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Why Browser Innovation Matters

dvanatta was one of a several people who noted a new article by Mitchell Baker on Mozilla.org about why browser innovation matters - especially Gecko, and why it will survive things like Safari Whoops - got the name wrong. Updated.

12 of 528 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Inovate by xZAQx · · Score: 4, Informative

    Optimoz (for Mozilla has mouse gestures, too, you ignorant clod.

    --

    We dance to all the wrong songs.
    --Refused.
  2. survive safari? by asv108 · · Score: 4, Informative
    I've tried safari and besides getting rid IE as the default browser on OSX, there is nothing that is great or revolutionary about Safari. I can understand the joy of "mac fans" because they are getting rid of another MS program, but Safari is not an innovative product, it is a lightweight IE replacement.

    Personally, I use Chimera on OSX, Moz on faster linux and windows machines, and Phoenix on slower linux and windows machines. Konq is a good choice too.

    1. Re:survive safari? by quigonn · · Score: 5, Informative

      Safari is _fast_, extremely fast, but you can only see (and feel) it when you're network connection is fast enough, too. ;-) Rendering time is just great. I compared it with some complex websites that our company created, and Safari definitely rendered it all fast enough.

      And it starts up quickly, which is very nice, too. And it has this sexy brushed-metal look that most OSX application created by Apple have. :-) And, what I find really great is that the development of Safari also improved Konqueror's quality in terms of rendering speed and Javascript support.

      --
      A monkey is doing the real work for me.
  3. Re:Inovate by TheShadow · · Score: 4, Informative

    Then again, if MS integrated this into IE, I'd go right back to IE because of page compatibility, esp. for forms and secured areas.

    If that's the case, go buy an IntelliMouse Explorer. One with two thumb buttons on the left side (in addtion to the two buttons + mouse wheel on top). You can use the two thumb buttons to go back and forth with one click. Plus, the explorer is an awesome mouse to begin with... no cleaning out gunk on the wheels.

    --

    --
    "What do you want me to do? Whack a guy? Off a guy? Whack off a guy? Cause I'm married."
  4. Re:What about standards? by galore · · Score: 4, Informative

    As an occasional website designer, I would like to avoid having to delve into the DOM to maintain a consistent appearance and functionality across platforms/browsers.

    by replacing vendor-specific APIs, that is exactly the problem the DOM solves...

  5. Try RadialContext by jeti · · Score: 3, Informative

    Opera ouse gestures are nice and efficient. But as you have
    to learn them by heart, people use only a few of them.

    An alternative is the RadialContext menu
    for Mozilla and Phoenix. It has the same feel as gestures,
    but adds a GUI to them. It takes some getting used to, but
    you'll end up using a lot more gestures than you would with
    other implementations.

  6. Re:What innovations? by gmuslera · · Score: 4, Informative
    Normally one don't see innovations until they are used and proved that are good. Tabs, gestures, popup blocking, form prefilling and a lot more were in their moment big innovations in mostly mature browsers (well, I think that browser tabs in opera were there from the start).

    I don't think that browsers should "innovate" in HTML (like Netscape 2 frames or all the crap in IE), that is the job of w3c, but there are a lot of usability innovations waiting to be done.

  7. Re:What about standards? by furrygeek · · Score: 4, Informative

    But the DOMs are different for IE and Mozilla/NS. Each time a new version of browser is released, there is a divergence from the previous DOM. Doubtless, this is true for the other browsers, as well. I've noticed that this complicates scripting for XML.

  8. Re:It's also surviving iTunes... by ianscot · · Score: 5, Informative
    No objection to the other choices you list, but Safari does offer leanness, in both design and responsiveness. That's a change from Mozilla in both respects, as long as the article's about Mozilla. You're right, though -- the "survive" line in the article overblows the thing.

    As usual, Apple releases a beta of an app and people either a) exult or b) express dismay that it didn't utterly change the world. It's a Web browser. By version 1.0 maybe they'll have a nice, stable, lean little browser that hooks into the rest of the OS without becoming cancerware like IE on a Windows box. That'd be handy.

    -- fellow Chimera user.

    --
    "Fundamentalism" isn't about divine morality. It's about human authority.
  9. Re:The job is not done yet. by ptaff · · Score: 4, Informative

    Time to clarify fileformats.

    GIF: non-lossy bitmapped format
    PNG: non-lossy bitmapped format
    JPG: lossy format

    GIF: 8-bit, 1 alpha channel
    PNG: n-bit (as needed, up to 24), 8-bit alpha (as needed)
    JPG: no alpha

    PNG is also patent free and typically gets smaller file sizes than GIF.

    There is no reason left but MSIE to use GIFs.

  10. Re:Inovate by packman · · Score: 5, Informative

    Nice flame... *sigh*

    I tried all the guesture plugins mozilla/mozilla based browsers have - but none of these work well.. Actually - the one you pointed out cause my mozilla to show up a completely blank window - nothing on it - guess the XUL interface choked on it... And since I couldn't find how to install such a plugin in an easy way as a normal user - I installed it as root on my gentoo system - bad Idea - it modified the global settings - so for every user - mozilla was suddenly useless... Oh yeah - phoenix choked on it too... Galeon wasn't affected - but the mouse guesture plugin doesn't work for it anyway... had to re-emerge the whole mozilla bloat-thing to get rid of it (in an easy way ;) :p) And when recompiling mozilla - I can't stop wondering what that huge amount of code does - when gecko can be - and is so fast (see galeon) - and mozilla is plain slow.

    I still favor Opera for a lot of other things, like the multi-window interface - not the "fake" and uncomfortable in use "tabbed window" interface... You can't even customize the position of the tabs (top/bottom/left/right), let alone reorganize or drag and drop (only in Opera 7 however - not yet there for linux :( ) - or save window setups...

    Until now - opera seems to me as the most innovative browser around - in every version - new and handy (little) features show up... In mozilla - maybe it's just me - I can't detect such innovations. The only innovation in mozilla is the gecko engine - I consider the bloatware XUL user interface as a (very very very) bad thing (thats why I use galeon from time to time - but it lacks a good user interface).

    If you would ask me - what innovations are you talking about? - well there are some very nice things here:
    - page zooming
    - back-forward using mouse only without even moving the mouse (as already pointed out)
    - Quick menu to enable/disable/control popups, proxy's, java, javascript, plugins, cookies, referrer logging and browser identification
    - inline find
    - hotkeys for everything... keyboard-only browsing is not only perfectly possible - it's even quiet comfortable..
    - crash recovery (no program is perfect - opera also crashes now and then) - continue exactly where you were before...
    - Linked background windows
    - Easy to reach page reload timer
    - Powerfull file transfer manager
    - quick search with any search engine using the adress bar

    For any of these features - you need more than 2 mouseclicks - I didn't had to look into menu's or preferences to find them - they are all right here on my screen, being used - or easy to reach thru right-click-menus... That's what I like about opera - and no other browser even comes near to what opera has to offer on UI level. Open source is nice - I like it - but out there are companies that also have to earn money and deserve it - Opera is one of these where I gladly give money for to have this comfort. Opensource will catch up - but when it does - the opensource community will 'bring/keep their own standards' (on ui-level at least - like it already tried a lot) while other ways can be way more handy - so users that are used to the Opera interface will have difficulties to switch - and rather stay with opera (and maybe pay for it - or look at banners) than to switch to a simular but 'incompatible' user interface, or Opera will maybe have a whole load of new handy small features... Don't be mistaken - a user interface is something very complicated - details are everything - and with opera - almost all the details are there...

    PS: Guys like you piss me off... calling peepz you ignorant clod while it could very well be applied to themselfs... You clearly never used opera - so you don't know what you are talking about... - you should really try it - you could learn something from it - and maybe even bring it to an opensource project...

  11. Re:Inovate by edbarrett · · Score: 3, Informative

    1. Read the mozillazine forums. Especially phoenix users. It's a 0.5 release, fer crying out loud!
    2. Install Preferential. It gives you a primitive, regedit-type editor for all(?) of the options in mozilla/phoenix, even the ones that aren't in the original preferences UI.
    3. ??
    4. Profit from being able to use your browser again.