially... they weren't getting the users' money for these browsers in the first place!

    If the developers choose to shut down the Chimera project, it would be a shame, but it would be their decision. To blame that decision on Apple is ridiculous.

    --

    -braxton
  6. Wait a second by ethank · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People are saying "don't take Chimera!" because Safari doesn't render well and lacks tabs....

    OK.

    Safari is in beta release 1. Chimera in the .6 release (post). By the time Chimera is indeed "dropped" Safari should be upwards of beta 3 or 2 or possibly even release. The developers of Safari maintain their own weblog (http://www.mozillazine.org/weblogs/hyatt/) and from what you read there, its indicative that CSS compliance is of the highest priority.

    I'll go with the best browser that provides the best user-experience. For me, I use Safari right now because its bookmark management rocks, its history view rocks and its fast as hell. I used Chimera from the time I bought my Mac (September) to when Safari was released. Sure, Safari has some CSS problems, and Chimera is still always running for that very reason, but it boils down to the typical mac idiom: what lets me do my work faster.

    Ethan

  7. GNUstep? by Dimwit · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You know, the GNUstep Project would love to have Chimera working on their platform.

    (For those who don't know: GNUstep is a free implementation of the OpenStep specification, of which MacOS X is a direct descendant. There's a very high level of source code-level compatibility between the two platforms.)

    Is there any reason why Chimera could not be ported to GNUstep?

    --
    ...but it's being eaten...by some...Linux or something...
  8. Funny... by Cinematique · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Chimera looks more Apple-like than Safari! WTF? Am I the only one who thinks Safari is great, but looks like a puddle of puke?

    Actually, Safari would be great if it looked like Chimera, but kept (and improved) its webcore stuff.

    At the end of the day however, the lack of tabs in Safari, plus the hideous UI, are what helps keep Chimera out of my trash can.

    1. Re:Funny... by usr122122121 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Ah, the irony of Apple not following their own Human Interface Guidelines, then hearing about from their users :-)

      Aren't they supposed to set a good example or something?

      --

      -braxton
  9. Why I use Chimera, not Safari by Tor · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Chimera is a Free(tm) browser, and so will not be subject to a vendor's (Apple's) agenda. In practice, this means that features like popup blocking, selective cookie acceptance/rejection won't go away (the way they have in IE) whenever the vendor no longer blesses such "anti-commercial" features. It also means better code scrutiny, and ultimately, better security.

  10. Please don't stop! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I LOVE chimera. Tabs rock, it's fast, its stable.

    And I love the interface, it's clean and unbusy. Shortcuts are reasonable and I don't get "surprised" by behavior like i do with explorer or opera or even omniweb.

    The big reason to keep working on chimera though is that when chimera is in good enough shape it can be the basis for a wide variety of great open source projects and university research projects. With all the information available on the web a clean module for doing web browser functions will be invaluable to lots of people.

    Another good reason, is that mozilla is the "2nd standard" web browser. Usually web designers code to ie and then mozilla, how many are going to code to safari too? This is a big problem with opera and omniweb, sometimes they just don't work on site X. Chimera is much much better for not getting scrambled websites.

    And folks were questioning tabs. Hearesy!

    The big reason tabs rock? It gets rid of waiting for the network. You're reading along and then just command click on what you are interested in. You mess around on the page a little bit and then switch over. It turns a click-wait-read-click-wait-read experience into click-click-read-read.

    Another reason, they remind you of what you were interested in. So i can scan down slashdot and command click the 5 or so stories that interest me. Then I get to the bottom and i don't have can just look at each of the stories in turn instead of going back to the main page each time.

    By the way, on the "fifteen minutes of fame" business, don't worry about it. You've got street cred now, that's worth tons here in Silicon Valley. You can get a nice job as the resident guru at a startup or write books or do consulting. You're in geek heaven man, don't sweat it.

  11. Pushing Down Developers by agentkhaki · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Recently, it came to my attention that MacAmp Lite X is no longer under developement either. Why?

    "iTunes just got to be far too big, far too free, and far too bundled with the OS"

    Granted, MacAmp Lite X wasn't freeware, like Chimera is, and it wasn't open source, like Chimera is, but it still begs the same question:

    As Apple moves from a company that was all about selling their own hardware and an OS to run on it, to a company that is all about moving into every aspect of our lives - giving us not only hardward and a (very healthy) OS to run on it, but also software to take care of most features required by an 'average' user, as well as digital lifestyle devices like the iPod (and rumored things like PDA's, video iPod's, etc.,) - are they becoming more like Microsoft? Are they discouraging the independant developer? Will they continue on this path to such an extent that those people who have begun to raise Apple's market share - and who have begun to actually pay attention to the operating system as something actually worth using - away?

    In short, will Apple invading all of the different types of software areas discourage developers to the point that it is no better than Microsoft, if only in terms of their attempted monopoly over all aspects of our computing experience?

    --
    Ack!
    1. Re:Pushing Down Developers by Graymalkin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You answered your own question. MacAmp Lite X's developers just gave up because they didn't think enough people were going to use it and buy it from them. That isn't Apple stifling innovation, it is a developer trying to sell a product in a competitive market and not having the wherewithal to keep up development in the face of real competition.

      Apparently in some cases like MacAmp Lite X, Apple producing a competitive product will discourage developers. Whether that is their intention or not isn't something anyone but Apple can really answer. In other cases Apple's competition has spurned companies to work even harder. Avid is a pretty good example of this, their DV Xpress package is a direct competitor to FCP. With FCP's meteoric rise to popularity and OSX being a capable OS they decided that they didn't want the Mac-only FCP dominating DV XPress' market. Thus they released DV Xpress 3.5 on both Windows XP and OSX. Now video editing on OSX is at a great point because you've got DV Xpress and FCP competing for the same userbase, it is in the best interest to both companies to produce the mostest badass versions of their software they can to increase sales.

      This point is what it comes down to, when you have competition you can either throw in the towel or try harder. Had MacAmp's developers made MacAmp Lite into a real powerhouse of a media player that picked up where iTunes failed they would have kept a decent sized user base. So to answer your question, no I don't think Apple is stifling innovation on anyone's part like Microsoft. It's up to people their programs compete with to make a better product. iTunes may be free but it isn't the end all be all of MP3 players. There's still room for an iTunes killer.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    2. Re:Pushing Down Developers by thatguywhoiam · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Hate to break this to you, but I know a LOT of people that think IE is great. Mozilla has more features, but Chimera has more features than Safari. Outlook Express is a pretty good mail client, until the virus situation became untenable I used it all the time. Microsoft make some sucky apps, but many of them are quite good.

      Oh, I know some people 'like' IE, but I haven't met anyone - at all - who doesn't immediately detest IE when they try something different. Anything different. Just for the pop-up blocking, that alone sends people running from the MS browser.

      I should qualify my statement a bit more; I meant to say that Microsoft's bundled apps tend towards suckage. Entourage/Outlook are alright, do what they say, apart from the viruses of course.

      Yes, you can uninstall IE. It's in Add/Remove Programs. No, that won't remove the WebBrowser control because apps need it to be there, just like Mac apps will when Apple start shipping WebCore as part of the OS. I fail to see the difference.

      Hey, that's new! There it is, just like you said. Wait, it says it'll remove the 'access from the start menu and desktop'. Mmmm-hmmm. See, this is what I mean. I am in fact complaining about the Add/Remove Programs function, really - its like it throws a curtain over the screen, there's some banging and shuffling in the back, and then the curtain is thrown aside and an excited little man assures me that everything is gone.

      I just don't trust that little man, y'know?

      WebCore will remain a part of Safari, and not be migrated into the guts of the OS, you're wrong about that. Which brings me to...

      This is false logic anyway, you don't need to uninstall one product to use the competition. Mozilla and IE can sit side-by-side, so really how "uninstallable" an app is is basically academic.

      It's not academic. This is Slashdot, we're all control freaks about our computers, and something that keeps me from that control is going to piss me off, plain and simple. Sure I can run Mozilla beside IE, but IE is gonna get called, by all those insidious other hooks in 3rd party apps, and negate my browser choice, because they can. I want the option, dammit.

      Yeah, you can. The quality of PowerPoint X was killing the Mac? I think not. Keynote is there because Jobs thought it was cool.

      I agree with you there. That was a surprise.

      --
      If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
  12. Open Source to the Rescue by phpsocialclub · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I do not see what the big deal is.
    It is unfortunate that the developers are feeling the pressure of apples new browser, but as long as the source code the Chimera remains available it can still be developed and improved.
    I use Chimera every day as my primary browser and download the daily builds every day.
    Safari is nice, but there is still a place for Chimera.
    New developers will step forward, I would if I had the time and/or skills, to keep this project moving forward.
    Projects change hands all of the time,

    Chimera will live on

  13. I like Chimera by Outland+Traveller · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I like Chimera a lot. It's near perfect for my usage, and I prefer it over Safari. My only suggustion is to add "close tab" buttons on each of the tabs, like galeon does under Linux. I miss these immensely for the easy, one-step ability to close tabs that *aren't* currently active.

    Thanks for the all the open source browser beasts :)
    -OT

  14. On the other hand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Tabs organize 5-7 windows very well with minimal mouse movement and single-clicking.

    Maybe you like to browse the web 1 page at a time, but when I'm searching for something in a site it'll take me 5 times longer without tabs. It'll take 2-3 clicks or a click&drag (worse) to switch windows and then switch back, leaving a total of 6 clicks or 2 click&drags (probably would take me 5 seconds I guess.. find the menu, click, find the window title, click... repeat). With tabs, I see the title and click once and I'm there. My mouse is normally at the top of the page since most links are around there and that's where I tend to read. No moving my mouse to the absolute top or absolute bottom.

    Just because you don't like them doesn't mean they're not good. I've never met someone who doesn't like tabs and most of the people I show this to are computer proficient but no where near the /. crowd.

    Moving back and forth between two tabbed windows is just as easy as moving between two windows, so I don't see how you're possibly complaining about that.

    1. Re:On the other hand... by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 3, Insightful

      None of these is sufficient, but all of them together are.

      1. Complexity. Tabbed browsing/MDI would add a set of features that most people wouldn't use, but the facilities for using it would still be sitting there in menu bars and such, making the application more complex for new users to learn.

      2. Inconsistency. For a third-party to release a Mac application that works in a way that is fundamentally different from the way other Mac applications is frowned upon. For Apple to do it is completely unacceptable.

      3. As I've already explained at length, and won't bother reiterating here, the tabbed browsing feature in Mozilla is shamefully incomplete and underimplemented. Apple would have to go back to the drawing board to produce a tabbed browsing interface paradigm that isn't fundamentally broken, as Mozilla's is.

      4. Redundancy. Adding tabbed browsing, Mozilla-style, to Safari would necessarily involve having to reproduce most of the functions of WindowServer in Safari itself. There's no justification for reimplementing WindowServer's functionality unless the new way is better, and I've already explained how tabbed browsing is most definitely not.

      5. Disproportionate effort. Safari is targeted, first, at the 5 million existing Mac OS X users, followed very shortly by the 20 million Mac OS 9 users that Apple hopes will make the transition this year. Of those 25 million prospective users, I think it's fair to say that maybe 100,000 of them would use tabs. Maybe. (Consider the ratio of IE users to Netscape users. IE does not have tabs. Netscape has tabs, and is freely available to anybody who wants it. Most people, though, don't bother downloading it. The obvious conclusion is that tabbed browsing alone is not a big deal to most people.) So when you consider that maybe a fraction of one percent of all Mac users might use tabbed browsing, it just doesn't seem worth it.

      6. Finally, opportunity cost. Time spent implementing tabbed browsing/MDI is time that could have been spent fixing bugs, or adding features that everybody would use. Maybe even features that none of us have ever thought of yet. Consider SnapBack. I had never even thought of such a feature before I saw Safari, and now I use it every single day. To have tabbed browsing-- which, as I've already explained, only a tiny fraction of Mac users would even use-- you implicitly have to give up something else. And based on items 1-5, I'm simply unable to support making that trade-off.

      --

      I write in my journal
  15. Ultimately, UI is crucial differentiator by macmurph · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I originally posted the following comment in response to a linux journal article about Apple's Safari. I feel the comment also applies to this discussion:
    http://www.linuxjournal.com/article.p hp?sid=6565&m ode=thread&order=0&thold=0

    In summary, there are many good rendering engines but very few great user interfaces, and in the end, UI is the crucial differentiator b/w browsers.

    In response to the whole rendering engine discussion I see here... IMHO Rendering engine/render speed is not everything... Of course, IE for the Mac is dog slow (its carbon, not naitive cocoa code)...and Apple was *forced* to create an alternative or fall behind. The IE for the Mac team was disintegrated long ago to make Web TV, Ultimate TV (a cancelled MS project),etc.

    But for most people, more important than rendering speed is an efficient, productive UI (because rendering speed problems have largely been solved in todays best browsers).

    Because the web has become so central to computing...UI is more important than ever in browsers. Safari beta (so far) offers a very nice bookmark manager but lacks tabbed browsing (or something like it).

    For now, I like Chimera for OS X because it has tabbed browsing and lightning fast rendering performance. On a dial up connection, a user can open pages in new tabs and queue the downloads. This is a very very efficient method of browsing that Safari so far, have chosen to ignore. Tabbed browsing in Chimera is faster and more efficient than IE 6 for Windows. I use a technique whereby each new chimera window contains catagorys of tabs... ebay auction tabs in one window, news tabs in another window, stock data tabs in a third window. By managing topics of tabs by window I never find myself hunting for the correct tab (In IE for windows, I would find myself hunting for the right tab along the Start bar. With too many windows open the start bar becomes cluttered and useless as an interface.)

    Chimera (Gecko based) is faster than Safari in my own independent testing...particularly at downloading and rendering JPEGs. When it comes to rendering raw HTML I can't tell the difference between Chimera and Safari but toss in a few jpegs and chimera wins. I imagine this is only noticeable on dial up connections.

    I expect Safari will surpass Chimera and therefore all other browsers in UI and performance at some point in the near future because apple is so damn good at what they do.

    PS. I should probably add that I think Chimera is the still the best browser and Apple's Safari is not yet very usable. I would hate to see the Chimera team give up so soon. I think Chimera has a lot to offer...especially because it uses a different rendering engine (great for checking standards compliance, etc). So keep up the good work Chimera! I want to see version .7 badly!

  16. Well.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think what has killed Chimera as far as Pinkerton is concerned is that fact he had pretty much hit a brick wall development wise. The major issues people were complaining about were slow text box entry and the fact that font rendering was not 100% quartz native. Sadly fixing these problems would be far from trivial, and in the end I guess he devided it was not worth the effort.

    Because Safari uses KHTML and because of the OS X QT port, it has 100% native quartz rendering form the get go, and access to services and other goodies.

    Chimera, as the name suggests was never really anything more than a kludge, gecko would have to be substatially reworked to perform optimally on OS X, and with Safari taking all the attention, it would be a lot of work for little or no recognition.

    Chimera will slowly putrify, and before long will be totally forgotten. Very sad to see it happen, but the work needed was beyond the capability of the developers involved, that's not an insult, that's just gecko.

  17. Re:Safari musing/Tab pontification by thatguywhoiam · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Twirlip. My man.

    Here, I thought I was all alone on the tabs thing. I was going to keep my big mouth shut (er, fingers tied?) about it but you've graciously stuck your neck out - on Slashdot no less.

    The problem with Tabs, is as you said, there's not really a problem to begin with. Browser window-switching accomplishes the same thing, with unlimited constraints, and equal-or-less number of keystrokes/mouseclicks. So why do people live and die by tabs?

    I think it comes down to a few weird little reasons... like, you can see how many tabs you have open at a glance. That's sorta nice. The instant-load thing, that's nice. But you know what it mostly is? (imho?)

    You don't have to re-size or move your new window.

    Seriously. Most browsers just don't know how to open a new window, because you can't tell it. Even clever browsers like OmniWeb that allow you to 'save' a window position are still going to cascade the windows, down-and-right, so you can grab the last toolbar. Then you have overlap after 5-6 windows and things get buried (the limit on tabs too).

    Really, it comes down to people not wanting to Mess With Their Windows. I'm happy messing with my windows. It would be interesting to know the ratio of tab-browsing freaks to those who run the browser full-screen, no?

    --
    If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
  18. Re: Tabbed Browsing's "faults" by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The series of images can then be looked at sequentially, and when you're done, you're back at your starting location.

    Just like windows, huh? Or like using the SnapBack feature, for that matter.

    Tabs are random access; windows are serial access.

    Cycling through windows is not the only way of dealing with them. There's also the window menu-- all the advantages of labeled tabs without the truncation problem-- and the dock menu. You can also minimize windows to the dock directly and manage them that way. I would like to see a "minimize others" feature added to Application Kit, similar to the "hide others" feature.

    Just because YOU don't have a certain problem doesn't mean others do not.

    Sure, Windows has a huge window management problem: the task bar. XP improved the situation quite a bit, but it's still not perfect. And because most of your UI's for UNIX include a task bar, they share Windows's problems. But the Mac simply does not have the window management problems that tabbed browsing was implemented to solve.

    even in Safari, opening a new window is slower and more resource intensive, as well as more distracting, than opening a new tab.

    That's not really true at all. Opening a new window in Safari requires just barely more allocation than opening a new tab or tab-like structure would. You have to allocate and initialize the view and then render the contents in either case; opening a new window merely requires a some drawing to the screen, which on all modern Macs is offloaded entirely to the graphics hardware. So the trade-off of speed for functionality is just not necessary. We're back to that "a problem we don't have" thing again.

    but please, whatever other arguments you may make about the abstract shortcomings of tabbed browsing, please try to remember that millions of people find them a useful method of organizing their webpages.

    I absolutely do not believe you. I think if you took everybody who has ever even heard of tabbed browsing and put them in the Rose Bowl, you'd have room left over for a medium-sized football game. You've got to remember that there are 5 million OS X users today, and that the number is increasing very quickly. So the fraction of OS X users who would benefit from Chimera-style tabs is tiny.

    Apple has the choice of not implementing MDI in Safari at all; implementing it badly, a la Mozilla; or implementing it well. Given that a bad implementation would be worse than none at all, and that a good implementation would require a great deal of effort for miniscule gains, the only reasonable course of action is to avoid implementing MDI in Safari at all. The time and effort to do so would be better spent on other things.

    Those who absolutely must have MDI in their browsers are free to use Chimera, or to use WebKit (when released) to roll their own WebCore-based one.

    --

    I write in my journal
  19. Re:Safari musing by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    If they understand the tab concept and they're using it, they're also well aware of which pages they've visited, and in roughly what order they opened new tabs. Then what's the point of representing different views as tabs? The point of tabs is to show you all the window titles at once. If you don't need to see the titles, then you're better off using windows

    The point in tabs is not to show you all the titles at once, it to show you all the sites you have open at once. Titles are not always nessesary, Infact, I don't even read the most of the time. I go by were they are.

    App...
    NST...
    NST...
    NST...
    NSP...
    NSS...
    NSS...
    App...
    Slas...
    Goo...
    Surf..

    Quick! Which one of those tabs refers to the NSTextField documentation page, which one refers to the NSTableView page, and which one refers to NSToolbarItem?

    My bet is on the 2nd to 4th ones. Of course. I would have a more accurate guess if I had knowen when that window was opened. In other words, you example doesn't work because we didn't know what you did. We don't have you short-term memory to examine.

    This is not a contrived example. This is fairly typical for me. Tabs, in a word, suck.

    Ah, yet another shining example of your ignorance. Maybe tabs suck for YOU, but they obviously don't suck for everyone. So just give it a rest ay?

  20. Re: Tabbed Browsing's "faults" by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Take a look at amazon.com or google.com or any other site that has been designed around users, most of them have tabs, because of the advantages they offer over things like menus. (menus are generally used for commands, not for navigation).

    The purpose of a tabbed interface is to reduce complexity. With a tabbed interface, you can take a set of controls that are logically or functionally related and present them to the user all at once, but separately from other sets of controls to which they are not related. For example, consider the Network pref pane. On my computer, I see four tabs: TCP/IP, AppleTalk, Proxies, AirPort. (Yours will differ depending on whether you're using an AirPort interface or a wired interface or a VPN interface or what.) When I click the TCP/IP tab, I see controls related to TCP/IP settings: IP address, gateway, and so on. When I click the AppleTalk tab, I see controls related to AppleTalk.

    I do not, however, have a tab called "Display" on which I see screen resolution setting controls. That tab is on a completely separate pref pane, the Displays pref pane. It would make no sense to put the Display tab on the Network pref pane.

    So what's my point? That tabs are an organizational feature, not a navigational feature. When you go to Amazon's web site and see something that vaguely resembles a row of tabs across the top, what you are seeing is essentially an organizational structure. Clicking on the "Books" tab (assuming there is such a thing; I don't feel like increasing Amazon's site traffic just to make a point) shows you content and controls related to books. Clicking the "Underwear" tab shows you content and controls related to underwear.

    Using tabs in a tabbed browser, though, is different. In that context, you're trying to use tabs as a document management feature. Tabs don't work well for that purpose, as discussed at great length elsewhere.

    So, in summary, tabs as an organizational feature are fine, whether in a program UI or a web page or a day planner. Tabs as a document/window management feature are not fine; they don't work, and even in the limited contexts in which they do, the existing features work better.

    Even so, I also don't understand your logic behide; that if a lot of users have never head of tabs, than they would not benifit from them.

    I assert that most Safari users would not use tabs if they were available. Why? Because we have been writing document-based applications for the Mac for nearly 20 years, and never once has the question of an MDI-style interface, tabbed or otherwise, come up. MDI was the standard on Windows for many years, until they deprecated it around the time of Windows 95. (I don't recall precisely when Microsoft's position shifted from MDI to mixed MDI/SDI to don't-use-MDI, but it happened around that time.) During that time, did users clamor for MDI on the Mac? No. Web browsers have been around for more than a decade now; tabbed browsing only appeared recently. And where did it appear? On Mozilla, where the limitations of new window spawning are well documented, and on Windows, where the task bar makes managing several windows a challenge.

    Has there ever been a native Mac document-based application-- i.e., one designed on the Mac, not designed on Windows or UNIX and ported, as in Chimera-- that had any sort of MDI interface? I don't know. But I can say with confidence that no major application had one.

    The gist of my argument is that MDI, and tabbed browsing which is a specific instance of MDI, have been around for a long time. The Mac has been around for even longer. During all that time, has MDI ever been an issue? No. Will adding tabs to Safari suddenly bring out a hitherto unrecognized need on the part of Mac users to use MDI? No.

    So if Apple were to take the time to implement MDI (tabbed or otherwise) correctly, a very small, albeit vocal, fraction of their users would benefit from it. Meanwhile, bugs that should have been fixed in WebCore went unfixed because the programmers were working on MDI instead. Idiotic trade-off, that.

    Most people I know have never hear of linux, does that mean linux is useless?

    Dear Lord, why dost thee tempt me this way? ;-)

    --

    I write in my journal
  21. Re:Safari musing by drsmithy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    How do you waste screen space with multiple windows?

    By having a toolbar, address bar, window widgets, status bar, plus maybe more in every window and by requiring all those windows to be suitable stacked for quick access if needed (the latter is more of a clutter issue than space, but IMHO the two go hand in hand).

    If you want to use all of your screen for a single window, go for it.

    Actually that touches on another one of my gripes with OS X - there's no quick & each way to make a window take up the entire screen.

    First, the OS provides you with no fewer than four different ways of dealing with windows.

    That doesn't mean any of them are _good_.

    One, the Window menu.

    So I have to move the mouse from where it is to the top of the screen, navigate to the Window menu, then read each entry and select the right one ? Sorry, too slow.

    Two, the dock menu. Works the same as the window menu, but it's accessed by control-clicking the application icon in the dock.

    Not to mention requiring another larger mouse displacement to get to and (this is the killer) having a built-in delay before displaying the menu. Sorry, too slow.

    Three, minimizing windows to the dock.

    Sorry, minimized windows in the Dock move around, thus meaning I have to actually look for any window before restoring it to make it useful. This requires mousing over each window to get a title, which is too slow (not to mention annoying). This is before we even get to the screen real estate problem with having a dozen minimised browser windows, along with probably two dozen _other_ windows from other apps.

    Four, the command-` and command-shift-` shortcuts for cycling and toggling. Very handy, those.

    Which require stepping through every window in the stack to get to the one you want, not to mention requiring ahving to examien each window to make sure you get the right one (since the order does not remain consistent). Stepping through a dozen browser windows every time I want to look at a different web page ? You have to be kidding.
    The keyboard shortcuts aren't too bad, but break horribly when you want to move between applications, because cmd+tabbing to another applicationg brings *all* of that applications windows to the front, obscuring everything else. Very annoying, that (but in line with OS X's interface paradigms).

    And finally, as demonstrated elsewhere tabs are completely unacceptable in large numbers. [...]

    Maybe for the way *you* use them, but not when you've got a dozen monitoring web pages sitting in tabs that remain in a fixed order. I don't *need* to read the title of the page, because its function is associated with its location (you know, the same principle Apple espouses with its single standardised menu bar). To say tabs as demonstrated elsewhere tabs are completely unacceptable" is patently false when I, and others, use them in such a way every hour of every day.

    And because applications like Mozilla have no tab-based equivalent of the Window menu [...]

    Nor do you need it, if you keep your tabs organised by window as I do.

    Here's a quick taste test. [...]

    I stay organised by having one window for each type of browsing I do. Thus, tabs only get opened in the window they need to and don't need to be moved between windows. For my usage patterns your "test" is completely unrealistic and pointless - it's not something I do (or want to) rarely, let alone often.

    With windows, on the other hand, I can make a pile in a corner of my screen or whatever, stacking and restacking to suit my purposes.

    But you can't move between them quickly & easily if you have other browser windows open and as soon as you do their fixed order is lost. This is even assuming the screen real estate can be wasted (which it can't in the case of our monitoring pages that need a large chunk of a 1600x1200 screen to be useful).

    I don't know what to say except, "maybe you were doing something wrong."

    You mean, like trying to do my job ? I have around a dozen terminal windows at a _minimum_ open at any given time. They all need to be fairly quickly and easily accessible and, ideally, partly visible at all times.

    That's simply bogus. Sorry, but it's true. As I said, the OS gives you no fewer than four ways of getting from one window to another, and that doesn't count the simple expedient of point-and-click.

    If you can keep ~40 (at current count) windows visible, hence "clickable" and usable on the screen at once, I salute you. And, as mentioned, just because the OS gives me several different methods doesn't mean any of them are any good for what I want to do.

    All of these methods scale to a practically unlimited number of windows [...]

    What definition of "scale" are you using here ? The already slow methods of the Window menu and Dock menu remain slow. Minimising much more than about 20 windows to the Dock is unworkable and the keyboard shortcuts are simply broken if you want to move to a specific window of a specific app in a single operation.

    Just because something is *possible* doesn't mean it is *optimal*. It's *possible* to have a large number of apps and windows open on OS X, but it is difficult and frustrating to manage them all.

    I don't know why you have a problem dealing with open windows, but it's not the fault of the OS or the application.

    I'm having a problem because the tools in the GUI to do this are inadequate. And it is a problem of the GUI, because I don't have the same problem in the Windows and KDE GUIs.

    If you don't want to use the shortcuts, then done.

    I do, it's just that they are poorly implemented.

    So what you call a powerful organizational feature is really nothing more than the illusion thereof.

    It's all in how you use it. I've explain how I use windows and tabs within to organise my browser windows in a hierachical fashion. I'm sorry if you don't understand, but trying to claim a flat, unordered and dynamic collection of windows is is any way *more* organised is just plain wrong.

    [...] to a problem that we don't even have.

    To a problem you don't have. I do, and tabs are, thus far, the best available solution on my preferred platform.

    Ah, I see. "Your opinion differs from mine, so you must not be as sophisticated as I am." Very mature.

    I fail to see how the "your opinion is different to mine, so you're wrong" attitude you have is any different. Not to mention your "I don't understand what you are doing, how or why, so you're wrong" attitude.
    As I said, in complete honesty, the only conclusion I can draw from your comments is that you aren't dealing with large numbers of open windows simultaneously, because I simply cannot understand how you could be doing so and _not_ find the current methods limiting and frustrating.

    [...] people who find tabs to be an enabling solution are handicapped by the fact that they don't know how to use the features that the OS already provides.

    You've yet to inform me of any features in OS X I don't know about, haven't known of for some time and have already tried.

    Your assessment of my criticisms is, unfortunately, not accurate. If you'd like to know what I'm saying about tabs, please go back and read my posts again.

    Well, thus far I've read what boils down to "there is no problem", "it's a bad idea", "it's fiddly to view two web pages in tabs side by side". To which I answer "there is a problem", "there is no better idea yet" and "so what".

    You seem fixated on not being able to read the title of a page and being able to manipulate multiple open pages so that they can be viewed simultaneously. I can understand why this would be useful and when, but I cannot understand your attitude that it is necessary _alL_ the time and that anyone who thinks otherwise is a fool.

    How does Windows handle it much better?

    Several ways:
    It's faster.
    It groups similar windows.
    It allows me to move quickly to *any* window by either mouse or keyboard.
    It allows me to order the tabs in the taskbar (only kludgily, but that's better than not at all)
    The placement of things in the taskbar is almost completely static (resizing it can subtly change the position of tabs, but it's far from the wholesale it-could-be-anywhere of minimised stuff in the Dock).
    It allows me to completely maximise windows.

    The only method that even comes close is an Application's Dock menu, but that suffers from being annoyingly slow, even more so on slow machines and having to read the verious items on the menu to choose the one that's wanted.

  22. Re:Safari musing by drsmithy · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Somehow you've managed to spin a massive omission from the UI into an advantage.

    I didn't say it was an advantage, I said it wasn't relevant to my application.

    It doesn't mean anybody else wants to do what you want to do, either.

    The popularity of tabs, and the similar reasonings behind liking them, would suggest otherwise.

    Your argument [...]

    If you believe any of my statements are factually incorrect, then please demonstrate why. If not, STFU and stop trying to pretend they are because you have a differing opinion or a lack of understanding.
    You seem to be implying, amongst all the pointless attempts at belittlement and name calling, that I have the wrong tool for the job, yet all I am after is a good GUI sitting on top of a good, Unix-based OS that doesn't require much futzing around with to work. In short, I want OS X.

    Then I ask you, with all sincerity, respect, and politeness, to shut the fuck up and go use Windows or KDE.

    I'd rather use OS X. It's nicer overall apart from these few annoyances I have.

    You are decidedly in the minority, to the tune of about 4,999,999 to one, plus or minus a margin of sampling error.

    I daresay there are quite a few people using OS X for similar tasks to me and have similar complaints.
    I would also be interested to see the results of the survey you did of all those people to be able to speak so authoritively on their behalf.

    I don't know what the hell you're doing, friend, but it's not typical desktop computer use.

    Unix Sysadmin. Which, if I'm not mistaken, is a textbook example of one of the types of user Apple is aiming OS X at.

    My attitude is, "Your opinion is different from virtually everybody's, so you're wrong."

    Since when was "virtually everybody" you ?

    [It's faster] Demonstrably false. Move on.

    Please demonstrate it as being false. Having a veritable multitude of PCs from Dual Pentium 1s to Quad Xeons available to me, along with quite a swathe of Macs going from a Beige G3/266 all the way up to a Dual 1GHz Xserve I can quite confidently say that OS X's GUI is *much* slower than Windows', even running on hardware that is probably four times faster in raw performance. To make the statement you have is either flat-out lying or complete ignorance.

    So does your Mac.

    Alas, my Mac requires more work to get at those groupings, which is why I have it listed as a Windows advantage.

    Haven't you been reading? [...]

    Haven't *you* been reading ? Not. Quickly. It. Doesn't. And, I might add, only two of those methods allow me to go *directly* to an arbitrary window. The others require switching to the application first, with its inherent disadvantages in spewing windows all over the screen.

    I don't have any idea what that means. [...]

    Well, I'm afraid I can't make it any clearer. I can fix the order of tabs in the taskbar by starting applications and opening windows in that order, and have them remain in that order.
    While OS X lets you drag stuff around the Dock (which is nice, and sorely lacking from the Windows taskbar) is doesn't allow any way of pinning an icon in a certain spot. This is most noticeable with minimised windows, where the position of a minimised window at any given time may not be the position it was minimised to, depending on what else has been happening.

    Apart from sounding like a contradiction of your previous point, this is substantively the same on a Mac. The placement of things on the dock is completely static until you move them, that is; they do not reorder themselves.

    Yes, they do. Apart from the whole centred aspect of the Dock moving things about depending on what is loaded and what isn't, the position of minimised windows *changes* often. If I minimise 3 windows, then restore the middle one and then re-minimise it, it's position in the Dock has changed. This is a bad thing.

    You win. Because the Mac doesn't let you do this, it must suck. I apologize for ever doubting you.

    *sigh*. You are the epitomy of a Mac Wanker. No opinion other than yours is right, everyone who thinks differently (ah, the irony) is wrong and the only true way is the way you believe things should be done. No-one else, no matter how sound their reasoning or different their needs, could possibly have a better method or different requirements than you, and you're not afraid to tell them so.
    I've offered many reasons, along with my needs, why I think some ways of doing things are better than others. Your replies, when distilled from direct or implied insults, effectively are "Why would you want to do that ?" and dismissive of any complaints.
    You seem completely unable to understand that there are people who have different workloads and jobs than you do and seem unable to understand that what works for you doing your job might not work for them doing a completely different job. It is somewhat unfortunate - albeit not completely unsurprising - that you appear to be a software developer, or at the very least someone who develops software as a hobby. I just hope you never try to write software outside of your direct experience, because your mind is closed and your habits are set.

    You are one of the reasons people like me don't like to be thought of as "Mac users". You have simply refusing to engage anything I've said with any meaningful dialog, choosing instead to insist your way is the only correct way and that everyone else is wrong - despite only having a handful of people in the entire discussion agreeing with you.

    In conclusion: please stop interjecting your opinions, [...]

    C|N>K. That's pretty funny, given that all you've done thus far is interjected your opinions with little more than "you're wrong and I'm right" to back it up.
    If you think the number of people who want to run lots of stuff simultaneously on OS X is small, and going to get smaller, then you are welcome to that belief. However, with Apple aiming OS X squarely at Unix users and Windows users, I propose that you are incorrect.

  23. Re:Safari musing by drsmithy · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Are there tabs in IE? No? Well, then I think "popular" is an absurd overstatement of the facts.

    Of people who know about them, they are more liked than disliked. That makes them popular from where I'm standing.

    Your line of reasoning is rather amusing, not to mention strange. Presumably you wouldn't call any Mac software at all popular, since at most it would only be used by 5% of the computing population ?

    I already have. The horse is dead, put down the bat.

    No you haven't. Not once. The closest you've come is saying "you're wrong" with no supporting evidence, or even an argument.

    Each of your criticisms of one of the five (!) methods of switching between open windows applies to that method and that method only.

    And...? This somehow makes them, and your complete lack of response to them, invalid ? How an earth can you call a response of 'well, the problems with the methods of switching windows only apply to each of those methods' meaningful when the criticism was 'it's a pain changing between windows on OS X because of problems in the methods'.

    You seem to be missing the fact that you can use any of those methods at any time. The fact that none of them is perfect amounts to a hill of beans.

    I'm not missing that fact at all, sorry to break it to you.
    My criticisms still stand. Your complete inability to address those criticisms, and the issues they raise, also still stand.

    And your favorite-- too slow!-- is demonstrably false. So why argue about it any more?

    Because you haven't demonstrated it, nor even suggested as to why it is demonstratably false.

    I always did love that one. "Tabs are faster, because switching windows is more computationally expensive!" [...]

    That's not what I said. I said tabs are faster. There are a number of reasons why they are faster to use, none of which have anything to do with computational difficulty. I'd be surprised if, programmatically speaking, a tab is much more expensive to create than a new window.

    The CPU cost of switching windows is very, very close to zero.

    Nevertheless it is slow - much slower than Windows on comparable, even significantly less powerful hardware.
    Even a dual 1GHz Xserve becomes sluggish to interact with in the GUI at trivial loads.
    Not that tabs are any faster, when the switch actually occurs - it's just they're quicker to get to.

    Having said that, I don't know where you get this silly idea I think switchings is slower because it is more computationally expensive. I never said that (or even implied it).

    You're mistaken. [...]

    Ah, I must have been imagining all those ads obviously aimed at Unix users.

    Well, if you say so, then it must be true. [...]

    I'm quite happy to run any benchmark you wish to devise and describe to compare the performance between switching windows on OS X vs Windows. However, given the sluggishness of OS X's GUI is a fairly commonly-accepted fact, I'm surprised you'd even bother trying to say it was faster.
    Btw, I don't expect Macs to be the fastest and really, it's not a huge issue as nothing I do requires a great deal of performance. I do, however, expect a machine with as much raw power as a Dual G4 _not_ to get a sluggish GUI under a trivial load. Speed does not really bother me. Unresponsiveness does, and OS X is unresponsive. Presumably some of this is builtin and deliberate, like the short pauses before menus appear - but other things like window resizing are so atrociously slow as to detract from the entire user experience.

    In other words, you are unable to reorder the little widgets in the task bar.

    That's what I said. Twice.

    I do so love the way you flip things like this on their heads. Instead of "you can't move it," it becomes, "you can fix the order." If I didn't know better, I'd say you're an apologist.

    What's to flip on its head ? I quite clearly stated that the order of the tabs in the taskbar does not change and I consider that an advantage - much like I consider it an advantage that the order of tabs does not change in Chimera. You might like having to hunt around for the window you want every time you want it, but I like things to stay put so I can take advantage of simply remembering where it was on the screen and click there. It's faster. The same principle behind the Apple Menu and standard Application/File/Edit/etc menus.

    But, in all fairness, I'm not entirely sure how else it could be done, practically speaking.

    It can't in the way the Dock is currently implemented. It is an inherently broken feature of how the Dock deals with minimised windows.

    Fuck you, too.

    Perhaps if you were a little less snooty, a little more open-minded, somewhat more prepared to accept that not everyone has the same needs you do and a little more humble I'd have been less inclined to describe you the way I did.
    However, the more posts of yours I read the more I agree with my initial assessment. You're a smarmy little know-it-all who refuses to accept they don't and would rather belittle and insult people with differing viewpoints than try to discuss them.

    Because you were asking for things that are not typical, not even within the range of typical.

    I'd call wanting to use several applications and windows concurrently to be fairly typical behaviour. It might not be for Mac users, as they're used to a GUI not geared towards efficiently dealing with lots of windows, but it is to the rest of the world.

    What's the problem?

    The problem is that instead of reacting in a reasonable and polite manner, you chose not to. As I've noticed in the past, this is a typical Mac Zealot reaction to any suggestion that their way is not the best way.

    We Mac users really don't like people such as yourself [...]

    Yes, I know. You are very intolerant to anyone critical of Apple or anything Apple has ever done.

    It is a free world. Use whatever computer you like. If Windows would better fit your needs and you pick a Mac, expect no sympathy at all from us.

    Except Windows wouldn't and doesn't, which is why I moved to OS X. Fortunately while the Mac community and its attitudes leave a lot to be desired, the OS itself is solid, reliable and apart from a few minor niggles, nice to use.

  24. Re:Tab are great for small screens. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Tabs, tabs, tabs... everyone's talking about tabs. Well, I might as well give my piece of mind.

    Here it is:

    (1) I don't see how having tabs can in any possible way be a negative feature. It's not like you can't just open new windows in Chimera, the only difference is that you don't hit command-T, which you probably wouldn't do if you were using a browser without tabs anyways.

    (2) Tabs, if you use them, can be powerful organization tools.

    For example:
    Say I have 12 pages loaded...
    -4 pages telling me why I should have sold my investments two years ago.
    -2 pages telling me how much money I should have in my bank account and how much I still owe the loan-shark
    -6 porn pages
    It would make sense to me to have three windows open, one with six tabs, one with 2, and the other with 6. If I wasnted to differentiate between my porn site, I could easily just open a new window. Three windows are a lot easier to keep track of than 12.

    (3) Tabs are simple. If you have three tabs open in one window and you want to close one tab, go to that tab and hit command-W, it's not different than closing a new window, only it just so happens that you don't have to switch between windows to find the one you want to close, you only have to click on the tab. AND, if you don't use tabs, hitting command-W WILL close the window.

    Anyways, thanks for listening to me everyone... I sincerely hope to see tabs in all browsers eventually. It's like most features in most applications... if most people want it, it makes sense to include it... it you don't want to use it, then don't.

  25. Real vs. pretend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I can understand having one's enthusiasm doused by all the excitement concerning Safari. I hope that Chimera, UnInc. will keep work; after all this enthusiasm will pass; people will eventually stop using Safari because they want a browser that works. Sure, Apple may get it out of beta next week: unlikely. It may be a year, it may be never, other priorities may seize their attention. It's happened before. Chimera is a much more polished product, keep up the work, keep your eyes on the prize and think long term, not just MacWorld-week.

  26. The REAL point of Safari... by Cerebus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...isn't the browser, it's WebCore and JavaScriptCore. The browser is a convenient testbed for both cores that has the happy side-effect of producing a useful app (and thousands of eyes to point out parse and render defects).

    Personally, I think Apple as a corporation could care less whether Safari lives or dies. But either way, OS X gains WebCore and JavaScriptCore, which will prove to be indispensible frameworks in the future.

    --
    -- Cerebus
  27. Re:Safari musing by FortranDragon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Maybe for the way *you* use them, but not when you've got a dozen monitoring web pages sitting in tabs that remain in a fixed order. I don't *need* to read the title of the page, because its function is associated with its location (you know, the same principle Apple espouses with its single standardised menu bar). To say tabs as demonstrated elsewhere tabs are completely unacceptable" is patently false when I, and others, use them in such a way every hour of every day.

    Obviously for you, tabs are essential. The main question is really: are you a normal user of tabs? That is, do people generally open a fixed set/fixed order of tabs most of the time or do they have open a random set of tabs (say, using the tabs to load stuff in the background while they continue to read their current page)?

    My thought is that it is the latter, not the former, but I could be wrong. I'd be interested to see what other people say about their usage.

    Personally, I'm glad to see both browsers. I want choices and having Safari and Chimera gives me the best of both worlds. That's cool. :)

    --
    "All the darkness in the world can not quench the light of one small candle."
  28. Re:Nooooooo! by DeeKay · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Omniweb is the *only* OSX-browser to get Drag & Drop right! Yes, it beats Safari by a large margin!
    I've tried them all, Safari, Chimera, IE and Omniweb, and OW is by far the best integrated with the nicest features, there's so much stuff that Chimera got from Omniweb you wouldn't believe it: Shortcuts, Linebreak/Tab/Space-Filtering in the URL bar, opening of a new browser window when there's none or all are minimized, a largely enhanced contextual menue that almost matches OWs Menues now (only in the latest nightly builds!) and much more!
    But Drag & Drop is really bad with Chimera, i can't drag URLs or Text into Editfields, if i drag an Image (read: just a rectangle of the image's size!) onto the desktop it makes a TEXT clipping of it! Why?
    This is why i still prefer OW as my primary browser, even though it may be the slowest and (besides iCab) most incompatible (hint: Setting the Browser-ID-String from "Omniweb" to "Netscape 6" helps with alot of lamely programmed Browsercheck-Javascripts!) and you bet i'm looking forward to OW5 featuring Apples WebCore..

  29. Re:Safari musing/Tab pontification by c13v3rm0nk3y · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think the reason I prefer tabbed browsers is that it gives me more choice. There are a lot of pages that just don't deserve their own window frame -- I mean, most of the pages I review in a typical day persist for a few minutes before being recycled. I tend to run a single browser window with 4-5 tabbed frames. If I need to do a side-by-side compare of content, I spawn a new window, and start building tabs on that one as well.

    So I may end up with groups of related pages, using browser windows to sort pages (usually one miscellaneous group, and one development group).

    Basically, having tabs available gives me more options. I already have the option of another browser window. Tabs give me the ability to manipulate content for pages that don't need a whole window to themselves.

    For 90% of my browsing, I don't need to see more than one page at a time. For those times I do need to see multiple pages, I can still do so through the magic of "Open in a new Window".

    For example, while browsing this thread, I ran across the link to Hyatt's weblog. Because I just want to see if it's been updated, I can cntrl-click (I'm on Windows right now) and it will load in a tab, in the background. The ~20 characters I can see of the title is good enough for me to tell what that tab is (I'm running with 6 tabs right now) and anyway, I'm just going to glance at it and then either kill the tab or reuse it for a google search or something. It's just become a natural thing for me to do now.

    Meanwhile, I've got a bunch of Solaris development pages, man pages and internal bug postings open in another browser Window. Because it's lunch time, that window is minimized to the Taskbar.

    I think the main issue for me is that switching tabs is no different than switching windows. It's just that, for most pages, I don't need another browser with the full complement of controls. I just need to see the content. Most content is just too short-lived to justify spawing a new window. The usual Copy-Switch-Paste activities are no easier with either scenario.

    Sorry, I can't do without tabs anymore; they've become a standard way I work. As someone pointed out in this thread, you don't have to use them, but they are there if you do want them. I will not use Safari because of this. *shrug* Even if Chimera never makes it past release 0.6, that release is good enough for the majority of my work, including my usual corporate webmail and bank accounts.

    --
    -- clvrmnky
  30. Do I have this straight? by Aram+Fingal · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If I understand the situation correctly, Chimera is a port of Mozilla from UNIX code base with a GUI written in Cocoa while the Mozilla that is called "Mozilla" on OS X is a Carbon port of the legacy Mac OS code for Mozilla. A Carbon Mozilla makes sense if you need to support both classic Mac OS and Mac OS X with uniform behavior as the priority.

    Eventually, however, won't it be more important to use technologies like the UNIX base and Cocoa which make better use of OS X's abilities than Carbon does? Chimera may be marginal now but it's the method that makes more sense for the future.

    1. Re:Do I have this straight? by lordpixel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You do have it straight, though actually, Mozilla itself will soon be dropping Classic (OS 9) support.

      At that point they'll switch to a Unix back end with a Carbon front end. While a Cocoa port of the front end would be nice, its quite large, and the performance gains most likely lie in moving the back end to the Unix back end.

      Chimera is not a Cocoa port of the entire Mozilla front end UI - its a completely seperate UI for "just the browser". Sort of like Phoenix, but more like Galeon or KMellon, because it doesn't use XUL.

      Interestingly, one could presumably make a version of Chimera that used Apple's WebCore (the Safari rendering engine), and indeed Apple could always take the Safari UI and use Gecko (the Mozilla rendering engine) at some point in the future. I don't expect to see either happen though!

      --

      Lord Pixel - The cat who walks through walls
      A little bigger on the inside than out