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MSN's Slate Recommends Firefox over IE

brightertimes writes "That's right folks, Slate (Microsoft's on-line magazine) recently printed an article enitled "Are the Browser Wars Back? How Mozilla's Firefox trumps Internet Explorer.""

493 comments

  1. In related news... by titaniam · · Score: 5, Funny

    Microsoft released a security advisory that recommends temporarilly installing and using Linux as the simplest way to prevent the latest nasty internet worm. The windowsupdate.com website now redirects to debian.org, a sure sign that the two-year-long "Security Initiative" at Microsoft is finally being taken seriously. Company insiders say a patch will likely be out "in a few weeks tops" so that customers will be able to return to using Microsofts' superior product. According to a Microsoft spokesperson, the fact that you will be able to seamlessly continue your work using OpenOffice, Firefox and WINE is proof of the company's committment to standards conformance and interopability.

    1. Re:In related news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      And now the weather.

      Snowday in Hell!

  2. That's a surprise.... by 10100 · · Score: 0

    it took them this long to figure that out.

    1. Re:That's a surprise.... by essreenim · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Ignore this thread. It was probably started up by an MS buff to use reverse psychology to ttrick ppl to read it. If you read the article it concludes by slating Firefox because it does not have suffient users and is therefore not applicable as a target by virus writers. This assumption is in fact false. There are many underlying attibuted shared by all browsers, many of them which are vulnerable in IE, and guess what - they are not vulnerable in Firefox. In other words, the same problems are likely to occur in both browsers if thety are equals. They do not. They only occur in IE becase though IE has always been a fast browser in my oppionion, it ultimatlely sucks as it is so insecure.
      Thankyou

    2. Re:That's a surprise.... by Rick+and+Roll · · Score: 1
      FireFox has its security advantages, including better design reviews on code check-in and forcing its users to manually launch downloaded programs. But I've got to admit, FireFox is designed more with features and compatibility in mind than security. The .xpi plug-in architecture is far from secure.

      I think a better example would be Opera, Konqueror, or Safari.

    3. Re:That's a surprise.... by essreenim · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't pick Opera either. Opera 7 had its share of security problems.
      Konquerer, Firefox - thats the way to go!

    4. Re:That's a surprise.... by NuclearDog · · Score: 1

      Just write that in all caps and it begins to look like the letters I have been getting from that nice Nigerian widow...

      ND

      --
      This statement is forty-five characters long.
  3. Now.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Just wait for Microsoft to come out with a TCO..

  4. Oops by chrisgeleven · · Score: 5, Funny

    Someone didn't get the memo from old Billy boy to not diss company products.

    1. Re:Oops by |<amikaze · · Score: 4, Funny


      I hope they didn't use Frontpage to make this article. I'd hate to see them violate their license agreement :)

  5. yawn by YetAnotherDave · · Score: 4, Funny

    another one joins the bandwagon...

    1. Re:yawn by scupper · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, I was listening to Bob Brinker's MoneyTalk this weekend on the radio, and he kept bashing on IE between taking investement advice calls.

      He'd take a couple of calls, then go on the attack on M$. He also lauded Firefox, and must have said the word "MOZILLA" a couple dozen times. I listen to this guy each weekend, and I've never heard him go so far off topic. He was going into importing your "Favorites", talked about extensions, themes. Blew me away, this has really P.O'ed a lot of average users.

      When financial advisors like Brinker are telling their non-tech audiences about going to Firefox, you know the dam has broke. I wonder now what Mozilla is going to do with this opportunity.......

    2. Re:yawn by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 1
      another one joins the bandwagon...

      And I *still* have trouble getting my sister and mother to use Mozilla Firefox. I had converted my mother over to Firefox and Thunderbird Friday night only to get a frantic call in the morning that it wasn't working. Whenever she tried to view a profile in Yahoo Messenger it'd give an error message about the component not being found, which she'd click ok to, and then it'd bring up the profile in Mozilla Firefox just fine. Clearly this annoyed her enough to force me to switch her back to IE as the default browser. Stupid Yahoo Messenger must be tied to IE too tightly. At least I told her to use Firefox for just normal web browsing... she did say it was faster and didn't crash when playing Yahoo's Canasta game like IE 6 does.

    3. Re:yawn by phrasebook · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you've really gotta set it up properly. I used my mother's computer a while back and found that somehow some ad/spyware had been installed. She must have clicked 'ok' to install something from a webpage. So I just removed the links to IE and installed Firefox, replaced the desktop and quicklaunch icons in the same positions, didn't tell her, and sure enough it was fine for a few days. But two things I forgot: 1) to turn off popup-blocking, so she couldn't see her online banking which shows in a popup and 2) to install Flash, so next time I used it I found like 10 flash7installer.exe's on the desktop that she'd tried to get working.

  6. impossible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this is impossible... a fp? anyway, this story is a few days old at least, and not quite surprising.

    1. Re:impossible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In Soviet Russia a beowulf cluster of our frist post failing overlords welcome me.

      Naked and petrified grits too.

  7. Microsoft and Mozilla by erick99 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The article is very well written and the author took some care to impart the features of Firefox. I am still surprised though to see Microsoft so thorougly criticized in a publication wholly owned by Microsoft. Either they are very open-minded or this particular writer will not be invited back....

    Cheers!

    Erick

    --
    http://www.busyweather.com/
    1. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If a publication is willing to criticize their owner, it can sometimes gain them more readers as they'll appear more independent. The next time they write a pro-MS piece, someone may take it more seriously.

    2. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Cruciform · · Score: 5, Insightful

      MSNBC has articles that put Microsoft in a bad light all the time. And they do the standard disclaimer at the end that they are owned by MS as well.

      They understand that it's a bad idea to mess with the "ethics" of journalism (though that's questionable these days), and that it can all be countered with advertising anyway.

      The average consumer won't go looking for that article, and they know it.

    3. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by TwistedSquare · · Score: 5, Funny
      They understand that it's a bad idea to mess with the "ethics" of journalism

      Ah, I knew Microsoft would beat slashdot somehow.

    4. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Bob+Loblaw · · Score: 1

      However, the author does take the time to congratulate you on ignoring the Linux wielding "propeller-head geek" and refering to the Mozilla "insurgency" ... a term overused these days as a synonym for "terrorist uprising".

      So I wouldn't call this article *completely* unbiased. It is more like a back-handed compliment than a glowing endorsement.

    5. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by julesh · · Score: 1

      Oh, come on, an article that describe's Microsoft's behaviour during the browser wars as "pushing the bounds of business ethics" isn't thoroughly criticizing them. Thoroughly criticising them would be describing it as "utterly criminal and morally repugnant behaviour designed to destroy the Netscape threat".

    6. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More likely his editor will not be invited back. Someone made the decision to publish the article, and that usually isn't the author. Hard to say which would be more embarrassing to Microsoft, though: articles pointing out IE's (very well known) security problems, or Bill Gates' influence in suppressing unbiased journalism becoming apparent. Of course, it's entirely possible that Gates simply doesn't care. If I had his money I probably wouldn't either.

    7. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes! Thats it! Its all a conspiricy. Even when its not... that only really means that it IS a conspiricy.

      The paranoid will never be convinced.

    8. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 1

      What paranoid nonsense.

      Slate would lose its (generally) good reputation in an instant if it was seen to be shilling for Microsoft.

    9. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by penguin+power579 · · Score: 1

      I believe he wont bw invited back...I knew this would happen. RUN FOR THE HILLS, HERE COMES THE PENGUINS!

    10. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Takes more than one party to form a conspiracy.

    11. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by AliasTheRoot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why? Do you really think Slate or MSNBC would have any credibility whatsoever if MS decided to excercise editorial content on them? I'd imagine Redmond gives them free reign to write what they want, if MS bashing comes up then thats the Zeitgeist and probably something they already know, care and are doing something about.

    12. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bad press is better then no press. That is the principle. People only remember the brand name and not what they heard about it.

    13. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree that it is well written, yet it neatly avoids mentioning that Firefox is a product of the Open Source development model. Wonder why.........

      Bill, if you put ketchup on your hat it will taste a lot better :)

    14. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by TelJanin · · Score: 1

      Slate would lose its (generally) good reputation in an instant if it was seen to be shilling for Microsoft.

      You mean, if it's url was slate.msn.com?

    15. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by maggeth · · Score: 1
      Either they are very open-minded or this particular writer will not be invited back....

      Slate has no problem making a mockery of George W. Bush and even John Ashcroft, both of which Microsoft desperately needs in office in order to continue it's "resolution" of their anti-trust cases.

      I guess the people in Redmond just don't read Slate or something.

    16. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by anon*127.0.0.1 · · Score: 1

      Hell, not just the writer. The article had to be approved by a few editorial types. They're the ones who will get the axe if heads do indeed roll.

      But it probably won't happen. I'm betting that Slate took a page from the old Browser Wars handbook. Only this time, it's IE that won't render the page correctly. People who use 'zilla or Firefox will read about how great their browser is, and how bad Microsoft is, and think "Wow, what honest, unbiased journalism!". People who use IE will get a broken page, or maybe some tripe about how IE is totally secure, and if you get a virus it's your own damn fault.

      --
      I am NOT a man!
      I am a free number!
    17. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by upsidedown_duck · · Score: 3, Insightful


      Or, this is very intelligently-done propoganda. It is always hard to tell how efforts like Slate fit into the broader interests of their parent companies.

      How would you feel if you hired a lawyer for a lawsuit in a software-related case and later found out that this lawyer also does a lot of work for Microsoft? Should I believe that a computer consultant is objective, when his company has "Microsoft Certified" in bold letters on their website? Should I trust Slate, whose financial standing is undeniably rooted in MSN?

      While there is nothing wrong with a person reading news and articles on MSN or Slate, that person should always keep an eye on other news sources, especially ones with different owners or public funding.

      --
      -- "Makes Little Debbie look like a pile of puke!" - Moe Szyslak
    18. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by rtaylor · · Score: 1

      Excellent point. This time they're suggesting you use someone elses free product rather than their own free product -- next time they're suggesting you buy MS Office rather than using Open Office.

      --
      Rod Taylor
    19. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by w42w42 · · Score: 1

      It was a very well written article, balanced from a technical point of view which most 'dotters appreciate, and a usability convenience aspect which blocks us from getting everyone we know on this software. I live if msft country though, and coming from msn, this is going to be a great link to send around.

    20. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      "ethics" of journalism (though that's questionable these days)

      On a side note: journalistic ethics "these days" are certainly questionable, but they're much better than they used to be. 19th and early 20th century newspapers make Michael Moore and Fox News today look like paragons of moderation and objectivity by comparison.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    21. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 1

      Right. Because everything connected with Microsoft is automatically E V I L.

    22. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by axis-techno-geek · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Do you really think Slate or MSNBC would have any credibility whatsoever if MS decided to excercise editorial content on them?

      MSNBC not so much, but I'm guessing Slate is but a mere puppet of the MS FUD Machine, like all those think tank white papers that tell you how Windows is cheaper, better, and faster than open source (bought and paid for by Microsoft).

      I know lots of people that if they see it on TV, it must be true, they just accept it at face value. You just have to remember that there are 4 sides to every story:

      1. Their side
      2. Your side
      3. What really happened
      4. The truth
      --
      This is not the sig line you are looking for... -- Old Jedi Sig Line Trick
    23. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Cruciform · · Score: 1

      True, but back then people didn't question it. They just accepted it as the truth. Unless they were the subject being liberally doused in untruth.

    24. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by mindstormpt · · Score: 1

      All right, the usual... Is it that unconceivble that Slate has published an article not too nice for it's mother company's software, for no reason at all? OF COURSE, we're talking about Microsoft, it's the devil!!

      Or not. The only number that rivalizes the number of Linux zealots on Slashdot is the number of conpiracy-theory guys...

    25. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by TelJanin · · Score: 1

      No, because everything payed for by Microsoft, running on Microsoft's servers, and serving ads provided by Microsoft is probably already a shill.

    26. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like FOX Sports ... http://msn.foxsports.com/?

    27. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would have no problem hiring Microsoft's lawyer for my software-related case. They are probably very good if they are representing MS. It would change my mind if there was a conflict of interest in the case, but then the lawyer would be legally obligated to inform me.

      Media companies are an entirely different story, but your lawyer analogy does not fit.

    28. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Akilesh+Rajan · · Score: 1

      Yes! I can't believe how many conspiracy nuts there are on this site who really believe in a cartoon picture of the world where the evil fat cats at Microsoft tilt their double chins in displeasure and call the hapless editor at Slate to have the rogue author "neutralized."

    29. Re:Microsoft and Mozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, exactly.

  8. And? by Dri · · Score: 1

    ..who's surprised? Soon we will obsolete their OS too. =)

    --
    Girls are strange. They don't come with a man page.
    -- Michael Mattsson
  9. Firefox by Old+Uncle+Bill · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I switched the other day (yeah, I'm going to get my geek card revoked), and firefox kicks some serious ass. I didn't switch in the past because I need some of the features of IE for our app at work, but now I only use IE for that. Anyone using IE should just switch, no questions asked.

    --
    Yes, I am an agent of Satan, but my duties are largely ceremonial.
    1. Re:Firefox by Three+Headed+Man · · Score: 0

      When Firefox stopped working on my computer, I switched to Lynx which I had installed to make sure my webpages didn't suck (yes, lynx) rather than use IE. I eventually redownnloaded with Opera. It's important to have a backup browser.

      Good rule of thumb: if your webpages don't display correctly in lynx, you've got soem serious problems. Testing in IE is also recommended.

      And one other thing I can't complain about anymore: Why doesn't Windows Update support Firefox? I'm using Linux now, so it's not that important to me, but I'd like to have an answer.

      --
      I'm probably at the karma cap. Mod up a funny troll instead, it lightens the mood :)
    2. Re:Firefox by squiggleslash · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Why doesn't Windows Update support Firefox? I'm using Linux now, so it's not that important to me, but I'd like to have an answer.
      Windows Update uses ActiveX. IE is the only web browser that supports ActiveX (with good reason...)

      Ironically, the very reason people avoid ActiveX - the fact that, once an applet is "trusted" it can do pretty much anything - is the reason Windows Update uses the technology (how else can you update your system without an applet trusted to do anything?)

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    3. Re:Firefox by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

      how else can you update your system without an applet trusted to do anything?

      urpmi --auto-select --update

      swaret --upgrade

      apt-get --upgrade

      etc,etc.

      --
      Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    4. Re:Firefox by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      All of these are trusted applications - applications that are not sandboxed in anyway (and none of these run within your browser, which is what the windows-update.com system is meant to do.)

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    5. Re:Firefox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, so those are linux applications that are trusted to do anything. Not much difference. A bad update can seriously f*ck your system.

    6. Re:Firefox by maskedbishounen · · Score: 1

      Rather, there's an user account that has unlimited reign of the system. Surely you've heard at least once in your life "don't run as root!"?

      I'm not aware if WU needs admin access on the box or not, but the same concept is more or less still there.

      It's also why we lock our root-requiring daemons away in a chrooted jail. :)

      --
      "An infinite number of monkeys typing into GNU emacs would never make a good program."
    7. Re:Firefox by HFXPro · · Score: 1

      Java applets are just as bad unfortunatly. Once they are trusted they no longer run in the sandbox. I've even seen Java applets that exploit weaknesses (all of which are patched now I thing) in some of the JVM's out there. So I would imagine it would be possible to do with a java applet to accomplish the same task.

      --
      Reserved Word.
    8. Re:Firefox by jisatsusha · · Score: 1
      how else can you update your system without an applet trusted to do anything?
      A standalone app. Why should upgrading your system have anything to do with a web browser?
    9. Re:Firefox by squiggleslash · · Score: 1
      Probably because the central concept is of you getting updates from Microsoft over the Internet. Given the popular equation of Internet = WWW, Microsoft can be forgiven for considering the most user friendly way of representing this as being visiting a website. That way there's no ambiguity, you must be connected to the Internet and able to reach the website Microsoft provides.

      I'm not sure I necessarily agree that the update process has to be that user friendly, I like Apple's "Don't worry, we'll tell you about it when the conditions are right" approach with software update (eg it checks once a week, automatically, as long as you're online.) This is, arguably, a superior approach as it doesn't require the user do anything. But Microsoft's approach to dealing with a situation where a user manually initiates updates seems fairly rational to me, and exactly what an ordinary user would find the most obvious and friendly.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  10. Time to update résumé!!! by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 0, Redundant

    /meesa guess that Paul Boutin will update his résumé real soon now!!!

  11. Hell here by bathmatt · · Score: 5, Funny

    Where did all this snow come from??

  12. Oh dear... by Phil+John · · Score: 0, Redundant

    ...looks like somebody will be looking for new employers come tomorrow.

    --
    I am NaN
    1. Re:Oh dear... by richy+freeway · · Score: 0

      He doesn't work for Microsoft. He's a freelance journo. http://www.paulboutin.com/

  13. The Author of this article by b0lt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I highly doubt that the author of this article will keep his job, when a while ago, a Microsoft employee >a href='http://www.macnn.com/news/21786'>got fired for taking pictures of shipments of Macs

    --
    got sig?
    1. Re:The Author of this article by b0lt · · Score: 1

      Sorry, the link is this

      --
      got sig?
    2. Re:The Author of this article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I highly doubt that the author of this article will keep his job, when a while ago, a Microsoft employee got fired for taking pictures of shipments of Macs

      Yeah, that made slashdot too.

      IIRC, he wasn't an employee but a contractor. He was fired for publishing photos and the location of MS's loading area. This was a lapse in their campus security and a breach of his contract. They didn't fire him for revealing there are Macs in Redmond.

    3. Re:The Author of this article by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Sad that. Still, I have an inkling of hope that this tiny bit of faith in journalism this article has rekindled in me won't be horribly horribly crushed. Props to Mr Boutin for his courage and integrity.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    4. Re:The Author of this article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I remember when this 'story' was published originally on Slashdot, and Microsoft announced that the employee was fired because they took pictures of a 'secure' area of the Microsoft campus and published them on the web. It is no secret that Microsoft used Macs. (How do you think they write and test all the Mac software that they sell). I am not saying that they were justified for firing this employee (who was a temp in their publishing department), but not everything Microsoft does is evil folks.

    5. Re:The Author of this article by UnknowingFool · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There is a huge difference between the two cases. That employee was fired for violating a company no-picture policy. Since he worked in a research facility, it only makes since that employees are not allowed to take pictures on company grounds lest they may take photos of sensitive, secret company research by mistake. Did MS overreact? Maybe. A warning might have sufficed but they were within legal grounds. In this case, if the journalist gets fired for publishing an review article (doing his job), he would likely have grounds for a lawsuit for wrongful termination. Then there's that pesky first amendment thing that MS has to get around.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    6. Re:The Author of this article by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Then there's that pesky first amendment thing that MS has to get around.

      Um, no, there isn't. The First Amendment (and capitalize that when you say it, son -- it's the most important political writing of the past three centuries) restricts the government, not private citizens (or corporations). Microsoft doesn't own the country.

      Not yet, anyway.
    7. Re:The Author of this article by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1
      Um, no, there isn't. The First Amendment (and capitalize that when you say it, son -- it's the most important political writing of the past three centuries) restricts the government, not private citizens (or corporations). Microsoft doesn't own the country.
      Not yet, anyway.

      sarcasm
      Pronunciation: 'sär-"ka-z&m
      Function: noun
      Etymology: French or Late Latin; French sarcasme, from Late Latin sarcasmos, from Greek sarkasmos, from sarkazein to tear flesh, bite the lips in rage, sneer, from sark-, sarx flesh; probably akin to Avestan thwar&s- to cut
      1 : a sharp and often satirical or ironic utterance designed to cut or give pain (tired of continual sarcasms)
      2 a : a mode of satirical wit depending for its effect on bitter, caustic, and often ironic language that is usually directed against an individual b : the use or language of sarcasm (this is no time to indulge in sarcasm)

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  14. The sky's falling by funkdid · · Score: 2, Funny

    Here and I thought those sounds were from the 4th of July fireworks......

    --

    I boycott signatures

  15. What is so surprising about this? by Noryungi · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Consider these point:
    1. Even though Slate is financed by Microsoft, its journalists can be independent and willing to criticize their bosses boss. Good for them.
    2. Microsoft security is such a joke that it is starting to percolate to the general public. Good for the alternatives.
    3. An application (IE) that hasn't been updated for a long time, and which is present on 95% of all computers, is bound to contain more security problems than one with an active developer community (Firefox). Good for Mozilla and Firefox.


    All in all, this is not really surprising, although it is certainly not good news for Microsoft.
    --
    The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
    1. Re:What is so surprising about this? by racerxroot · · Score: 3, Insightful

      and consider this... if microsoft is TRULY interested in improving the security of their OS (as they say they are), then they will infact look into other options... personally, im no microsoft fan, but I'll say this - if you're a big computer, and you do something extremely well (which they would say about themselves), you've still got to admit you aren't perfect.. you cant be the "all around guy", and sometimes you've got to fall back on something... firefox is a way to ensure people will continue using microsoft windows in a fairly safe way, and it wont cause them to call tech support every 5 minutes.

      --
      --- Caffeine is directly responsible for some of my greatest ideas, and some of my most embarrassing moments...
    2. Re:What is so surprising about this? by Noryungi · · Score: 2, Interesting

      if microsoft is TRULY interested in improving the security of their OS (as they say they are), then they will infact look into other options...

      Well, yes, they could do that.

      In fact, it would be a great idea for Microsoft: actively supporting The Mozilla Foundation would give them some fantastic leverage in their different legal problems.

      Something like: "Your honor, Microsoft has donated X thousand dollars to the Mozilla Foundation! How can we be accused of anti-competitive behaviour after such a generous gesture?".

      Such a donation would greatly help both Microsoft (see argument above +use of a superior technology) and the Mozilla Foundation... heck, it may even alllow it to accelerate the pace of the Firefox development.

      But, alas, this is certainly not going to happen, since Microsoft knows that Mozilla means, in the end, independence from Windows, its APIs, and assorted Microsoft Cash cows, such as Office.

      Case in point: this previous article on Slashdot.

      --
      The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
    3. Re:What is so surprising about this? by iabervon · · Score: 1

      It's also worth considering that Microsoft has reportedly recently restarted IE development. Microsoft has had lots of trouble in the past getting people to upgrade. If they can get people to try Firefox and then release a version of IE which is as good as Firefox but works better on Windows (in the sense of being preloaded and having its components used in system behavior), people will get the upgrade.

    4. Re:What is so surprising about this? by JimDabell · · Score: 1, Interesting

      An application (IE) that hasn't been updated for a long time, and which is present on 95% of all computers, is bound to contain more security problems than one with an active developer community (Firefox).

      I disagree. Whenever you make changes to something, you run the risk of introducing a security hole. Security holes don't simply develop of their own accord in old code.

      If the only development Microsoft is doing on Internet Explorer is patching security holes, then it is getting more and more secure. If Firefox developers are adding feature after feature, security holes are bound to be introduced at some point.

      Stable, mature code is generally more secure than code that is under active development. That is one of the very few things that Internet Explorer has on its side.

    5. Re:What is so surprising about this? by fwarren · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And yet, after being patched for six years, IE is still a such security risk, CERT has issued a warning. IE has been patching for six years, and is closed source so hackers can't look at the code, they can only probe from the outside. Mozilla/Firefox is open source, you can look at the source code. Hell, you can even try to submit your own backend or introduce your own secuirty bug. Yet it is more secure than IE. I agree, you would think the stable product being patched should be more secure than the product with features beind added to it. However, the actual track records show a different story.

      --
      vi + /etc over regedit any day of the week.
  16. My Dear God by KJE · · Score: 5, Funny
    Firefox eschews ActiveX and other well-known infection paths. You can configure it to automatically download most files when you click on them, but not .exe files, which are runnable programs. I thought this was a bug before I realized Firefox was saving me from myself, since .exe files could be viruses or stealth installers.

    Talk about saving users from themselves.

    1. Re:My Dear God by VertigoAce · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I hate to say this, but if you try downloading exe's with both IE and Firefox, IE does a better job of telling you that it may be dangerous to open it. In addition, Firefox lets you automatically save the file to disk, so in the future no dialog box will show up. It doesn't let you run it without first saving it, though, and the author saw that as a security feature. IE, on the other hand, pops up a window warning that you are downloading an application, shows you the file name, and shows you the server that is hosting the application. Then it tells you the file might be harmful to your computer if it comes from an untrusted source. You can't stop this dialog box from popping up with any option on the box.

    2. Re:My Dear God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, you're right! I'm dumping everything and keeping IE as it's SO much more secure!

      Thanks for the heads up there Sparky!

    3. Re:My Dear God by VertigoAce · · Score: 1

      To clarify: that warning by no means makes up for all of the other security issues with IE. I use Firefox as my main browser on both Windows and Linux. I've had no problems using Firefox for any of the sites I visit regularly (including both of my online banking sites). Sometimes I run into a site that says I need IE 5+ or Netscape 6+, but those are few and far between.

    4. Re:My Dear God by anethema · · Score: 1

      This is probably the most annoying thing about mozilla/firefox.

      Can someone explain to me the difference between clicking open in IE, or clicking save in firefox and doubleclicking the file in the download manager?

      Since IE obviously saves it to a temp. location, a virus scanner will pick it up before its run anyways. One of the methods just involves a few more clicks. I cant see any security advantage, all this does is annoy the user.

      If anyone knows WHY this is somehow more secure, please let me know.

      Also if someone knows how you can make firefox just save IE to a temp folder and open it, like IE, let me know :)

      --


      It's easier to fight for one's principles than to live up to them.
  17. Just like their support of Apple by harks · · Score: 4, Interesting
    //cynicism

    Microsoft is just looking for a way to convince courts they're not a monopoply.

    1. Re:Just like their support of Apple by Freidenker · · Score: 2, Informative


      and of Borland.

      You're completely right, its part of their strategy.

      Greets
      fdk

    2. Re:Just like their support of Apple by slavetrade55 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, except that the fact that people are downloading and using Mozilla, Firefox etc. is, in fact, a complete refutation of the notion that Microsoft is a monopoly (at least in terms of web browsers). I should hope that any judge with a brain would be so convinced.

    3. Re:Just like their support of Apple by Temporal · · Score: 1

      "Monopoly" doesn't mean 100% market share. "Monopoly" means enough market share that you are able to exploit monopolistic powers over that market. Microsoft certainly has the latter, in both operating systems and browsers.

    4. Re:Just like their support of Apple by slavetrade55 · · Score: 1

      Ya, and look how well that's working out. The U.S. government just warned people not to use IE because it blows. If people were so constrained by MS's exploitation of the browser market, they'd be totally screwed. Fortunately, no one is forced to use IE. And if people want to ignore the constant security warnings, and continue to use a browser that blows, then that's their own problem; That alone does not reflect on Microsoft's business ethics. It reflects poorly on the the people who still use their web browser.

      Seriously, how hard is it to go to www.mozilla.org/firefox and hit the "download" link?

    5. Re:Just like their support of Apple by Pxtl · · Score: 1

      That's the friggin' point. THey have a vastly inferior product that owns the market anyways because of their monopoly. If IE was a separate download from FireFox and wasn't pre-installed, people wouldn't touch the thing with an 11-foot pole. This is what differs from the Moz debacle - FireFox is actually a superior product, which has lower market share entirely because of monopoly.

    6. Re:Just like their support of Apple by slavetrade55 · · Score: 1

      Well, Firefox has small (though growing) user penetration partly because it's only existed for what, a year? and wasn't superior to IE till probably v0.8. (the windows version was pretty crashy till then).

      But you seem to have missed *my* point, which is that regardless of whether Microsoft bundles IE with windows, IE still blows, and there are better options available. If people can't be bothered to seek them out either they are:

      1. Actually *satisfied* with IE as it is, in which case there is no reason to exhort them to try alternatives.

      2. They are too lazy to try the alternatives, which is not, after all, Microsoft's fault or their problem. It's the competition's job to convince them to switch, not Microsoft's. People don't always immediately gravitate to new and better products. That's a hazzard of trying to penetrate any established market--you might fail.
      Consumer demand is a fickle thing.

      MS should be allowed to bundle all the cheesy, buggy crap they want. If people are too lazy to switch to obviously better alternatives, then it's their loss. Microsoft might be banking on lackadaisical users, but I'm not sure that makes them unethical. It does, however, leave them open to be conquered by better products that impress people enough to try them out. Firefox is pretty damn close.

    7. Re:Just like their support of Apple by Pxtl · · Score: 1

      Well, that would be nice in theory if browsers were interchangeable, but instead we have a World Wide Web that is designed for IE, full of suicidal ActiveX controls and non-standard crap that other developers have to play catch-up with.

      Look at the OpenOffice project - they can never actually develop a real office platform with any innovation as they have to focus entirely on feature-compatibility with Word in order to compete.

    8. Re:Just like their support of Apple by Temporal · · Score: 1

      No, Microsoft should not be allowed to bundle software with Windows.

      Consider: Microsoft has an obviously inferior product. Microsoft has not even bothered working to improve this product in years (since version 6.0). Yet, Microsoft retains 95% market share.

      Microsoft has no incentive to compete. As long as they bundle IE with Windows, IE will retain a market share of over 90% of Windows users (which themselves account for over 90% of all desktops).

      If Microsoft were not permitted to bundle IE with Windows, they'd actually have to create a quality product if they wanted market share. Then, competitors would also have to improve the quality of their products, etc. What we'd end up with is much better web browsers all around. Isn't that something we want?

      You can't just blame it all on lazy users. Most users don't know why Firefox is a better browser, or how they can get ahold of it. You can say it is up to Mozilla to educate the users... but why should Microsoft not have to do the same? It's unfair to force Mozilla and Opera to fight for their market share while Microsoft just gets it by default.

      The capitalist system can't work as long as one company has such an absurdly unfair advantage. Personally, I think it should be up to the OEM's to decide what web browser to bundle with their systems. Microsoft should be expressly prohibited from unfairly pressuring OEM's by, say, threatening to raise prices if they don't use IE. If OEM's still want to use IE, that would be their choice, but as long as IE remains an obviously inferior product, one would expect OEM's to go with alternate browsers.

    9. Re:Just like their support of Apple by slavetrade55 · · Score: 1

      Consider: Microsoft has an obviously inferior product. Microsoft has not even bothered working to improve this product in years (since version 6.0). Yet, Microsoft retains 95% market share.

      Well, here at least we're in partial agreement, though I would like to point out that IE has not always been obviously inferior. There's a reason why people who never considered installing Mozilla are now installing Firefox: Mozilla is a clunky memory hog. But, like you say, Firefox makes IE look like trash.

      Microsoft has no incentive to compete. As long as they bundle IE with Windows, IE will retain a market share of over 90% of Windows users (which themselves account for over 90% of all desktops).

      Well, that's really the issue isn't it: Once someone makes a browser good enough such that IE, bundled or not, looks so shitty by comparison that users download the new one, only then does MS have an incentive to improve their product. The fact that something else is better does not negate the possibility that IE might be "good enough-ware" for most people. Again, it's not MS's fault that users find its inferior built-in browser to be "good enough". The point is that once that ceases to be the case, then they *will* lose their 90% market share, regardless of whether IE is bundled with windows. If it doesn't suck bad enough for people to bother to change, then tough tits for Mozilla. Having a browser come with windows is a convenience for many people; that's part of what they pay for when they buy Windows in the first place.

      If Microsoft were not permitted to bundle IE with Windows, they'd actually have to create a quality product if they wanted market share. Then, competitors would also have to improve the quality of their products, etc. What we'd end up with is much better web browsers all around. Isn't that something we want?

      Well, we already have better browsers than IE. I'm using one right now. If there were more people like me then MS would have to improve their browser. Again, let me stress, it is not Microsoft's fault that people are sometimes willing to use products inferior to the alternatives simply because they are slightly more convenient. If users want better browsers, they should go use them. If they don't, then of course it limits the demand for new browsers. Again, tough tits for Mozilla and Firefox; no one has a god given right for consumers to want their products. If people still want IE over Firefox, well that's lucky for MS, but not unethical.

      You can't just blame it all on lazy users. Most users don't know why Firefox is a better browser, or how they can get ahold of it. You can say it is up to Mozilla to educate the users... but why should Microsoft not have to do the same? It's unfair to force Mozilla and Opera to fight for their market share while Microsoft just gets it by default.

      It's not unfair at all. The fact that something has wide initial distribution does not make the competition unfair. If you're competing for the hearts and minds of users part of the battle is getting them to switch from what they're already using. Let's put it this way: if Microsoft was bundling internet explorer 3 with Windows instead of IE6, don't you think people would seek out the alternatives? In fact, when Microsoft *did* bundle IE3 people *did* seek out the alternatives. I know I'd have rather eaten dirt then traded Netscape for IE back in the day. Microsoft doesn't get its market share by default; the only reason they have any share of the browser market at all is because people are still willing to use their browser. Complain to those people, not to Microsoft.

      As far as Mozilla having to go the extra mile and educate the users goes, I can almost see your point. But like I said before, no one has a god-given right to consumer demand, and if people are satisfied with what they pay for when they buy windows, then tough tits once more for the alternatives.

      The capitalist system can't work as long as one company

    10. Re:Just like their support of Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple is mostly for homosexuals, fruits, and stupid white women.

    11. Re:Just like their support of Apple by Temporal · · Score: 1

      Let me break down my argument for you:
      1. Letting Microsoft force OEM's to bundle IE with their systems hurts consumers as a whole.
      2. A business practice which hurts consumers as a whole should not be legal.

      Point #1 is easy to prove: If OEM's were allowed to bundle any browser they want with their systems, then they would bundle the browser which provides the best value for the end users. OEM's are, however, forced to bundle only IE, because it is very difficult to sell computers without Windows installed, and Microsoft won't let OEM's install any other browser with Windows.

      It is completely irrelevant whether or not consumers are able to install a different browser on their own. Having the best browser already installed would undeniably be better than having to go get it manually, especially for the majority of users who don't know about the alternatives and don't possess the necessary computer knowledge to install a competing product. Yes, IE is "good enough" for most people, but that's irrelevant; they would be better served by having the BEST browser installed.

      Point #2 is perhaps more debatable. However, the whole point of capitalism is to create a system where any interaction between two entities benefits both entities. The problem with monopolies is that consumers can't find an alternative supplier if they don't like the deal they are getting. The supplier can thus force the consumer to do other things that they don't want to do in order to get the product they need from that supplier.

      Maybe you think there is nothing wrong with this. Fine. But any economist will tell you that it hurts the economy in the long run. And any lawyer will tell you that it is illegal.

  18. integrity by Schlemphfer · · Score: 5, Insightful
    There are more than a dozen posts since this article was posted, but none so far have mentioned the obvious comment. For all Microsoft's sleazy business practices, this article is evidence that they are exercising great integrity when it comes to publishing Slate. That article completely (and justifiably) ripped Internet Explorder a new one. After reading that article, I view Slate far more favorably than I used to.

    I've always thought Microsoft made the best keyboards and mice, but second-rate everything else. Turns out that they also deserve credit for making content sites.

    --
    I'm generally "Interesting," "Insightful," and even "Funny" here. What the hell happens to me at parties?
    1. Re:integrity by Wtcher · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That and they'd get dinged on it if they didn't give their journalists the freedom to write well. They /are/ trying to be a reputable source of information. :)

      --
      ----- Wtcher Dragon, UDIC
    2. Re:integrity by ggambett · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm generally "Interesting," "Insightful," and even "Funny" here. What the hell happens to me at parties?

      Nothing, it's just that you don't go to parties full of geeks with no life :)

    3. Re:integrity by sabNetwork · · Score: 1
      I've always thought Microsoft made the best keyboards and mice, but second-rate everything else.


      Nah, just the mice. They make some really stellar mice.

      Their keyboards are nice for the first month, and then get loud and clunky. I prefer Logitech's keyboards, as they last longer.
      --
    4. Re:integrity by Digi-John · · Score: 1

      I've always thought Microsoft made the best keyboards and mice, but second-rate everything else.

      Since when has MS made the best keyboards and mice? The keyboards feel like they have marshmallows under the keys, and the mice are just hard/annoying to use. I much prefer my old Ambra keyboard and my 3-button Logitech mouse, which I acquired for the huge sum of 99 cents each at Goodwill

      --
      Klingon programs don't timeshare, they battle for supremacy.
    5. Re:integrity by M.+Silver · · Score: 1

      I've always thought Microsoft made the best keyboards and mice

      I dunno about keyboards... I like my M-type much better, and have never quite gotten the appeal of the so-called Natural ones (and not from lack of being forced to use them, either).

      Mice, you may be right. I can't make a judgment one way or another on modern ones, since my little dates-from-when-bus-mice-were-a-new-thing mouse (a Microsoft) is still puttering along, so I haven't had to buy any more. I've considered getting an optical and/or wheeled mouse, but there's the ain't-broke factor here...

      --

      Slashdot's token middle-aged housewife
    6. Re:integrity by Nf1nk · · Score: 1

      Get a new mouse. I have two microsoft mice on my desk one is from when the wheel mouse was a new idea and the other is a fairly recent optical mouse. I held your opinion that an optical mouse can't really be that much better, but I was badly wrong. The optical mouse never binds up on the ball or needs to be disassembled to click on a small widget on the desk top. Oh yeah and I bought my optical mouse on clearance for about twenty bucks, and it was worth every penny.

      --
      I used to have a cool sig, back when I cared
    7. Re:integrity by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      I've always thought Microsoft made the best keyboards and mice, but second-rate everything else.

      Perhaps instead of "made" you meant "re-branded".

    8. Re:integrity by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      I've had my MS natural for a few years now and it works fine. :)

    9. Re:integrity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I much prefer my old Ambra keyboard and my 3-button Logitech mouse, which I acquired for the huge sum of 99 cents each at Goodwill"

      Congratualations, but I don't mind shopping somewhere other than Goodwill as I am not poor and would rather let someone else that needs it more get it for that price. I also think that MS keyboards and mice are great as I personally have several of them. I have no idea what you are talking about marshmallows under the keys as I have never seen or heard a comment like this and I have dealt with thousands of these keyboards at work. Also, I am interested in how the mice are hard to use, I am currently using a three button MS optical mouse and it couldn't be any easier. We also have thousands of MS mice at work and everyone loves them as they are top quality. They have all the buttons you need, a scroll wheel and the mouse sensitivity can be configured very easily but comes almost setup perfectly by default. There are justifications for using another mouse however in terms of quality MS mice and keyboards easily competes, and in most cases surpasses, any of the products you mentioned.

      Nice try at bashing Microsoft but you may want to come with a reason that doesn't make you an obvious troll.

    10. Re:integrity by Digi-John · · Score: 1

      Ah, I had forgotten about the "Natural" keyboards. Totally unusable (in my opinion) for anything like gaming, they are rather annoying for anything. A friend of mine swears by them, but I believe that is mostly because he has a natural keyboard and believes that all his computer equipment is totally superior to anything else. :-)

      --
      Klingon programs don't timeshare, they battle for supremacy.
    11. Re:integrity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "and the mice are just hard/annoying to use."

      I have a five year old that learned how to use the mouse in thirty seconds. If you find that the mouse is hard to operate you have some serious problems as I can give the mouse to most kids under 10 and they have no trouble with it. I have never had any problems with any MS mice or keyboards and don't notice any marshmallow BS of which you speak of either. I also have used many different types of keyboards as I have been a programmer for the last 13 years.

    12. Re:integrity by M.+Silver · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I'll think about it. Despite having a cat and a dog (mostly-German-Shepherd, a veritable hair factory) I haven't had to de-hair the mouse all that often. It gets full (I just now opened it up, and it was pretty hairy in there) but it seldom makes any difference at all, and I haven't had trouble with precision in the slightest. I'm not sure how much is driver (I'm running an ancient driver, as befits my ancient Win95 install) and how much is driver, but I'm mostly afraid to mess with it lest it stop working so well. (Which pretty much describes the whole Win95 setup here. I think this week is finally the time I'm going to migrate everything important off of it, though. Nostalgia only gets you so far.)

      --

      Slashdot's token middle-aged housewife
    13. Re:integrity by Digi-John · · Score: 1

      Congratualations, but I don't mind shopping somewhere other than Goodwill as I am not poor and would rather let someone else that needs it more get it for that price.

      I would not say I am "poor", but I prefer not to spend money on peripherals when I can get better equipment for almost nothing; then I can spend the money I saved on something important, like more RAM or blank CDs.

      I also think that MS keyboards and mice are great as I personally have several of them. I have no idea what you are talking about marshmallows under the keys as I have never seen or heard a comment like this and I have dealt with thousands of these keyboards at work.

      The Microsoft keyboards I have used all have had very soft key action. To be fair, lots of other keyboards I've used have this problem as well. The one I use is similar to the old IBM keyboards, that is, very springy and with good feedback. As for mice, I am rather attached to my Logitech and prefer it over other mice I use. Perhaps that is simply because I have used it for so long.

      Nice try at bashing Microsoft

      Thank you. I would be bashing anything of sub-par quality, but the parent mentioned Microsoft products. My bash is on-topic and thus deserves a "+3, Insightful".

      --
      Klingon programs don't timeshare, they battle for supremacy.
    14. Re:integrity by plaa · · Score: 1

      I've always thought Microsoft made the best keyboards and mice, but second-rate everything else. Turns out that they also deserve credit for making content sites.

      Check out this post.

      Paranoid? Probably, but still take everything with a grain of salt, especially when there can be second motives for journalism. One "good" story doesn't make a magazine reputable.

      --

      I doubt, therefore I may be.
    15. Re:integrity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See how long he keeps his job. :p

    16. Re:integrity by danharan · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they are now wondering how to rebrand Gecko :)

      --
      Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
    17. Re:integrity by M.+Silver · · Score: 1

      I'm piggy-backing to point out to the below-my-threshold previous poster that there's no reason not to shop thrift stores for computer equipment. Trust me, you *won't* be cheating some poor person out of it... there'll be ten more in the back, and they'll have turned away donations of three dozen more for lack of space. Better you give your cash to the thrift store, which is hopefully also a fundraising servie.

      Heck, I've got a whole box of keyboards and mice (Compaqs) that have floated around in the back of my van for a few weeks because I haven't gotten around to taking them to the thrift store. (Leftovers from the church garage sale, donated by a local hospital that was about to fill a Dumpster with P333s rather than pay $800 worth of MS licensing on each of them. We sold all the computers, but most people already had keyboards and mice, and the latter already outnumbered the CPUs.)

      Old (and not-so-old; some people dump mice and all when they buy a new computer every two or three years) computer equipment is *not* a scarce commodity.

      Now, as to your post directly:

      The Microsoft keyboards I have used all have had very soft key action.

      That's been my experience. I don't like the Natural, because it's, well, unnatural, but I've also used an MS-branded "conventional" keyboard, and it's definitely one of the weird squishy type.

      (Granted that my keyboard preferences may have been skewed at an early age by learning to type on a Color Computer's "chiclet" keyboard...)

      --

      Slashdot's token middle-aged housewife
    18. Re:integrity by 00squirrel · · Score: 0

      That article completely (and justifiably) ripped Internet Explorder a new one. Really? Did you read the same article I did. The article did diss IE, but in a very small, subtle manner.

    19. Re:integrity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have no idea what you are talking about marshmallows under the keys as I have never seen or heard a comment like this and I have dealt with thousands of these keyboards at work.

      Sir/Madam, then you just have never met anyone with a keyboard like the '92 vintage IBM I am typing on now. You don't -- you can't know what Really Good Feedback means. (And this masterful piece of engineering art will probably outlast everything else in my system...)

      Microsoft Mice are nice, I have one myself. But who manufactures them?

    20. Re:integrity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      clearly you havent been to too many goodwills. youre probably too good for the the place ("not poor"), but if you took a look youd realize that they have about 50 keyboards lying around (average).

    21. Re:integrity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > and the mice are just hard/annoying to use.

      My Microsoft optical mouse isn't at all hard to use. I move the mouse and the mouse pointer moves. I can click and use the scroll wheel very easily. Perhaps you had half your hand blown off in Vietnam or Iraq or somewhere?

  19. Perhaps this is the slap they need by grunt107 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When your own people give in and recommend a rival browser, it seems they are admitting the security issues in IE are basically unfixable. This does raise an interesting query - does this mean MS will be less likely to attempt repairing the flaws, ceding some interim revenue to a free competitor that right now is no threat at all, and devote more resources to Longhorn's IE version/replacement?

    1. Re:Perhaps this is the slap they need by the+web · · Score: 1

      The only query I had after reading this is, when will MS buy out Mozilla?

      "Let's just scrap it and buy something that works."

      --
      __
      Thou hast besquirted me, O leotarded one.
  20. MS plan I think is Avalon.. by eamacnaghten · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I think MS's plan was to try and replace HTML with XAML and Avalon - it probably still is - so they were not going to invest in technology that they were(are) going to try and kill and which they thought(think) will die.

    However - I think they are making a mistake in that philosophy (if it IS there philosophy), in so far as much if they try and forceably tie people down to their platform then corporates and government departments will rebel against microsoft. Some already are - there will be more. Also if FireFox/Mozilla becomes the standard browser it could lead the way to a migration away from the Windows OS.

    Microsoft have made mistakes concerning the global village paradigm before - I think they are doing it again now.

    --

    Web Sig: Eddy Currents

    1. Re:MS plan I think is Avalon.. by Ath · · Score: 1
      The way Microsoft managed to dominate the browser client was that they did not try to rip and replace the server-side content. Yes, they extended it and tried to make things that broke standards compliant browsers, but they have not yet made a wholesale attempt to take over the "standards" behind the content itself.

      I think you are right that they would like to decide the future structure of how content is delivered. However, I think they just cannot come up with a compelling reason for the user base to follow them. The content providers would have to endorse a wholesale migration from HTML and Javascript for them to succeed, something that is heard to see happening.

      I guess Microsoft will try, but they really have a harder time today than they did 8 years ago when they started the process on the client side. Back then, they used exclusivity contracts and the "free" pricing mechanism to leverage their OS monopoly so that they could control the browser client. They destroyed that method themselves, because now the browser is commoditized. There is no revenue stream to attack. I just wonder what creative method Microsoft could use to convince even the largest sites to migrate towards some other content platform.

    2. Re:MS plan I think is Avalon.. by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

      ``I think MS's plan was to try and replace HTML with XAML and Avalon - it probably still is - so they were not going to invest in technology that they were(are) going to try and kill and which they thought(think) will die.''

      If they were trying to replace HTML with their own format, they would be developing MSIE, rather than neglecting it. Content providers aren't going to drop HTML just like that; they won't just lock everyone who doesn't have the latest MS software out of their content. The only way to lure people into using the new features is to do what MS and Netscape did in the beginning: add new features, but keep the same base.

      Of course, they might pull a trick where they let you develop rich web apps that will gracefully scale down to plain HTML ones. In fact, I think that's a good idea - maybe we could roll something like that for open-source browsers, before Longhorn comes out.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    3. Re:MS plan I think is Avalon.. by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      They are likely encouraging the use of Mozilla/Firefox, or at least ignoring IE development, so that
      a) Firefox becomes mainstream enough for attackers to consider, removing one of its advantages,
      b) it becomes known enough that when bad things happen to it the event will be noticed and associated with OSS, which they are also pushing into the public consciousness, or even possibly
      c) it becomes better and considered as a normal browser, both for monopoly defense and so that
      d) they can integrate at least the Gecko renderer into Windows and spend no resources on IE/MSHTML, which makes it a possibility that
      e) Microsoft can shift away from HTML into whatever it thinks it can have a tighter, proprietary hold on.

      Even though Microsoft has its own dialect of C++ and libraries, it still made a C# that it created and owns. In the same way, MS may abandon HTML simply because most everything is a free standard, and if the browser wars are coming back, the exotic proprietary stuff (largely ActiveX and MS's DHTML and VBScript/JavaScript customizations) won't be as important to developers.

      Moreover, MS is making no profit from IE. It's profits are coming from Windows and Office - areas that OSS has not yet surpassed in functionality and ease of use and installation. It's probably not worth fighthing the browser wars in terms of resources; they'll have to develop something giving them no profits, when they can concede that Mozilla is better and not pay for its development.

      The "web app" future didn't arrive quite the way people thought it would. Local software is still more common than any web app (the most common web apps are webmail, etc.), and the Internet is still separate from the rest of the computer. I doubt MS would lose anything of importance even if it made Firefox the default, bundled (that's legal) browser with Windows, and designed small, isolatable parts of Office/Windows to be OSS so that they can link with Gecko. All they would lose is the division of IE development that's taking resources from their budget.

  21. On MSN Slate's site... by Phil+John · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...he says that on Firefox the fancy popup menus don't appear, and after loading up explorer I see what's missing...the exact same functionality that countless free cross browser AND cross platform javascript/dhtml popup scripts provide (for example, young pups ypSlideoutMenu which is used on the Blender foundations' homepage).

    I think it's another case of Microsoft making stuff look crap in other browsers for no good reason.

    Haven't tried it on a mac yet, but I'm betting it looks like ass in safari too.

    --
    I am NaN
    1. Re:On MSN Slate's site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Quoth the article: Some interactive features designed exclusively for Internet Explorer won't appear, such as the pop-up menus on Slate's table of contents.

      You're exactly right. Duh, if it's designed exclusively for Internet Explorer, it's not going to work on Non-Microsoft browsers is it?

  22. IE Maintenance by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 5, Interesting

    MSIE is incredibly far behind, in standards compliance, features, usability, and security. Basically, MSIE hasn't improved much since 4.0, which I think is more than 7 years old. Continuing to use MSIE means a serious degradation of the user experience. Apparently, it's so bad that even Microsoft's subsidiaries are jumping ship. I wonder why Microsoft has let it come this far.

    --
    Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    1. Re:IE Maintenance by cyclobotomy · · Score: 1
      I wonder why Microsoft has let it come this far.

      Perhaps MS is afraid web applications will obsolete the need to run desktop apps on their operating system.

    2. Re:IE Maintenance by mewphobia · · Score: 0

      Everyone keeps saying how far MS are behind mozilla based browsers in terms of features. But HTML doens't mean jack in the next round of the browser wars.

      In the next round, the web is an Application Platform. XAML is what matters. While everyone using firefox thinks that they have a kickarse browser, It's only for the current web.

      XAML is way better than XUL. And even within the XUL community there is a disgrunted feeling.

      My personal rant with XUL is: Where is XUL's OLE/Opendoc replacement? It would be easy to just allow XUL embeding in xhtml - What an easy solution! But the mozilla editor doesn't support xhtml! only html 4!

      Noone is listening to the users of XUL. and it sucks.

  23. A little late, don't you think? by underpar · · Score: 1

    If it had come out last week and directly from Microsoft I would have agreed.

    1. Re:A little late, don't you think? by zoloto · · Score: 1

      awww, you are no longer my friend on your list.

      sucks

  24. Broken Sites by Maxwell'sSilverLART · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From the article: Whether or not you do, US-CERT advises increasing your Internet Explorer security settings, per Microsoft's instructions. (Alas, the higher setting disables parts of Slate's interface.)

    Sorry, you seem to have misspelled "Alas, the higher setting highlights Slate's use of insecure and nonstandard features." You might want to have that keyboard checked.

    --
    Moderate drunk! It's more fun that way!
    1. Re:Broken Sites by julesh · · Score: 1

      Sorry, you seem to have misspelled "Alas, the higher setting highlights Slate's use of insecure and nonstandard features." You might want to have that keyboard checked.

      Seems to work fine in Mozilla, so perhaps "Slate's use of features that are broken in Internet Explorer" would be better?

  25. Interesting way to see it by hoferbr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "But for now, there's safety in numbers--the lack of them, that is. Internet Explorer is used by 95 percent of the world. Firefox's fan base adds up to 2 or 3 percent at most. Which browser do you think the Russian hackers are busily trying to break into again?"
    That is an interesting way to see it. Blame IE's popularity!

    1. Re:Interesting way to see it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Popularity would indicate people love IE, instead of merely suffering with it or tolerating it because they know of no alternative.

      The word for which you're hunting is "ubiquity".

    2. Re:Interesting way to see it by Narphorium · · Score: 1
      "...Which browser do you think the Russian hackers are busily trying to break into again?"

      I'm sure there are plenty of Russian hackers working on the Firefox project as well.
      You see, not all hackers are bad, even the Russian ones. =P

    3. Re:Interesting way to see it by stratjakt · · Score: 1, Troll

      Try this.

      Find someone who uses a computer, but isn't necessarily a nerd. Replace their IE with Firefox, don't say a word.

      Watch... 10:1 says they get pissed off, ask who "
      "fucked up" their computer, and how to put it back to the way it was.

      I use Firefox, and can put up with its quirks. Most regular folks will find its braindead UI choices annoying. They don't know about security issues or dhtml, they just know this other browser is fucked up.

      For instance:
      - the default "theme" looks stupid, and without some experience, it's hard to figure out what the icons are supposed to be. Especially the Add Tab and "Display the progress of downloads" (what the fuck do I need that on the toolbar for anyways?)

      - the google bar is about .25 of an inch long, and you cant drag/stretch it. Braindead and useless, unless I want to google something 20 characters or less.

      And some real usability bugs:
      - Some times it stops resolving hosts, for no reason. I'll click a link and it'll say "xxxxx cannot be found". Same if I type in an address. At this point it must be shut down and restarted.

      - I've installed Flash Player about 20 times, and some sites still ask for it.

      IE is not just ubiquitious, it is popular, because it frankly works.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    4. Re:Interesting way to see it by thumperward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Bullshit. I've got a mate who fucking swapped Windows for SuSE on his girlfriend's PC and she didn't notice.

      The Average User (note: this is the person who calls their Slashdork friend to install Kazaa for them) has no problems switching at all, and in my experience generally appreciates being switched. There really aren't that many people in the "picky enough to stick to IE" camp when it comes down to it, it's just that they hang around in roughly the same areas online as the Enlightened.

      As for the theme, only the most anal of the anally retentive care. I hated Qute but the energy required to complain about it dwarfs the energy required to switch themes. The mythical Average User is lucky if they've changed their Winamp skin since they got the computer and have no problems dealing with its UI.

      - Chris

    5. Re:Interesting way to see it by qwasty · · Score: 1

      Well, ever since Microsoft started blocking Opera web browsers from it's websites, Opera has been masquerading as IE by default, to trick Microsoft into letting Opera users browse the web unhindered. So, basically, for all we know, Opera usage could be 90% and no one would be the wiser, since Opera is pretending to be IE in all the stats.

      Also, I don't think Mozilla's usage statistics are really all that important. The important figures are how many standards compliant browsers are in use, versus IE browsers in use. As far as I know, every browser on the market is more standards compliant than IE. When web standards are adhered to, it matters much less which browser you use, because the webpages should work equally well on any compliant browser.

      So, we're guessing IE has about 90% of the browser market, and we know that Opera is included in those statistics. We also know that some people change Opera from it's defaults so that it identifies as Opera. Stats collected from those browsers amount to about 1% of all browsers. Mozilla is, unfortunately, relegated to the "other" category. As of about 3 or 4 months ago, Opera users who changed Opera's default settings to identify as Opera instead of as MSIE have surpassed the number of Mozilla users. But, it's also worthwhile to note that Mozilla is sometimes counted as Netscape, and vice versa. Netscape supposedly holds 5% of the market.

      If all that isn't confusing enough, stats collected from different sources can have completely different browser usage statistics. I trust RE_INVIGORATE's browser statistics the most though, because it's stats are collected from ungodly numbers of completely different websites, not from just one or two similar websites.

    6. Re:Interesting way to see it by Mazaev2 · · Score: 1

      Ditto here.

      A totally computer illiterate friend of mine has been complaining about pop-ups, spyware and slowness for ages using WinXP

      One day I came over and installed Fedora Core 2. He even said it looks more professional then Windows to him due to the fonts and Gnome 2.6. He's very happy using Firefox, Evolution, OpenOffice and Gaim among others.

      And until he decides to start learning it on his own, I can always ssh in and upgrade his system or whatever.

    7. Re:Interesting way to see it by dastrike · · Score: 1

      Any browser detection worth its name can identify Opera even when it is identifying itself as MSIE.

      Examples:

      Opera as MSIE 6.0:
      Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; X11; Linux i686) Opera 7.50 [en]
      Opera as Netscape 4:
      Mozilla/4.78 (X11; Linux i686; U) Opera 7.50 [en]
      Opera as Opera:
      Opera/7.50 (X11; Linux i686; U) [en]

      As you can see, the string Opera is present always, allowing for identification as Opera, but yet working to fool the old crummy browser detections that only know the existance of Internet Explorer and Netscape 4...

      Actually most simple browser detections can be fooled just by adding the string MSIE anywhere in the User-Agent.

      --
      while true; do eject; eject -t; done
  26. The hardest part by FrO · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You know what the hardest part of this is? Getting those computer-illiterate people who you support to use Firefox.

    I've been trying to get my dad to use it (with threats like, "when the russian mafia gets your credit card because you were using IE, don't complain to me"...) but it doesn't work. And he's not terribly illiterate. I can't imagine trying to explain to my girlfriend's grandparents, "Ok, Don't click on the blue E anymore... click on the icon that looks like an orange fox"... they would never do it.

    As nice as Firefox is, it's going to be an uphill battle to get those illiterate folks to switch.

    1. Re:The hardest part by Pikhq · · Score: 0

      A few bits of advice:
      Firesomething
      Aqua blue theme
      IE icon set
      Finnaly, a shortcut to Firefox with the blue E on it.

      --
      echo "rm -rf ~/* ; echo "echo "Exit" ; exit" > ~/.bashrc ; exit" > ~user/.bashrc
    2. Re:The hardest part by pjt33 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So make them a link to Firefox with the IE icon.

    3. Re:The hardest part by FrO · · Score: 1

      yeah, I've been thinking of doing something like this... but with my dad, he'll notice immediately and then yell at me for switching him like that...

    4. Re:The hardest part by ggambett · · Score: 1

      Why don't you install Firefox but put the IE icon in the shortcut?

    5. Re:The hardest part by chord.wav · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I've installed Firefox as the main browser for all my clients and I've set up a shotcut to it with the IE Logo icon and deleted the originals, I renamed iexplorer.exe so they have 2 shortcuts but wherever they click, they use Firefox. It's not that I'm not giving my client "the right to choose" but I'm tired of calls because of spyware, worms and when-I-open-the-broswer-millon-pop-ups calls.

    6. Re:The hardest part by BlueBat · · Score: 0
      FrO (209915) wrote:
      I've been trying to get my dad to use it (with threats like, "when the russian mafia gets your credit card because you were using IE, don't complain to me"...) but it doesn't work. And he's not terribly illiterate. I can't imagine trying to explain to my girlfriend's grandparents, "Ok, Don't click on the blue E anymore... click on the icon that looks like an orange fox"... they would never do it.


      Well, you could just change the icon of Firefox into the icon that IE uses.

      BlueBat
    7. Re:The hardest part by Cecil · · Score: 1

      There's a nifty feature in Windows. It's called changing the icon and name of shortcuts.

      As long as it has a blue E for an icon, they'll see Firefox as a faster, less annoying version of IE. Install an IE skin if you're really worried.

    8. Re:The hardest part by rob_canoe · · Score: 2, Funny

      Just tell him that firefox is the latest version of the internet. As any fule kno, the internet is still on version 0.9, with 1.0 due out later this year.

    9. Re:The hardest part by cyberfunk2 · · Score: 1

      Just have recently managed to switch several older people older.. but your right, it was a hell of an uphill battle..

      The best way i've found to explain to them :

      "What's wrong with internet explorer" ?
      "Well.. let me put it this way.. remember how it dies when you visit some sites and ocassionally takes the desktop with it? Yea, Firefox doesnt do that as often, and it doesnt kill your desktop when it does".

    10. Re:The hardest part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just went throught this with family friends. It seems they are now hard-wired to look for the big blue 'E'.

      I know this will sound stupid, but honestly I think Firefox could benefit from having a better icon.

    11. Re:The hardest part by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The "average user" who can't be made to understand that "no dammit, the blue e is not the Internet!" is a favorite Slashdot bugaboo. Like everyone else here, I've run into a few of them. I used to try to educate those people, but you know what? Fuck 'em. I will happily give anyone who asks for it advice on what browser to use, and will help them set it up -- but that's it. I don't go around preaching, and after I answer questions in a way that any reasonably intelligent, literate (not necessarily computer-literate, just literate) person should be able to understand, I'm done.

      In a strange way, this is an expression of my faith that the "average user" actually isn't a moron. I don't believe that people who simply cannot understand the concepts of hardware, software, applications, operating systems, and networks, and the distinctions between them -- no matter how carefully and reasonably you explain them -- are "average users." I believe they're the bottom of the user barrel. They're hopeless cases. They have mental blocks which ensure that they will never, ever, ever learn how to use a computer with a modicum of sense, and the only thing the rest of us can do is tune out their complaints when their systems are buggy and virus-ridden and crash ten times a day.

      There are people who will never be able to learn to drive a car without crashing it ten feet down the road, too, and it's not worth your time to keep trying ... and trying ... and trying to teach those people how to drive. But most people, with a certain amount of patience and a genuine desire to learn, can be made to understand what the accelerator and brake pedal and steering wheel are for, and why road signs exist and why paying attention to them is a good idea. The hopeless cases? Let 'em walk.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    12. Re:The hardest part by dmaxwell · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Mega dittos but I'll add one thing to it. It almost always isn't stupidity or the inability to learn the basics. They simply aren't motivated to learn basic computer hygiene. A major reason they aren't motivated is because someone like us is giving them free tech support and bailing them out everytime they mess the damn thing up.

      I help motivate them by not giving more than one tech support freebie. If I give advice on avoiding worms, malware, and general stupidity and it is ignored then they can pay me or someone else to fix any future hoseups (or even buying a new computer).

      I'm going to head the pedantic smartasses off by pointing out I don't extend this attitude to co-workers. I'm already being paid to put up with them.

      Going back to your car analogy, most people don't abuse their cars to that extent. Most people are moderately sane drivers who at pay somebody once a year to change the oil. The consequences of not doing so are expensive. Mind you, nobody understands cars either but it is understood that you don't do certain things and have to do others. You aren't being a mean antisocial person by making the same thing apply to your friends and families computers. There is a difference between occaisional helpfulness and being used. A lot of tough love is called for.

    13. Re:The hardest part by qwasty · · Score: 1

      I've been trying to get my dad to use it (with threats like, "when the russian mafia gets your credit card because you were using IE, don't complain to me"...)

      Show him the browser warning. Each phrase is linked to a news article describing the things like the poor guy from the UK who got prison time after someone hacked into his IE and used his computer to trade child porn. It happens a lot more than people think, and all because people won't stop clicking the E icon. Having the Russian mafia take over your computer isn't just an idle threat, it's a daily reality for IE users. This is one case where FUD can and should be used, because it's 100% true, and you're literally saving lives.

      If I were you, I'd take stronger measures than just "asking" your dad to stop using IE. Tell him the way it's going to be. This really isn't something to fool around with, your dad could have federal agents interrogating him about his ties to terrorism...

      Of course, use tact whenever possible. It's your dad, so maybe you'd be better off buying him a shiny new Opera web browser and saying "happy birthday!".

    14. Re:The hardest part by siliconjunkie · · Score: 1

      My god I wish I hadn't spent my entire batch of (latest) mod points, I would have gladly blown them on this post. Well said. Bravo!

    15. Re:The hardest part by Kadmos · · Score: 1

      I can understand why *you* might make Firefoix the only available browser, but if it were me I would be happy charging them for the mistakes they continue to make. Sure, I would tell them about, and recommend alternatives (eg Firefox), but if they *want* to get rooted and pay you for fixing it, isn't it win-win all round? You get paid, and they get a working browser until the next time they stuff up. Maybe they like it that way :-)

      OR look at it this way: If we keep helping idiots they will continue to breed :-P

    16. Re:The hardest part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I've installed Firefox as the main browser for all my clients and I've set up a shotcut to it with the IE Logo icon and deleted the originals

      You're why I can't get to my bank. You're fired.

    17. Re:The hardest part by dcam · · Score: 1

      My experience has been a little different.

      I live in the same house as 4 other techincally illiterate people (2 parents, 2 sisters). I pushed everyone to mozilla about 3 months ago and haven't had any complaints.

      You can also remove the link to IE from the desktop. Everyone knows to click on godzilla for the web now.

      --
      meh
    18. Re:The hardest part by atomicbirdsong · · Score: 1

      I would like to also give my cheers to the parent and relate another feel good story involving tough love.

      I have a friend who always likes to ask me for help with technical issues. And this person uses a Mac by the way. One of those favors involved setting up a backup system. On my advice they bought a hugh gazigagillion firewire drive, and I configured everything on the computer so that all their data saved to the home folder. All this person had to do was copy the home folder to the backup drive. Note, no backup software was purchased because it cost *too much*.

      But you know what - it still got screwed up..how? I have no idea. And you know why? This person surely called for support. But then got angry when I told them they would have to wait a few days till I had some down time to look into their problem. Then, this is the best part...I insisted we do the troubleshooting via email (oh yeah - the person lives an hour and half away, so this wasn't going to happen in person anyway.) And although I gave very simple instructions in the email (the nice thing about email is that you can edit and give simple instructions), this person got impatient and started arguing why we couldn't do this over the phone. I explained that I was happy to help out, and that I thought we could recover their lost data, but I just can't do it on the phone because it takes too much time.

      I haven't heard from them in a week, and you know what, they probably had to dish out a butt-load to Apple or Intuit(missing Quickbooks Data! - Yikes), or they completely bailed, and decided it would be more fun to re-enter all their business data from the past nine months! EAK! JUST BECAUSE THEY COUNLDN"T HANDLE READING EMAIL...and probably because I wouldn't sit on the phone and let them Kavetch. (which is what I think half of friend/family *tech support* calls really are.)

      Ultimately I was not suprised in the least. I've had it with the impatience and incompetance and the whining. Here is my last $.02 on this: Be happy to help out, which I was, but don't be afraid to let them hang themselves either. After all, its just their computer...none of their problems are life threatening. And they'll learn to respect/ value the device too! //

      You know what - I have 2 more cents too! My girl friend is a former Micrsoft Sales Executive (and she's HOT!). She was always a big supporter of the MS machine, and was involved in promoting .NET - a few weeks ago her computer got infected with Adware stuff..nasty...I recommended she install Mozilla - she did and she does not plan to go back...she is not a disgruntled former MS worker...she just realized Moz works better and has far far far fewer risks. She gets it. Very simple. So there are the bad ones and the good ones.

      Happy to tell you all about both.

  27. Stoopid semantics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "(Microsoft's on-line magazine) recently printed an article"

  28. Is IE is on the way out? by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I half expected that MS would dump IE, but I think this article somewhat validates my thoughts.

    The very fact that this was published on MSN must hit at deep rumbling in the MS camp. IE users are, quite frankly, sick of IE. The recent warning from the US government must have been the last nail in IE's PR coffin. People now know other browsers are out there, and have begun to download them. MS issued a hasty patch after Homelland security recommendations for another browser, but it seems they won't upgrade IE functionality until Longhorn, 3 years away! That will mean IE will have spent 6 years in development limbo.
    Or then again this could be a lone cowboy at MSN, eager to leave for the fresh pastures of The Register.

    I reckon MS will soon dump IE in favour of a new browsers, or maybe a new 'kind' of browser(.NEt based, XAML interface anyone?). Maybe MSN client?
    Tellingly IE still runs off version numbers IE5, IE6, whereas most MS apps run off the 98,2000,XP versioning scheme. These are my crackpot prediction for a rumour hungry world.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
    1. Re:Is IE is on the way out? by SpooForBrains · · Score: 1
      Or then again this could be a lone cowboy at MSN, eager to leave for the fresh pastures of The Register.
      Well then he's likely to find himself SOL, as, despite the excellent central message of his article, he's clearly a pratt.
      --
      "The dew has clearly fallen with a particularly sickening thud this morning"
    2. Re:Is IE is on the way out? by stonedonkey · · Score: 1

      You think the richest man in the world lets Slate run itself?

  29. IE sucks by essreenim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I want to iterate the above..
    If you read the article (wolf in sheeps clothing) it knocks Firefox because it has fewer users and therefore hacks for IE are far more lucrative than for Firefox - True.
    Does this mean there are as many potential hacks for Firefoxs - No, False, in my opinion. Why?
    Because the types of hacks found in Ie are fundamental mistakes in design that would be universal to ANY browser if they were on the same par. They are not. These fundamental mistakes have not been made by the othere -especially the OSS browsers. This is because, as I have always said - OSS software is open to the world and gets more scrutiny. Major problems a re found earlier.
    However, the makers of Firefox should not rest on their laurels...

    1. Re:IE sucks by foidulus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't think that being closed source is the sole reason why IE is insecure, there are relatively secure closed source browsers(Safari being one), I think that IE's main problem is that Microsoft never showed any interest in making it a mature browser. It is a product of the browser wars of the 90s, where MS tried to get as many features as possible into the browser, security be damned(and others participated in this mentality too during that time). The problem is, after Microsoft won the battle(in terms of install base), they pretty much lost all interest in keeping IE up to date, as there have been almost no new features introduced into IE for a long, long while. Meanwhile, other browsers fixed their problems and moved on. This is what we have today.
      I think that products can be secure without being open-source. Peer review is great, but let's not forget that Microsoft has some brilliant minds working for it, the problem is that MS management decides that they want to add some type of random, pointless feature and assigns these people to do it, and do it FAST, instead of allowing them to work on increasing security, maturing the browser etc.
      Probably the feature of FOSS that makes it more secure is that it removes all PHBs(Pointy haired bosses for those who aren't dilbert fans)

    2. Re:IE sucks by OneDeeTenTee · · Score: 0

      It's not so much that open source software is open to review by all, it's the fact that open source developers have learned from the MS mistakes, and they are not bound by the MS codebase to propagate those mistakes.

      The biggest thing that open source code does is allow any programmer to submit patches, so when something is found there may be a few dozen people racing to come up with the best fix.

      --
      Stop the world; I need to get off.
    3. Re:IE sucks by downbad · · Score: 2, Insightful
      This is because, as I have always said - OSS software is open to the world and gets more scrutiny. Major problems are found earlier.
      Oh really? Then why is the whole linux-2.6 kernel tree vulnerable to a horribly pitiful bug that allows any user to chmod files in /proc?

      I'm a GNU/Linux user, and I really want to believe that open source software is under more scrutiny, but how can we know for sure? Even RMS and ESR say that open source only works because programmers need to "scratch an itch" - I'm not sure auditing the security of gigantic projects like mozilla and the linux kernel is an itch that anybody would want to scratch.

    4. Re:IE sucks by E_elven · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There, also, lies a benefit of the current community process. No-one in their right mind will attempt to completely master the Linux kernel in its current magnitude; rather, people concentrate on small subsystems of it -say, the filesystem or modem drivers- and thus have much less to comb through.

      --
      Marxist evolution is just N generations away!
    5. Re:IE sucks by Bertie · · Score: 4, Informative

      Erm, Safari's based on the same open-source KHTML engine as Konqueror, is it not?

    6. Re:IE sucks by foidulus · · Score: 4, Informative

      The renderer is, not the whole browser...

    7. Re:IE sucks by Myen · · Score: 2, Informative

      Do you mind actually stating which design flaws those are? (I'm seriously curious, that's all.)

      As far as I know, ActiveX ~= XPInstall, and BHOs ~= extensions. And yes, Mozilla extensions can deploy binary components, which means they can do anything BHOs can do anyway, including installing BHOs to mess with Explorer. Not allowing extension installs from being triggered from certain events (such as document load) is still just covering up the problem - I have seen sites that ask you nicely to manually trigger ActiveX installs to help "support" them. It happened to have been one of the nastier ones (3721.com stuff) too.

      There is simply no way to make sure that users don't do things that mess up their computer. It's a fight between convenience of letting the users do things they want (such as installing that nifty feature) and inconveniencing the user enough that only things they really want gets installed.

    8. Re:IE sucks by nmos · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem is, after Microsoft won the battle(in terms of install base), they pretty much lost all interest in keeping IE up to date, as there have been almost no new features introduced into IE for a long, long while.

      I don't think so. Even their newer products demonstrate that MS views security as something to be tacked on later rather than something to be designed in from the start. Right now if MS had the choice to include some cool new feature that they KNEW would get broken and damage their customers later they would do it in a heartbeat. Just look at Passport, even if they had the best security in the world it'd still get broken eventually simply because it's such a huge target. MS must know it's goint to happen and yet they keep encouraging people to dump their personal information into it. They just don't care.

    9. Re:IE sucks by downbad · · Score: 1

      That's true. I'm just saying that with some other development processes, people would get paid or have some definite incentive to go through the code with a seriously critical eye, itch or no itch.

    10. Re:IE sucks by FCAdcock · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Oh really? Then why is the whole linux-2.6 kernel tree vulnerable to a horribly pitiful bug that allows any user to chmod files in /proc?

      Maybe so, but just as soon as a problem is found, it's patched and re-released.

      I think linux's best feature is that shortly after the problem is announced, many different people "scratch their itch" and rush to patch it.

      I would love to see a great desktop on linux. I think the modern ones are either too cluttered, or severly lacking. Windows has that beat, it's not too cluttered, and it's got a feature for just about everything. I just don't think any of them are all that great, save the graphics programs. Windows makes a program for everything they can think of, but they don't take the time to make those programs work well together. I have severl applications which I can not copy-paste out of.

      I honestly don't see the OS wars even nearly over.

      Linux has just about won the servers. They are, hands down, more secure than MS servers. Patches are qiuckly made for major bugs, and lesser bugs get fixed fairly rapidly. Linux servers also have uptimes that long outrun anything Microsoft makes.

      Windows has the desktop market with a clean desktop where I know how to do what I want to do because that's how it has always been done. The problem is that I can't do anything I NEED to do. I can't easily get security updates when a problem is found. In fact, I know there are more than a few serious problems which have not been patched for long periods of time. Much longer than it should anyways.

      That's where the new battle is going to be. Taking your victory, and fixing your problems. Becomming a truely mature operating system. They both need to work on having a stable, secure core system (Linux); and an easy to use desktop where I can do anything I want (Windows).

      Linux has already started working on a good desktop, and is getting close to catching up with microsoft. Microsoft arguably hasn't even finished their's. So while linux is looking foward and moving on, Microsoft has already moved away from the desktop almost completely. With Microsoft venturing into almost every nook and cranny they can find to suck money from, windows movement has slowed to a drool, and dosen't look to be moving into any new direction.

      I own and use both OS's simply because of gaming, photoshop, and mozilla. Yes, I know linux has firefox and thunderbird also, but when I'm playing I don't want to mess with a kvm just to check my email. Like I said, you use Linux for the things yohave to do, and windows for the things you want to do.

      --
      --Forest C. Adcock--
    11. Re:IE sucks by airjrdn · · Score: 1

      Very good post, nicely done.

    12. Re:IE sucks by ScottGant · · Score: 1

      Then why is the whole linux-2.6 kernel tree vulnerable to a horribly pitiful bug that allows any user to chmod files in /proc?

      Mine isn't...already patched it...days ago. Also, was that bug out in the open and everyone knew about it for months and months before a patch was available? Um...no.

      Anything else?

      --

      "Music is everybody's possession. It's only publishers who think that people own it." - John Lennon.
    13. Re:IE sucks by essreenim · · Score: 1

      You exaggerate. And the 2.6 kernel is very fast. Its a new Kernel and any good admin wouldn't rush to implememt it yet until all bugs have been irined out. Give it a year, stop moaning...

    14. Re:IE sucks by essreenim · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure auditing the security of gigantic projects like mozilla and the linux kernel is an itch that anybody would want to scratch
      Come on, do u really think all hackers out there are auditors. Thats not how a typical security bug gets reported..

    15. Re:IE sucks by essreenim · · Score: 1

      Do you recall the ability of IE versions up to 5.5 at least being able to open pages of one domain, while this domain appeared as a completely different one in the address bar via a simple button.
      I'm not going to argue withe the definition of design but I would say that when you sit down to decide the conditions by which text appears in the address bar of the browser, you should come up with something better than that.

    16. Re:IE sucks by essreenim · · Score: 1

      I'm playing I don't want to mess with a kvm just to check my email.
      You should open your mind about Linux on the desktop. For me its main problem is lack of users - That should change. Lack of intelligence insulting features - People should change!!!
      What distro are you using. I believe you are not the kind of person who wants all the eye candy - no offence. Why not use Mandrake or Red Hat. Especially Mandrake - its a serious Linux distro- ersatile enough for almost any task. I would say only beaten in terms of perfomance, and its stil fast! It also has all the eye candy you want..

    17. Re:IE sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BTW Safari is mainly khtml (opensource) + GUI.

    18. Re:IE sucks by blackmonday · · Score: 2, Informative

      Safari is definitely not a closed source browser. It's based on KHTML, from the Konqueror open source browser. Apple gives its changes back as required by the license to the Konqueror group.

    19. Re:IE sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When will you idiots get it in your heads that "modern" and "user-friendly" means something more than "eye candy".

      Your last paragraph is practically an insult to anybody's intelligence.

      As to your Mandrake recommendation, I for one positively loathe the colourful kindergarten looks of any distro with KDE. (The icons are hideous, and there's no easy way to change icons.) Not that Gnome hasn't gone the same way.

      There's a reason why Apple is so popular. Their desktop looks... just adult. You know. Stylish. Coherent.

      [Insert pr0n related joke somewhere else.]

    20. Re:IE sucks by Logi · · Score: 1
      I don't think that being closed source is the sole reason why IE is insecure, there are relatively secure closed source browsers(Safari being one)

      While this doesn't negate the point of the parent post, I would just like to point out that Safari is based on the KHTML library, which is the rendering engine from the Konqueror browser from KDE and thus Open Source.

      So just replace Safari with Opera in the above and resume your usual flaming.

      --
      Logi - I can do anything, but not everything.
    21. Re:IE sucks by Locutus · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Ah, but they DO CARE. It's all about selling another version. One better than the last. After all, isn't THAT their one consistant pitch, "It's better or more secure, or more feature rich, or more X than the previous version"?

      They design their OS so well, they can't( won't really ) add USB support to it. Thinking Windows 95 and Windows NT here.

      If you remember ANYTHING about Microsoft, remember that they are a marketing company first. The black magic they deliver is secondary and only important to the fact that it solves SOME of the customers needs. Now this isn't a bad thing if your only interest is $$$$. But, if you are a company or person attempting to use Microsoft products to solve a problem or simplify your live, it won't. It'll just change your current problem domain for the time being and you'll be back with bills in hand to get out of another mess they led you into( or you followed them into.. ;-)

      Microsofts security game is just that, their game and only yours when you follow them. I really think that's why GNU/Linux is really picking up steam now. Companies are starting to figure out that they have no control on the Microsoft threadmill. GNU/Linux gives them some control back. But, with some different issues though still without the lack of control Microsoft solutions/problems bring with it. IMHO.

      LoB

      --
      "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
    22. Re:IE sucks by essreenim · · Score: 1

      As to your Mandrake recommendation, I for one positively loathe the colourful kindergarten looks of any distro with KDE.
      I'm not going to even acknowledge that. Gnome is awful and really just a Winodws clone at the moment. I was apalled to see a WinXP skin for Gnome. Thats not what Linux is about. Though I wouldn't be surprised if people are using Win skins for KDE too - ironic.

      As for your other flamebait, I was just trying to win over a few more ppl to Linux. Personally, I like a good terminal but I know thats not what any Windows user wants, they want a functinal GUI amongst many other things, and yes, they are eye candy junkies in need of reassurance, many of them.

      There's a reason why Apple is so popular. Their desktop looks... just adult. You know. Stylish. Coherent.
      Haha, you are just trying to get to me now. I like OSX too but I loathe sudo admin access, the way the OS handles interrupts and many other things. It is overall a great OS though. Personally, I honestly don't care about MAC OSX or any OS in terms of looks. I want security, responsivess, performance, and bags of useful features (and I dont care how I get them - preferably from the keyboard alone) ; )



    23. Re:IE sucks by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      there are relatively secure closed source browsers(Safari being one)

      AFAIK, and IIRC, Safari is strongly based on Konqueror which is open source, and Apple is giving back to Konqueror changes made to it.

      The only noteworthy closed source browser I know if is now Opera, and IMHO Firefox kicks some serious ass over Opera.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    24. Re:IE sucks by essreenim · · Score: 1

      Also, there is a finite amount you can do with an O.S Unix/Linux based O.S.' are catching up and in my opinion ahead in many ways.Too many features makes a system cumbersome and I think MS know this. This is why I am betting that they will stick with Avalon for Longhorn and that it will be a monster of locked down non-backwards compatible convuluted API, and that they will flog Longhorn itself for half nothing. Because if they don't, Linux can turn the desktop tide. Longhorn could be evil though. I really want to see a dedicated opensource d3d renderer (not an emulator like WineX) comparable to DirectX for Unix/Linux. For me thats important. Either that or OpenGL to really take another giant leap in development.

    25. Re:IE sucks by Myen · · Score: 1

      Thank you, for actually replying :)

      Yeah, I agree IE does some things that really just can't be explained; no argument there. I was just curious about the design flaws in the hopes that I won't come up with similiar stuff in things I do.

    26. Re:IE sucks by T-Ranger · · Score: 4, Interesting
      The problem is the level of maturity of MS programmers. (both inside MS, and app programers) The assumption is that potential attackers are mearly curious or otherwise easily thwarted. You only need to keep honest people out because everyone is honest.

      To be fair, UNIX, and the rest of the Internet world, also went through this phase. SMTP being the prime example (still unsolved. Grr..). Everyone online are friends, so you only need enough security to keep out curious friends. The Morris Worm was the kick in the balls to get people thinking about security. The assumption changed from "everyone is friends who play nice" to "attacks will happen by determened (and smart) people." The "bug of the month club" that Sendmail admins were members of is quite similar to todays with MS.

      This is no excuse for Microsoft programmers, or 3rd party app for Windows programmers. The evolution of internet security is well documented. And even if no MS programmer ever was at a university in around 1985-1995 durring this transition on the Internet (computer nerds at a Uni assumably having (some, limited) 'net access) there is enough foklore floating around that they should know better.

      So what are they to do? Well, taking Sendmail as an example, many users gave up and wrote better mailers. And the Sendmail folks did fix many of its problems. Writing a mailer from scratch was probabaly less effort then "fixing" Sendmail, esp given the stupid design of Sendmail. (compared to modern mailer designs, anyway). I dont realy know enough about the internals of Windows (NT), but I do know that it was desigined by more-or-less the same team as that that desigined VMS. VMS is paticularly anal about security. So lets say that WNT is at its core, "secure". It is all the user level OS apps, add on packages, and 3rd party packages that suck. So it should be, line for line, easier to "fix" the windows problems then it was to "fix" Sendmail. (Because at its core Windows should be OK).

    27. Re:IE sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not install it and leave all those gaping holes from previous kernels? Can I have your IP address please? Oh the hubris of Lunix advocates!

    28. Re:IE sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like I said, you use Linux for the things yohave to do, and windows for the things you want to do.

      Translated into correct English: Like I said, I use Linux for the things I have to do, and Windows for the things I want to do.

      Please do not push your own prefrences onto others as a generalised truth.

    29. Re:IE sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      For the most part an attack would be executed at the rendering/scripting level, not the interface. The interface is all that is closed source with Safari.

    30. Re:IE sucks by downbad · · Score: 1
      Mine isn't...already patched it...days ago.

      Days ago? The patch was released less than 48 hours ago, smart guy.

      Also, was that bug out in the open and everyone knew about it for months and months before a patch was available? Um...no.

      2.5.41 was released in October 2002. You're a schmuck if you believe nobody discovered it before the patch's author.

    31. Re:IE sucks by downbad · · Score: 1

      Do you think any "good admins" use SuSe 9.1? I ask because SuSe 9.1 is based on 2.6 and was released about 4 months ago.

    32. Re:IE sucks by dossen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm just curious. How would you make a "dedicated opensource d3d renderer", that is less of an emulator than WineX? Remember that WineX does not emulate the entire Windows/PC system, it only implements the API. There is some added complications in building an implementation of the d3d API on to of Linux/X/OpenGL (as WineX does), but I don't think you can get rid of much of it. Remember that most of the stuff that d3d does needs to be accelerated by the GPU to be fast enough, and the only accelerated interface to the GPU on Linux is X/OpenGL. To do something that has the _potential_ to eliminate some of the levels in WineX, you need to have lower level access to the hardware. And you still need to implement all of the Windows/DirectX API, and map it to Linux and X.
      Or do you have any concrete examples of some feature in current cards, that _cannot_ be accessed in OpenGL? In that case you should lobby the manufacturer to include a way to access it in their Linux driver. Then I'm sure that WineX would get support for it, if it improves the implementation of a feature that is actually used.

    33. Re:IE sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > OSS software is open to the world and gets more scrutiny. Major problems are found earlier.

      Yes, especially in SendMail

    34. Re:IE sucks by ScottGant · · Score: 1

      48 hours = 2 days = days...plural...days. as in more than one.

      Smart guy.

      --

      "Music is everybody's possession. It's only publishers who think that people own it." - John Lennon.
    35. Re:IE sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also had it days ago. You don't really seem to know what you're talking about. Perhaps if you studied up a little more on computers you could actually give advice. But you seem new to all this.

      Also 2.6 has been out for a while, but it was recently discovered, and you're an idiot if you think otherwise. This is the open source community, they don't keep things to themselves. But like I said, you're new to all this which is obvious or you wouldn't have made such an idiotic post.

    36. Re:IE sucks by babyrat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just look at Passport, even if they had the best security in the world it'd still get broken eventually simply because it's such a huge target.

      So what you are saying is NEVER release ANYTHING because even if it had the "best security in the world" it will get broken?

      HEY EVERYBODY!!! Stop developing Linux - it may be pretty secure but it will get broken. Better stop Apache, Mozilla and OpenOffice too - it's inevitable - no matter how secure you make it, it wil get broken...if you continue to develop given this information then you obviously don't care about security.

    37. Re:IE sucks by nmos · · Score: 1

      Try spending 5 minutes on Google figuring out what Passport is beore making ignorant comments. Thanks.

    38. Re:IE sucks by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      As far as I know, ActiveX ~= XPInstall, and BHOs ~= extensions. And yes, Mozilla extensions can deploy binary components, ------------ 1 in the base install you can see every extension installed (and worst case they would be in only 2 places) 2 current firefox/thunderbird forces you to click an install button (possibly next Moz will do this) 3 because Moz is not "part of the OS" you can rip it out and reload from zero

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    39. Re:IE sucks by thinkerdreamer · · Score: 1

      Mozillazine said they patch some of the same security holes in Internet Explorer. So there are at least some similar design flaws. I mean, from what I know they coded the thing in C++. If they wanted to be more secure, they should have coded it in a language like Java. Too bad Java runs so slow.

    40. Re:IE sucks by Dwonis · · Score: 1
      Oh really? Then why is the whole linux-2.6 kernel tree vulnerable to a horribly pitiful bug that allows any user to chmod files in /proc?

      Sigh. Yeah...

      Is that actually a security hole, though? Is there anywhere in /proc that relies on the permissions working properly?

      dwon@gando:/proc/sys/net/ipv4$ chmod 666 ip_forward
      dwon@gando:/proc/sys/net/ipv4$ echo 0 >ip_forward
      dwon@gando:/proc/sys/net/ipv4$ cat ip_forward
      1
    41. Re:IE sucks by Myxorg · · Score: 1

      Not a troll, just an honest question. What don't you like about "sudo admin access"? Also what is wrong with the way OSX handles interrupts(I am ignorant of how it handles interrupts differently, so please enlighten me.)? Also what are some of the other deficiences you see with osx. (aside from price, and hardware which is probally a big one.)

    42. Re:IE sucks by essreenim · · Score: 1

      I dont see the point of sudo admin access.
      You can create a permanent admin account with just one command in term. so whats the point of sudo admin. Ok, a regular user account can be used for administrative purposes by an admin. That is nothing new...
      My problem with interrupts is that user control is not easy. The MAC decides what does what, and when, its difficult to circomvent. It does it well usually but when things grind to a halt you are stuck. Unless you want to go copying pointer tables and all that nonsense you are stuck with this. Maybe the G5 has improved upon this, but the OS itself is partly to blame.

    43. Re:IE sucks by essreenim · · Score: 1

      Well you or I are allowed to make these mistakes, but when a mega corporation like MS does this and people keep using the browser, it really ticks me off.

    44. Re:IE sucks by essreenim · · Score: 1

      Too bad Java runs so slow.

      Dont get me started on this again. Popular myth about Java:

      Slow beacuse .class files -> java byte code interpreter (slower than executables)

      Reality:

      x% of .class files -> java bytecode interpreter.
      y% of .class files -> javah c binary.
      (In fact if code is in a loop that is used allot it will be y)
      Java is not slow. It gets faster all the time. Sun are doing a great job on it. They put allot of time and energy into native compilation, and it pays off. And bare in mind also that "y" is precompiled for the specific platform it runs on.
      I believe this will only get better. There is now a compilation flag especially included for the AMD 64. In fact this is what I would really like to see more of - morespecific java architecture optimizations!

    45. Re:IE sucks by essreenim · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I lkie SuSE but if they have one weakness, its that they rush. They were the first to have support for the AMD64 too. They should relax a bit!

    46. Re:IE sucks by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1
      Oh really? Then why is the whole linux-2.6 kernel tree vulnerable to a horribly pitiful bug that allows any user to chmod files in /proc?
      There is also no reason why you *have* to run 2.6, when you can still drop a 2.4 or even 2.2 kernel in any of your favorite linux distros. I and my colleagues still use 2.2 sometimes, especially if there is no pressing need for 2.4.

      You don't have that option with MS-Windows, if you change the kernel (NT/2000/XP/2003), you must also change everything else as well. Furthermore, since MS spent several years scattering MSIE code throughout multiple parts of the kernels, you don't really have the option of dropping MSIE completely.

      Currently you can only drop MSIE completely by also dropping MS-Windows completely, which IMHO is not such a bad idea these days. Especially for older people and others not interested in system maintenance. Trying to force every MS-Windows user to be an amatuer security expert is inefficient at best a recipe for failure. The cyclopean 'upgrades' and 'patches' coming out of Redmond really prevent home users with modems and other slower connections from keeping up to date, but then MS tends to sit on known security issues for years and not issuing a patch until an exploit is active in the wild. Result? You can't patch fast enough.

      Dropping MSIE is a start and makes an eventual transition to a more modern OS smoother.

      --
      Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
    47. Re:IE sucks by downbad · · Score: 1
      48 hours = 2 days = days...plural...days. as in more than one.

      Congratulations, you can do arithmetic. You get a gold star.

      Now re-read my comment.

    48. Re:IE sucks by downbad · · Score: 1
      This is the open source community, they don't keep things to themselves.
      Yeah, it's not like Alan Cox withheld all of the info on 4 critical holes in 2.2.20-pre10 or anything...
      </cynicism>

      Anyway, who is "they?" You can't seriously believe that everyone who uses linux subscribes to that philosophy.

    49. Re:IE sucks by ScottGant · · Score: 1

      Well, it's obvious that you cannot do simple arithmetic if you call attention to my post that I patched my kernel days ago and you said it wasn't true since it was only out 48 hours ago. 48 hours is 2 days, you didn't seem to grasp that.

      But who really gives a damn? So what? It's patched. You seem to be all fired up on these kernel bugs and semantics, but as someone else pointed out Linux's best feature is that shortly after the problem is announced, many different people "scratch their itch" and rush to patch it.

      Then you called me a schmuck if I believed nobody discovered it before the patch's author. Where's your proof on this? Or is this just speculation on your part? It's just a guess...but it means nothing. I could easily say that no one knew about this bug at all until this author released the patch. See, how easy it is to say something without having to prove or back it up in any way? And we're talking about THIS bug, not bringing up something that someone else on some other kernel did or didn't reveal. Yeah, I saw your post about Alan Cox withholding all of the info on 4 critical holes in 2.2.20-pre10. 2.2.2? How does that have ANYTHING to do with the bug you first brought up? Are you suggesting that Alan Cox knew about this bug with 2.6 and did nothing? Again, show me the evidence.

      But this my post here will do nothing, if you read it you'll fire another post off to show how clever you are, then I'll fire off another to try to show how clever I am....and neither of us will change our minds. So what is the purpose of any of this?

      --

      "Music is everybody's possession. It's only publishers who think that people own it." - John Lennon.
  30. Also featured.. by Retep+Vosnul · · Score: 2, Funny


    Mozilla crew can not be bothered making comments on why people should use there product over other browsers.
    A friend of the team replied "they are too busy getting it right".

    Next on : "MS programmer fired and replaced by spin doctor".

    --
    -- forget /. It's gone.
    1. Re:Also featured.. by black+mariah · · Score: 1

      "Getting it right" is Mozilla programmer speak for "We already have themes and XML scripting capabilities, with tabbed browsing, integrated popup blocking, and all the other bells and whistles. We'll get around to actually connecting it to the internet one day. Isn't it pretty? Mmmm.... XML...."

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
  31. Last Year?! by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

    ``Firefox is built and distributed free by the Mozilla Organization, a small nonprofit corporation spun off last year from the fast-fading remnants of Netscape''

    I was under the impression that the Mozilla Organization was quite a bit older than that. Didn't the mozilla.org effort start in 1998 sometime?

    --
    Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    1. Re:Last Year?! by seasleepy · · Score: 2, Informative

      Mozilla was open-sourced in 98, but it was just spun off into the non-profit Mozilla Foundation after AOL/Netscape fired everyone last year.

    2. Re:Last Year?! by brunokummel · · Score: 2, Informative

      There's a difference between the Mozilla Foundation and the Mozilla project.
      The Mozilla Foundation, established in July of 2003, exists to provide organizational, legal, and financial support for the Mozilla open-source software project.
      The Mozilla project begun as when Netscape Communications announced in January 23rd ,1998 that the source code for Netscape Communicator would be free of charge.


      "Mozilla":
      http://www.mozilla.org/mission.html

      --
      What is best in life? To crush your enemies, to see them driven before you and to hear the lamentations of their women.
  32. secretly switching people to fire fix by spacerodent · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I switched both my parents over to firefox and it took them over a month to notice. They wanted to know why IE had a funny embryoish logo in the top left heh. I had switched the firefox icon over to the IE one and set up an IE theme on it. Really I havn't seen a single example of somthing IE does better than fire fox. The only limitations I've noticed are on web sites designed ONLY to work with IE like the mcafee web site.

    1. Re:secretly switching people to fire fix by JHammell · · Score: 1

      (hushed announcer's voice) We've secretly switched John's websurfing app to Firefox. Let's see if he notices....

    2. Re:secretly switching people to fire fix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do it secretly? I switched my parents over telling them the benifets of firefox and they were more than willing to switch. They were using Firefox instantly, it's not exactly rocket science to work a browser.

    3. Re:secretly switching people to fire fix by dmh20002 · · Score: 1

      yea. my kid's computers were hopelessly infected with spyware. several search bars in IE and all kinds of weird icons on the desktop. I did clean reinstalls and then substituted FF for IE including changing the icons the way you did.
      no junk on their systems after about a month and no complaints. yay.

    4. Re:secretly switching people to fire fix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should not have been letting the internet babysit your children for you. Don't know about you people, but I don't see many spyware popups unless I am looking for l33t juarez, hardc0re japscat pr0n, or something else I'm not really supposed to do.

      Oh well, your children are probably camwhoring and planning to hook up with 'bob' from north dakota soon, anyhow, so it'll cease to be an issue.

    5. Re:secretly switching people to fire fix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why are you not supposed to do that? You do have a free will or not?

    6. Re:secretly switching people to fire fix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know that "fire fix" is a typo, but it seems oh-so appropriate...

    7. Re:secretly switching people to fire fix by beakburke · · Score: 1
      "Oh well, your children are probably camwhoring and planning to hook up with 'bob' from north dakota soon"

      Hey...Leave me out of this!!!!

      --
      ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
    8. Re:secretly switching people to fire fix by Autumnmist · · Score: 1

      What IE-lookalike theme are you using?

      I've been searching for a good one that works with Firefox 0.9.1 for when I need to deal with stupid stubborn normal users.

      --
      --- "Many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view." ~ Ben Kenobi, 'Return of the Jedi'
  33. Mozilla Schmozilla by Prince+Vegeta+SSJ4 · · Score: 1

    I'm doing just fine with Netscape Navigator Gold 1.0

    1. Re:Mozilla Schmozilla by Prince+Vegeta+SSJ4 · · Score: 1

      For all you nitpickers, I meant 2.0 gold (should proofread my typing)

    2. Re:Mozilla Schmozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good, because I was going to say... I didn't 1.0 could handle virtual hostnames.

  34. For Web Designers out here... by c0ldfusi0n · · Score: 5, Informative

    I found this really nifty application called Comparator made by Vansath Dharmaraj -- it's basically a test browser with a split view: the top one is the page rendered in IE, the bottom one is the page rendered using Mozilla (which comes back to say Mozilla-powered browsers such as Firefox).

    That, along with Firefox extensions IE View and Web Developer makes coding websites compatible in both IE and Mozilla browsers a hell of a lot easier.

    --
    A computer makes it possible to do, in half an hour, tasks which were completely unnecessary to do before.
  35. He cocked up a key feature by oliverthered · · Score: 1

    To quote the artical. "Firefox development and testing are mostly done by about a dozen Mozilla employees, plus a few dozen others at companies like IBM, Sun, and Red Hat. I've been using it for a week now, and I've all but forgotten about Explorer."

    Looks like I'm in that 1 in 12, who are the other 11 people? they must have lots of aliases.

    --
    thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    1. Re:He cocked up a key feature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "Firefox development and testing are mostly done by about a dozen Mozilla employees, plus a few dozen others at companies like IBM, Sun, and Red Hat."

      I can name six more people that are involved in testing and development of Firefox and they don't work for Mozilla, IBM, Sun, or Redhat. The author clearly doesn't understand what he is talking about on this point. The testing and development is not mostly done by a group of twelve people as their are hundreds, most likely thousands that test and have contributed code.

    2. Re:He cocked up a key feature by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      Well
      1: Every-time you submit a bug your helping testing. (that's goto be a couple of thousand peeps)
      2: every time you post a patch you've done some development.
      3: All those extensions

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
  36. Laugh it Up by mfh · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You're laughing, but someone at Slate is going to lose their job over this article. It's reminiscent of nothing in my short term memory, related to Microsoft.

    --
    The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
    1. Re:Laugh it Up by Pharmboy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You're laughing, but someone at Slate is going to lose their job over this article. It's reminiscent of nothing in my short term memory, related to Microsoft.

      You are probably right. I base this on the fact that Microsoft would look bad if they pushed this guy (Paul Boutin) to be fired, and somehow they will manage to not only look bad, but release 2 conflicting press releases regarding this, making themselves looking worse. Well, if history is any indicator, anyway.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    2. Re:Laugh it Up by eltoyoboyo · · Score: 3, Funny

      Not likely, more like a raise. They managed to slip this in and get it posted as an article on /.

      "You've probably been told to dump Internet Explorer for a Mozilla browser before, by the same propeller-head geek who wants you to delete Windows from your hard drive and install Linux. You've ignored him, and good for you. "

      Microsoft 0wnz Slate and uses it as one of their information outlets.

      --
      Have you Meta Moderated t
    3. Re:Laugh it Up by dont_think_twice · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You're laughing, but someone at Slate is going to lose their job over this article. It's reminiscent of nothing in my short term memory, related to Microsoft.

      To be honest, Slate (and MSNBC) typically provide some of the most critical press Microsoft gets. I am guessing that the news sites are run entirely independent from Microsoft, and the sites feel obligated to criticize Microsoft to prove their independence.

    4. Re:Laugh it Up by zerocool^ · · Score: 1

      You're laughing, but someone at Slate is going to lose their job over this article. It's reminiscent of nothing in my short term memory, related to Microsoft.

      I dunno, the first thing that I thought when I saw that an arm of microsoft was willing to reccomend a non-Microsoft product was "What do they get out of the deal?". If they admit (passively) that IE is insecure, or not very good, then when they release XP-SP2, they can make a big deal out of going back to reccomending IE, thus tempting people to try it out.

      Or, something.

      ~Wx

      --
      sig?
    5. Re:Laugh it Up by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "You're laughing, but someone at Slate is going to lose their job over this article."

      Based on what?

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    6. Re:Laugh it Up by 4of12 · · Score: 1

      someone at Slate is going to lose their job over this article.

      They don't actually have to actively fire this guy.

      Assigning him to follow stump speeches for the Bush and the Kerry campaigns should be sufficient to encourage him to seek more pleasant employment elsewhere:)

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
  37. A thought... by StarTux · · Score: 1

    Maybe this is a way for Microsoft fans to get their favorite browser, IE, to be updated?

    Guess there is no chance that MS would ditch IE and use FireFox instead huh?

    1. Re:A thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe this is a way for Microsoft fans to get their favorite browser, IE, to be updated?

      But it is. The guy's only complaining about IE security and XPSP2 has a whole raft of IE security enhancements. The article isn't about standards compliance and what-have-you.

  38. When Firefox becomes top dog... by Ced_Ex · · Score: 1, Insightful

    So IE has vulnerabilities that are exploited all the time by crackers and script kiddies, but isn't that mainly due to software having its inherient holes and bugs? Every piece of software out there has its bugs, whether we know about them or not. Given that IE has a commanding lead on the browser platform, doesn't that just give people a reason to target IE? No one likes #1, and when you're at the top, you're constantly fighting people's criticism and attacks.

    So my question is, when Firefox gets to be #1, won't that just shift the attacks to Firefox?

    --
    Live forever, or die trying.
    1. Re:When Firefox becomes top dog... by adamjaskie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, it will shift the attacks to Firefox. But, since Firefox has an active development team that is constantly working to improve it, with major updates every couple months, and minor fixes every day, any exploits will probably be fixed faster than Internet Explorer, which has no real active development until a major exploit is discovered, or MS wants to ship another service pack every couple of years.

      --
      /usr/games/fortune
    2. Re:When Firefox becomes top dog... by glennrrr · · Score: 1

      When and if that happens in five years you'll just have to spend half an hour getting used to a new browser. If you can't spend half an hour every five years improving your security, the Russian mafia deserves your money.

    3. Re:When Firefox becomes top dog... by mingot · · Score: 1

      And the same people who never update IE are going to start updating Firefox on a regular basis?

      Ok, be honest here. How many of you "I installed Firefox on moms PC and she didn't even notice" people did this months ago and have enjoyed the peace and quiet of not having to support them? And how many of you have been diligent about going back and updating them? Have there been any security flaws found/corrected since then? If not the only thing protecting them is the relative obscurity of the software, no? And when its not so obscure?

  39. You think that is bad? by dwalsh · · Score: 1

    I read an interview a few years ago with some senior MS exec. in the server OS division. I'm don't remember all the details or have a link.

    He was asked about how the subject in question might affect the home OS line (e.g. Win 98/ME) . He responded "I don't deal with toy operating systems" or something similar (he definetly used the "toy" word). I thought that was hilarious, but it did not generate a fuss at the time.

    --
    ${YEAR+1} is going to be the year of Linux on the desktop!
  40. How Safe is FireFox? by nikster · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I have been using FireFox for a long while. It's great.

    But then, i don't think it has been designed with security in mind as much as convenience, exactly the same predicament that made IE such a huge security hole. There is auto-install of plug-ins, there is auto-install of skins - i kind of have a hard time believing that all of these were written by people wrecking their brains about possible exploits. [if you know different, let me know]

    With IE, we know it's broken beyond fixing. With FireFox, we don't know. It has not been tested, as it has not been the target of serious malware writers.

    Imagine - unlikely as it may be - FireFox wins the new browser war. Will it still be safe? IMHO, only a real security model like the one built into Java can really protect users.
    And from working with that, i know that it places lots of seemingly unnecessary and annoying constraints on development and web apps.

    1. Re:How Safe is FireFox? by UTPinky · · Score: 1

      Think of this though... If you remember as of version 4 with IE, the browser became very closely tied to the Windows. If something is that coupled to the underlying OS, then any security flaw have just had its possible impact increased by an order of a magnitude. Just my 2c.

      --
      I'm only paranoid because everyone is against me...
    2. Re:How Safe is FireFox? by RickHunter · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes, Firefox is safe. Or, rather, as safe as it can be reasonably expected to get. Plugins and skins can only be installed by whitelisted servers, and must prompt the user before installation.

    3. Re:How Safe is FireFox? by EMR · · Score: 1

      Well, considering the fact that the entire source code of FireFox is available, then any insecurity found can quickly be seen and fixed in record time (hours instead of months), as you can have thousands of eyes looking at the source code. Yes, the mozilla foundation is a core of a dozen developers, but anyone can develop it, and many do by posting bug reports and tracking down issues, and even submitting patches to fix issues in the mozilla bugtracker. Something that can never happen with IE. with IE you are stuck waiting for M$ to get around to fixing a bug (or hiding it even further and denying it)

    4. Re:How Safe is FireFox? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really don't know much about security but I will take a stab at some of this.

      First of all, IE and Windows are very much interconnected. This interconnection allows a clear shot at Windows through most IE holes. Firefox/Mozilla is seperate from Windows.

      Auto-install of plugins and to a lesser extent skins are troubling but the user still has to ok the install. How are auto-installs of plugins handled? I am under the impression that plugins are made available from some whitelist- such a system I would think is fairly safe. I would think that skins are secure- although the ability to change the appearance of the gui somewhat unknowingly could be considered bad. Perhaps most importantly the auto-install stuff can be turned off with out really hampering the browser- this cannot be done in an unhampering way in IE.

    5. Re:How Safe is FireFox? by wintermute740 · · Score: 1

      "Yes, Firefox is safe. Or, rather, as safe as it can be reasonably expected to get. Plugins and skins can only be installed by whitelisted servers, and must prompt the user before installation."

      Also, these are new features to firefox, so I'd imagine the programmers took the time to get these features right before adding them. I'm using an older version (before it became known as Firefox) and these auto-install features simply did not exist in that version.

    6. Re:How Safe is FireFox? by weierophinney · · Score: 1
      But then, i don't think it has been designed with security in mind as much as convenience, exactly the same predicament that made IE such a huge security hole. There is auto-install of plug-ins

      But you're missing two key differences: Firefox is not tied to the OS like IE is, and extensions are written in XUL, which isn't binary. In addition, on multi-user systems, you have to be an administrator (Windows) or root (*nix) in order to install an extension globally. What all this means is that if you download and install malware:

      • it may only affect you, as, on a multiuser system, only your profile will be affected
      • it may only affect your browser installation (if the plugin is installed globally).

      Finally, if exploits are found in Mozilla's code, there's an army of developers out there ready to patch the code to eliminate it. All in all, I'd say the Firefox approach to extensions is head-and-shoulders beyond IE.

    7. Re:How Safe is FireFox? by asa · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There is auto-install of plug-ins, there is auto-install of skins - i kind of have a hard time believing that all of these were written by people wrecking their brains about possible exploits. [if you know different, let me know]

      I know better. I've been involved with the Mozilla and Firefox development process for years and I can tell you with great confidence that we've considered security at every step of the way, from design, to implementation, to testing. We've got some of the top minds in the business constantly trying to find holes in our security story. They find 'em and we fix 'em.

      If you don't believe me, then ask Bugzilla about it, or take a look at the code. Maybe then you won't have such a hard time believing it.

      With IE, we know it's broken beyond fixing. With FireFox, we don't know. It has not been tested

      Um, hasn't been tested? We've got tens of thousands of people who have tested and reported bugs (including security bugs) on Firefox and the rest of the Mozilla code base. We've got millions of users using it. We've been the target of malware writers and we are beating them with a strong security ethos that defines almost everything we do.

      Imagine - unlikely as it may be - FireFox wins the new browser war. Will it still be safe? IMHO, only a real security model like the one built into Java can really protect users.

      You're suggesting that Firefox and the Mozilla codebase don't have "a real security model"? I'm guessing you really haven't even looked.

      Do yourself a bit of a favor and actually look at the code, the bugs, the process, etc. before you start talking about security.

      --Asa

    8. Re:How Safe is FireFox? by nikster · · Score: 1

      thanks for answering my concerns. i hereby admit i am a lazy-ass and rather than looking at the code, the bugs, the process, etc. before talking about security, i ask slashdot.
      i would like to note, though, that as a side-benefit to my procrastination, all /. readers now know FireFox is secure.

      in my defense, i also want to note that FireFox' own security claims are rather modest, as noted on the homepage:Built with your Security in mind, Firefox keeps your computer safe from malicious spyware by not loading harmful ActiveX controls. A comprehensive set of privacy tools keep your online activity your business.
      ... and that's all it says. i wouldn't exactly guess from that that

      "we've considered security at every step of the way, from design, to implementation, to testing. We've got some of the top minds in the business constantly trying to find holes in our security story. They find 'em and we fix 'em.".

      maybe it's time to step up the marketing?

    9. Re:How Safe is FireFox? by Trejkaz · · Score: 1

      extensions are written in XUL, which isn't binary.

      #!/bin/sh
      rm -rf /

      That isn't binary either. Of course you can write the same thing in JavaScript, right? But the important thing is that you can only run code which you let run.

      --
      Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
    10. Re:How Safe is FireFox? by Lord+Omlette · · Score: 1

      "We've got top people working on it."
      "Who?"
      "Top people."

      --
      [o]_O
  41. News by eSavior · · Score: 3, Funny

    In related news, the editor for slate magazine was fired: Wednesday, June 30, 2004, at 11:04 AM

  42. MSN's Slate Recommends Firefox over IE by penguinoid · · Score: 1

    Takes bazooka ... Aims at foot ... Wham!

    Maybe Microsoft has actually taken seriously that memo about increasing security.
    Or they didn't and the site was hax0red and fixed up :-)

    --
    Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
  43. At the sign of the blue `E' by Boronx · · Score: 1

    Hmmm, I solve this problem by deleting the blue E. I explain to them they can still get IE from windows explorer, which they do at first, but eventually laziness wins the day.

  44. Just a guess.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    But maybe Microsoft thought something in Longhorn would make HTML and therefore IE obsolete by now?

    It sure would fit their modus operendi to try and kill HTML since they don't control it.

  45. Total Replacement of IE by Carcass666 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What would be really great is if the Firefox team could build ActiveX wrappers mapping the integration of IE into third-party apps (like QuickBooks and FranklinCovey). This would allow companies to obliterate IE from their organizations.

    1. Re:Total Replacement of IE by user+no.+590291 · · Score: 1

      And would make Firefox subject to the same security holes for which Microsoft is being consistently and correctly castigated.

    2. Re:Total Replacement of IE by vidarh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're missing the point. Making Firefox available as an ActiveX control for displaying web content in other apps would NOT be a security hole. Allowing web pages to embed Active X components in the web pages is what is a potential security nightmare.

    3. Re:Total Replacement of IE by user+no.+590291 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      OK, I misunderstood- you're talking about using Firefox as a dropin for the MSHTML component, not making a wrapper that'll make Firefox run ActiveX controls. While this is an improvement, it wouldn't allow Firefox to completely replace IE, because of the sites (for example, one RBOC telephone book) that require you to accept and run an ActiveX control for the site to even work. But of course, implementing this would open all the holes.

    4. Re:Total Replacement of IE by stormcoder · · Score: 5, Informative

      This has already been done. The html renderer is available as a dropin replacement for MSHTML. Infact it is possible to make Outlook use gecko instead of MSHTML which I think is pretty funny.

      --
      Sorry my bullshit sensor overloaded.
    5. Re:Total Replacement of IE by Carcass666 · · Score: 1

      I have poked around on Firefox's FAQ's and haven't been able to find out how to accomplish this. If I could get Gecko to render HTML in Outlook, we could shitcan IE. Could you give me any idea of where I could go to find out how to do this? (We need Outlook due to some third-party apps that operate as Outlook plug-ins)

    6. Re:Total Replacement of IE by elFarto+the+2nd · · Score: 2, Informative
    7. Re:Total Replacement of IE by stormcoder · · Score: 1

      Ya, what he said. He beat me to it. What I get for leaving my computer for a quicky.

      --
      Sorry my bullshit sensor overloaded.
  46. MS Keyboards by TexasDex · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Although I've entirely switched over to Linux by now, I have to agree that although MS's software bites the big one, their peripherals are pretty good. Not the best perhaps, but good.

    Right now I'm using an MS wireless/optical mouse and an MS natural keyboard, and I am for the most part able to ignore the fact that they're both made by the same company that wants your soul.

    --
    The Cheese Stands Alone.
  47. ActiveX by tchernobog · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Even here, a note is made about ActiveX:

    ActiveX was meant to make it easy to add the latest interactive multimedia and other features to sites, but instead it's become a tool for sneaking spyware onto unsuspecting PCs.

    Now, we all know that ActiveX, a technology that has been around for years and years, is perfectly insecure. Moreover, now there are other ways to do most things that ActiveX achieves: Java apps, server side scripting (with, let's say, PHP) and many more. Secure ones.
    So what? We have better alternatives. Microsoft obviously won't drop ActiveX support from IE until someone still asks for it. Then, the problem is with companies and sites that make use of them.
    It's strange that someone would still be using something that's not portable, and an increasing audience won't be able to benefit from (if they follow CERT raccomandations, at least :).
    At last, I think that sooner or later ActiveX will disappear (given Microsoft doesn't try some horrible marketing move), because no-one wise will use it. Many users have been educated to click "NO" to those popups requiring you to install a BHO... so new site will have an hard battle against users' suspicion. The problem here is: will Microsoft let this happen, or has it some interest in keeping a buggy technology alive?

    I remember it were just for one reason I switched to Mozilla Suite (no, Firefox just doesn't suits me ;): they don't have the possibility to use ActiveX.
    PS: also the pop-up blocking thingie has been useful, but I am a Mozilla user since before it was introduced.

    --
    42.
    1. Re:ActiveX by LostCluster · · Score: 1

      ActiveX will never die because it's also the platform for gettng other programs to do the heavy lifting for you in Visual Basic, and is still supported in VB.net.

      In short, ActiveX lets you write a component for a Win32 executable and IE at the same time. Of course, the flaw is that a full .exe is usually given total security freedom, while the ActiveX control in IE should limited but isn't effectively.

    2. Re:ActiveX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's strange that someone would still be using something that's not portable, and an increasing audience won't be able to benefit from (if they follow CERT raccomandations, at least :).

      I can't agree with you more. Luckily, this browser-standards/security debacle is all working out pretty well for my company. We make web-based enterprise software, and from day one we've been focused on making it 'real' web software--stuff that doesn't rely on ActiveX or other crap. Our competitors do, on the other hand, throw in either small ActiveX widgets when they can't think of a better solution, or worse just embed their app in an ActiveX control.

      Until recently, clients generally didn't understand why we wouldn't just throw some ActiveX hack in when clearly that's what our competitors did. But now...they really get it...and our competitors are completely dependent upon their ActiveX crutches/hacks. They still believe it's the way to go...their marketing material is getting more desperate: e.g. "But we're a Microsoft Solutions Partner! Doesn't that sanctify our product?"

      Not one bit.

    3. Re:ActiveX by sewagemaster · · Score: 1

      not entirely sure firefox will be completely immune though. I was browsing some rom site and whem i tried clicking on the download page, it automatically tries to install a .xpi extention on my browser before presenting me the download link of the rom.

    4. Re:ActiveX by tchernobog · · Score: 1

      They're working to fix this, both with white-lists and other improvements. Some of them should already be in the trunk. Try searching bugzilla.

      --
      42.
    5. Re:ActiveX by essreenim · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Haha : )

  48. Microsoft needs FireFox by RichMan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    At this point Microsoft needs FireFox. Without a browser alternative the ONLY safe recomendation would be to remove Windows. At least with FireFox as an alternative to IE (and ThunderBird for Outlook) Microsoft can remain as the desktop operating system.

    Without FireFox the safe solution is to get rid of Windows and that is Microsofts worst nightmare. So for now Microsoft will be happy that FireFox exists and that Windows remains as the desktop platform.

    1. Re:Microsoft needs FireFox by trashme · · Score: 1

      Who cares about Microsoft? We need Firefox. Not only does it provide a great browsing alternative, it provides true competition to Microsoft.

      The more popular Firefox (and other alternative browsers) gets the more pressure Microsoft has to get off of their asses and upgrade IE. In the end, it's better for everyone.

    2. Re:Microsoft needs FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Without a browser alternative the ONLY safe recomendation would be to remove Windows.

      No, without a browser alternative, the only safe recommendation would be to not use any browser at all. If the only other browsers only ran on other platforms, THEN removing Windows would make sense. If there were no other browsers anywhere, removing Windows would be pointless. You've got no safe web browser either way.

      But Firefox isn't the only alternative anyway. There's Opera, which is a pretty good browser. There's even NS4.x still, crappy though it is, and non-graphical browsers like lynx. And the lesser known graphical ones, like Amaya.

      If you switch platforms you could get Safari or Konqueror, but would either of those exist without Mozilla leading the way?

    3. Re:Microsoft needs FireFox by Trejkaz · · Score: 1

      They should write IE7 as a native Windows GUI around the Gecko rendering engine...

      --
      Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
    4. Re:Microsoft needs FireFox by dcam · · Score: 1

      I think you may have that backwards. Moving off windows is too big a step for most people to make at once. On the other hand moving to firefox is a step towards moving off windows. Why? Because it is cross platform, it means one less app that is unfamiliar if people move to a new OS.

      Firfox is bad news for Microsoft. There are no two ways about it.

      I'm interested to see what Microsoft is going to do. There are under pressure from a lot of directions at the moment:
      1. Browser wars have restarted. What is interesting about this is they have restarted with so little warning.
      2. Security. MS is trying to address this with XP SP2, but this is still a huge issue for MS.
      3. Longhorn. This is a huge issue for a number of reasons, first off the delay in shipping it. Secondly the fact that it is a rewrite, new API, *lots* of new code == lots of new problems. Thirdly due to performance considerations (this may be less of an issue). The interesting thing about Longhorn is that there are parallels (Netscape)

      The next 6 months or so are going to be very interesting. If MS isn't careful they could lose signifigant market share, which I for one won't be crying about.

      --
      meh
  49. Timing? by IoN_PuLse · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Seems interesting that they bash IE and talk about all the cool features Firefox has, when XP SP2 with a revamped IE (with many features that firefox has, some look extremely similar *rip-off*) is going to be out very soon....

    1. Re:Timing? by Nasarius · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It has...pop-up and ActiveX blocking. That's about it. It lacks tabbed browsing, themes, configurable extensions...

      --
      LOAD "SIG",8,1
    2. Re:Timing? by earache · · Score: 2, Informative

      You've been able to get all that crap from third parties for years, way ahead of opera and way ahead of mozilla. Why tabbed browsing is attributed to a mozilla or opera innovation is beyond me.

  50. They found an exploit... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1, Interesting

    They will get everyone on board with Firefox, then release the exploit to the script kiddie masses. They will make sure the same exploit isn't available to IE. They will wait until peoples' machines start getting infected with [whatever] and say "Those using Microsoft IE are not affected by the vulnerability."

    There's no other marketable reason.

    1. Re:They found an exploit... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft might be trying to have all of their users move to Firefox. If that happens, Microsoft could lay off many of their employees working on Internet Explorer, which would save them money. Or, another option could be that Microsoft transfers those employees to work strictly on the OS. If all of their users begin using Firefox and Microsoft beigns to drop Internet Explorer from their OS, they will begin to look more "secure" because less patches will need to be released since "Exploit Central" won't exist.

    2. Re:They found an exploit... by IoN_PuLse · · Score: 1
      save them money
      They need to do this????
  51. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  52. Firefox saved my ass by vurg · · Score: 1

    I was returning to Canada from US last February and I need to print some PDF forms (since I don't have PR card) from the Canadian Immigration site so I can board my plane. This was a last minute thing and I have to run to the consulate to have it processed and stamped before heading for the airport. The problem was I couldn't download the damn PDF file and the page is giving me some server-side error message. After minutes of panicking, I opened an alpha of Firefox sitting in some old directories, downloaded the PDF successfully, finished my paperwork, and flew home. There were several times that something like that has happened and I always use Firefox to solve it. And I'll be using it more often if not my work requires IE6.

  53. Hmm... by dave420 · · Score: 1

    They've got some work to do, yet. I just installed firefox again, and the setup crashed... not a great start :)

    1. Re:Hmm... by Foofoobar · · Score: 1

      Blaming user error on the software is yet another user error. Stop the madness.

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
    2. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you've got some spyware, or a virus, or you've hosed your registry. When was the last time you ran ad-aware and spybot?

  54. My own stats by bigberk · · Score: 3, Interesting

    My web site gets about 1200 visitors/day and I track the stats on browsers used... although it's only 4 days of data, my stats are showing that 25.5% of my visitors use Mozilla. This is a huge increase over the norm, which is around 16% Mozilla.

    1. Re:My own stats by bigberk · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Yes, I'm seeing one-quarter Mozilla traffic also with little open source content. In fact, my site is a predominantly Windows shareware/freeware downloads site.

    2. Re:My own stats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      try to have your site /.ed and you'll definetely see lots more % of em are firefox ;)

  55. Diversion ? by cobbaut · · Score: 1

    Could this be a diversion tactic from MS ?

    To get the OSS people's attention focused on this small victory ?

    --
    European Linux user, living in Antwerp
    1. Re:Diversion ? by twistedcubic · · Score: 1

      Maybe they want to give a lot of attention to Firefox so that's its shortcomings are well known. Armed with this info, MS improves on these in its next release of IE.

    2. Re:Diversion ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fortunately for Mozilla, and unfortunately for Microsoft, the cheerleading squad and the football team seldom overlap in their membership. The users are cheering. The coders are coding. Few coders stop to cheer and few users dive into the code.

  56. It's a markeing trick ... by Titusdot+Groan · · Score: 2, Interesting
    MS is acknowledging that they have been leap frogged only so they can announce that they are back in the lead with SP2!

    Their reputation is so bad right now that without a clear admission of how bad it is nobody will believe them when they announce SP2 "fixes everything".

    I notice the timing is really close to SP2 coming out ...

    Or, maybe I've been reading /. too long ...

    1. Re:It's a markeing trick ... by Obiwan+Kenobi · · Score: 2, Funny

      Damn, where's +1 Conspiracy Theory when you need it... ;)

  57. Debian. Who gives a shit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not the developers. At this rate, GNU/Hurd will be ready before the next stable release is out.

  58. Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Mad+Bad+Rabbit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's not like IE is a profit-center for Microsoft anyway;
    they make all their money from Office and the O/S itself.
    What's to stop them from scrapping IE6, and replacing it
    with a Firefox derivative labelled "IE7" ?

    (no doubt accompanied with lots of unconvincing spin
    about how they're cool now with open-sizzource, 'yo)

    --
    >;k
    1. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Walkiry · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >What's to stop them from scrapping IE6, and replacing it
      >with a Firefox derivative labelled "IE7" ?

      The fact that they spent three years integrating anything from "explorer.exe" to the kernel with IE?

      --
      ---- Take the Space Quiz!
    2. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by bunratty · · Score: 5, Interesting
      But Microsoft has stopped developing IE on non-Windows platforms, and has also stopped developing new versions for its existing operating systems. The only way to get IE7 will be to buy Longhorn, the next Windows version.

      I'm sure Microsoft will suddenly start supporting the standards that Mozilla and Opera have supported for years in IE7, meaning that developers will start using those standards. Because IE6 won't recognize those standards, newly designed sites will look like sh*t in that old browser, and users will be forced to upgrade to IE7.

      It looks like Microsoft found how to make its IE monopoly pay off for them after all!

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    3. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by nmos · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I wouldn't be surprised if they at least a few developers working on this as a backup plan. The problem is that MS has been a master at leveraging product X to force/encourage users to use product Y. I don't think they'd want to give up the control that IE gives them. Also anything that makes it easier or more transparent for users to switch to another OS is almost guaranteed to lose them some Windows market share. That's really the only problem with being a monopoly, you really don't have anywhere to go but down.

    4. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by SquadBoy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That is where you are wrong. I work network support for a software company. We have plenty of clients who would love to go to Linux for limited purpose machines (basically boxes that need a OS and a browser) but because we mad the choice to hire code monkeys who code to the MS specs that they get with their MS tools and that means that even though the app in question runs on a Linux application server that it is IE only on the front end ( Don't ask me how they pulled that off) and that means that our clients are locked into MS on the desktop. (Our main app is mission critical and would cost them millions to switch, the thin client interface thing is just part of the story) So anyway while they don't sell IE it would be wrong to assume that they don't make money off of it.

      --

      Cypherpunks: Civil Liberty Through Complex Mathematics. Those who live by the sword die by the arrow.
    5. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      The fact that they spent three years integrating anything from "explorer.exe" to the kernel with IE?

      And if Gecko is sufficiently old better than IE06.dll (or whatever the HTML renderer is called), they'll swap it out lickity-split.

      Heck, there's even a Mozilla project to do just that.

    6. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because IE6 won't recognize those standards, newly designed sites will look like sh*t in that old browser, and users will be forced to upgrade to IE7

      Pfft. Most people are hardly aware of sites that look f'ed up, it's probably considered a normal part of web browsing experience by now. Hell how many sites are made for a specific resolution and assume a maximized window in windows? When IE7 comes out, people will see a whole new side to screwed up sites - and web design teams will have lots of fun problems since they can only have one version of IE per machine and IE is now tied to the OS so you have to use older versions of windows in order to check a website. FUN!

    7. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by It'sYerMam · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Good idea, with one flaw. Standards compliance will mean that you can grab firefox instead of IE7, and sites will look decent.
      It seems more likely that IE7, included only in longhorn, will include new features (ActiveY?) that nothing else supports, making developers use them and cutting off Windows Longhorn regardless of browser choice.

      --
      im in ur .sig, writin ur memes.
    8. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by PeterPumpkin · · Score: 1

      I doubt this will happen, at least for a long long time.

      Brand name carries a browser far beyond its heyday. Look at websites today. The Netscape browser is still supported specifically, but not Mozilla or or Firefox, even though the Mozillas have 10x the marketshare. Heck, many sites STILL support the ancient Netscape 4.x series, even though it accounts for
      BTW the websites I create now work fine in every browser imaginable, even with Netscape 2.1 or IE 3. Block positioning links and giving them backgrounds with CSS, and other tricks make it possible. IE6 will probably become the tinderbox NS4 is now for the l33t standards junkies of tomorrow.

    9. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by PeterPumpkin · · Score: 1

      oops, darn brackets! Completed paragraph:

      Heck, many sites STILL support the ancient Netscape 4.x series, even though it accounts for <0.3% of the browser share nowadays. Even when IE6 dips below 5% (which unfortunately is probably at least 6-10 years off) , support for it will still be extensive.

    10. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by M.+Baranczak · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has stopped developing IE on non-Windows platforms

      You're implying that they were developing for more than one "non-Windows platform". As far as I know, IE was only ever made for Windows and Mac OS. Did I somehow miss the IE releases for OpenBSD or Minix?

    11. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Big deal. This is easy to get around. First, there has been a mozilla-embed project for just about forever on the mozilla timescale and I've used it to patch applications that open IE inside themselves to open Mozilla instead. It works great. Microsoft could split the two parts of IE out into separate functions, as they are essentially already split in every way but packaging, and when you ran iexplore it would pull up firefox. I'm not saying they're going to, but it would be trivial. They would have to do a tiny bit more work to make explorer.exe flop back and forth between list boxes and firefox, but really on the scale of what Microsoft did in the last week or two, and this project, this project would be easier.

      There are no technical reasons, nor even financial ones (I.E. loss of development costs spent on IE) but only political ones (they would look like the horses' asses we all know they are.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    12. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Erik+Hensema · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The fact that they spent three years integrating anything from "explorer.exe" to the kernel with IE?

      It's not intergrated with the kernel. It's intergrated with the OS. MSIE is basically a set of libraries used by lots of applications, including msie.exe-the-browser.

      You can compare msie intergration into the Windows OS with khtml intergration into KDE. You simply cannot rip khtml out of KDE without breaking a bunch of (critical) applications. Same goes with MSIE.

      --

      This is your sig. There are thousands more, but this one is yours.

    13. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by TWX · · Score: 1

      "It seems more likely that IE7, included only in longhorn, will include new features (ActiveY?) that nothing else supports, making developers use them and cutting off Windows Longhorn regardless of browser choice."

      You're forgetting one very important thing-- People and companies aren't rushing to adopt new Microsoft versions. At work we still have PCs running Windows 95 and 98 as our dominant platform, and we still have Macintoshes running 7.6.1. We update when we have to, not just on a whim. It's expensive, it breaks existing things, and it forces the users to be uncomfortable while they learn something new.

      When I was fourteen and playing with Windows Chicago Beta I thought it was cool to upgrade the OS every few weeks. Now that I'm twenty-four and actually try to give myself some semblance of a life, I don't want to sit there reinstalling things anymore. I want them to just work. If my web browser can't view a page, I email the webmaster complaining about their page. I don't upgrade my OS, unless there is some overwhelmingly compelling reason to do so.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    14. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by bunratty · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Most users don't even know what a browser is, much less how to find, download, and install Firefox. Most users will think only "the Internet is broken on my computer", and notice that the Internet works fine on computers that have the new Windows. Microsoft needs only 5% of users to buy the new OS for this reason, and they make many millions of dollars in profit.

      Besides, many IE users refuse to switch to Firefox because many sites use proprietary extensions in IE, such as document.all. That means those sites work only in IE or perhaps Opera.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    15. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point and quite an interesting piece of speculation.

      Small typo correction: "IE7, included only in Longhorn, will include new features (ActiveY?) that nothing else supports, making developers use them and cutting off Windows 2000/XP regardless of browser choice" is what you meant, right? :)

      (And besides cutting off all browsers available on Windows 2000/XP, it would also cut off all browsers available on other operating systems -- at least until makers of other browsers again catch up supporting the new crud against their own will...]

      But maybe it's harder to do something like that nowadays. I mean, it's difficult to imagine what they can bring to the table that the already ubiquitous Flash and Java can't cover. Actually -- any ideas?

    16. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe this "ActiveY" would be something targeted for online advertising, ISPs willing to cap bandwidth, or DRM... Dunno. But something with big money involved is the first thing that popped into mind ;-)

      Or maybe they'll merge IE and Media Player completely, then separate the new monstrosity from the OS to avoid paying EU half a billion (because the accompanying all-new Windows Media formats make Joe L. User need the IE7-MP anyway).

    17. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by mingot · · Score: 2, Insightful



      No, but you DID miss the releases for Solaris and HPUX.

    18. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by jproudfo · · Score: 1

      There was a Solaris version, as well. I think maybe one for HP-UX.

      I used the Solaris version and it was really slow. Much slower than the equivalent Netscape version.

    19. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by omicronish · · Score: 2, Informative

      The fact that they spent three years integrating anything from "explorer.exe" to the kernel with IE?

      I see comments like these from time to time, but have yet to see any evidence of kernel integration of IE Microsoft claim that IE is an integral part of Windows appears to have a slightly different meaning than the interpretation of some people: to me it seems like it's integral in that builtin applications and UI use IE (but it could also purely be a legal-type claim that doesn't reflect coding realities). The new Help and Support Center is a web page, for example, and file system Explorer windows can seamlessly become IE windows. Although it isn't a builtin Windows application, Visual Studio.NET makes heavy use of IE, not only in the documentation reader but in stuff like project creation wizards (look carefully at those dialog box buttons; they're IE web page buttons).

      Without IE, some of the common UI that most people expect with Windows would not exist. It isn't impossible to build a Windows kernel without IE because it assuredly doesn't even exist in the kernel in the first place, but it'd be difficult to build the UI without IE.

      You might wonder why they use IE as UI. Answer: it's probably simpler than writing raw Win32 UI code, which is just plain ugly. This'll probably change with Longhorn and its extensive use for .NET; no more ugly Win32 UI coding.

    20. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Jhan · · Score: 1

      My current job is to go through a BIG bunch of HP/UX machines and determine what they do, if anything. On one of them I found a /opt/microsoft directory, under which was the subdirectories ie/ and oe/.

      Yes, that's right. Internet Explorer and Outlook Express for HP/UX.

      This was a very "far out" moment for me. I started experimenting and both programs worked very nicely indeed in a standard X environment.

      Then a bystander (one of the real admins) quietly remarked "You are are running IE... On our critical HP server... as root?!?!"

      ^C^C^C^C!!!!!

      --

      I choose to remain celibate, like my father and his father before him.

    21. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by nick125 · · Score: 0

      they may. they did it before and what is going to stop them from doing it again. They are just going to get the source for Firefox and change the title from "Mozilla Firefox" to "Microsoft Internet Explorer". dont forget the credits. Microsoft will also have those changed too. Here Comes Internet Explorer 7 (just as good as Mozilla Firefox because it is Firefox)

    22. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The new Help and Support Center is a web page, for example,

      A-ha, not quite. It's a hypertext document, but not a Web page. (Not in the WWW document network.) Nitpicking, I know :P

    23. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by omicronish · · Score: 1

      Yeah, nitpicking ;) An interesting aside: I actually thought the Add/Remove dialog in Windows XP used IE this entire time, but examination with Spy++ showed a class of "DirectUIHWND". If you've seen the VS.NET autorun UI (not the actual installer itself, which is some MSI thing), it uses a mini-HTML control that lacks public interfaces, so normal people can't use it. Hopefully the mini-HTML controls are more secure, and it'd be interesting if they later replaced the current IE HTML component with these.

    24. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      When I was fourteen and playing with Windows Chicago Beta I thought it was cool to upgrade the OS every few weeks. Now that I'm twenty-four and actually try to give myself some semblance of a life, I don't want to sit there reinstalling things anymore. I want them to just work. If my web browser can't view a page, I email the webmaster complaining about their page. I don't upgrade my OS, unless there is some overwhelmingly compelling reason to do so.

      Amen. We still use 9x on all but a few stations. And when I want to be "whiz banged" by the operating system, I install a new version of Linux on a spare box, NOT a new version of Windows. Since I can't mess with the innerds of Windows like Linux, its just not as much fun.

      One of the maddening things is new software that requires stupid amounts of resources to do basic tasks (Wtf does Peachtree need 1ghz+ for?!?) because of the eyecandy, and NOT the features. This forces us to throw away old boxes, buy new boxes, WIPE xp off and force an install of 98 on the box. (really, i *had* the only xp install, and just switched to SuSe). At least MS has decided to extend support for 98 (patches) for another 2 years. At least with 95/98 you don't have all the peer limitations, etc.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    25. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by epsalon · · Score: 1

      First, there are many IE-only websites which will become broken if IE switches to the Gecko rendering engine. Second, the IE-only sites are a good thing for M$. That way they keep their monopoly on IE and subsequently on Windows.

      IE is not a profit center in itself, but it is there to lock people into Windows. If you make IE standards-compatible, you have one less application lock people into Windows.

    26. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft have already said they're not going to bother implementing support for XHTML,CSS2/3 and other standards tey don't already support.

    27. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is unfortunantly reinforced by idiodic businesses such as SBC that use improper terminology such as "Just waiting for the internet to load".

    28. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I have a sneaking suspicion that it would be simple if not trivial for Microsoft to add ActiveX support to such a project. ActiveX is after all just another name for the same old tired component schemes with more crap tacked on. .NET is kind of exciting, ActiveX is a big yawn. Of course Microsoft will probably do their usual extension dance all over .NET's front lawn but at least this time they will have actually been responsible for planting that turf.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    29. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Trejkaz · · Score: 1

      ...since they can only have one version of IE per machine and IE is now tied to the OS so you have to use older versions of windows in order to check a website. FUN!

      So how is this different to now, where we need Linux (or Mac, I guess) to test Konqueror, and Windows to test Internet Explorer? If our web design house has already sprung for a copy of VMware to solve this problem, having to create yet another virtual machine doesn't phase me.

      What does phase me is the lameness of having to buy that Longhorn license at all. :-/

      --
      Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
    30. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Trejkaz · · Score: 1

      I mean, it's difficult to imagine what they can bring to the table that the already ubiquitous Flash and Java can't cover. Actually -- any ideas?

      Not really. I mean, between media player plugins and Java, you should be able to mix and match to build anything you need. VRML plugins were written in Java, when they were still in vogue. Presumably any other plugin could be too. And the best thing about the Java-based plugins is you don't have to rewrite them when the new version of Windows comes out, you just wait for Sun to update Java. :-)

      --
      Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
    31. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by Trejkaz · · Score: 1

      I hope this isn't true, particularly when it's been shown that a fucking script is enough to implement this sort of thing. :-/

      --
      Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
    32. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

      MS tried to do this, but apparently a few apps don't play nicely and call iexplore.exe directly instead of letting Windows take care of handling the URL. This is what "Set Program Defaults" was supposed to be about.

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
    33. Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Windows is full of those little idiosyncracies. For example the windows auto-update (or whatever it's called) wizard ignores the time settings on the local system, displaying 4:01 pm instead of 16:01 or whatever you might have it configured for. msnm calls iexplore directly, but that at least I am quite sure is deliberate.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  59. Notice the job saving ending.. by segfault_0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Notice at the end of the article he basically says that regardless of anything good about Firefox its really a better choice since it has such a small market share - which is what makes it secure. Basically he seems to be saying that Firefox is security through obscurity rather than good design practices which MS didnt completely adhere to. Nice political dodge for the author.

    --

    I was crazy back when being crazy really meant something. (Charles Manson)
  60. Question for Paul Boutin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not counting today, how long did you work for Slate?

  61. Still a CORPORATION by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft is still a corporation. That mean they are still alive for one motivation: money.
    Every actions they do is to fill this goal.
    If its look weird at first, it is probably meant for a long term view.

  62. IE only site features by Wild+Bill+TX · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Some interactive features designed exclusively for Internet Explorer won't appear, such as the pop-up menus on Slate's table of contents.

    I get this statement as an attempt to slightly discredit Firefox. The article conveniently fails to emphasize that this lack of interoperability is the site designer's fault, and instead presents the Internet Explorer exclusive feature in an innocent manner. Bleh, what can you expect from Microsoft?

  63. Is it simply a business issue for Microsoft? by awfar · · Score: 1

    MS gives IE away for free, but there are free alternatives like Firefox. If you want the "Real Thing", you must pay for it *and* its development. So many competing internal projects, one way to get attention/funding/support is to raise more outsider awareness and support, influencing the influencers to begin chanting "We want a new IE, better, faster and we are willing to pay for it".

    Dunno.

  64. Scepticism by IANAAC · · Score: 1
    Either this is just a fabrication, or you really don't know what you're doing.

    I don't like IE any more than anyone else around here - and I use Mozilla exclusively, but come on...
    A server-side error is a server-side error and no matter what browser you use, that won't change. What more likely happened was that during you're panic-time, the admins fixed whatever was causing the server-side error.

    1. Re:Scepticism by mborland · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Either this is just a fabrication, or you really don't know what you're doing.

      OK, sceptic [sic], hold the judgment...I agree that it probably wasn't really a server-side error, but the Acrobat Reader plugin to IE is a piece of crap.

      I've had to set up quite a number of sites that serve either static or streamed PDF content, and IE has problems with handling content in SSL in some inappropriate cases (Pragma/Cache headers cause IE to 'lose' a download file in SSL). The Reader plugin, like I said above, is a piece of crap and doesn't always render correctly, and can't always handle streamed content properly (probably related to IE's problems). The errors produced at this time are usually very misleading and often indicate a server problem (because Reader thinks it never got a file/stream).

      Making Reader launch the actual app rather than the plugin helps with rendering and stream content, but again will have problems if IE can't find the file it just downloaded.

      Mozilla/Firefox/Netscape do not have this particular problem, both because they don't use a plugin, but also because they present the app with a complete file (is that really so hard?).

    2. Re:Scepticism by IANAAC · · Score: 1
      Mozilla/Firefox/Netscape do not have this particular problem, both because they don't use a plugin...

      Actually, Mozilla most definitely does use a plugin. Type about:plugin or choose Help:About Plugins from the menu and you will see nppdf32.dll as the plugin under Windows and nppdf.so under Linux if you've installed the plugin. Agreed that with these plugins the file is presented as complete, though.

  65. Mozilla/Firefox Inconsistancies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When,

    M/F decides to become consistent in it's approach they will do a lot better.

    I cannot tell you the number of times I've been totally irritated to find that "the icons have changed again" with another point release. Or this or that menu no longer exists. Or the entire context of the Preferences window has been jumbled, again.

    Just try to write something that uses M/F in an automated fashion.

    Or try to write some documentation. It will not take long before that sentence where you say "a small red mailbox will appear to the lower right of your screen when you have recieved mail" is obsolete because it's now a white envelope icon. And because of that your documentation is trashed since you have no idea what else has been changed.

    And while we are at it what about the name changes. Mozilla, Phoenix, Firebird, and now Firefox. Doesn't anybody over at that project think 5 minutes ahead? Don't they realize they are just shooting themselves in the foot by not picking a name that doesn't either infringe on somebody's trademark or otherwise hard earned name. Wake up Mozilla.org people!

    And the worst is trying to support my mother who lives thousands of miles away. If you install version so and so dont count on being to call her and say go to preferences item located at a location because its not gonna be there after you have installed a later version for yourself. And you are going to be left scratching your head and fumbling around on the phone like an idiot trying to tell her how to turn on or off a feature since you cannot remember exactly where that feature is in her version.

    BTW businesses HATE the above things also

  66. Re:I don't think the article is *that* good for FF by eddy · · Score: 1

    Seems there's a little astroturfing campaign going on. See here for instance. Again with the plugins bashing.

    </tinfoil hat, and all that>

    --
    Belief is the currency of delusion.
  67. Missing the point a little... by XeRXeS-TCN · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well it's interesting to see that an MSN run website has slammed Internet Explorer, and spent some time extolling the virtues of Firefox, which is indeed surprising at first glance. But in many ways, there is one other important factor to consider.

    Even Microsoft *knows* that Internet Explorer is antiquated. They pulled developers off it years ago, and afaik have only recently started some work on it. It displays none of the features that all the modern competitive browsers have, and has FAR more security issues than possibly any other browser.

    But at the end of the day, they don't care. It doesn't provide them any revenue, so they don't really give a damn about what features you want. It comes free with every OS they distribute, and it doesn't have advertising panels or anything like that, so it doesn't really matter to them what browser you decide to use with their OS, you're still using their OS.

    And that's another thing to consider. Until they bother undertaking a vast overhaul of Internet Explorer (which they may not even do), they know that users will be vulnerable to all sorts of these problems that keep reoccuring. So in some ways it can be construed as a good idea for them to move you to other browsers, especially free ones like Mozilla where they do not provide another company with revenue. This will keep their users much safer, and at the end of the day, I think that's what this is about. Their users. You can use any browser you want on their OS, but again, you're still using Windows.

    Consider the two scenarios. You get extremely frustrated with all the viruses and bugs that Internet Explorer throws up, and you decide that you've had enough. What are your options?

    1. Install FireFox, or Opera, or any other browser on Windows, and thus be protected from most (all?) of the issues that tend to crop up on IE,
    2. Switch to Linux or a BSD variant, which are not affected by all these issues.

    With those choices in mind, which would you expect Microsoft to prefer? ;)

    1. Re:Missing the point a little... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Install FireFox, or Opera, or any other browser on Windows, and thus be protected from most (all?) of the issues that tend to crop up on IE,
      2. Switch to Linux or a BSD variant, which are not affected by all these issues.


      That second one isn't a separate option. If you switch to a different OS, you MUST install a different browser (possibly while you install the OS). Running IE on Linux or BSD isn't really an option. (oh, you probably *could*, but then you'd be partially vulnerable again)

    2. Re:Missing the point a little... by pe1chl · · Score: 1

      In fact, they know that they have built in vulnerabilities in their OS, their browser and their other applications from the time they implented all kinds of "active scripting" in them, and they do not seem to be bothered.
      All the blame is passed onto the user every time, and the whole discussion whether adding these features ever was a good idea is never taken on.
      They don't mind, as the features are considered cute and sell programs, and security has never sold anything.

    3. Re:Missing the point a little... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      ah, but Firefox works on Linux and OS X, and that's the crux of the biscuit. One less application keeping people tied to Windows.

      What Firefox needs more than anything is a massive marketing campaign -- I hope they get their act together for 1.0.

  68. Intersting Fact by Psymunn · · Score: 1

    My dad was contracting for microsoft a couple years back, writing software for their speaker installation or something along those lines. It turns out that, without fail, almost ever microsoft peripheral actually generates a loss. The entire hardware department was, more or less, held up on the basis of the microsoft mouse alone. Of course, it's generally in Microsofts best interest to produce everything, even if they don't stand to make money with it
    Incidently, the speakers tanked. Not bad at all (managed to scam a free set) but cost double what anything else on the market at the time did more or less based on the fact they where USB (this was just about the time USB was getting off the ground).

    --
    The Neo-Bohemian Techno-Socialist
  69. Inrelated news.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slashdot recommends microsoft windows over linux.....

  70. For me, Mozilla is getting there... by Roguelazer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I was looking at my website's logs today. Here's what I found for June:

    MSIE: 52.0%
    Mozilla: 27.4%

    Now for this month, July: MSIE: 48.1%
    Mozilla: 32.9%


    Yes, it's only the first five days of July. But still, it looks like a pattern to me. (btw: OS stats are 68% Windows, 18.5% Linux)

    1. Re:For me, Mozilla is getting there... by Rudisaurus · · Score: 1
      I was looking at my website's logs today. Here's what I found for June:

      MSIE: 52.0% Mozilla: 27.4%

      Now for this month, July: MSIE: 48.1% Mozilla: 32.9%

      Yes, it's only the first five days of July. But still, it looks like a pattern to me.
      Wow, you're right! Mozilla users browse earlier in the month than IE users do!!!
      --
      licet differant, aequabitur
    2. Re:For me, Mozilla is getting there... by sewagemaster · · Score: 1

      now with that post on slashdot, your mozilla numbers are going to rise up even more ;)

  71. Same old party line. by twitter · · Score: 5, Insightful
    For all Microsoft's sleazy business practices, this article is evidence that they are exercising great integrity when it comes to publishing Slate. That article completely (and justifiably) ripped Internet Explorder a new one.

    I'm not as impressed as you are. Paul Boutin is still dismissive, insulting and pulling the party line. He gives the wrong reasons for using Firebird and stops short of placing blame where it belongs. It's not just the browser, it's the OS that's got problems.

    Here's a flamebait quote:

    You've probably been told to dump Internet Explorer for a Mozilla browser before, by the same propeller-head geek who wants you to delete Windows from your hard drive and install Linux. You've ignored him, and good for you.

    Paul does not go on to tell us why anyone who did not dump Windows after Melissa should be happy. Instead he gives us the now usual FUD equating M$ and Linux security and the M$'s lame excuse for poor security:

    Even Mozilla's spokespeople stress that no software can be guaranteed to be safe, and that Firefox's XPInstall system could conceivably be tricked into installing a keystroke logger instead of Sun's Java engine. But for now, there's safety in numbersâ"the lack of them, that is. Internet Explorer is used by 95 percent of the world. Firefox's fan base adds up to 2 or 3 percent at most. Which browser do you think the Russian hackers are busily trying to break into again?

    Sorry Paul, this normal user is very happy to have dumped Windoze 98 in favor of Red Hat and Debian years ago. I've had perfectly usable browsers, email clients, digital music, and everything else I've ever wanted with far less hastle and trouble than my Windoze suffering peers and relatives. The browser is just the tip of the iceburg. I've enjoyed stable systems that stay up longer than my utility company's electricity, and a plethora of superior programs and features without having to drive to a store and periodically "rebuild" my computers. Learning Linux has been easy, fun and never required me to wear a propeller on my head.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Same old party line. by tc · · Score: 4, Funny
      Sorry Paul, this normal user is very happy to have dumped Windoze 98 in favor of Red Hat and Debian years ago.

      You not only read, but actually post on Slashdot. And you think you are a "normal user"? I suspect you need to recalibrate your idea of normalcy.

    2. Re:Same old party line. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Moderators: Please note that "twitter" is a known fanatical sycophant whose obnoxious offtopic rants are legend here on Slashdot. It doesn't matter what the topic is, he'll find a way to scrape in some pointless Microsoft bashing. While nobody expects us to love Microsoft in any way, his particularly tepid style of calling anyone he replies to "troll" or "liar" or "fanboy" because he happens to disagree with whatever they're saying is well documented and should not be rewarded. If anything, twitter is the type of person that should not be part of the open source/free software community. He is an anathema to all that is good about free software.

      I'm posting this so that you (the moderator) have some context to consider twitter and not mod him up whenever he posts his filler preformatted rants about installing Knoppix or Mepis or whatever that unfortunately get him karma every single time and allow him to continue posting his trademark toxic crap (read on) day in and day out. You may consider this a troll - I consider it community service. And I ain't kidding.

      If you're a /. subscriber, I invite you to look through some of his posting history. I guarantee that you'll be hard pressed to find someone that is more "out there" than twitter. You'll also probably notice he's got quite an AC following. Don't just read his posts, make sure you go through the replies.

      To get an idea of what I'm talking about, check this post out. This is an article about email disclaimers. The parent of the post is complaining about the ads in the linked page and so on, and twitter actually goes off on a rant to blame it on Microsoft and recommend Lynx, because "is teh free".

      Here's another. In this post twitter not only calls the OP a troll but attempts to "tell it like it is" while making some vague argument about "GNU". Yes, if you're confused, you're not alone. The reply (modded +4) proceeds to simply destroy his bogus argument. You will notice he did not reply. This is what some people call "drive-by advocacy". A sort of I'll just leave you with my thoughts here and move on to the next flamebait kind of deal. In fact, he almost never replies because he knows that his fanatical arguments simply do not hold up to any sort of discussion. It's not that he's chosen the wrong cause - he's just going at it in a completely wrong way.

      Here's that drive-by advocacy and FUD in motion: twitter goes on about some topic and then drops the usual "oh and M$ is teh evil" because "WMP phones home" or some such. Called on his FUD, he then claims that WMP stores every song and movie you've ever played in a file, somewhere. Pressed further, he just sort of slithers out of sight, his FUD-spreading complete. This is not about some Microsoft technology that nobody likes anyway; it's about lying for the sake of lying. Way too many of his posts are exactly like this one.

      More? Just read though this post and the subsequent replies. I guess this stands on its own. Or these two. Or this one. Or this one.

      Still not convinced? This is what twitter considers "humour" while going about his daily "M$" routine.

      M

    3. Re:Same old party line. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's so wrong about wearing a propeller on your head? Though I did cover up the beach-ball color pattern in favor of the furturistic sci-fi look that tinfoil provides. What color is your propeller? Mine is red.

    4. Re:Same old party line. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Paul Boutin is still dismissive, insulting and pulling the party line.

      How does that make him any different than you? You are dismissive, insulting, dishonest and deceitful. You lie for the sake of lying. You're the worst kind of astroturfing faboy there is here in Slashdot, and that's saying a lot.

      The train has left, twitter. It's long gone. People like you are passe. The normal, honest folks who love free software are in it, and you are stuck back in the station with the rest of the freaks. You lose.

      Be seein' you.

  72. They forgot... by chill · · Score: 1

    ...image blocking and adblock. Then you can get around all them nifty ads on Slate and MSN!

    chill

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  73. Need to know by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

    "What You Should Know About Download.Ject"
    (http://www.microsoft.com/security /incident/downlo ad_ject.mspx)

    Nice. Security on a need to know basis... ;)

    --
    Privacy is terrorism.
  74. Spyware ... by MisanthropicProgram · · Score: 1

    When someone complains to me about spyware, I first tell them about Ad-aware and then I tell them to install Firefox. I also explain to them, that since I installed Firefox, I haven't had a problem with adware. This gets all the time.

  75. Check out the Netscape trial. by khasim · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Microsoft didn't care about browsers until Netscape and Java. Then they saw that the future might be a commodity OS running a browser as the interface to the apps (running on a server).

    If Microsoft doesn't control the browser, it doesn't control that interface. Windows becomes very easy to replace.

    And there goes Microsoft's monopoly.

    1. Re:Check out the Netscape trial. by terrab0t · · Score: 1

      That's interesting, but in practical terms one of the only web app I've used that actually runs as fast and conveniently as a local piece of software is GMail's web interface. I have actually stopped loading up Thunderbird in favour of keeping GMail open in one of my tabs. I'm sure there are others, but things like a mail app are the most important because they get the most use. For example, I use my bank's online site all the time, but the interface is the usual click-and-wait for everything. There's no other way to access that functionality (like a local banking app), but it still makes me wish for something better. I would even consider switching banks if one of them actually made a faster web app for me. My point is: how important is the web interface when it still comes off as a clunky version of a local app? Will we start to use web apps for everything from spreadsheets, to instant messaging? If so, I'm extatic that an open browser like Firefox could be leading the way and pushing sensible standards, but otherwise Linux is still our real hope for an open undictated world of software.

  76. WIndows XP - SP2 delayed..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft has decide that the final release of the security oriented Windows XP - Service Pack 2 will permanently disable IE and include a copy of Firefox...

  77. Why it's gotten this far. by twitter · · Score: 1
    I wonder why Microsoft has let it come this far.

    Too much trust in Paladium? Microsoft has placed far too much stock in it's monopoly position. With auto-updating able to break Mozilla and every other competitor on their platform, they have not taken competition seriously. Any program can be made to perform worse than the M$ equivalent. As all of this "signed" code is equated with "security", M$'s ability to keep competition off their platform will increase. When they put it into the BIOS they think they will be able to keep everyone else away forever. A year ago, they thought they had things so wrapped up they could shove down licensing plans that made the old mainframes look cheap.

    It's not happening the way they wanted it. Corporate users balked at the new licensing. Hardware makers don't like the idea of hardware being "free" as in cost and fail to share M$'s vision. Microsoft's users are going to keep jumping ship because Microsoft did not put their resources where they should have. All of their anti-competitive activities have been a huge waste of resources and their products are showing it off. Their competitors have continued to improve and now have obviously superior products that people want. It's all over for them.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Why it's gotten this far. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Moderators: Please note that "twitter" is a known fanatical sycophant whose obnoxious offtopic rants are legend here on Slashdot. It doesn't matter what the topic is, he'll find a way to scrape in some pointless Microsoft bashing. While nobody expects us to love Microsoft in any way, his particularly tepid style of calling anyone he replies to "troll" or "liar" or "fanboy" because he happens to disagree with whatever they're saying is well documented and should not be rewarded. If anything, twitter is the type of person that should not be part of the open source/free software community. He is an anathema to all that is good about free software.

      I'm posting this so that you (the moderator) have some context to consider twitter and not mod him up whenever he posts his filler preformatted rants about installing Knoppix or Mepis or whatever that unfortunately get him karma every single time and allow him to continue posting his trademark toxic crap (read on) day in and day out. You may consider this a troll - I consider it community service. And I ain't kidding.

      If you're a /. subscriber, I invite you to look through some of his posting history. I guarantee that you'll be hard pressed to find someone that is more "out there" than twitter. You'll also probably notice he's got quite an AC following. Don't just read his posts, make sure you go through the replies.

      To get an idea of what I'm talking about, check this post out. This is an article about email disclaimers. The parent of the post is complaining about the ads in the linked page and so on, and twitter actually goes off on a rant to blame it on Microsoft and recommend Lynx, because "is teh free".

      Here's another. In this post twitter not only calls the OP a troll but attempts to "tell it like it is" while making some vague argument about "GNU". Yes, if you're confused, you're not alone. The reply (modded +4) proceeds to simply destroy his bogus argument. You will notice he did not reply. This is what some people call "drive-by advocacy". A sort of I'll just leave you with my thoughts here and move on to the next flamebait kind of deal. In fact, he almost never replies because he knows that his fanatical arguments simply do not hold up to any sort of discussion. It's not that he's chosen the wrong cause - he's just going at it in a completely wrong way.

      Here's that drive-by advocacy and FUD in motion: twitter goes on about some topic and then drops the usual "oh and M$ is teh evil" because "WMP phones home" or some such. Called on his FUD, he then claims that WMP stores every song and movie you've ever played in a file, somewhere. Pressed further, he just sort of slithers out of sight, his FUD-spreading complete. This is not about some Microsoft technology that nobody likes anyway; it's about lying for the sake of lying. Way too many of his posts are exactly like this one.

      More? Just read though this post and the subsequent replies. I guess this stands on its own. Or these two. Or this one. Or this one.

      Still not convinced? This is what twitter considers "humour" while going about his daily "M$" routine.

      M

  78. Mod up parent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Marked as "Funny", but should have been "Insightful". There might lay quite a bit truth behind the words. Microsoft skips updating IE, just to lower the number of people using it, and thereby "no longer having a monopoly."

    1. Re:Mod up parent by slavetrade55 · · Score: 1

      So, the scenario is like this?

      MS board room: "I have a great idea: let's let our market share slip down to 50% by letting our products stagnate! Then people won't be able to say we're a monopoly any more (since we won't be)! What great business geniuses we are!" /. guys: Psha, just because half of all people don't use IE doesn't mean that it's still not a monopoly! Those trickerous fiends! They've pulled the wool over the public's eyes yet again!

      I think it's far more plausible that MS is just utterly lazy.

  79. MS dropping IE? by JonnyCalcutta · · Score: 1
    Is is not possible that IE would want to drop IE completely? Given that MS failed to take over the Internet even with 95% penetration of their own browser on their own OS, and that the browser is now really a commodity (and going even further, that MS want to move on from the, for want of a better word, 'html' standards), perhaps they are building up to simply dropping support and development of IE completely - let Opera and Mozilla and anyone else fight it out and in the process get rid of one of the major holes in Windows _and_ one of the major factors in any anti-trust grumblings.

    I mean look at it this way - IE gains them nothing but trouble these days. It did its work but really bought them nothing - no server monopolies, no MSN domination, no 'Windows for Toasters' and all the other things we knew Bill was plotting when he evetually realised the Internet wasn't some fad. From one perspective its now just money down the drain, but with anti-trust and security problems thrown on top.

  80. FireFox extensions for IE. by khasim · · Score: 1

    http://update.mozilla.org/extensions/?application= firefox

    Look for "IE View" (yep, still in beta).

    "Adds "View page in Internet Explorer" links to the content and link context menu. Handy for previewing pages in IE, loading up IE-only pages when you run across them in Mozilla, etc."

    So you can still run everything in FireFox and then open IE from FireFox for those sites that require it.

    1. Re:FireFox extensions for IE. by DA-MAN · · Score: 1

      I wonder if there is a way to use this with Crossover Office on Linux.

      --
      Can I get an eye poke?
      Dog House Forum
  81. Nice flame. by twitter · · Score: 1
    You not only read, but actually post on Slashdot. And you think you are a "normal user"? I suspect you need to recalibrate your idea of normalcy.

    Sorry bud, I set things up for other people too. My wife is very happy with Debian and has been for years. Last week I set up my next door neighbor with Mepis. She's an Interior design professor at LSU, and is also happy to leave the world of Windoze behind.

    The flood of user conversions is on.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Nice flame. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Moderators: Please note that "twitter" is a known fanatical sycophant whose obnoxious offtopic rants are legend here on Slashdot. It doesn't matter what the topic is, he'll find a way to scrape in some pointless Microsoft bashing. While nobody expects us to love Microsoft in any way, his particularly tepid style of calling anyone he replies to "troll" or "liar" or "fanboy" because he happens to disagree with whatever they're saying is well documented and should not be rewarded. If anything, twitter is the type of person that should not be part of the open source/free software community. He is an anathema to all that is good about free software.

      I'm posting this so that you (the moderator) have some context to consider twitter and not mod him up whenever he posts his filler preformatted rants about installing Knoppix or Mepis or whatever that unfortunately get him karma every single time and allow him to continue posting his trademark toxic crap (read on) day in and day out. You may consider this a troll - I consider it community service. And I ain't kidding.

      If you're a /. subscriber, I invite you to look through some of his posting history. I guarantee that you'll be hard pressed to find someone that is more "out there" than twitter. You'll also probably notice he's got quite an AC following. Don't just read his posts, make sure you go through the replies.

      To get an idea of what I'm talking about, check this post out. This is an article about email disclaimers. The parent of the post is complaining about the ads in the linked page and so on, and twitter actually goes off on a rant to blame it on Microsoft and recommend Lynx, because "is teh free".

      Here's another. In this post twitter not only calls the OP a troll but attempts to "tell it like it is" while making some vague argument about "GNU". Yes, if you're confused, you're not alone. The reply (modded +4) proceeds to simply destroy his bogus argument. You will notice he did not reply. This is what some people call "drive-by advocacy". A sort of I'll just leave you with my thoughts here and move on to the next flamebait kind of deal. In fact, he almost never replies because he knows that his fanatical arguments simply do not hold up to any sort of discussion. It's not that he's chosen the wrong cause - he's just going at it in a completely wrong way.

      Here's that drive-by advocacy and FUD in motion: twitter goes on about some topic and then drops the usual "oh and M$ is teh evil" because "WMP phones home" or some such. Called on his FUD, he then claims that WMP stores every song and movie you've ever played in a file, somewhere. Pressed further, he just sort of slithers out of sight, his FUD-spreading complete. This is not about some Microsoft technology that nobody likes anyway; it's about lying for the sake of lying. Way too many of his posts are exactly like this one.

      More? Just read though this post and the subsequent replies. I guess this stands on its own. Or these two. Or this one. Or this one.

      Still not convinced? This is what twitter considers "humour" while going about his daily "M$" routine.

      M

    2. Re:Nice flame. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      My wife is very happy with Debian and has been for years

      I seem to remember you've often lamented the fact that your wife needs to run "Windoze" for something or other. You use that as a starting point for many of your "let me tell you why M$ is teh sux" diatribes, going on and on how you are physically incapable of securing the box from all sorts of "Winblows nasties" while you wax poetic about how your box-o-teh-line 450MHz Celeron just "hums" along with Debian or whatever, never needing a patch and never crashing.

      Soooo... which is it, twit?

  82. I don't think BillG minds too much by WebCowboy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's not like his eZine was dissing Windows XP or MS Office. The article still derides Free Software advocates by calling them "propeller headed geeks" and so on, and does suggest Firefox is somewhat less capable than IE because the fancy menus on Slate do not work (even though there are definitely platform-agnostic methods to achieve the exact same effect). Despite that, the article is very favourable to Mozilla's stable of products which is nice.

    Anyways I don't think anyone will lose their jobs over this:

    * IE doesn't make MS any money--it has been bundled into Windows XP so there is no lost revenue (at least for the short and medium term) if users switch en masse to another browser.

    * MS has integrated IE into Windows so tightly that you cannot avoid it. You need IE to run Windows update, and a lot of software uses IE DLLs to function (even a lot of third party Windows-based software). Using Firefox to browse web pages doesn't completely obsolete IE

    * Microsoft is doing enough on its own to obsolete IE--in fact they seem to encourage anything that will obsolete it. IE development has basically been abandoned since Windows XP was released (and even before 2002 there was little improvement). The Slate article just helps things along a bit.

    * Anything that makes a Microsoft property look like it isn't part of a big machine bent on world domination is welcome--especially if it doesn't have a meaningful impact on the bottome line.

    So that leaves one thought: Why does MS seem to be abandoning IE?

    I think it has already been touched on by some here. Web browsing and other internet-related tasks are being integrated even further into future versions of Windows. Longhorn is supposed to be re-worked top to bottom to incorporate XML-based protocols, better support distributed computing technology (web services and so on). What is your machine and what is the internet is supposed to become almost seamless.

    In achieving that goal IE has to disappear in BillG's eyes. Not only that, (X)HTML has to recede into the background as well--it is a document markup language at its roots and is poorly suited to development of highly interactive applications. Never mind that there are vendor-neutral/open standards emerging (XForms, XUL, SVG, etc)--they are not yet as established as HTML. MS sees this as a new opportunity to use Longhorn to establish an MS-controlled platform again using XAML and Avalon.

    I think that BillG himself actually despises IE. The design is antiquated and insecure at its heart. The code probably gets more and more unmanageable with time judging by how often one patch sometimes creates other bugs. First and formost, however, by throwing resources as IE microsoft would prolong what it sees as "yesterday's Internet". Ideally, Longhorn would be released without any visible indication of a separate browser and enough HTML support to make existing sites function. As Longhorn grows in market share, MS hopes that sites start incorporating MS-specific protocols like XAML to transform websites into really interactive, whiz-bang internet applications that break completely in IE or Mozilla or any other mere browser on a competing or obsolete platform.

    No, there will be no firings at Slate over this editorial stance. Far from it--it is probably quite compatible with the Chief Architect's long-term vision.

    1. Re:I don't think BillG minds too much by airjrdn · · Score: 2

      Just curious, why don't those menus work in Firefox?

    2. Re:I don't think BillG minds too much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny how an open source affecionado seems to know so much about MS's plans. I would say either sombody is pulling stuff out of their ass, or they are on the wrong end of the stick.

    3. Re:I don't think BillG minds too much by gludington · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Just curious, why don't those menus work in Firefox?

      Because, as the article indicated, the menus are "interactive features designed exclusively for Internet Explorer." The lack of support in other browsers is intentional, or at least an artifact of how their base authoring tools detect browser capabilities.

      They are sending different versions of the page depending on which browser is detected. The version sent to Firefox does not have these features. If you spoof the user-agent using a user agent switching extension to tell Firefox to pretend that it is IE, it appears that they are using IE-specific extensions of the DOM, rather than W3C standard methods and objects. If standard DOM elements were used instead, Firefox would be perfectly capable of displaying the same effects. In fact, one of the points of authoring to standards is to cut costs by making browser sniffing and other such methods unnecessary.

      (Both as a security measure and for its cross-platform goals, base Firefox does not support ActiveX, however, so the javascript functions -- not part of those menus -- that write out ActiveX controls would still not be supported in Firefox.)

    4. Re:I don't think BillG minds too much by airjrdn · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the explanation.

    5. Re:I don't think BillG minds too much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...and a lot of software uses IE DLLs to function (even a lot of third party Windows-based software)..."

      You should emphasize, "especially a lot of third party Windows-based software"!!!

      It is not reassuring to know that Intuit's tax software uses IE dll's to access the net and do online updates to your tax programs (at least QuickTax in Canada does).

    6. Re:I don't think BillG minds too much by mt-biker · · Score: 1

      and does suggest Firefox is somewhat less capable than IE because the fancy menus on Slate do not work...

      Slate has fancy menus?

      Damn, gotta get me some of that MSIE.

  83. IE = Opera by DecadeSol · · Score: 1

    When Microsoft wanted to make a browser, they made a partnership with Opera. They then proceeded to take the source, change the interface, and rename it to Microsoft Internet Explorer.

    Internet Explorer is just Opera

    1. Re:IE = Opera by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correction: IE = Spyglass Mosaic

  84. If you think... by Rie+Beam · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem is, Internet Explorer is a freely-available application, and Windows is not. Microsoft isn't stupid - they really have nothing to lose by letting this little upstart get some breathing room - it'll make their massive changes in Longhorn seem more "revolutionary" for those who have been away for awhile, such as "basic features which IE should have had 7 years ago" and "latest extension which prevents a horrible security risk". You know, fun stuff.

    1. Re:If you think... by 40000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The people who read articles about "Browser Wars" are probably using Linux or a Mac anyway so what difference does it make to MS?

  85. Also on page 3 of today's Independent by dizzyduck · · Score: 1

    There's also a full page spread about CERT's advice on page 3 of today's Independent, which can also be read online.

    --
    Allergy advice: Contains eggs.
  86. Windows Update by pjt33 · · Score: 1

    MS can't drop ActiveX without redoing Windows Update - IIRC the article even points this out. It would be a pretty chunky service pack to totally replace the current update system, and they'd probably have to wait until the service pack after that one to remove ActiveX support in case the update-changing SP is broken.

  87. equivalent to firefox for page design by shendure · · Score: 1

    I just installed Firefox and love it- am wondering if there is an equivalently well-designed freeware for designing web-pages so I don't have to keep using MS Frontpage. Any help? --j

    1. Re:equivalent to firefox for page design by SiegeTank · · Score: 1

      You could always download the full version of Mozilla and give Composer a try ;-)

      http://www.mozilla.org/releases

  88. The Reasons by Kwil · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A bunch of other slashdot folk have pointed out bits and pieces of this puzzle, but let's see what happens when we put it all together:

    1. The new standards, XML, etc, are going to be controlled as much outside the browser, by the productivity suite, as they will be within it. The standards for basic browsers have more or less solidified at this point. There's no more control to be taken here.

    2. The browser market has been driven into the ground. There's no money to be made here anymore, as decent free alternatives are available, and the market has gotten used to not paying for their browser. There won't be another Netscape threat.

    3. The whole "browser as your desktop" idea has faded away. MS is no longer in danger of losing its OS or productivity-suite sales to a browser company.

    Put all of this together and you've got the reason why MS doesn't really give a crap if people use IE or not anymore. But why go the extra step of taking it down?

    1. Even in its recommendation, the article is a backhanded compliment at best. Very much in the league of "If you have to switch, this one will work." Which leads to a setup for the future version of IE.. "All the features of Firefox, plus..." which of course will only be able to run properly on the new Longhorn system.

    2. IE's security problems have really started to hit the mainstream. The article isn't telling folks anything that wasn't known already, but lets MSN Slate look like a wonderfully independant publication while doing so.

    Most importantly:

    3. IE doesn't make them money anyway. At this point, the various holes are costing them more than IE provides them both in actual dollars in support and programmer hours that have to be devoted to containing the mess, and in PR.

    So it's really to Microsoft's interest at this point to get people *off* of IE, especially to something simple that they'll be able to easily port settings from for the new version. The only thing that might keep them there is stubborn pride. If cooler heads have prevailed in the boardroom, expect to see more on these lines from Microsoft sources.

    --

    That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    1. Re:The Reasons by e6003 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I'm not sure I agree entirely with your points.

      1. The new standards, XML, etc, are going to be controlled as much outside the browser, by the productivity suite, as they will be within it. The standards for basic browsers have more or less solidified at this point. There's no more control to be taken here.

      I think this sort of control was always very much the "consolation prize" for MSFT. (One of) the original point(s) of bundling IE in with Windows was probably to try and force people, via "embrace and extend", over to using Windows NT servers and IIS to serve content. Unfortunately this was the first example of them underestimating The Power of Open Source(TM) as Apache emerged at round about the same time, and could scale far better than NT4/IIS could, on proprietary Unices before the true rise of Linux.

      2. The browser market has been driven into the ground. There's no money to be made here anymore, as decent free alternatives are available, and the market has gotten used to not paying for their browser. There won't be another Netscape threat.

      If you're implying that MS perceived Netscape as a threat in a revenue sense, then I think you're a bit off base. Remember, the anti-trust trial witnesses explained at great length about the "applications barrier to entry" (namely, the positive feedback circle that Windows is popular because it has loads of applications written for it, which in turn feeds its popularity so more applications are written for it). Netscape, and especially Java (remember the still-born WordPerfect for Java?) threatened to undermine that barrier if the browser could become the platform for applications. With Mozilla and technologies like XUL, this threat is more alive than ever.

      3. The whole "browser as your desktop" idea has faded away. MS is no longer in danger of losing its OS or productivity-suite sales to a browser company.

      Possibly, but even KDE and GNOME perpetuate the "tradition" of using the same application for browsing the local file system and the web. I kind of agree about the threat to MSFT's OS business not coming from a browser company, but I think that's partly an artefact of history - MSFT's continued anti-competitive behaviour made it pretty clear that ANY serious threat to them would have to come from a decentralised organisation (e.g. FOSS) simply because MSFT would crush, by fair means or foul, any other company that tried to compete with them.

      3. IE doesn't make them money anyway. At this point, the various holes are costing them more than IE provides them both in actual dollars in support and programmer hours that have to be devoted to containing the mess, and in PR.

      Did IE EVER make them any money? OK, we never knew what the cost of Win95b and Win98 would have been if MSFT had been forced to unbundle IE, but it didn't directly make them money IMO. I think your last sentence is closer to the truth than you realise - MSFT has limited programming resources and I read a statistic (can't remember the source alas) that 80% of the Longhorn developers have had to be pulled off Longhorn work, to patch 2000/XP/2003 (and by implication, IE since the codebases are so inter-twined). It's worth reviewing ESR's discussion of Moore's Law as part of Halloween IX - basically, the easily-overlooked consequence of computer power roughly doubling every 18 months is that the software to make use of that power must also double in complexity concurrently with this. IMO, MSFT is becoming a classic victim of this, just as [old and new] SCO did. Of course, MSFT has far more programming resources than SCO does/did, but it will only buy them time and the continued delays and feature shedding of Longhorn are precisely the sort of symptoms to look for.

    2. Re:The Reasons by dcam · · Score: 1

      So what were the browser wars (round 1) about? Why did Microsoft expend so much effort in fighting Netscape? Why does Microsoft bother with Media Player? Why are they fighting the EU over that one? The issues are as relevant as they are now.

      3. The whole "browser as your desktop" idea has faded away. MS is no longer in danger of losing its OS or productivity-suite sales to a browser company.

      Sure, but the truth lies in the middle somewhere. The browser can provide a platform for development and we may see more and more apps being developed for the browser.

      --
      meh
  89. Not Suprised by Jozer99 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why the big deal? Just because a publication is owned by a company does not mean that it has to be a propaganda peddler. The New York Times and Slashdot are/were owned by media companies. Did they become solely dedicated to shoving that company down people's throats? No. Does Microsoft's ownership of MSN change anything?

  90. PHBs by gumpish · · Score: 0

    Probably the feature of FOSS that makes it more secure is that it removes all PHBs(Pointy haired bosses for those who aren't dilbert fans)

    Uhm, the phrase "pointy haired bosses" doesn't have any meaning whatsoever outside the context of Dilbert. Simply stating what the acronym stands for helps no one.

    1. Re:PHBs by Guiannos · · Score: 1

      ...because NO ONE on /. ever resorts to inside jokes or comments, especially not from pop culture that appeals specifically to a geek cult base...

      --
      "People should get beat up for stating their beliefs."
    2. Re:PHBs by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Uhm, the phrase "pointy haired bosses" doesn't have any meaning whatsoever outside the context of Dilbert.

      Obviously, you've never worked for a big company.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    3. Re:PHBs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So...

      What's your handicap?

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

      I used to work for a *very* small company, my only boss being the owner of the business, and he had the pointiest hair I've ever had the misfortune to experience.
      They're everywhere, and their numbers are increasing. All I can suggest is a cull.

    5. Re:PHBs by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      The last company I worked for was not run by PHB's, because PHB's don't realize they are stupid. These people were deliberately stupid. When my supervisor complained that my use of Hungarian notation was confusing and meaningless to her, I pointed out that the first Windows book you open up will... at which point the project engineer raised his hand to interrupt and said, simply "We don't read books here."

      Needless to say, it was a government contractor for the U.S. military.

      Now I work for a very small company too. My boss is the owner of the business, and he's a really sharp guy who appreciates me and my talents, and I him. Assuming the business doesn't fail (always a risk with startups), I believe it will be a very fruitful relationship. It made the contrast even more stark with my last job and drove home to me how miserable I was there. Sad to say, I've only ever been happy when I've worked primarily by myself.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    6. Re:PHBs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or in a circus...

    7. Re:PHBs by Dwonis · · Score: 2, Insightful
      When my supervisor complained that my use of Hungarian notation was confusing and meaningless

      Hungarian notation *is* confusing and meaningless. Here's why:

      The purpose of Hungarian notation to to prefix the type of a variable to the name of the variable. That way, you don't have to look up the type of the variable any time you see code that references it.

      However, the type information used in the Hungarian notation prefix is usually incomplete; Much of the following information about the variable is not included:

      • scope
      • array bounds (and how they are determined, and whether the array can safely be extended by something like mrealloc())
      • quoting/encoding (possibly even different nesting levels, like data inside an SQL statement inside HTML code, for example)
      • data source (keyboard or network?)
      • whether the data is sensitive (passwords, encryption keys, etc)
      • locking mechanism, and when/if it must be used
      • references, and how/whether to acquire and release them
      • (on Windows) whether the variable will be propagate to child processes

      In other words, Hungarian notation encourages programmers to think they know the type of a variable (including all the above attributes), without actually knowing the type of the variable.

      And then there's the maintenance cost associated with changing the type of a variable.

      In fact, the only good reason to use Hungarian notation that I can think of is that it's a widely-used convention among Windows developers.

    8. Re:PHBs by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So you're saying some information is worse than none? How ridiculous. I seen many examples of bugs and problems that could have been avoided by simply prefixing "p" in front of a variable name that's a pointer. Much of the information you describe is described by the name of the variable. Beyond that you have to read the code a little bit. Consistent use of variable names and a decently-designed class library (or at least something less cryptic than STL, which sacrifices everything that makes C++ good for performance) will solve the other problems. If your class library is appropriately designed, you will be forced to treat your data in the way it needs to be treated. Quoting and encoding will be properly handled. Data source should be irrelevant because all data would be treated the same, and automatically translated as appropriate. Allocation, locking and other issues will be handled simply and consistently by a well-designed class (often the constuctor and destructor can be used to handle these things transparently). You can't blame Hungarian notation for a lack of proper encapsulation and data abstraction. If you are going to code like that, go back to Fortran.

      And the "maintenance cost" you speak of? If the change is a fundamental type change (say a pointer to a reference, rather than an int to a long), then you'd better check all those instances of a variable because you're liable to have problems (even if it compiles).

      Hungarian notation won't make a stupid coder smart, but it will certainly help a smart coder avoid mistakes. I'm a smart coder; I can't speak for the rest of the world.

      Hungarian notation or at least some subset of it, is a lingua franca that exists primarily in Windows programming due to an attempt to move away from IOCCC candidate coding with one character variable names or inscrutable naming conventions and abbreviations. The other step is consistency in the API's and libraries, something Windows fails at miserably, and MFC is only somewhat better. The code is would have written for these clowns would have required a minute fraction of the development and maintenance that their archaic "design" required, and yet they were proud of their ignorance. Oh well, it's no spin off the government's teeth, because they can just piss more millions as needed. I'll stick to private concerns where getting work done efficiently actually matters.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    9. Re:PHBs by Dwonis · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      So you're saying some information is worse than none? How ridiculous. I seen many examples of bugs and problems that could have been avoided by simply prefixing "p" in front of a variable name that's a pointer.

      I *am* saying that some information is worse than none, because having *no* information encourages a programmer to look up *all* the information. Having only some information does not have this effect. Having *some* information is worse than *all* of it, and you get *all* the information from the documentation/comments, which you should be checking anyway. The bugs you refer to might well have been avoided by prefixing "p" in front of the variable name as you say, but they might also have turned into more subtle bugs, if the programmer made *other* type-specific mistakes.

      As a programmer, if you don't know everything you need to know about a variable, you should be checking the documentation/comments. You should not be relying on variable prefixes to give you this information, since the information you get from variable prefixes is incomplete.

      I'm aware that Hungarian notation is helpful in certain cases, but not using Hungarian notation has the benefit of requiring the programmer to know the variables, or else look them up again. Thus, I contend that not using Hungarian notation reduces mistakes that would otherwise make it into the finished program, although it may increase frustration and development time somewhat.

    10. Re:PHBs by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Then I guess we must agree to disagree.

      By the way, I just noticed half of a paragraph in my last post I meant to take out entirely. I was talking about a place I used to work out developing C++ in a style that would have looked archaic 15 years ago. It was a nightmare.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
  91. Reverse Psychology... by MoeMoe · · Score: 2, Funny

    I have to give Microsoft credit on this move... They know that no smart person listens to what they say so they advertise Firefox in order to push people away from it and move back to what they "don't" recommend... IE

    It's like when your mom decides she likes rap too and you have to burn every 50 Cent CD in your collection because of it...

    --
    Business \Busi"ness\, n.;
    A scam in which all people involved perceive as beneficial...
  92. Poor guy... by Snaller · · Score: 1

    ...now he has to find a new job!

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  93. All a matter of standards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OpenSSL doesn't support some standard methods of authentication for certificates. I'm not sure how much coincidence is involved in the use of said standards on the Windows Update site, but the issue is one of lack of standards support in Mozilla.

  94. Who Will Even Find This Article by ExileOnHoth · · Score: 1

    The average consumer won't go looking for that article, and they know it.

    Correct. Skip the direct article link and go straight to slate (ouch!) by typing www.slate.com into your web browser.

    Even looking for it, it took me a while to find the headline. Finally I did. It says: "Webhead: Mozilla vs. the Explorer Monster," and it's accompanied by a picture of a plastic godzilla toy. Who the heck is gonna click on that?

  95. I was about to say... by ChozSun · · Score: 1

    from-the-no-sh!7-sherlock dept but the dept this is currently assigned to will do the trick.

    Even if you are MS, you have got to admit to using other browsers until MS fixes IE. It is pure logic.

    --
    ChozSun
    ChozSun.com
  96. for those who have ingrained mistrust of MS.... by 3seas · · Score: 2, Insightful

    .... realize this is a tactic of competition by MS.

    Realizing they are gaining an ever increasing degree of mistrust by the consumerk, they simply figure that if they attach themselves and there perception of mistrust to Firefox.... then they can create enough confusion in the minds of the consumer, as to what the consumer mind trusts...... then it becomes a crap shoot (playing the odds of chance) to maintain at least a part of the market.

    And of course maybe everyone was already leaving IE anyway and MS just decided to make it look like it was their idea and of course creating/maintaining the illusion that people follow what MS says...

    Or maybe MS just had some "Black-Scholes Formula" in marketing that has turned bad all around (like the trillion dollar bet -- search google)....and they have yet to realize their marketing mouth has gingivitis...

  97. OSS movement... by NeoGeo64 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    All these Windows viruses are actually a good thing in the long run. They force users to get educated on computer security (well, most of them) and make them start looking for alternatives.

    A few weeks ago I asked my brother how his new Dell was, and he told me that he had downloaded Mozilla (on his own! he's a computer n00b) because IE6 kept "fucking up" (lol his own words) and he got "sick of that shit". He had downloaded the big Mozilla browser, however, not Firefox.

    Honestly, computer users are too stupid (or just don't care) about "standards" and "compatibility". They want something that works, and when something breaks, they're going to move onto something else.

    Firefox today, Linux tomorrow. Eventually people will learn that IE6 isn't the whole problem, it's Windows. You'll soon see articles within a year and a half pushing the use of Linux into the mainstream, and Windows will start losing its stronghold on the market.

    This will be shortly before Longhorn is released, and by the time it is, it won't matter. Longhorn's requirements will be so massive that people will not want to buy a new computer just to use Microsoft's "latest and greatest" when they can run Linux at no cost, and not have to buy a new machine, not to mention top-notch security to boot.

    It's already starting to happen - look at KDE and GNOME. Both are very user friendly and very point-click-drool interfaces. Not to mention alot prettier than XP...

    You'll see... Linux's time is coming...

  98. MS sucks by jjriggs · · Score: 0, Troll

    Whoever wrote that article is an ass. He called me a propeller-head geek. Down with Microsoft.

  99. IE generates no revenue ? by DRWHOISME · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What about all those links that used to be preinstalled on IE ?

    Am i wrong ?

    Reminds me of the media player model. Lots of links to websites. Maybe some kickbacks for hits on websites?

  100. Hmm. by Minwee · · Score: 3, Funny
    If I didn't know any better I would say that somebody is trying to hype the next version of Internet Explorer.
    "It's better than ever! You need the new Internet Explorer now!"

    "But I already have it. It works just fine for me. I haven't had any problems yet."

    "That's not true! You have problems you don't even know about it! It's awful, it's crap, it has to go away right now! Don't you see how serious we are about this? I'm going to spread coffee grounds all over Internet Explorer and then grind them in, just to show you how bad it is!"

    "So, um, you mean IE isn't any good? It's really so bad that you would recommend using a competing product instead of it?"

    "That's just version you have! The new version fixes everything! It will solve ALL of your problems!"

    "But I --"

    "Even the ones you don't know you have! In fact, it fixes so many problems that you need three CDs just to install it! There's a bonus CD which only contains exclaimation marks, for people like me! Really!"

  101. It's the monopoly stupid by fwarren · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The reason IE is so insecure is the fact that Microsoft was levraging it's monopoly. IE, is so inscure because of the way Microsoft leveraged their monopoly to try an take over the internet. The PC industry was growing fast enough, that if only some users of Netscape switched, AND all new PC's were sold with IE on them, they would be able to win the browser war. That was a given for Microsoft. They would win. So the question was, what to do with the win? Perpetuate the monopoly and hijack the internet. ActiveX will only run on windows. Let's make a world where all websites that matter, use ActiveX. Let's break standards so that websites that work in IE, won't work well in other browsers. We have enough programmers, that we cna hijack the standards and everone else will play catchup. So by adding ActiveX, making the user experience easy and good looking, with security as a side note, Mircosoft created IE, which by the way had to be intergrated into the OS as a pretence so that the Department of Justice could not ask them to remove it for a default windows install. The browser is really a few dll's that anyone can use to manipulate html. So it's strenghts are your strenghts, and it's weaknesses are your weaknesses. The file explorer, Internet Explorer, Outlook Epxress, are all built on an intregrated together via these DLL's. You can use a secuirty weakness in any one component aganist the others. Time has proven that ActiveX and breaking web standards was a bad idea that is only now starting not to pay off for Microsoft.

    --
    vi + /etc over regedit any day of the week.
    1. Re:It's the monopoly stupid by essreenim · · Score: 4, Informative

      Thats fair enough but its beside the point.
      Konquerer, Opera, Firebird (now Firefox), Mozilla, and many other Mozilla based browsers suffer the burden you speak of yet really are better than IE. All I was trying to say was that the website link referred to in the master blog is deceptive. It tries to make you 'click here to see how Firefox is better than IE' and actually turns out to be a refute of IE's security problem on the basis that hacking IE is a more lucrative business. I was merely trying point this out. I do all this just to try and make people aware of the shortcommings of IE. We are on the same side here. You may remember the laughable security bug a few months back where web hosts could use a simple button to redirect clients a bogie site masquerading as a legitimate one. This was the begininning of the end for me. I demonstratedthis to our Admin using a little php server in work. I showed how with one click it could be possible to gather credit cards with the bug. But more than that I was surprised that such a fundamental bud existed, and is no doubt already responsible for mass credit card fraud.. I really dont know how Ms are getting away with this. Almost Everyone (all though it is changing slowly) still uses IE. We use it in work, against my wishes...

      I guess thats where your ActiveX controls comes in. I actually got forced to use Active X control today too, as it was required to participate in closed beta testing..ActiveX has its uses, but it could EASILY be substituted with something better...

    2. Re:It's the monopoly stupid by kz45 · · Score: 1

      The reason IE is so insecure is the fact that Microsoft was levraging it's monopoly

      no, it's insecure because microsoft disbanned the IE team, because they were afraid it would become an application platform.

  102. Heh. by bl1st3r · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The fact of the matter is: IE is free. Just as free as mozilla. MS won't come straight out and say, "Use Mozilla" because that would be retarded. But they don't care if everyone goes to Mozilla. MS was interested in winning the original browser wars because they were afraid it would destroy their desktop market. Now that losing is no longer a fear, they can safely move away from free application development and focus on their core competancy: OS development. They can let Mozilla develop all they want, and integrate Mozilla at a later date.

    --
    hrrm.
    1. Re:Heh. by WormholeFiend · · Score: 1

      They can let Mozilla develop all they want, and integrate Mozilla at a later date.

      What would they call it, Microzilla Firesoft?

    2. Re:Heh. by Coryoth · · Score: 3, Insightful

      MS was interested in winning the original browser wars because they were afraid it would destroy their desktop market. Now that losing is no longer a fear, they can safely move away from free application development and focus on their core competancy: OS development. They can let Mozilla develop all they want, and integrate Mozilla at a later date.

      Nope, MS can't let mozilla come in and dominate the browser market. That's potential death right there. If mozilla has 90% market share when Longhorn finally comes out then MS is going to have a very hard time selling XAML - what with a massive install base of XUL capable browsers already out there. If MS fails to sell XAML and XUL takes off, then all of a sudden you don't need MS APIs, or OSs to use all those XUL apps. That's a huge kick in the balls for maintaining a desktop OS monopoly. Lose that, and they lose REAL leverage.

      There's a long line of dominoes, and as long as MS is relying on having a desktop monopoly to leverage their products they need to guard every point of entry into that line. They can't afford to give up the browser just yet.

      Jedidiah

  103. IE is part of Windows. by BitwizeGHC · · Score: 1

    They're not developing IE because they're developing Windows.

    XAML will be built into Windows, not part of something separate called IE.

    --
    N4st0r, trixx0r h0bb1tz0rz! Th3y st0l3 0ur pr3c10uzz!
  104. K-Meleon for Win32 by d-Orb · · Score: 3, Informative

    No one seems to realise that a very fast and nice concoction of Gecko (Mozilla/Firefox's rendering engine) with a simplistic Win32 UI called K-Meleon is available and provides a very fast and snappy browser in Windows. Since it uses quicklaunch, you don't need to wait for ages to start it, as oppossed to FireFox. I like it anyway :)

  105. That's completly incorrect. by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    Java applets are just as bad unfortunately. Once they are trusted they no longer run in the sandbox.

    Well for one thing, ActiveX controls need to be trusted completely to run at all. You can either give some website root access to your box (basically), or see nothing at all.

    With java, an applet can do most everything you'd want an applet to do, without any extra security rights at all. and contrary to what you've said, Java has a very granular security model. You can grant very specific rights, such as the right to read and write to one specific file, or read the files in one specific directory, make a network connection to a specific machine, etc.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  106. Ok, how is this NOT MS FUD? by SlashDread · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The whole article is damage control, and FUD.

    It shimmers over "not installing .exe" like he never though of that trick, and it isnt really important

    Well one thing he deserves applause for: "Microsoft wiped out Netscape in the Browser Wars of the late 1990s not only because the company's management pushed the bounds of business ethics"

    It mentiones "without a user knowladge" but fails to adress it as an issue, instead blaiming sneaky spyware writers.

    It then mentions Firefox, isnt a "one-click" (Didnt amazon patent that? they should watch using those words) install, because it needs "plugins" ans for java you need to go to "Sun" (who?)

    And the obvious "youll still need IE for the trusty MS update teehee" and and the final worrd is ofcourse-we-didnt-do-it.: "Just watch firefox become popular adn the spyware will eat yur breeen too muahaha."

    Escuse me while this "propellor-head" goes back to programming his (free) PVR, on his (free) OS of choice, after this session in a (free) browser to await the coming arrival of the firefox-virus writing overlords who will cometh to taketh over my desktoppe.

    "/Dread"

  107. Bleh by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    There's a huge difference between a journalist writing a critical piece on Microsoft in some subsidiary getting fired, and getting fired for violating a clear company policy, and giving away information that could have been considered sensitive (that so and so group was doing work with new Macs).

    Microsoft may not even have the legal right to fire this journalist (OSDN can't, for example, fire Rob or Hemos as slashdot editors due the contract they originally signed with Andover). If they did put pressure on slate, or if slate acted unilaterally, it would hugely damage slate as an independent news source.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  108. OK, asked bugzilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am not allowed to see this bug for security reasons. So how do I ask bugzilla about security problems?

  109. ActiveX by fwarren · · Score: 5, Funny

    Microsoft said from the start that ActiveX was secure. It took 8 years for the first big hole to come and bite them in the butt. Microsoft has an ActiveX control that turns out to have a security exploit in it. They have released an updated control that has been patched. The problem is, if you have "Always Trust Microsoft" checked, a webiste can force you to download the old, insecure ActiveX control, and then take advantage of the exploit. Microsoft's solution, never check "Always Trust MicroSoft". So my gut instinct was correct 8 years ago......

    --
    vi + /etc over regedit any day of the week.
  110. Switch ISPs and/or visit other sites by tepples · · Score: 1

    Most users will think only "the Internet is broken on my computer"

    People who notice the effects of sites switching to new standards not supported by IE probably won't think that the computer is broken but that "the Internet" is broken. And for everybody but MSN customers, who provides "the Internet"? Not Microsoft. Unless MSN is the only high-speed Internet access provider in the area, they may switch to an ISP that offers Mozilla Firefox or another browser based on the Gecko engine.

    many IE users refuse to switch to Firefox because many sites use proprietary extensions in IE, such as document.all

    Can't people just not patronize "many sites"? Or do the companies that run "many sites" have a local geographic monopoly on an essential service?

  111. Replacing KHTML by tepples · · Score: 1

    You simply cannot rip khtml out of KDE without breaking a bunch of (critical) applications.

    But can't one make a wrapper that exposes a KHTML compatible interface to the outside but uses Gecko internally? Somebody managed to make Gecko for the MSHTML API so that almost any program that uses IE can be patched to use Gecko instead. (Granted, document.all and other IEisms won't work, but the basics do work.)

  112. You're new here, aren't you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    better off buying him a shiny new Opera web browser

    Opera is closed-source. As the F/OSS zealots here will tell you, that's no better than MSIE. 8-)

    gewg_

    1. Re:You're new here, aren't you? by qwasty · · Score: 1

      I'm not an open source zealot, though I do recognize where it's valuable. I think it's safe to say that "consumer" closed source software is typically better than the open source alternatives. Opera is a great example of this. It's closed source, and miles ahead of any other browser - Yes, even Mozilla Firefox.

      Now, I think the best mail client out there is Mozilla Thunderbird...so far, I haven't found a commercial product I like better - Opera's M2 mail client really sucks. Other than Thunderbird, I can't think of any "consumer" open source software that's better than the commercial versions.

      Maybe we should do an "Ask Slashdot" for the best-of-class consumer open source software. I'm sure there's more out there that I don't know about, especially in games.

      I think the GPL really stifles commercial contributions to software. It gives rights to a "thing" (the software), when really, it should probably be more concerned with encouraging the production of better software. In a perfect world, it would be profitable for companies to produce open source products. In some cases it is, but despite what the fanatics say, it's not that way for everything.

      I'm digressing a bit, but let me plug the Zesiger License as an alternative to any other open source license. It allows people to earn a return on their software, before being required (GPL-style) to release the source code to their products. Note that this license could easily be applied to any other intellectual property, not just software.

  113. You're right about that by multipartmixed · · Score: 1

    I forget the exact details, but it has *something* to with partial HTTP retrievals.. block support or something.. I haven't looked at it in a coon's age. IIRC, the "Fix" is to force apache into HTTP/1.0 mode when serving PDF files to MSIE. And it is indeed a problem with the Acrobat plugin.

    I can see why they'd want to do it, though. The idea is that you can read a thirty trillion gigabyte PDF without waiting for the whole damned thing to download. But - if it's busted, waiting is better than not being to read it at all...

    --

    Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
  114. use Firefox brand to push more open source apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, if Longhorn is 3 years away and Firefox and Thunderbird are on the rise; isn't this our chance to get more productivity apps bundled in and have them accepted like a word processor or spreadsheet?

    If anyone has something good that people are ignoring maby they'd be willing to let it be re-skinned and put under the Firefox brand (assumimg they'd be interested). Optomisticly we could get people off their Windows addiction one app at a time and give control back to people who actually care about open standards and having their apps disentangled from their OS.

  115. Can a central whitelist scale? by tepples · · Score: 1

    Plugins and skins can only be installed by whitelisted servers, and must prompt the user before installation.

    ActiveX plug-ins also prompt the user before installation. But a whitelist poses different problems: for instance, how can its administration scale with the number of plug-in publishers?

    1. Re:Can a central whitelist scale? by RickHunter · · Score: 1

      Delegation. Delegate management of chunks of the list based on, say, plugin functionality, and make it clear that any "commercial compromises" (eg, you pay us $X, we slip your spyware onto the list) will result in that organization being permanently blacklisted.

  116. Re:FIREFOX sucks by Bz3rk · · Score: 1

    I tried it, and sisn't like it. It has trouble with DNS, even though there is nothing wrong with my DNS servers. You're better off to stick with an IE mod like Avant brower; it has more features than Firefox.

  117. OT - Re:Laugh it Up by DarthWiggle · · Score: 1

    Damnit, I had to read this post twice, because my /.-conditioned brain didn't know what to make of the correct use of "you're" (instead of "your") and "lose" (instead of "loose", growl)...

    Poster didn't even say "Micro$oft".. We should build a memorial to this post.

  118. Satan, get me a popsicle -- make it strawberry! by tilleyrw · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I am filling this space to post this title. See above.

    --
    This post encoded with ROT26. If you can read it, you've violated the DMCA. Handcuffs please, sergeant.
  119. More people are going to find out by KalvinB · · Score: 1

    that JavaScript and cacheing are broken (and who knows what else) in the latest versions of FireFox and Mozilla. JavaScript worked fine in older versions. I don't know if the developers have ever managed to use the URL to generate a unique cache file name which is the only thing preventing caching from working the way it's supposed to.

    I've tried the latest versions of Mozilla, FireFox, Opera and Netscape and I'm right back using IE.

    Maybe a few releases down the line I'll give it another shot. But basically this was just a really bad time for FireFox to have this kind of publicity. I never go to a web-site wondering if IE will be able to display it properly.

    But when I'm seeing screens from Wolf5K showing up in my JavaScript tutorials (and not even showing the whole screen at that) in FireFox and Mozilla, something is definitly broken with the browser.

    Ben

    1. Re:More people are going to find out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not a bug. It's a feature. Javascript is bad. Just say no to Javascript. The only good thing about jscript is when you can turn it off.

  120. Opera? by pohlman0 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Why no mention of Opera? To my knowledge, it's just as safe as Mozilla and its relatives and in my experience it's easier for a newbie to configure and learn. The only thing I can think of is that MS would rather promote the free project than the commercial competitor, especially seeing how Opera could kick their asses in areas other than the desktop. Or am I missing a point, as usual?

    1. Re:Opera? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention the fact that all the touting of tab use in mozilla has been in Opera for years now. The latest version 7.51 of Opera is amazingly good. I am using it as both my Browser and Mail client - so far it has blocked 100% of spam without any additional configuration which I absolutly love. The chat function inbuilt is not bad either but the browsing is what I love. The speed and functionality has been excellent from the very beginning. Most of the nice stuff mentioned in Mozilla, eg tabs, mouse gestures, w3c compliance etc have been in Opera for years. I love the ability to close Opera and return to all my browsing windows (Esp handy when Windows decides to freeze or crash while you online)This is not a troll or flame post, just a factual statement. Opera seemed to be the only browser till mozilla picked up its socks in recent times to be doing any innovations in the browser space. Basically, Kudos to them and I hope others will try it to see how good it is.

  121. It still doesn't change the fact that .... by liquid+window · · Score: 1

    It still doesn't change the fact that web developers need to check their work on every freaking browser in existence to make sure it displays correctly.

  122. Finally! by DerPflanz · · Score: 1

    PHBs(Pointy haired bosses for those who aren't dilbert fans)

    Finally I read what that means. Read it everywhere, never bothering to find out the exact meaning, though reckoning it would be some kind of clueless boss. Thanks for enlightening me with YAA (Yet Another Ackronym) ;-).

    --
    -- The Internet is a too slow way of doing things, you'd never do without it.
  123. nice article at netcraft by solferino · · Score: 1

    A good article covering this that you can point friends and contacts to is at netcraft.

    Along with a good brief overview of the security concerns and warnings, it helpfully suggests that one way of getting firefox is off the OpenCD which it then goes on to explain has several other very professional F/OSS packages.

    The article then closes with a teaser about moving fully over to GNU/Linux.

  124. When the guy who writes the book on security.. by d_jedi · · Score: 0
    Even their newer products demonstrate that MS views security as something to be tacked on later rather than something to be designed in from the start

    .. works for Microsoft, it kind of diminishes your argument, doesn't it? (See: "Writing Secure Code 2nd ed" by Michael Howard and David LeBlanc)

    Of course, that's not to say that every MS project (not limited to MS Project.. lol) follows the guidelines, but I suspect most do, to varying degrees.

    --
    I am the maverick of Slashdot
  125. Slate.com breaks the mold frequently by SoopahMan · · Score: 1
    The suggestion that someone at Slate would get fired for this ignores Slate's history. They have a long-standing pattern of writing plenty of articles that go against Microsoft's best interest - and those authors remain. I'd bet someone $50 this author doesn't get fired.

    If you really think this would end in firing, search back for Slate.com anti-trust articles. There are plenty that could hurt MS publicity much worse, and those authors remain.

  126. Exactly what is "funny" about knowing MS's plans? by WebCowboy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I fail to see why being knowledgeable about MS's plans would be viewed with suspicion. Perhaps I should clarify my background.

    I've used Linux since 1995 or so but actually became an "open source affecionado" around mid-1997 on a student work term. My employer was well into migrating from old AT&T UNIX boxes to COMPAQs running Slakware Linux tuned to meet their needs (data collection/logging and web-based reporting). Actually seeing Linux used in a production environment run as rock solid as the old AT&T boxes (and much better than the Windows NT server) without any licensing costs sold me easily. In the years since then things have only gotten dramatically better for Linux.

    However, in my field of work Linux is still very much the exception (unfortunately). Things run on either Windows NT or 2000 or in special cases QNX or a proprietary RTOS or UNIX. My present employer works in very close conjunction with Microsoft to develop drivers and application software. It is an important part of my job to stay current on Microsoft's direction as well as that of our own developers. As I am an applications specialist and not a developer/programmer at this point I cannot issue a decree that we shall adopt Linux as a platform of choice for our products--indeed no one can without reprocussions.

    Because of my background with both sides I can see the strengths and weaknesses of both Linux and Windows (or Free vs proprietary systems in general). For example, Linux and BSD are unmatched for stability and security. Regardless of any studies that say otherwise, Linux is most often much cheaper to maintain than Windows. Free Software applications are also thr real kings of the enterprise. The Internet wouldn't survive without Apache, Sendmail, Postfix, BIND, mySQL, PostgreSQL and so on.

    On the other hand, vendors reluctance to develop open drivers (or disclose enough information to the community to do so) ie frustrating. There is still too much crap to contend with for the everyday user to get their Centrino chipset to work, or to make their flashy new NVidia or ATI video cards work properly.

    Microsoft/proprietary software has its own list of goods and bads. Microsoft developmer tools totally kick butt on the competition. Developing with .NET really is faster and better (as our developers have found out). Whether or not there are bugs to work out and regardless of how MS has executed the solutions, they have developed and/or embraced some very good concepts. Longhorn shows real promise, and for a 1.0 product MS Reporting Services is astonishingly well executed.

    However, with Microsoft I have very real and grave concerns as well. While Windows has come a long way in stability and usability, Microsoft neglected security for too long. I think that poor security has been the most serious issue MS has ever had to face. Licensing schemes have been a royal pain to deal with for a long time too. I'm next to fed up with complicated licensing schemes, license key codes, dongles, product activation and other administrative nightmares, all of which add no function to the end solution at all and only serve as mechanisms to grant the user the priviledge of running an application. And as promising as Longhorn looks, MS is re-inventing the wheel in a blatant attempt to lock the industry into it's own solutions. Really, what is the point of creating XAML when open standards were already there? Longhorn also looks set to break a lot of compatibility and be even more resource hungry than ever.

    I think _every_ professional should know as much about MS's plans as possible. Likewise they should all know as much as possible about development in Linux and Free Software in general (you know damn well many in MS are studying up on the "enemy"). How else can anybody be competitive? It is only wise to bet on both horses here in particular. With Longhorn so far from release and the potential for a disconnect in terms of hardware and software compatibility with previous versions of Windows, Linux is poised to make a breakthrough. Hopefully Those in the Linux camp can "steal" the best ideas from Longhorn and execute them with characteristically more elegant, interoperable design.

  127. Next IE version to be based upon Mozilla? by slainfu · · Score: 0
    How about it? Microsoft ceased IE development and then recently restarted it again. Now we see an MSN article giving Mozilla the thumbs-up.

    I don't think it's an impossible scenario.

    --

    slainfu
    "I can't be a terrorist if you're sucking my bum."
  128. I wouldn't want to be Paul Boutin by serutan · · Score: 1

    Next stop: downtown Seattle with a cardboard sign, "will write online editorials for food."

  129. Why they won't by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    What's to stop them from scrapping IE6, and replacing it
    with a Firefox derivative labelled "IE7" ?


    Hmmm... I think the problem is XUL, XPCOM, and the Python bindings for XPCOM. It seems to me that this makes a very powerful alternative to VB, but is cross-platform and would reduce the barrier of migration.

    The browser is still important, and is perhaps becoming moreso.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  130. Active X Powered Sites?? by Pizentios · · Score: 0

    It's it just me, or is the windows update site one of the only Active X Powered sites out there. I havn't ever been on a site that is powered by active x other than microsoft's crap. Or am i wrong? Can sombody post some links to "other" active x powered sites? Just my two bits.

    --
    -Pizentios
    1. Re:Active X Powered Sites?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it depends what you mean by "powered". tomshardware and anandtech both use activex in their sites. I know because I used to get those "may not display properly" popup warnings in IE before I hacked the resource file.

  131. Slate by petrus4 · · Score: 1
    I wouldn't be so suprised at this author's independent opinions. Microsoft don't need Slate towing the party line when they've got ZDNet acting the prize poodle in as eloquent a manner as they do. As evidence of what I'm talking about, I offer you this recent priceless little gem.
    ZDNet regurgitates Microsoft's propoganda more closely than just about any other news service I know of, and you can also read the Halloween Documents to learn about how the Gartner Group have done the same thing.

    MS might be on their way out generally, but they still have plenty of Grima Wormtounge equivalents busily trying to convince people otherwise.

  132. mc8903 by orionware · · Score: 1

    Doesn't anyone notice that slashdot and MANY MANY other sites do no render properly in Firefox where Mozilla works fine?

    Back to Moz for now.

    --


    Karma means nothing to me, so suck it...
    1. Re:mc8903 by LocalH · · Score: 1

      ./ renders fine in Firefox for me. Need a screenshot?

      --
      FC Closer
    2. Re:mc8903 by orionware · · Score: 1

      For me the text overlaps the side nav on the main page.

      --


      Karma means nothing to me, so suck it...
    3. Re:mc8903 by crashnbur · · Score: 1

      Um, Slashdot loads perfectly in Firefox for me. Not that I have any stake in that. I only care about my l33t h4x0r1ng 5k1||5 because my web site loads properly in just about every major web browser developed after the last version of Netscape 4.

    4. Re:mc8903 by klaasvakie · · Score: 1

      For me the text overlaps the side nav on the main page

      I have this too. Here is the solution:

      press CTRL+ (font size one up) and then CTRL- (font size back to normal).

      This will rerender the page correctly. hth

      --
      # ssh -l neo the_matrix; killall -9 agent_smith
  133. Switching people from MS IE to Opera by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As nice as Firefox is, it's going to be an uphill battle to get those illiterate folks to switch.

    I work as a contractor in a government department. There are nine people plus myself in our team, and IE was firmly entrenched as the defacto standard when I started. I showed my team that validating pages on the W3C (which is required for every single page) was a breeze in Opera, and nowadays all members of the team surf with Opera. (yes, we paid the license... it was worth every dollar since the productivity increased a lot.)

    I've also convinced some of our customers to switch to Opera. What argument did I use?.. Popup killing. Everybody hates popups, and Opera is good at killing them.

  134. AOL? by newhoggy · · Score: 1

    What I want to know is: After ditching Mozilla in favor of Internet Explorer in a settlement with Microsoft, is AOL now going to ditch Internet Explorer in favor of Mozilla or Firebird due to the recently discovered security flaw?

  135. Appearance of Competition is Good for MS by ibi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As long as Mozilla/Firefox doesn't pose a real threat to IE (and it doesn't, of course) I'm sure MS appreciates its minions dropping the occaisional complement on Moz. That way they have something to point to when the EU people start making anti-trust noises.

    You can bet that if Moz had a chance of getting 20% marketshare, the MS folks would be trash talking it constantly.

    It would be surprising if Slate ran an article about how great Linux was as a desktop OS - but the browser wars are over (at least until Linux becomes a major force on the desktop at which point who knows....)

  136. I call subversion. by ilikejam · · Score: 1

    "MSN's Slate Recommends Firefox over IE"
    No. It doesn't.
    "Independent Writer Recommends Firefox over IE on Internet Site Owned by Microsoft" is what happened.

    --
    C-x C-s C-x k
  137. Not buying the argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Will Firefox make your computer hackproof? Even Mozilla's spokespeople stress that no software can be guaranteed to be safe, and that Firefox's XPInstall system could conceivably be tricked into installing a keystroke logger instead of Sun's Java engine. But for now, there's safety in numbers--the lack of them, that is. Internet Explorer is used by 95 percent of the world. Firefox's fan base adds up to 2 or 3 percent at most. Which browser do you think the Russian hackers are busily trying to break into again?"

    What makes him think that they didn't try to hack Mozilla? A) I'm not buying the 95% figure B) I'm not buying the 'hands off' approach by the Russkies C) the most recent attack only worked after IIS had first been compromised. Clearly, if the Russkies were after the numbers they would have targeted Apache.

    Frankly, I think this is a smokescreen to divert attention away from IIS vulnerabilities. MSIE is already known to be junkware ... by dissing it, MSFT takes heat off IIS and prepares for a day when a user-based browser won't exist on its OSs.

  138. har har. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The normal, honest folks who love free software are in it, and you are stuck back in the station with the rest of the freaks.

    AC trolls, honest? The freaks seem to follow Twitter around. More idiocy from M$ fanboys is all it is.

    1. Re:har har. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I rest my case twitter. Please stop posting. You're dishonest and insulting.

  139. Re:FIREFOX sucks by Trejkaz · · Score: 1

    Does it fix all the features of XML, XHTML and CSS which don't work right in the base IE?

    --
    Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
  140. IE is more secure than firefox for the moment by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

    I do like Firefox a lot. It is a wonderful browser, and it is improving at a rapid pace. But I will not use it until the devs get their heads out of their arses. It is not as secure as IE for one simple reaon: no javascript whitelisting. IE has it in the form of security zones.

    If firefox ever adds jscript whitelisting to the main app or someone develops an extension for it (that is kept up to date with current releases) I will switch in an instant. Unfortunately I am getting the impression that the devs are very pro-jscript and have no interest in making it easy for users to browse with it off completely. Instead they want to only allow disabling it's most annoying and obvious features. This is a woefully inadequate solution.

    With IE I can browse with javascript completely off while still being able to shop at sites like newegg or amazon with jscript (and activex if necessary) automatically enabled. There are many sites nowadays (created by incompetent web designers)that won't even load without javascript. I will either ignore such sites or take the chance on giving them temporary trusted or partially restricted status.

    People talk about how insecure and dangerous ActiveX is and they're right, but javascript is almost as bad. IMO, anyone who surfs the internet with javascript on is asking for trouble and shouldn't be surprised when they find it. And, no,I am not talking about popups. Javascript is a hell of a lot more than just the window popup or resize functions. The recent slammer worm, while an example of an exploit of bad IE security in the form of BHOs is also an example of the dangers of javascript. This worm could not function without it and it did not rely on popups or resizing. It used javascript that would never be blocked by the kind of partial blocking that firefox uses.

    Mozilla has also had security zone capability through user pref javascript settings for a long time, but a UI for it has never been included in the official browser. At this point it looks like it never will.

    There was some effort expended at actually producing a UI for the zones but nothing seems to have come of it. The devs who were working on it gave up when they saw this which unfortunately is not capable of javascript whitelisting at least in current versions of mozilla or firefox.

    There have been some attempts at extensions to add in jscript whitelisting to mozilla, but there is nothing that works with current versions of either mozilla or firefox.

    All of this work is at least 1-2 years old. Some of it is as 3-4 years old. Nothing is currently being done with any of it. Obviously the devs don't consider it an important feature. In fact they consider it so unimportant that even when it's already in the code, they can't be bothered to make a UI for it it.

    So thank you very much, but I will stick with a much safer browsing experience on IE with pwrtwks to give me two click security zone control and trust setter and IE Zone Editor to give me even more control over IE's wonderful security zone features.

    For the one remaining gigantic IE annoyance, those popup "warning" windows you get when browsing with activeX turned off on sites with activeX, there is a way to turn them off. It works.

    --
    Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
  141. Mozilla by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

    Your comment deserves a much higher score.

    I always thought Mozilla was a piece of junk. Never mind all the hard work that went into it; that's what you get if you write bloatware. Firefox is good, but you virtually cannot lose bloat once it's there. Now that Firefox is actually adding more features, I fear the bloat will only increase.

    Where is this all going? I think we need to start over. Part of the bloat comes from the fact that legacy HTML needs to be supported. CSS has a completely different syntax from XML. Javascript - yet another syntax, and various ways to access elements. And yet, with all these technologies, wrapped up in a package of over 30 MB, we can't build proper applications, even though it builds on an OS which has everything an application needs.

    If I had enough time and patience, I would write a new, modular web client, that supported various technologies using plugins. XML plugin, CSS plugin, HTML plugin, JPEG plugin, and, most importantly, AppML (name made up) plugin, that allowed for rich, responsive, native look-n-feel applications to be accessed over the web.

    HTTP really isn't hard to implement at all. Parsing XML, while certainly not trivial, isn't that hard either. Rendering HTML mostly amounts to mapping it to native widgets and adding some graphics here and there. I strongly feel that this should not have to take as much code and data as Mozilla [Firefox] uses for it.

    --
    Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    1. Re:Mozilla by mewphobia · · Score: 0

      First of all, thanks.

      I agree with most of your points, but i guess i think about attacking the issue differently. I am of the opinion that a lot of the bloat in mozilla is due to the nature of opensource in large projects. As soon as you have a large project involving smart people, everyone wants some input into the direction of the project. And opensource by its nature is allowing everyone to do what they want! This impedes direction, and introduces bloat.

      What can we do about this? Well in this regards, I think you've hit the nail on it's head unintentionally.

      For opensource to succeed it needs modularity.

      Every good opensource project needs a module/plugin/etc. system. IMHO Linux would be FAR better off if it had a stable module interface. Mozilla too. Developers don't want moving targets. The Win32 API has been so successful because it hasn't been a moving target for developers. Same goes with SYSV.

      When an opensource project becomes modular, it becomes a base from which other projects can grow. The Natural Selection side of OSS comes into play. If you don't like something, unload the module! Someone else can easily develop a better one.

      Actually, now you got me ranting, and realising things that probably wouldn't have been as clear otherwise.

      On a side note, I think one of the benefits with firefox is it's plugin system. It's not perfect - actually far from it, but the dependancy stuff they are adding now is looking kinda good - at least compared to anything else I know of.

      Also, another note: A lot of mozilla as an application's bloat comes from the design decision to not use native widgets for portability reasons.

  142. JScript, JavaScript, ECMAScript ... by zonix · · Score: 1

    With IE I can browse with javascript completely off while still being able to shop at sites like newegg or amazon with jscript (and activex if necessary) automatically enabled. There are many sites nowadays (created by incompetent web designers)that won't even load without javascript. I will either ignore such sites or take the chance on giving them temporary trusted or partially restricted status.

    There is UI for disabling JavaScript completely in both Mozilla (Edit > Preferences > Advanced > Scripts & Plugins > Enable JavaScript for : Navigator) and Firefox (Tools > Options > Web Features > Enable JavaScript). There's also 'about:config', but perhaps I'm missing something?

    BTW, isn't JScript Microsoft's alternative to JavaScript (as in Netscapes JavaScript)? Now that you mention it, I seem to remember that there was options to disable both JavaScript and JScript in the old Netscape releases, but if I'm not mistaken Mozilla's JavaScript is ECMAScript compliant which is the standard that includes (most if not all of) both MS JScript and Netscape JavaScript.

    z
    --
    What would an EWOULDBLOCK block, if an EWOULDBLOCK could block would? -- me
    1. Re:JScript, JavaScript, ECMAScript ... by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, there is a global Javascript disable in the gui of every browser I know of. Did you think I was unaware of it? If you followed my link you would even notice that I am aware of Javascript that can allow for Javascript whitelisting in Mozilla.

      I would love to be able to always leave Javascript disabled, but I can't. I usually need it enabled on ecommerce sites in order to buy anything. I find it ironic that Firebird has whitelists for pretty much everything except Javascript already. One reason that I find its omission suspicious.

      Thanks for pointing out the JScript thing. These days I guess you have to figure most abbreviations have already been trademarked.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    2. Re:JScript, JavaScript, ECMAScript ... by zonix · · Score: 1

      Yeah, there is a global Javascript disable in the gui of every browser I know of. Did you think I was unaware of it?

      No I didn't, I guess I just got confused when you mentioned JavaScript as being disabled (completely off) in IE and then shopping with JScript automatically enabled. Because, now that I think more of it JScript (as a term?) should be exclusive to IE, as JavaScript is exclusive to old Netscapes and new Mozillas, as mentioned in my previous paragraph about ECMAScript.

      BTW, do Microsoft still refer to it as JScript anyway and not Active Scripting?

      In other words, I'm pretty sure I was wrong when I mentioned the old Netscapes as having both JScript and JavaScript. I'm probably mistaken "Java" for "JScript" with respects to the available enable/disable options.

      z
      --
      What would an EWOULDBLOCK block, if an EWOULDBLOCK could block would? -- me
  143. OT/Rant:Moore et al. by Half-pint+HAL · · Score: 1
    It's worth reviewing ESR's discussion of Moore's Law as part of Halloween IX - basically, the easily-overlooked consequence of computer power roughly doubling every 18 months is that the software to make use of that power must also double in complexity concurrently with this.

    I'm afraid that that is quite simply rubbish. There is a (seemingly irrisistable) temptation for software developers to believe this, but it isn't to be true. Resisting would mean getting the job done quicker. Software is overcomplicated already.

    HAL,

    Reformed Software Developer.

    --
    Got them moderator blues I blieve I walk out the do', With these mod-points I been gettin', I 'most never post no mo'
  144. Re:I don't think the article is *that* good for FF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know about the plugins but if you're not used to tabbed browsing or you're used to moving around bookmarks in your favorites menu then yeah, it will take some time to get used to it. Two days is nothing - I've seen people take weeks to get used to new IDEs. 'not used to' != 'not able to use'.

  145. Fisking Paul Boutin by contenunu · · Score: 1

    My esteemed colleague Paul doesn't really understand the issues involved in Web standards, as I wrote elsewhere. Nonetheless, I certainly support the Anything's Better than IE/Win Campaign ("Abby-Wink").

    --
    Joe Clark | http://joeclark.org/weblogs/
  146. Not Security Holes Marketing Features by rtb61 · · Score: 1
    A lot of the problems of IE where done on purpose. These were incorporated so MS could sell licence fees to advertisers to make use of these, hidden to the consumer features.

    They were just porely thought out, as MS's desire for even greater profit outweighed any disadvantage to the end user (or even considered at the time).

    Pop ups are a great example and you wonder why MS took so long to do anything about blatant abuse of pop ups - disadvantage the user no change in profit (monopoly), disadvantage the advertiser drop in profit (no licence fee).

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  147. Dual boot, my fan. by twitter · · Score: 1
    An AC who's way too interested in Twitter says and asks:

    I seem to remember you've often lamented the fact that your wife needs to run "Windoze" for something or other. ... Soooo... which is it, twit?

    My wife's computer is now dual boot Windoze 98 and Debian Testing. We still have to boot it over to use a crappy old parallel scanner, but everything else works just fine under testing, even our USB cameras. The operating system history, without loss of information, was Red Hat 6.2, 7.0, 7.2, Debian Woody, Debian Sarge. Red Hat was Dual Booted through BIOS. Debian's Woody installed a dual boot LILO configuration. The 450MHz AMD K6/2 works very well under both OS, thank you, but Debian is much more useful.

    98 was impossible to secure, so I did not instal network drivers and things have been OK. The system only has the problems introduced by DLL hell and the few programs required to run devices hooked to it. The most serious problem is non-standard bmp and tiff image formats introduced by the Kodak Imaging program installed by one or another of the cameras. These nonstandard file formats blow up most image programs including Paint Shop Pro. Electric Eyes under Woody manages to open them, so I can write them out into reasonable formats. As a retail tech, I've seen what has continued to happen to people who try to use M$ on the internet. It's not pretty, so that dual boot machine is protected by a linux firewall too.

    In any case, Windoze does not get much use here anymore and both of us are happy about that. We both spend more time doing what we want on our computers and elswhere than people who suffer Windoze.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Dual boot, my fan. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well I hardly needed that explanation; I had a vague recollection of you using your wife's horrible experiences with "Windoze" as "proof" of something-or-other. Assuming all you write here is actually true, now I know more than I really wanted to, and I also feel very sorry for you. Anyway.

      But ultimately what you're saying is that you're a dishonest deceitful liar and basically full of shit. Nothing new there.

    2. Re:Dual boot, my fan. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Moderators: Please note that "twitter" is a known fanatical psycophant whose obnoxious offtopic rants are legend here on Slashdot. It doesn't matter what the topic is, he'll find a way to scrape in some pointless Microsoft bashing. While nobody expects us to love Microsoft in any way, his particularly tepid style of calling anyone he replies to "troll" or "liar" or "fanboy" because he happens to disagree with whatever they're saying is well documented and should not be rewarded. If anything, twitter is the type of person that should not be part of the open source/free software community. He is an anathema to all that is good about free software.

      I'm posting this so that you (the moderator) have some context to consider twitter and not mod him up whenever he posts his filler preformatted rants about installing Knoppix or whatever that unfortunately get him karma every single time and allow him to continue posting his trademark toxic crap (read on) day in and day out. You may consider this a troll - I consider it community service. And I ain't kidding.

      If you're a /. subscriber, I invite you to look through some of his posting history. I guarantee that you'll be hard pressed to find someone that is more "out there" than twitter. You'll also probably notice he's got quite an AC following. Don't just read his posts, make sure you go through the replies.

      To get an idea of what I'm talking about, check this post out. I mean, this is an article about email disclaimers, right? The parent of the post is complaining about the ads in the linked page and so on, and twitter actually goes off on a rant to blame it on Microsoft and recommend Lynx. WTF?

      Here's another. In this post twitter not only calls the OP a troll but attempts to "tell it like it is" while making some vague argument about "GNU". Yes, if you're confused, you're not alone. The reply (modded +4) proceeds to simply destroy his bogus argument. You will notice he did not reply. This is what some people call "drive-by advocacy". A sort of I'll just leave you with my thoughts here and move on to the next flamebait kind of deal. In fact, he almost never replies because he knows that his fanatical arguments simply do not hold up to any sort of discussion. It's not that he's chosen the wrong cause - he's just going at it in a completely wrong way.

      More? Just read though this post and the subsequent replies. I guess this stands on its own. Or these two. Or this one.

      Still not convinced? This is what twitter considers "humour" while going about his daily "M$" routine.

      More? Bad spelling in astounding conspiracy theories, more offtopic FUD and uninformed "I'm right, look at me" rants, promptly proven wrong. Worse even, twitter wants to be RMS, apparently (that first one is a winner). I mean,

  148. more fan mail, yeah. by twitter · · Score: 1
    But ultimately what you're saying is that you're a dishonest deceitful liar and basically full of shit.

    Not at all. Windoze has never worked as it should nor half as well as free software. I'll stand by all of the things I've described, from email rooting my machine at a fortune 500 company to whole labs of machines dying at LSU to my own and my brother's own computers simply dying of bit rot. I can easily do that and acknowledge that I and others may need to hang onto one last legacy install to access crappy old hardware.

    No one really needs "proof" that Windoze sucks when 90% of the world has suffered under it themselves. It only takes on round of the upgrade train for people to figure out M$ for what it is. My stories have been my own and other people's experience.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:more fan mail, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      from email rooting my machine

      Never happened to me. You're stupid.

      whole labs of machines dying at LSU to my own and my brother's own computers simply dying of bit rot

      Never happened to me. You're just stupid.

      Of course I've never been able to get my USB camera to work under Linux, so I must be stupid as far as you're concerned.

      Funny how that works.

    2. Re:more fan mail, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Moderators: Please note that "twitter" is a known fanatical psycophant whose obnoxious offtopic rants are legend here on Slashdot. It doesn't matter what the topic is, he'll find a way to scrape in some pointless Microsoft bashing. While nobody expects us to love Microsoft in any way, his particularly tepid style of calling anyone he replies to "troll" or "liar" or "fanboy" because he happens to disagree with whatever they're saying is well documented and should not be rewarded. If anything, twitter is the type of person that should not be part of the open source/free software community. He is an anathema to all that is good about free software.

      I'm posting this so that you (the moderator) have some context to consider twitter and not mod him up whenever he posts his filler preformatted rants about installing Knoppix or whatever that unfortunately get him karma every single time and allow him to continue posting his trademark toxic crap (read on) day in and day out. You may consider this a troll - I consider it community service. And I ain't kidding.

      If you're a /. subscriber, I invite you to look through some of his posting history. I guarantee that you'll be hard pressed to find someone that is more "out there" than twitter. You'll also probably notice he's got quite an AC following. Don't just read his posts, make sure you go through the replies.

      To get an idea of what I'm talking about, check this post out. I mean, this is an article about email disclaimers, right? The parent of the post is complaining about the ads in the linked page and so on, and twitter actually goes off on a rant to blame it on Microsoft and recommend Lynx. WTF?

      Here's another. In this post twitter not only calls the OP a troll but attempts to "tell it like it is" while making some vague argument about "GNU". Yes, if you're confused, you're not alone. The reply (modded +4) proceeds to simply destroy his bogus argument. You will notice he did not reply. This is what some people call "drive-by advocacy". A sort of I'll just leave you with my thoughts here and move on to the next flamebait kind of deal. In fact, he almost never replies because he knows that his fanatical arguments simply do not hold up to any sort of discussion. It's not that he's chosen the wrong cause - he's just going at it in a completely wrong way.

      More? Just read though this post and the subsequent replies. I guess this stands on its own. Or these two. Or this one.

      Still not convinced? This is what twitter considers "humour" while going about his daily "M$" routine.

      More? Bad spelling in astounding conspiracy theories, more offtopic FUD and uninformed "I'm right, look at me" rants, promptly proven wrong. Worse even, twitter wants to be RMS, apparently (that first one is a winner). I mean,