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Mozilla's Goodger on Firefox's Future

An anonymous reader writes "The New Zealand Herald has an interview with Ben Goodger, lead engineer for Firefox at the Mozilla foundation. In it he describes how he got started, his reasons for Firefox's existence and what the future may hold for the little browser that could."

470 comments

  1. I just swithced a coworker today! by stuffedmonkey · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    She had 5-6 different spywares running at the same time on her windows xp box!

    1. Re:I just swithced a coworker today! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      That's not spyware. That's multiple IE windows :)

    2. Re:I just swithced a coworker today! by bigman2003 · · Score: 1

      So which distribution of Linux is she running now? 10..9..8..7..6..5..4..3..2..1 post..

      --
      No reason to lie.
    3. Re:I just swithced a coworker today! by TheDarkener · · Score: 2, Funny

      And I just switched a coworkers todays toos! He had 10-11 different spywares on his computers toos! Wows!

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  2. My Wishlist for FireFox by The_Rippa · · Score: 5, Interesting

    1. Firefox takes over IE's spot as top browser
    2. Firefox renders slashdot correctly, since this is the site that promotes it the most.

    Keep up the good work!

    1. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Trillan · · Score: 5, Funny

      An easier wish might be "Slashdot updates its HTML for 2001."

    2. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2a) Slashdot gets its long-overdue rewrite in compliant HTML

    3. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      2. Firefox renders slashdot correctly, since this is the site that promotes it the most.

      No, the IT theme is meant to be like that

    4. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by cephyn · · Score: 1

      Has there ever been an official response as to why Slashdot's code is so outdated and why they haven't updated it?

      --
      Moo.
    5. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by robbo · · Score: 1

      2. Firefox renders slashdot correctly, since this is the site that promotes it the most.

      Amen to that. Back in the early mozilla days, rendering bugs seemed to be a big priority. How many versions of firefox now have gone by with the slashdot bug unfixed? Or is it a problem with slashdot's html?

      --
      So long, and thanks for all the Phish
    6. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I always wondered about that... in Firefox .10PR (and in previous version I used) Slashdot's main content area overlaps or runs flush with the left nav. No padding, no margin, whatever. I remember reading articles on A List Apart about redoing Slashdot, which made me wonder why this was still happening.

      Is this a problem with Firefox or with Slashdot?

      As for Firefox taking the #1 spot, I would love to see that. There are a few things I've had difficulty achieving in Firefox that work in IE, but none of them are necessary (collapsing DIV when display set to none, for example).

      One day, my boss will choke on his "we should just design for Microsoft IE and if it doesn't work in your Mozilla then maybe you shouldn't use it." Bastard.

    7. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >2. Firefox renders slashdot correctly

      I think that would require slashdot to use standards-compliant code.

      Worst thing is, it's been done over and over by other people (www.alistapart.com), so the slashdot team don't even need to work that hard to do it. But it seems they just won't do it anyway.

    8. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Tumbleweed · · Score: 1

      I think you got that backwards.

    9. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Trillan · · Score: 1

      No, I didn't. It would be even better if they updated for 2004, but just to 2001 would do... :)

    10. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by John_Allen_Mohammed · · Score: 0, Troll

      Have you ever come in contact with Rob Malda and his gang before ? I met Rob and some of his crew at linux world expo in '99. Lets just say I was not impressed. The slashdot idea was great for it's time, but Malda & the gang dont have the ethic or the motivation to do anything useful. These guys are a like a one-hit-wonder from the eighties... the only reason we hear about them is due to all the wonderful people supporting them. If it weren't for them, Malda & the Gang just dont have the staying power or work ethic to make things right.

      Now mod me down for flaming the slashdot gods.

      --

      Skype Me! username: john_allen_mohammed
    11. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Tumbleweed · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I really think Slashdot updating their HTML would be _much_ harder than what was suggested above. MUUUUUCH harder. I think what was suggested above will happen much sooner.

      Slashdot doesn't even need to update to 2001; all they need to do is _correctly_ support any real version of HTML - any one would do; as long as it's valid. I'll hold my breath - I look stunning in blue. :)

    12. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by EzInKy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      No, the IT theme is meant to be like that

      It's the table layout, not the theme. They "bleed" into each other on Mozilla, but Konq handles it just fine.

      --
      Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
    13. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by recursiv · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's well known (by me, and for no good reason at that) that they don't use CSS because they think HTML should be enough for any web page. After all, everyone knows that CSS is for LiveJournal lusers to set their scroll bar colors, and could not possibly have any practical application. Real men use tables for layout, and that's that. A real programmer would never prefer CSS's long spelled out english words like border-color in favor of HTML's ULs and TDs. People who use CSS to obtain some result that could be possible with straight HTML are obviously being inefficient. They are probably wasting several bytes on those long, spelled out words.
      The content is the only thing matters is the content anyway. If it's so bad, why don't you make your own front end for the RSS feed? That's the true Open Source way! Plus, what if someone tries to access /. in Netscape Navigator 3.0. It will surely choke on the CSS, and give some unpredictable result.

      Better safe than sorry.

      --
      I used to bulls-eye womp-rats in my pants
    14. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by untermensch · · Score: 1

      Actually, at least some of the slashdot rendering is supposedly fixed in one of the mozilla branches, but I'm not sure when we'll see that in an actual release. http://www.squarefree.com/burningedge/bigger-pictu re.html

    15. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by sridev · · Score: 1

      > Firefox renders slashdot correctly, since this is the site that promotes it the most.

      What's with the Slashdot RSS - is everyone seeing months old articles?

    16. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by jamie · · Score: 4, Informative
      OK so this is the thread where everyone complains about Slashdot's HTML, bring it on!

      For the record...

      Slashdot does emit code to an HTML standard, it just happens to be HTML 3.2. That's a standard. Call it "outdated" if you like but if it works, it works, right? Isn't that the point of standards, you don't have to change them every time something new comes along?

      We're hoping to move to XHTML in the future (sometime within the next year, for sure, I hope) but like everything else it goes on our priority list based on resource-cost and benefit. There are bugs that need to be squashed, meaningful features to be added, and performance improvements we need to put into place that come first.

      Honestly XHTML will probably just save us a little bandwidth and make the site look a little prettier, but only the hardcore readers will notice the difference, at least if we do it right. The only real long-term benefit will be to us coders -- it should let us rip out kludgy old code, but of course that's almost as tedious as writing it in the first place, so it's a mixed win.

      Yes, it's a mozilla bug, not a Slash code bug. They've known about it for a year, but it's fixed now, yay.

      No, it doesn't help that someone else took a static rendering of our homepage and converted it to CSS. That's a fun experiment but of course it's very different to change the code to emit HTML to a different standard.

      A shout out to Peter and Shane here for working on the XHTML theme :)

      OK, resume flaming us and our sucky HTML, Offtopics all around! :)

    17. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by el-spectre · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, you'll get modded down for being an ass. Until you've created something that is read by a coupla million people, perhaps you should calm down, troll.

      --
      "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
    18. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 2, Informative

      I have one URL for you: XSLT. No css, no html, just news articles marked up with XML. Been a W3C standard since 1999.

    19. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Heh, that's funny. Care to go into more detail?

      I'm also starting to get annoyed at the lack of progress here. I mean, slashcode is an open-source project, right? Isn't one of the reasons to use open-source because it's faster-moving then closed-source? Slashcode hasn't moved anywhere at all in years...

      The ONLY change we've had in years is a few new sections, all of which have TERRIBLE eye-hurting colors (Games, IT for instance.)

      Even worse, some features (like filtering-out specific topics) have been broken and never fixed... or is that fixed now?

    20. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by jb.hl.com · · Score: 2, Informative

      I always wondered about that... in Firefox .10PR (and in previous version I used) Slashdot's main content area overlaps or runs flush with the left nav. No padding, no margin, whatever. I remember reading articles on A List Apart about redoing Slashdot, which made me wonder why this was still happening.

      Is this a problem with Firefox or with Slashdot?


      Um, you must be new here. I can't remember how many comments I've seen bitching about that. Put simply, it's a FF rendering bug which we've had for ages and can be solved by doing Ctrl-Scroll Wheel Up and then Ctrl-Scroll Wheel Down.

      --
      By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
    21. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 3, Funny

      And here chimes in Mr. Doesn't-Get-The-Joke to spoil everyone's fun.

    22. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Frizzle+Fry · · Score: 1

      Yes, although I don't feel like tracking it down. They acknowledge that it would be nice to use standards-compliant html and style sheets and such (and even posted a story where a guy did a mockup of /. with style sheets), but changing all of the code would be a lot of work and isn't a big priority for them right now.

      --
      I'd rather be lucky than good.
    23. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by LnxAddct · · Score: 2, Interesting

      1. Firefox takes over IE's spot as top browser

      Has anyone else notices how spreadfirefox.com has been slahdotted for nearly 36 hours? There are over 50 news site linked to it according to google news. It must be going really well, except now noone can access it! Anyone, after day 1, they had greater the 320,000 downloads, I assume its only gotten better since then. We are definilty going to make 1 million!
      Regards,
      Steve

    24. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by CamTarn · · Score: 1

      ..."Slashdot updates their 2001 for HTML"?

    25. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Automatic update feature like Windoze update would be neat.

    26. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Open or Closed, if the design is fundementally broken, there's not much you can "move" to fix it.

      Reports are that slashdot is an old school spaghetti-style perl/sql/html jumble. Most people didn't know better in 1997. This is not a "send in a patch" type problem -- the only way to fix it a massive rewrite. Which is expensive and may perform worse or have less features, and therefore is risky (remember /. is a business).

      For whatever bitches about Malda etal people have, the fact is that they've focused on more features rather cleaning up something that is ugly. Also, as bad as the HTML is, it works everywhere except some buggy Firefox betas.

    27. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by ZeroPost · · Score: 1

      I think that Firefox is well on it's way to dethroning IE as king of the web browsers. With all of the recent publicity, users are beginning to realize that there are more (and better) choices for web browsers out there than what comes boxed with Windows. The Mozilla developers have done a great job in turning the tables on Microsoft in the browser wars.

    28. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by pyrrhonist · · Score: 1, Offtopic
      We're hoping to move to XHTML in the future (sometime within the next year, for sure, I hope) but like everything else it goes on our priority list based on resource-cost and benefit. There are bugs that need to be squashed, meaningful features to be added, and performance improvements we need to put into place that come first.

      Like changing the IT colors to something that doesn't cause blindness? (please oh please oh please oh please...)

      --
      Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
    29. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by robbo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Is this a problem with Firefox or with Slashdot?

      Um, you must be new here. I can't remember how many comments I've seen bitching about that. Put simply, it's a FF rendering bug which we've had for ages and can be solved by doing Ctrl-Scroll Wheel Up and then Ctrl-Scroll Wheel Down.


      So, wait, it's a bug in slashdot's code, but then firefox changes the way it renders the page if you twiddle a nob? Shouldn't firefox consistently render it the same (broken) way every time?

      --
      So long, and thanks for all the Phish
    30. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by seizer · · Score: 3, Informative

      Thanks for the info - I'm sure changing slashcode to emit anything else at all will be a big chunk of work, and that's fair enough! No gripes about that, but it'll be great when XHTML happens.

      You really don't emit HTML 3.2 though - more like a a bastardized form of it. It fails horribly with the 3.2 validator here. And blocking the W3C Validator is a bit of a giveaway too, surely?

    31. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by MrHanky · · Score: 3, Funny

      No, he'll get modded up for saying 'Now mod me down'. Didn't you get the memo?

    32. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by pyrrhonist · · Score: 1
      I assume its only gotten better since then.

      It's now over half a million.

      --
      Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
    33. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by TheLittleJetson · · Score: 3, Informative

      yeah... im guessing there's no templating engine in use or anything, given that the site hasnt changed in years. web-developers take heed, always use a templating engine so your html and code are separate. you'll be glad you did.

    34. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by CamTarn · · Score: 1

      I know this is not totally serious, but ...

      "After all, everyone knows that CSS is for LiveJournal lusers to set their scroll bar colors"
      Hey, I use Livejournal. I've never set scrollbar colours in my life, I care about usable design and accessibility, and try to design my pages to look decent with CSS, but usable if you need to turn CSS off. Admittedly, I may be in a minority...

      "...and could not possibly have any practical application. Real men use tables for layout, and that's that. A real programmer would never prefer CSS's long spelled out english words like border-color in favor of HTML's ULs and TDs. People who use CSS to obtain some result that could be possible with straight HTML are obviously being inefficient. They are probably wasting several bytes on those long, spelled out words."
      Actually, CSS is cached (if used properly) so it's not loaded every pageload. Plus, you can achieve some effects with a few lines of CSS that would take hundreds of lines of nested tables and Javascript.

      "The content is the only thing matters is the content anyway."
      Yep, that's why separation of content and presentation is so cool :)

      "If it's so bad, why don't you make your own front end for the RSS feed? That's the true Open Source way!"
      'cos I'm lazy... =P

      "Plus, what if someone tries to access /. in Netscape Navigator 3.0. It will surely choke on the CSS, and give some unpredictable result. Better safe than sorry."
      You can design a CSS page to gracefully degrade, so that users whose browsers don't support all CSS features (or don't support them properly) will still be able to use the site.

      That said, I don't go so far as to declare "Tables are eeeevil! Never use them!" - they're pretty useful in quite a few contexts (outside the obvious ones of presenting tabular data). It's still tricky to implement a nice column design in CSS under certain circumstances, for instance.

      Um. I think I had a point at some point, but I've forgotten it now... never mind.

    35. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by AnyoneEB · · Score: 5, Informative
      Put simply, it's a FF rendering bug which we've had for ages
      So, wait, it's a bug in slashdot's code, but then firefox changes the way it renders the page if you twiddle a nob? Shouldn't firefox consistently render it the same (broken) way every time?
      It's a FireFox bug. Changing the font size forces FireFox to rerender the page, resulting in a correct render. IIRC, the problem has something to do with threading in the render during load feature. The bug has been fixed in the .10 trunk, but, as far as I know, no one has announced either way on it being part of v1.0.
      --
      Centralization breaks the internet.
    36. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by el-spectre · · Score: 1

      Yeah, there's that... the mod system is funny. I wish you could decline positive moderations, my comment was NOT 'insightful'.

      (However, I refuse to post anything like that AC, as the cowardice implied is not my style...)

      --
      "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
    37. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by cephyn · · Score: 1

      so basically they run their business bass-ackwards. focus on unecessary features that people don't need (seeing as how they aren't being used right now) instead of getting the foundation up to date and correct, which would make adding the features later much easier.

      Well, that sounds par for the course. Doesn't Microsoft operate that way? I hope /. adds a Clippy "feature" soon...

      --
      Moo.
    38. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by TheLittleJetson · · Score: 1

      One day, my boss will choke on his "we should just design for Microsoft IE and if it doesn't work in your Mozilla then maybe you shouldn't use it." Bastard.

      Yeah, people like this make the web a bad place to be. Where I work, we design [php] to gecko engine, and then put in user-agent-checks to spit out IE/safari compatible content where neccesary.

    39. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by BrainInAJar · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with firefox's rendering of slash?

      I haven't noticed any differences whatsoever between any OSDN site with IE or ffx

    40. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Tim+C · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Heh - it still amuses me when I see people make that sort of request about the IT section colour scheme.

      Go take a look at games, think about how much worse it is and how much longer it's existed, then think about how likely it is that any of the /. editors actually cares enough to do anything in response to the complaints.

      Oh and Jamie, you're lying - slash does not emit valid HTML 3.2. Fine by me, just don't treat us like idiots please; some of us do this for a living.

    41. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

      Yes, the bug is not unique to slashdot.

      I have seen it and variations thereof (table adjustments) on numerous sites.

      There appears to be problems in the layout elements during the load. Refreshing from cache because of a font change performs a full layout and weigh in of all elements, which on this run through are already downloaded, and available for examination. It seems to be mainly on the sites with iFrames or other dynamic (javascript insertion) elements. I havent noticed it on any simple html sites, only dynamic ones.

      But, then again, I might be wayyyyy off track.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    42. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This being slashdot, he probably meant it should be "HTML updates its Slashdot for 2001."

    43. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Trillan · · Score: 2, Informative

      There hasn't been a problem for a couple versions now, but the HTML Slashdot generates is still invalid. :)

    44. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heres my ONE problem with firefox.

      alt-enter does not open a new tab in firefox, it does in mozilla. It's not a option in firefox, nor does the tab-preferences extension [or whatever its called] allow this either. I really like to type something in the address bar, hti control-enter to get a new tab in mozilla, but its missing in mozilla. Disappointing.

      If anyone knows how to do this in firefox and I'm just missing it, PLEASE let me know.

    45. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Stormie · · Score: 3, Informative

      Slashdot does emit code to an HTML standard, it just happens to be HTML 3.2.

      Nice try, Jamie. That'd be why the W3C Validator reports 207 validation errors on Slashdot's front page, eh? The HTML is absolutely rancid with unbalanced start/end tags, it's a miracle anything renders it properly.

      Of course, you've done your best to hide this, haven't you? If anyone wants to try plugging "http://slashdot.org" into that validator, you'll get a "403 Forbidden" error - yep, the fine folks at Slashdot have blocked the W3C from accessing the page. But save the HTML to a local file and validate that, it'll be most illuminating. You'll need to tell it to use encoding "iso-8859-1 (Western Europe)", since that's sent in the http headers rather than defined in the HTML code.

      OK, resume flaming us and our sucky HTML

      Did I do OK?

    46. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by BrainInAJar · · Score: 1

      wait... what?

      Lemme get this straight. the FFx group wrote a workaround right in the browser, SPECIFICALLY for slashdot?

    47. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by pyrrhonist · · Score: 1, Offtopic
      Go take a look at games, think about how much worse it is and how much longer it's existed, then think about how likely it is that any of the /. editors actually cares enough to do anything in response to the complaints.

      Yes, Games is a little annoying too. The difference, however, is that the beige-on-white is hard to read, and painful. Games just doesn't affect me that way, because the darker purple provides some contrast.

      It would be nice if there was a option in the preferences somewhere that would "force all pages to be Slashdot green". That way, we wouldn't have to keep removing "it" from the URLs of stories, or changing it to something more imaginative.

      --
      Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
    48. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by John_Allen_Mohammed · · Score: 0

      My original comment was not insightful either. But judging by the positive moderation it received (when it should have been modded a troll,) says something about the way people are feeling about slashdot. I hope Malda & his crew are observing people's emotions, this sort of thing should be a wake up call for them to get into action...

      That wont happen though, they're waiting for the open source community to fix things for them, IMHO.. just my opinion (and if I'm not mistaken, someone did write css-compliant-slashdot code, maybe a year ago or so... maybe someone can pull that article up if its handy? )

      --

      Skype Me! username: john_allen_mohammed
    49. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by seti32 · · Score: 3, Funny

      No. This is normal... they're just dupes.

      But seriously, I am getting current articles from the feed.

    50. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by CTho9305 · · Score: 5, Informative

      but then firefox changes the way it renders the page if you twiddle a nob? Shouldn't firefox consistently render it the same (broken) way every time?

      In theory, yes. Unfortunately, there's a class of bugs called "reflow" bugs - reflow is basically the incremental rendering of pages as more of the HTML is downloaded.

      When certain things happen at certain times, in certain orders, the layout ends up getting rendered incorrectly until you force a reflow (you can do this by changing the text size, resizing the window, etc).

      The problem with these bugs is that they're very hard to track down. A lot of the time, you can't reproduce them on a [faster|slower] connection, and if the developers aren't experiencing it, they're stuck.

    51. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Trillan · · Score: 5, Informative

      No. It was a bug in Fire Fox.

      There's two separate arguments going on here.

      The first is "Is Firefox bugged?" and the answer was "Well, it was, but it was fixed." It depended on network timing, I think, because it was intermittent. There's also another aspect to this, which is that the bug was in bug quirk compatibility mode... so if Slashdot's HTML wasn't old crap, it would never have occured at all. But it was still a bug.

      The second argument is "Is Slashdot generating valid HTML code?" The answer is "No." Jamie argues that it is valid, just HTML 3.2 instead of 4.0. However, anyone running the validator can prove this wrong easily -- it's not valid HTML 3.2, either. This isn't really that big a deal, since being technically correct was much less important in HTML 3.2, but it is always annoying to have someone bald face lie to you.

      It may have been that slashdot was the only site to demonstrate the bug (I think it was in 0.7, but I could be wrong), but I doubt it. It was indeed a Firefox bug, and not just a bug in the Slashdot HTML. But that does not mean the Slashdot HTML is valid.

      I hope that helps. This is confusing. :)

    52. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by sp0rk173 · · Score: 1
    53. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I get a problem quite a bit, especially when using the RSS feeds. I am using FF 1.0RCPR

    54. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by jabberwocky_rt · · Score: 1

      http://gospel.booleangate.org/mojo/site2/index.htm l

      works in IE, Mozilla/FF, Opera...

    55. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by timealterer · · Score: 3, Informative

      The only real long-term benefit will be to us coders

      Not true - valid XHTML has other advantages. For example, it's much easier for devices such as PDAs and phones and programs such as screen readers to parse and make sense of. Bandwidth savings is also relevant to users. Some of us, sometimes, are on slow connections. It's been well proven that having a site respond faster, even when the response is under a second to start with, makes the user experience much better.

      --
      - Allen Pike
      Altering time, one time at a time.
    56. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by k8to · · Score: 1

      Nope, it's still broken. I see posts by michael all the time which I've requested filtered out for many years.

      --
      -josh
    57. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by r3al1tych3ck · · Score: 1

      RE #2: Well, it does not for me on slackware.

    58. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by ioslipstream · · Score: 1

      Actually, Firefox 0.10 seems to be rendering this site perfectly now.

      Could just be a glitch though

    59. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha-ha!
      Do you really think they're not using templates? How do you think they change color schemes so easily?
      The data and code ARE separate.
      If they wanted to, I'm sure they could build new templates, but this site has never been about bells and whistles. In any case, /. uses such basic HTML, there really isn't a need to convert to the most recent version. The only possible snag I could see is if their code isn't well-formed. But then again, I don't know of any browsers that stick so closely to standards that they crap on a site just because they forgot to close a paragraph element.

    60. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just did it... but it may be a feature of TBE.

    61. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. And wouldn't it be nice if browsers actually supported XSLT without server-side parsing? Actually XSLT isn't meant for formatting graphical purposes. It's meant to be the layout structure.

      It helps to think of HTML as currently (rightly or wrongly) performing 3 different functions: providing content, structuring layout, and formatting laid out content. The W3C has chosen to break those functions into their logical parts: XML, XSLT, and CSS (respectively).

      If you're formatting in your XSLT, then you're using it incorrectly.

    62. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll hold my breath - I look stunning in blue

      Now if only it.slashdot.org would hold its breath.

    63. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by johnlenin1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      While I appreciate the difficulty of retooling the site to spit out XHTML+CSS, this article in A List Apart estimates that such a Slashdot would save about 10 gigabytes of bandwith per day, saving Taco & Co. some $3600 a year. Plus it would be readable on PDAs and the like. Sounds like a worthy goal to me.

    64. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by xard · · Score: 1

      I might be quite wrong here. I thought there was a mention in the latest trunk of Firefox about some fix to do with slashdot and that damn gap there. I am not sure if this relates to this bug or not. But for the moment crtl + -- Crtl - works well enough.

    65. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by MadChicken · · Score: 1

      Hm, gives me an idea for a sig. Oh wait, I've had this for a little while!

      It's not impossible, but it would be a bit of focused work.

      --
      SYS 64738 NO CARRIER
    66. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by jsebrech · · Score: 1

      Isn't cmdrtaco just an employee nowadays? Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think he pays the bandwidth bill anymore.

    67. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Firefox renders Slashdot correctly? Why should this be a problem? Don't the html writers at Slashdot check their page in all platforms, browsers, etc?
      Yahoo does. I'm running Firefox 0.8 on Mandrake Linux now, and Slashdot seems to be rendered ok, so what is the problem? That big space between the top and the first message thread? Give me some details, and also why Slashdot doesn't look right in some browsers, OS's etc.
      I for one have gone to the trouble to check my html in something like Mac OS 7.5.3, now probably totally obsolete, running Icab or Netscape. Also, I check using Arachne 1.70, now entering it's third year of _no_updates_ to this neat little MSDOS internet client. Even the Arachne list folks have seemed to have abandoned it for BasicLinux.
      It is important that one's pages appear useful in all browsers and OS's even if that seems impossible. I at least try.

    68. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 1

      Not sure what's supposed to happen. Page appears completely empty save for the top nav and a couple of items on the right. No working links or clickable areas that I can find.

      I think I understand your intent, but it looks like it's not quite working.

      When I've used the display:block - display:none, Firefox simply removes the content but takes up the same space as if the DIV was still there. IE pretends the DIV went away completely. Now I realize that there are ways to hack this up, including maybe moving the DIV way off the screen, but I haven't seen an example that works in both.

      The first place I ever saw it was on Microsoft's FAQ site - I also noticed that they use a completely different display method for non-IE browsers. Strange.

      I'm secretly hoping that there's a way to do this that does work properly in the major browsers and that I'm just unaware of it. If you get it working, please let me know!

    69. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Performaman · · Score: 0

      WTF? FireFox renders Slashdot fine for me under Windows & Debian.

      --

      I have gas, but my car uses petrol.
    70. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by BladeMelbourne · · Score: 1

      Actually to 1999 would be nice, that was when XHTML 1.0 was finalised.

      HTML 4 is a very old standard (deprecated IMHO) - nobody should use it anymore.

      It would be an interesting project to use PHP and fgets() to read Slashdot and reformat it as XHTML 1.0 Strict with CSS.

    71. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 1

      What did you expect? They're Gen-X right?

      --
      Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
    72. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Zordak · · Score: 0

      As many have said, just load all of your pages without the leading [section] on [section].slashdot.org, and you'll get Slashdot green. Its not that hard. When you look at t page, go to the location bar, remove the section and reload.

      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
    73. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by mcrbids · · Score: 2, Funny

      I really think Slashdot updating their HTML would be _much_ harder than what was suggested above. MUUUUUCH harder. I think what was suggested above will happen much sooner.

      I think you are probably right. And so does somebody else!

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    74. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by pyrrhonist · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      As many have said, just load all of your pages without the leading [section] on [section].slashdot.org, and you'll get Slashdot green. Its not that hard. When you look at t page, go to the location bar, remove the section and reload.

      Your condescending attitude notwithstanding, if you'd actually read my post, you'd know I already know how to do that.

      I know, "it's not that hard", but the point is that I shouldn't have to do that in order to read an article without hurting my eyes. I am suggesting that maybe it should be changed so that Slashdot always uses a plain default if the user wants it.

      --
      Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
    75. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by balster+neb · · Score: 3, Interesting

      A lot of the time, you can't reproduce them on a [faster|slower] connection, and if the developers aren't experiencing it, they're stuck

      Precisely the case. From what I understand, it was caused by a race condition, a class of problems that popup when multiple threads (or processes) work in parallel on the same resources. Such bugs are very subtle and hard to reproduce, as they depend a lot on external conditions.

      I used to get this problem at /. almost every time with a dialup connection, but I have never seen it happen here with my new connection. I still occasionally see it happen in other pages, only not so dramatically (usually just a line or two that bleeds).

      Anyway, as long as you're having problems, the quick work around is to change the text size and back. Just hold Ctrl and scroll you mouse wheel once up, then once done, and its fixed.

    76. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by mibus · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If it's so bad, why don't you make your own front end for the RSS feed?

      The RSS feed doesn't include the full article summary, it limits the length.

      Makes the RSS much less useful IMHO.

      Editors - any chance of changing that? :)

    77. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by The+Meshback · · Score: 1

      That's it! I've had enough! /. won't render in a w3c complaint browser? Well...screw them! I'll just go find my own tech news site that actually is worth a shit.

      In fact, I'll go make my own...ummm...//. Yeah. So head over to HTTPcolonbackslashbackslashBACKSLASHBACKSLASHdotBI Z.

      All the cool kids are doing it.

    78. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's been several sites (like alistapart.com) that have done the Slashdot design in valid xhtml+css. I don't know how hard the integration with slashcode would be though. Slashdot has been all talk when it comes to web standards though, granted.

    79. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Ma�djeurtam · · Score: 1

      See my sig, use it as your sig too, and let's beggin an agressive lobby for a well-written xhtml slashdot. :)

      --
      Instant Karma's gonna get you, Gonna knock you right on the head (John Lennon, 1970)
    80. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Megaphoneman · · Score: 1

      Can you feel the ground swelling? IE is slipping, it's official...
      http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1646584,00.as p

      So what are the predictions for how Microsoft will try and protect it's market share?

    81. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by si618 · · Score: 1

      Actually, #2 looks like it's fixed, i'm on 1.0PR and /. has rendered fine...it wasn't (occasionally) on 0.9.3 and lower.

      --
      Sometimes I doubt your commitment to Sparkle Motion
    82. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is fixed on the trunk, but not on the Aviary branch, because it caused regressions for other rendering bugs.

    83. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by LPetrazickis · · Score: 1, Funny

      In Modern Slashdot, 2004 is updated for HTML 3.0.

      --
      Is this a sigs-optional kind of place? 'Cause I am totally down with that if you know what I mean.
    84. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Myen · · Score: 1

      The bug was fixed in trunk (which is actually post-1.0), but not in the branch (which will eventually be 1.0 before getting merged back, I believe) because the fix caused an even worst regression with the widths of boxes - they become something like 100% wide a lot of the time or something.

      Appearently, there was a bug in the width code that was hidden by the /. rendering code.

      For those interested, see bug 246382. Not providing a link to bugzilla.mozilla because I want to avoid getting that thing spammed, plus they don't accept referrers from /. anyway.

    85. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      My wish is that the Firefox extension architecture not radically change every subrelease. The last update to Flashblock was only two and a half months ago. Since then, there have been two official Firefox releases, each of them breaking extensions. Why is this so? I am NOT going to update everytime only to wait for extensions to be "fixed" again when extensions seemed to be working fine in the first place.

      As such, I cannot forsee Firefox being a serious contender if it won't bother with backward compatibility modes or a stable extension architecture.

      I liked what I saw on 0.9, 1.0RC even more so. I want stuff like flashbock, and I do want the latest, sleekest, fastest version but sorry, not without flashblock and adblock working properly because I like to keep the bullshit down on my general web experience.

    86. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well I use IE and Slashdot renders just fine, every time.

      "I always save downloads to my desktop so why should I have to tell the browser that every time?"
      WTF does he mean by the above statement.
      I don't like a buch of shit on my desktop so I set IE to store all downloads in C:\Progra~1\Temp and it downloads to that directory every damned time without being told to do so.
      I can't stand a bunch of crap on my desktop spoiling the view and anytime I see someone with a bunch of icons and downloads filling their desktop I know they're a clueless moron who can't see the mountain because of all the molehills.

    87. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by ImaLamer · · Score: 1

      Plus, what if someone tries to access /. in Netscape Navigator 3.0.

      I'm sure you see this as a joke, but ever since I posted a link to my site in my sig I've received hits from Solaris systems, NetBSD, FreeBSD, OS/2, Amiga, 1 Irix, and 2 "Unknown Unix" systems. (Who here is 'running' WebTV is what I'm wondering)

      Point is, you never know who your audience is...

    88. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by recursiv · · Score: 1

      Very true. Certainly better to keep the tables than use CSS. After all, how many people can this obscure "table reflow" problem be affecting? Surely not as many as all the people using Irix, Amiga, and OS/2 combined!

      --
      I used to bulls-eye womp-rats in my pants
    89. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by fermion · · Score: 1, Interesting
      First, please show me a non-commerical popular page, that is not about HTML, that runs through the validator perfectly. One once popular page, which I am very familiar with and know that everyone who worked on it was well aquainted with the HTML standard from 1.0, has 449 errors. Most pages I work on has several errors, none of which are fatal. Creating an HTML page with no errors is like creating a program with no strict warning. A fun academic playtoy, but largely useless.

      Second, most of the complaints I hear come from a confustion between HTML as a text markup language and the desire to make it a page layout language. HTML marks up text and then the browser decides how to best display the text to give meaning to the markup. We have had lots of hacks to convert HTML to more a of a layout language, CSS being the latest, but to do anything useful you still have to hack. This gets complicated by the fact that the IE does not play well with CSS.

      /. does a good job rendering in IE and Camino and Safari and Moz and Firefox. Most errors are in the page layout aspect, which, as I have said, is beyond the scope of HTML.

      Other much more well funded sites, especially those that are 'IE' only, fail to render well in anything but the current version of IE, and often only work sporadically in that. For instance, something as simple as a password or tabs often fail in some of the IE only commercial pages I am forced to use.

      Finally, aside from the color, /. does a good job with the UI. I seldom hit the wrong button. Or get confused on where I am.

      I am not a /. fanboy. I am not an HTML expert. But there are sites that I hate to use, and sites that I use as examples of practical ways to solve problems. /. is the later.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    90. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by dryeo · · Score: 1

      I'm using a trunk build built a couple of days ago. Reports as version 0.9.1+. I don't see the bug or wide boxes.
      At that its been awhile since I've seen either bug and only saw the extra wide boxes for a short while
      Dave

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    91. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Feztaa · · Score: 1

      The bug has been fixed in the .10 trunk

      Yeah? It's a shame they broke it again in the version that I downloaded.

    92. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SD could use a face lift :)

    93. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My wishlist.

      That Firefox does compete with IE
      That Firefox rendering engine becomes as fast and flawless as IE at rendering anything you throw at it.

      Firefox still does not render some DHTML and CSS correctly. Dont blame the page (IE can do it).

    94. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can write valid CSS that IE can't handle. It works both ways.

    95. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    96. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by jabberwocky_rt · · Score: 1

      My bad, http://gospel.booleangate.org/mojo/site2/index.htm l

      Click the little "maximize" button next to "SoCal Mountains" It should expand the div

    97. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      just load all of your pages without the leading [section] on [section].slashdot.org, and you'll get Slashdot green. Its not that hard.

      That's like saying that hitting the "delete" button isn't that hard. It's an annoyance that could trivially be fixed with the addition of a tiny option (unfortunately spam isn't like that...) to the user prefs. But the guys in charge don't care. Not that I care all that much either. Slashdot is becoming less and less relevant with most of the stories being either dupes or lightly camouflaged ads.
    98. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by velnayakkar · · Score: 1

      I'm not able to access https sites using Firefox. Is this a problem with browser or has anything to do with my network setting?

    99. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No problems here, sounds like a network/firewall issue.

    100. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by tabdelgawad · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's better if IE retains the top spot, thus continuing to attract the majority of hacks and intrusions, while Firefox gets a solid #2 with, say, 20% of the market so that all websites would have to dump their IE-specific content and start coding to standards. THAT would be ideal.

      Also, while we're talking wishlist, I wish Firefox would support saving web pages as a single archive (.mht). Very valuable for saving copies of pages that change frequently. This is a standard format that IE already supports.

      --
      Imposing Libertarian views on everyone online since 1992.
    101. Re: My Wishlist for FireFox by Adhemar · · Score: 1
      An easier wish might be "Slashdot updates its HTML for 2001."

      A while ago, somebody already worked out how it should look like, i.e. what the XHTML output [view source] could/should be.

      So, is this going to be implemented in Slashcode?

    102. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by autOmato · · Score: 1

      It's the table layout, not the theme. They "bleed" into each other on Mozilla

      The table layout works fine for me with Firefox on any OS I've used so far.

    103. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by SenseiLeNoir · · Score: 1

      Well said, in fact I woudl prefer it even MORE if no individual browser having a substancially larger share fo the market than others. for example eaching having between 15 to 20% of the market share.

      This will do a LOT to prevent crackers targetting a specific browser, like whats happening with IE, and it would give incentive for the web browsers to design to standards, and incentive for the web developers to adhere to those standards.

      --
      Have a nice day!
    104. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by avallark · · Score: 1

      perfect! Well all the worms and the virii thats hitting the IE seems to help firefox in that cause. I guess, mother nature is helping us with her microscopic creations.

    105. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by FyRE666 · · Score: 1

      Honestly XHTML will probably just save us a little bandwidth and make the site look a little prettier, but only the hardcore readers will notice the difference...

      Good point; after all, how many of them would you find reading slashdot? ;-)

    106. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by juhaz · · Score: 1

      It's the table layout, not the theme. They "bleed" into each other on Mozilla, but Konq handles it just fine.

      What everyone is after with "it theme" is the color scheme of that table layout, which makes our eyes bleed. And no, it's ugliness doesn't have anything to do with Mozilla or Konq, both show the horror.

    107. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Can someone explain this to me. Where is the error here? Is there supposed to be a space betweent the equal sign and the quote mark?

      Line 10, character 12:

      TOPMARGIN="0" LEFTMARGIN="0"
      ^

      Error: there is no attribute TOPMARGIN for this element (in this HTML version)

    108. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Oddly_Drac · · Score: 1

      "That's a standard."

      And it's a standard you don't adhere to, as the w3c validator shows. Don't cover hacks with handwaving to standards that are outmoded in the hope that people weren't around for 3.2. Attributes are wrong for 3.2 under 'body', the 'style' attribute wasn't around, you aren't encoding ampersands (hair splitting, I know) and what the hell is a NOBR tag?

      Slap in a 4.0 transitional DTD and stop fannying around waving that arm.

      "Honestly XHTML will probably just save us a little bandwidth"

      Looking at this page alone, removing the inline CSS and using classes will save some, font tags another percentage...overall, I think probably about 25% of your bandwidth as long as you use a CSS cascade and don't get caught with horrendous classitis. XHTML is stripped down to the bare essentials for semantic markup, and nothing in slashdot appear to be semantic.

      "That's a fun experiment but of course it's very different to change the code to emit HTML to a different standard."

      Yes, you do it in the scripts, but first you start with a plan. You could consider using templates, too, although they tend to multiply out of control unless you have a planned development.

      "XHTML theme"

      A 'theme'? Jesus, this sounds promising...

      "OK, resume flaming us and our sucky HTML"

      Honeybunch, the only reason that people say these things is that there are actually some commercial professionals on here that would be happy to lend a hand, but you have no coherent method of farming out the work, let alone organising it. The word 'community' means more than the bunch of names in the authentication database.

      --
      Oddly Draconis
      Too cynical to live, too stubborn to die.
    109. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Nurgled · · Score: 1

      TOPMARGIN is a proprietary Internet Explorer attribute, not part of the standard. The same applies to LEFTMARGIN.

      I seem to remember that HTML 3.2 was roughly based on Netscape's implementation of bastardized HTML, so I'd guess that the "correct" way to do this would be with MARGINHEIGHT and MARGINWIDTH, which IE does not support. HTML 3.2 isn't really a standard in anything but name.

    110. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by jamie · · Score: 2, Informative
      The nice thing about HTML is that attributes and tags that your browser doesn't recognize, it has to ignore. The ones you mention do serve a purpose: to make Slash look nice and be usable on many browsers, possibly including yours.

      I thought we nailed all the unencoded ampersands, though, I'll check that out. Eventually :)

      The commercial professionals who are lending a hand are the Peter and Shane I mentioned earlier. Peter started work on an XHTML theme earlier this year and has made some great progress. If you're interested in joining the fun, drop by the IRC channel, #slash on irc.slashnet.org, I'm sure they would welcome patches. Peter's code is the strict-600 module available via anonymous cvs at strict.openflows.org:/var/lib/cvs if you'd like to check it out. As I said, sooner or later we hope to take the steps to incorporate that work into the core Slash code, so if you're interested in contributing to Slashdot, joining our little community and contributing patches would be a great way to help.

    111. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Nurgled · · Score: 1

      Slashcode uses Template Toolkit, which is quite a flexible (and separate) templating system written in Perl. Anyone who knows template toolkit could theoretically create a new slashdot theme and submit it. The garish section themes are created by swapping out a few of the template elements and introducing others in their place.

      I don't know about how jumbled the perl and SQL are, but the template stuff's pretty divorced from the rest. See the Slashcode site, for example.

    112. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1

      Gecko isn't multithreaded, but instead it uses a timer which periodically triggers so called incremental reflow. It boils down to much the same thing though.

    113. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 1

      Works quite well.. now I've got to go back and rework some code! *sigh*

      Just out of curiosity, did you write that source tree viewer "NASTV" app? If so, I would suggest that you let the app send filename headers when you "view" items; opening a .jpg forces my machine to download the file as a .php document. I think it would be nice to have the option of opening it within the browser.

      Nice code. Thanks for the help!

    114. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Oddly_Drac · · Score: 1

      "The nice thing about HTML is that attributes and tags that your browser doesn't recognize, it has to ignore."

      True enough, but the DTD is there to identify the HTML being used to indicate to browsers whether they should be using quirks mode. Mixing elements that 'might be ignored' with elements that are completely deprecated tends to give the air of something authored in frontpage, and reduces the 'standards' argument to so much hot air.

      "Eventually :)"

      No worries. I'm still getting through that myself, even though it's been standard for a long time.

      "The commercial professionals who are lending a hand"

      Fair enough.

      "if you're interested in contributing to Slashdot"

      I have so many balls in the air that I could make a tidy sum demonstrating juggling as a developer moving into project engineering, which isn't that much fun, but I'll certainly try and shuffle some time to help. Seriously, though, consider templating. Apart from separating the business logic from presentation, it does allow for easy modification down the line. I'm willing to bet that you have significant amounts of presentation littered through the code.

      --
      Oddly Draconis
      Too cynical to live, too stubborn to die.
    115. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by John+Siracusa · · Score: 1
      Slashdot does emit code to an HTML standard, it just happens to be HTML 3.2. That's a standard.

      Sure, but Slashdot doesn't correctly follow it. For some reason, the W3C validator is getting "403 Forbidden" responses from the home page, but a cursory examination of the source finds an error before even leaving the HEAD tag: HTML 3.2 doesn't allow a "type" attribute in the "link" tag. My local HTML validator finds 198 other violations of the HTML 3.2 spec. But at least it "works", right?

    116. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot does emit code to an HTML standard, it just happens to be HTML 3.2. That's a standard.

      As everybody else has pointed out, it's not even close to being HTML 3.2. However, HTML 3.2 is not a standard. The only version of HTML that has been standardised is ISO-HTML, which is a stricter form of HTML 4.01 Strict.

      Honestly XHTML will probably just save us a little bandwidth and make the site look a little prettier

      XHTML doesn't save bandwidth or make a website look any prettier. If it does anything with respect to bandwidth, it will make you use more. You are probably confusing the difference between HTML and XHTML with the difference between Transitional and Strict. It's almost certain that if you made this mistake, you are better off using HTML 4.01 than XHTML - HTML 4.01 and XHTML 1.0 are functionally identical, and HTML 4.01 is easier to use while remaining compatible, as you don't have to worry about things like Appendix C or media types. There isn't much benefit in XHTML 1.1 for websites like this, and the content negotiation required to implement it and remain compatible with Internet Explorer will drastically increase the bandwidth consumption and load on the CPU.

    117. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      XHTML is stripped down to the bare essentials for semantic markup

      No it isn't. XHTML 1.0 is functionally equivelent to HTML 4.01, including such things as the <font> element type. Later versions of XHTML are not allowed to be transmitted as text/html, which means that you either have to use content negotiation, which sucks up bandwidth due to poor cachability, or throw away legacy browser compatibility (Lynx, Internet Explorer, pretty much everything except Mozilla, Opera and Safari).

    118. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by jabberwocky_rt · · Score: 1

      yeah, you have to click "execute..." it was originally intended to be a simple source view for a school project. I had to write the thing in about an hour because the work was due in 2hrs :(

      I'm in the process of rewriting the whole thing.

      email me at andrew@crimsonregiment.org, if you have any questions on my source.

    119. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    120. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, please show me a non-commerical popular page, that is not about HTML, that runs through the validator perfectly.

      You are aware that Slashdot is not a non-commercial entity, aren't you?

      Most pages I work on has several errors, none of which are fatal.

      Define "fatal". In terms of HTML, all errors are fatal; a document is either valid or it isn't. Are you saying that, in the browsers you have tested in, there are no known rendering issues? That sounds very fragile, you run the risk of the next version of a browser misunderstanding the page, a browser you haven't tested in misunderstanding the page, a search engine misunderstanding the page, and so on. And don't say "it doesn't happen", as people have said that in the past and been caught out.

      Creating an HTML page with no errors is like creating a program with no strict warning. A fun academic playtoy, but largely useless.

      That's a ridiculous thing to say. What makes it useless? Does all the text somehow disappear purely because the document is valid? Of course not!

      We have had lots of hacks to convert HTML to more a of a layout language, CSS being the latest

      Firstly, CSS isn't a "hack", stylesheets have been part of the HTML design philosophy since around HTML 2.0 or so. But more importantly, how on earth can you characterise a separate stylesheet language as a "hack to convert HTML" into some other type of language? CSS is, if anything, the opposite of that.

      But there are sites that I hate to use, and sites that I use as examples of practical ways to solve problems. /. is the later.

      This doesn't mean that their use of HTML is automatically good though. It's like, when I point out a scratch on your car, attempting to explain how scratches are good because your car is very useful to you.

    121. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by recursiv · · Score: 1

      Thanks! I do it for the fans. It's always good to hear from the people on the street who are following my work! I do appreciate my public.

      --
      I used to bulls-eye womp-rats in my pants
    122. Re:My Wishlist for FireFox by chromatic · · Score: 1

      Slash uses Template Toolkit. It's a nice system, but the Slash templates haven't changed much visually in years.

  3. firefox by techefnet · · Score: 2, Funny

    Its nice to see firefox is doing so well. Mozilla is just a resource hug.. Thats why i changed :)

    1. Re:firefox by Jeff+Mahoney · · Score: 5, Funny

      Aww, Mozilla, the touchy feely browser. It hugs my resources!

    2. Re:firefox by NanoGriever · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It is still a resource hug. It does got rid of useless options and cleaned up the interface. But I don't see it eats up less RAM or something. It's actually getting worse, try browsing a bunch of png files (eg screenshots) and see the memory used goes thru the roof.

      Yeah, I did changed the cache and all those options, doesn't do a thing to help.

    3. Re:firefox by techefnet · · Score: 1

      Thats so unfear. Slashdotters seem always to find a way to make fun of my comments. :/

    4. Re:firefox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is so unfear. Its rediculous

    5. Re:firefox by pyrrhonist · · Score: 3, Funny
      Slashdotters seem always to find a way to make fun of my comments. :/

      Alright, it's make fun of Techefnet's comments day! Here we go...

      Thats so unfear.

      Techefnet does not fear the undead, but he sure unfears the dead!

      That sucked. Damn. Forget I said anything...

      --
      Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
    6. Re:firefox by jokach · · Score: 1

      and once you start adding a extensions to Firefox as well, it hogs even more resources.

    7. Re:firefox by ZeroPost · · Score: 1

      It is still a resource hug.

      Those darn resource huggin hippy broswers...

    8. Re:firefox by prockcore · · Score: 1

      Aww, Mozilla, the touchy feely browser. It hugs my resources!

      We need to fight a more sensitive browser war!

    9. Re:firefox by b1scuit · · Score: 1
      Keep your browser off my resources, you sicko!

      Keyboard Error... press F1 to resume.

    10. Re:firefox by techefnet · · Score: 1

      Pfff. :)

    11. Re:firefox by POWRSURG · · Score: 1
      It does got rid of useless options and cleaned up the interface.

      Useless options or know, it also got rid of a feature I loved (though I can get it in an extension, not having it in the browser means that even less people will care about it). That feature is only in Mozilla (it is not in Netscape) and that is the Site Navigation Bar. It Provides access to the Metadata a Web site may have define. I am a strong supporter in using Meta data on a Web site, especially using Next and Prev to go between pages.

      I know IE doesn't do anything with it (and thus most Web designers don't even do anything with it) and W3C specifically said user agents did not have to do anything with it, but Firefox is supposed to be better than IE and Mozilla (yes, I know it wants to be bloat free). Sadly, Mozilla may have the feature to display it, but this is turned off by default, so not many people even know about it. This all said, I doubt it'll ever happen.

      /oh well
  4. Only 3 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    And Firefox 1.0 PR has already hit a half million downloads. Way to go!

    1. Re:Only 3 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Of course, I personally downloaded 300,000 of them myself, just to stuff the ballot box, so to speak... :-) :-)

  5. Process for Takeover by syntap · · Score: 4, Funny

    1) Take 90% of browser market share

    2) Integrate into Windows Explorer and tell judges it can't be ripped out

    My best sig is this one.

    1. Re:Process for Takeover by Compholio · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It'd be interesting if MS started including Firefox instead of IE, I bet they waste a ton of cash on IE development when they could just include someone else's browser and add an extension for things like Windows Update.

    2. Re:Process for Takeover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      >It'd be interesting if MS started including Firefox instead of IE

      Yeah, it'd also be interesting if Hell started importing ice.

    3. Re:Process for Takeover by BandwidthHog · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah, it'd also be interesting if Hell started importing ice.

      I think they already do that. It's the export market you wanna keep an eye on.

      --

      Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
    4. Re:Process for Takeover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually the original poster might not be that far off. MS uses a LOT of external software, either from free sources or by license or by buying a company outright. Ever look at the About box for IE?

    5. Re:Process for Takeover by polin8 · · Score: 2, Funny

      What IE development?

    6. Re:Process for Takeover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And once they have 90% of market share, then people will bother writing viruses and hacks for them. :-)

    7. Re:Process for Takeover by Jahf · · Score: 1

      They don't consider it a waste, they consider it an investment. IE isn't just about web browsing for MS ... it is about being able to put out "improved" web features (non-standard things), ActiveX/whateveryoucallitnow, and to have a web rendering engine that is under their control for embedding web information in other applications.

      As someone who deals with customers who want to switch their desktops or browsers from IE to Mozilla, I can tell you one of the biggest locks that they get from IE is that they have many customers who deployed internal web sites with things that require IE (or in some cases "require" IE). It makes it very hard for the customer to switch.

      I'm not saying MS couldn't do everything with FireFox that they do with IE from a technical standpoint (though it most likely would be an MS specific fork of FireFox), only that from a business view it doesn't make -any- sense for them to.

      Heck, even if the market share for the WWW went to FireFox, MS would likely still be updating the IE engine for use in non-browser items. They're stubborn that way.

      --
      It is more productive to voice thoughtful opinions (reply) than to judge (moderate) others.
    8. Re:Process for Takeover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Notepad? You're full of shit. I wouldn't be suprised if Notepad was the result of the person who coded the edit control using it as a testbed.

    9. Re:Process for Takeover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One thing I cannot figure out in firefox. How does one, like in mozilla, be able to type a url in the address bar and hit control-enter to open a new tab? I don't see this in preferences or anything. It's the one thing I like in mozilla, and forces me to use mozilla over firefox at work. I'd love to know if there is a way to do this in firefox. Much thanks.

    10. Re:Process for Takeover by sharkey · · Score: 1

      They've outsourced it. Bonzi, Gator, Comet and others have taken over work for MS.

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
  6. Server is slow already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Kiwi helping build browser

    17.09.2004
    By PAUL BRISLEN

    The web browser wars are over and Microsoft won, right?

    Well someone's forgotten to tell Ben Goodger and his team at the Mozilla Foundation because this Kiwi software engineer is taking market share from Internet Explorer (IE) with Firefox, the browser that's smaller yet smarter than anything else available.

    Goodger, back in New Zealand this week visiting family and friends, works for the Mozilla Foundation and has been the lead engineer on Firefox throughout its development.

    He began while still at the University of Auckland waiting for the launch of Netscape 5.0.

    "I used Netscape 4.0 and basically was just designing web pages and doing web development work."

    The wait for version 5.0 was a long one and when Netscape finally ceased development work on its browser and opened up the source code to the Mozilla Foundation, Goodger found himself taking time off to work in the US on the browser itself.

    Today he leads a relatively small team of engineers who are hard at work preparing for the release of Firefox version 1.0 and the Kiwi input is hard to miss.

    The code names for the previous versions of Firefox include Three Kings, Royal Oak, One Tree Hill and Greenlane.

    Firefox has generated an enormous amount of interest among hardcore internet users around the world and for the first time has taken market share away from Microsoft's Internet Explorer.

    Goodger said the figures themselves varied depending on the source but US-based web training organisation W3Schools claimed IE 6.0 peaked in May of this year with 72.6 per cent market share among its "early adopter" users and had fallen back to 68.3 per cent in August.

    That's the first time IE has declined in market share since its release and could mark the turning point for the browser community.

    The mainstream audience is still firmly in the grasp of IE, however, with figures in excess of 90 per cent reported by several different organisations.

    Most, however, report that IE is losing ground to Mozilla-based browsers and most of those switching are using Firefox.

    In its first day of release the latest version of Firefox was downloaded more than 300,000 times.

    So what is it about Firefox that's attracting users? Goodger said it was a combination of things.

    "Some like the added features, some like the smaller size of the browser. It really depends."

    Goodger is quick to point out that while Firefox is smaller than other browsers, that doesn't mean it's a "lite" version of a browser.

    "It's fully featured. In fact if anything it's got more features that people use than many browsers."

    Goodger and his team have been working with one goal in mind: to make a browser that makes the internet simple again.

    "Do you remember how it was when you first went online? It was easier to search for things, easier to find things, there were fewer annoyances.

    "That's what we want to get back to."

    Goodger said Firefox gave users the chance to block pop-up windows, the bane of many users' lives, but went beyond that.

    Because the browser was not tied in to the operating system, something Microsoft touted as a benefit for IE users, it was not prone to the same security vulnerabilities as IE.

    "We also wanted to make the searching experience much easier for users."

    Consequently Firefox has a Google search box built in and allows users to search within a web page simply by typing in the word they're looking for without having to launch a separate search box.

    Goodger's favourite feature, however, is Firefox's smart keywords utility.

    "It's something that's a little bit hidden so people have been slow to find it but when they do it blows them away."

    Users might, for example, regularly use the company phone book online so Firefox allows them to add that search to their browser.

    "So you can

    1. Re:Server is slow already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's smaller yet smarter than anything else available.

      I should put that line in my resume. For computer jobs, though, not porn ones.

  7. That title... by over_exposed · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...just cracks me up. "Mozilla's Goodger on Firefox's Future"

    It just sounds DIRTY... If there was some guys Goodger in my future, I'd certainly try to do something about it...

    --
    "The object of war is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his." - Patton
    1. Re:That title... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Goodger Goodger Goodger Goodger
      Goodger Goodger..

      Umm, mushroom?

    2. Re:That title... by St.+Arbirix · · Score: 1

      Goodger Goodger Goodger Goodger
      Goodger Goodger..


      Yeah, I read that and thought it was saying Mozilla Badger. Firefox, Thunderbird, Sunbird, Badger... it made sense. I figured it was a program that ran on Firefox Future (an OS maybe?).

      --
      Direct away from face when opening.
    3. Re:That title... by dosius · · Score: 2, Funny

      A snake, a snake a snaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaake, ooh, it's a snake.... o/`

      Sorry, couldn't resist. Now watch my karma take a nosedive.

      Moll.

      --
      What you hear in the ear, preach from the rooftop Matthew 10.27b
    4. Re:That title... by atomm1024 · · Score: 2, Funny
      You can make almost anything sound dirty if you say it in the right tone. For example:
      "Problems regarding accounts or comment posting should be sent to CowboyNeal."
      Teeheehee, "comment posting"...
      --
      Signature.
    5. Re:That title... by mancontr · · Score: 1

      You should have linked it...

    6. Re:That title... by xpatiate · · Score: 3, Funny

      even better, in my Firefox tab the title is trunced to read "Mozilla's Goodger on Fire..."

      --
      (music + neurology) * fiction = feedback
    7. Re:That title... by codeman38 · · Score: 1

      That makes me wonder-- is Goodger the opposite of badger?

  8. Firefox v. IE by dan_sdot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In terms of features, I don't see why anyone would NOT use firefox. You could call things like tabs, quick searches and easily accesible plugins "innovative features," but its not really that innovative, if you think about it. Its just obvious. Microsoft's IE is just a way to look at web pages. Period. No customization.
    Congrats to the Mozilla folks for thinking out of the box and trying to create something that users wanted.

    1. Re:Firefox v. IE by js3 · · Score: 1

      except it doesn't have a google toolbar. I need my google toolbar!!

      --
      did you forget to take your meds?
    2. Re:Firefox v. IE by rainman_bc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      except it doesn't have a google toolbar. I need my google toolbar!!

      yes it does

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    3. Re:Firefox v. IE by dosius · · Score: 1

      I have a Google search box right next to my address bar. Works for me...

      Moll.

      --
      What you hear in the ear, preach from the rooftop Matthew 10.27b
    4. Re:Firefox v. IE by TheAwfulTruth · · Score: 1

      There is no word search Have to use the search this page feature) This was a big negative for me too.

      --
      Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
    5. Re:Firefox v. IE by kayak334 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft's IE is just a way to look at web pages. Period. No customization.

      I think what most Slashdotters fail to realize is that most people just don't give a shit. It's "just a web browser" and so to them, IE = Firefox. In that sense, they are right.

      I'm with you, I like to customize. I have used Firefox for a long time now, and I love it. But I don't really think it is obvious that everyone needs to use it. It just doesn't matter to a lot of people.

    6. Re:Firefox v. IE by TheAwfulTruth · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Here's why not:

      If you install it as the default browser, then it breaks updates (completely for Office). If you don't install it as default, then it frequently doesn't come up (any time a URL is launched via a shell command, which is more often that you might think)

      In the end, I feel like I now need to maintain TWO seperate browsers with constant security updates (Yes, for FF too) and security settings to cover 99% the same functionality. I opined before that I also don't believe that FF is all that secure. Several surprising default settings and demonstrably anti-security minded UI features make it a little frightning.

      In the end, all I really want is a browser to look at webpages, period. This was in fact a main factor for the creation of FF, to have a simple fast browser based on the Moz engine. Well it is so simple and so virtually identical to IE that there really doesn't seem to be a point in using it on Windows...

      On Linux though, It's the shiz-nit! Well, with tightened security settings (hust like IE) and as long as you don't go DLing 500 plugins, it only took one to crash it for me :(

      --
      Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
    7. Re:Firefox v. IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congrats to the Mozilla folks for thinking out of the box and trying to create something that users wanted.

      It's a sad day for the human race, when "thinking out of the box" is equivilent to creating "something that users wanted".

    8. Re:Firefox v. IE by radish · · Score: 1

      Get the goolebar extension - does (pretty much) everything the IE one does except PageRank (which is useless IMHO). I was finally able to delete my big blue E icon when I got that ;)

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    9. Re:Firefox v. IE by videodriverguy · · Score: 1

      I use Firefox mainly for tabbed browsing. But the experience is not good because there is a major problem with the browser at my location.

      Where I live, there is a problem with the local DNS. It often fails and you have to 'refresh' to get a page to load. But, guess what, you can't do that in Firefox!. If you follow a link and have set it to open in a new tab, when the DNS fails there is nothing in the address line!. So refresh doesn't work - you have to close the tab and try again. Aargh - this drives me nuts sometimes, so much that I often switch back to IE for certain things.

      Oh, and I did try to get the source so I could add a retry count to the DNS code. No point, as the downloaded source does not build (on Windows). Missing source files, etc. So much for Open Source - there isn't much point in having the source if it doesn't build, is there?

    10. Re:Firefox v. IE by nuclear305 · · Score: 1

      When Firefox's Googlebar supports the display of PageRank info, then I'll be excited considering Firefox already has a google search box by default.

    11. Re:Firefox v. IE by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      Considering everything else FF does, I think it's a small trade-off... Not only that, but why have a toolbar reporting back your browsing habits? Maybe it's a security hole that FF doesn't want...

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    12. Re:Firefox v. IE by danharan · · Score: 1

      http://update.mozilla.org/extensions/moreinfo.php? id=193&vid=701

      --
      Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
    13. Re:Firefox v. IE by zcat_NZ · · Score: 1

      Agreed.. if you care about your pagerank, your page will be listed in DMOZ. And if it's there it will be in google's directory too, with a pagerank indicator next to it.

      --
      455fe10422ca29c4933f95052b792ab2
    14. Re:Firefox v. IE by syrinx · · Score: 1

      Turn on "search in page" or whatever in FF preferences, and just start typing, and it will auto-search the page. No mouse at all.

      --
      Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.
    15. Re:Firefox v. IE by maxpublic · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Then try Opera. The open source zealots hate it because it isn't part of their religion, but it's the best browser out there, by far. And mouse gestures - once you start using 'em, you wonder why the hell they aren't available for every application.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    16. Re:Firefox v. IE by WhiteDeath · · Score: 1


      Not knowing your network setup, this may be totally wrong, but I've seen "every second dns lookup fails" before.

      It was a bug in windows 98 ICS, combined with the ISP providing an incorrect DNS to dial-in customers. Basically win98 behaves correctly and ignores the dead DNS, using only the good one, but ICS continues to alternate between the two.

      The result - the machine running ICS has perfect browsing, everyone else gets pissed off.

    17. Re:Firefox v. IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because when I press Windows_Key + E I want to go to explore my hard-drive.. and then quickly jump to the internet in the same window.

      That is why I use IE.

    18. Re:Firefox v. IE by DarkSarin · · Score: 1

      i tried opera for a while. Hate it. Admittedly, I never actually purchased it, but overall, I think it sucks.

      Why?
      1. reduced page size. SOme sites bork on this, and I prefer maximal viewing area.

      2. goofy schemes. man some of them suck. others are okay, but overall, it sucks.

      3. crappy mail client. I didn't like it, even compared to outlook. now that i use thunderbird, I'll never go back.

      so you may disagree on all these, but they are my personal complaints with the browser.

      --
      "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
    19. Re:Firefox v. IE by kiwi_james · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you change to error pages instead of dialog boxes this problem should be solved for you. Details are on the Firefox Tips and Tricks page: Use error pages instead of dialog messages

      Good luck...

    20. Re:Firefox v. IE by ZeroOne42 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Mozilla/Firefox already has fully customizable mouse gestures (using the nightly build).

      My friend once got into a debate with me over Opera and Firefox, and it got down to him finally saying that despite how wonderful Firefox was and everything, he'll stick to Opera because he liked the ads! Well, I promptly directed him to a site where you can install ads for Firefox as well.

    21. Re:Firefox v. IE by videodriverguy · · Score: 1

      Thanks - the default dialog boxes are a real pain if you often get DNS fails.

    22. Re:Firefox v. IE by sailgreg · · Score: 0

      You can enable MouseGestures in every Cocoa App on OS X with a plugin. But yes, it is a sweet feature. I use mouse gestures in almost every app for opening and closing windows, going to my home folder, buddy list or whatever I have setup for that program.

    23. Re:Firefox v. IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use IE because...

      It renders pretty much anything you trhow at it. Even the somewhat non standard html. Pretty impressive if you think about it.

      IE 6 for PC only handles dhtl, css extremely well.

      It doesnt take so long to load when I start it up.

    24. Re:Firefox v. IE by LegendLength · · Score: 1

      I choose to use IE instead of FireFox at work because of one feature: 'Ignore colors specified on web pages' in IE's Tools, Internet Options, Accessibility.

      With this feature on, I am able to browse at work without my screen being full of web page colors that make it look like I am goofing off.

      I realise it is an exotic option for a browser, but I wish they would include it in FireFox because it makes a real, practical difference to me.

    25. Re:Firefox v. IE by erlando · · Score: 1

      If only I had modpoints. Nice tip. :o)

      --
      Remember, there are no stupid questions. But there are a lot of inquisitive idiots.
    26. Re:Firefox v. IE by jsoderba · · Score: 1

      This option has been in every version of Mozilla ever. In Firefox it's the clearly labeled "Always Use My Colors" checkbox in the Fonts & Colors dialog.

    27. Re:Firefox v. IE by mmport80 · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have off line browsing! (last time I checked).

      Or spell checking, for anything input into forms.

      BTW, Konqueror has both :)

    28. Re:Firefox v. IE by anshil · · Score: 1

      Because JOE-USER, secretary, grandma does not need any of these features, and does not know how to install software, yet would not dare to replace any windows component for some "strange" features.

      And these "Users" people who really just *use* the computer, are over 90% of the market. BUMP!

      --

      --
      Karma 50, and all I got was this lousy T-Shirt.
    29. Re:Firefox v. IE by ampathee · · Score: 2, Informative

      And mouse gestures - once you start using 'em, you wonder why the hell they aren't available for every application.
      they are! (for windows, anyway.. dunno about linux)
    30. Re:Firefox v. IE by hachete · · Score: 1

      I think Firefox copied the tabs *and* the mouse-gestures from Opera (I can the flames revving up already...) but as I always say, steal from the best. I use Firefox because it's HTML rendering and plugin support is that much better. Plus it's Linux support is better IMO.

      h,

      --
      Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
    31. Re:Firefox v. IE by jasonwea · · Score: 1

      Want PageRank? How about Google Pagerank extension (for firefox and mozilla) for a nice little PageRank icon in your status bar?

      I prefer it over the bulky Google bar and use "google whatever" in the address bar whenever I want to search for something.

    32. Re:Firefox v. IE by Mant · · Score: 1

      If you read the artical they are actually quite upfront about it taking ideas from other browsers. Nothing wrong with that, and the users only benefit.

    33. Re:Firefox v. IE by Mant · · Score: 1

      Because JOE-USER, secretary, grandma does not need any of these features

      Of course nobody needs tabbed browsing, or type ahead find, or pop-up blocking. They are all easy to use and make life easier though.

    34. Re:Firefox v. IE by juhaz · · Score: 1

      If you install it as the default browser, then it breaks updates (completely for Office).

      What do you mean by that? Just tried, FF is the default browser, Office update does still launch IE (as it should, since it's depending on features only present in IE).

    35. Re:Firefox v. IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > In terms of features, I don't see why anyone would NOT use firefox.

      Apart from the fact that v1.0PR is broken on my machine (just hangs after it's loaded, unlike the previous version which works just fine), no reason at all. Let's hope the final v1.0 version works, eh?

    36. Re:Firefox v. IE by Ramsed · · Score: 1
      The open source zealots hate it because it isn't part of their religion
      Of course there are some real zealots who reject everything that is not open source, but I really think only a really small minority of Firefox-users hate opera, because among others:
      • Diversity of browsers could persuade web-developers to make their website adhere to the standards.
      • Opera tries to follow the web-standards
      • Opera doesn't have a long history of crushing their opponents with illegal (monopolic) methods
      • Opera workt with the Mozilla-community: Mozilla and Opera forms a group to develop web app specs
      • Opera has humor
    37. Re:Firefox v. IE by kliklik · · Score: 1

      First, set the browser.xul.error_pages.enabled to true in your about:config. Than, install Show Failed URL Extension.

      That should fix things like this.
      --

      --
      guru in training
    38. Re:Firefox v. IE by sangdrax · · Score: 1

      Guess what, most people just want to look at web pages. Period. No customization.

      Using FireFox adds NO value for them, since they can view all pages already, view one page at a time and hence don't need tabs, and give nothing for something invisible like security.

    39. Re:Firefox v. IE by PsychoSid · · Score: 1

      Now if Microsoft did that with IE would we all:- 1. Complain bitterly about it 2. Welcome anything MS could do to make reduce viruses etc. and therefore enhance the internet experience for all. I am guessing No. 1

    40. Re:Firefox v. IE by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      Can you give examples of the 'surprising default settings and demonstrably anti-security minded UI features' in Firefox? I'd like to know what I need to turn off.

      (There is that Password Manager thing which I never use...)

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    41. Re:Firefox v. IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Opera doesn't have a long history of crushing their opponents with illegal (monopolic) methods

      I dunno, I think it's a bit hard to 'crush your opponents' when you have about 2% of the market share.

      But I think I'll stick with Opera anyway - If they remove the ads, they might actually have a chance of unseating Firefox as the 'in thing'.

    42. Re:Firefox v. IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact is that many people who use the Internet don't actually give a damn what they use to browse it with. There are a lot of people out there who just see a browser as a browser. They don't care about security, stability and customization - at least not until something "bad" happens to make them change their minds. This is why I'm doubtful of Firefox suddenly taking over IE in terms of the number of users. There are too many people who don't care about which browser they use so it's unlikely there will be a sudden switch. Since IE is integrated with Windows and Windows is installed on the majority of new machines sold, many people who aren't interested in technical issues are likely to stick with IE simply because it's there.

    43. Re:Firefox v. IE by danila · · Score: 1

      Excuses, excuses...

      1. You can maximize the pages if you want to. Or resize the pages. :) You can even run it in full screen for truly maximal viewing area. There is even a beta available with "Medium-screen rendering" that comfortably fits large pages designed for 1280x960 into a small window without horisontal scrolling.

      2. What schemes? The default one is quite nice, IMO, there are many others, you can make your own, etc. Personally I remove all controls anyway, so the only thing that the skin influences are the tabs. They are quite nice actually and have a pretty mouse-over effect. :)

      3. The mail client is not crappy. May be it's not your style, but I migrated from The Bat! (which was pretty good) and am very happy with M2. May be you tried an old version of Opera? Try 7.54, it's quite good.

      So you see, there is no reason not to use Opera. :)

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    44. Re:Firefox v. IE by danila · · Score: 1

      Nothing wrong, but if one wants an innovative browser, Opera is the only choice. Mouse gestures, tabs and pop-up blocking do not sell Opera, even if they did several years ago. While Firefox copied these features, the Opera team continued to improve the browsing experience. I tried Firefox once, but while it's a great replacement for IE, it doesn't really compare with Opera.

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
  9. Only 5-6? by boredMDer · · Score: 1

    *shrug* Big deal. I've seen well over 400 present (as counted by Ad-Aware).

    5-6? Consider yourself lucky that you didn't have to deal with 100 times that amount.

    1. Re:Only 5-6? by GregChant · · Score: 1
      *shrug* Big deal. I've seen well over 400 present (as counted by Ad-Aware).

      At the university at which I work, we have a record board for number of spyware/malware found. The record, as of this morning, is 3441.

      Undergrads suck at computers (and life).

    2. Re:Only 5-6? by irc.goatse.cx+troll · · Score: 1

      Tracking cookies mean nothing, registry entrys mean little more.

      --
      Pain lasts, kid. Its how you know you're alive. Sometimes I think this growing up thing is just pain management-TheMaxx
    3. Re:Only 5-6? by thephotoman · · Score: 3, Funny

      I'm an undergrad that saw both the Firefox and Linux light. I'm now prostletyzing for both.

      --
      Haec merda tauri est. Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.
    4. Re:Only 5-6? by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm now prostletyzing for both.

      I'd suggest that you put off preaching to the masses until you've finished the more important task of completing English 101.

      Either that, or apply for a job as a Slashdot editor. In two sentences you've managed to make an excellent case concerning your qualifications.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    5. Re:Only 5-6? by thephotoman · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Err...my spelling is admittedly terrible. As for my grammar errors, I haven't slept in a week, and O-Chem is eating my brain. Have mercy on me.

      --
      Haec merda tauri est. Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.
    6. Re:Only 5-6? by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Ah, O-Chem. My apologies. If I'd've known I wouldn't have stooped so low as to compare you to a slashdot editor!

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    7. Re:Only 5-6? by thephotoman · · Score: 1

      Your apology is graciously accepted.

      --
      Haec merda tauri est. Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.
    8. Re:Only 5-6? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would you guys like a room?

  10. Slashdot's code... by DamienMcKenna · · Score: 1

    sucket verily and needs to be brought into 1996...

    Damien

    1. Re:Slashdot's code... by robbo · · Score: 1

      So why does a reload make the bug go away? Is it just a problem with ad placement?

      --
      So long, and thanks for all the Phish
    2. Re:Slashdot's code... by rjforster · · Score: 2, Informative

      Instead of a reload try a resize up and down (either with ctrl mouse-wheel-up/down or ctrl +/-).
      This makes the page render properly without the extra bandwidth usage.

  11. Coral Cache by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    Cached copy if you want the pretty pictures to go with the text.

  12. Why those suburbs? by CynicalGeek · · Score: 5, Funny

    What's wrong with Ponsonby or Remuera - much classier. Or Manukau, Otahuhu, Papatoetoe - much more authentic. They could offer a porn-optimised version of Firefox codenamed "K-Road".

    1. Re:Why those suburbs? by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 1

      Each codename appears to a place located to the east of the previous suburb:

      Three Kings --> Royal Oak --> One Tree Hill --> Greenlane --> Mission Bay --> Whangamata

      (from the Firefox Roadmap)

    2. Re:Why those suburbs? by Megaphoneman · · Score: 1

      Well based on that logic, I for one won't be using the White Island version. I'm glad they went east, what would a Henderson Valley version be like?

    3. Re:Why those suburbs? by sn00ker · · Score: 1

      Whangamata? I realise that Auckland's growing fast, but I didn't know that the Coromandel was now part of Auckland. Why not Packawankers, or Chowick? They're also east of Mission Bay.

      --
      "God, root, what is difference?" - Pitr, userfriendly
    4. Re:Why those suburbs? by LadyLucky · · Score: 1

      Welcome to bogan country.

      --
      dominionrd.blogspot.com - Restaurants on
    5. Re:Why those suburbs? by hacknslashdot · · Score: 1
      Features planned for White Island version:
      • A month after installation, your canary will die
      • small chance of explosion causing computer meltdown
    6. Re:Why those suburbs? by jeffdsimpson · · Score: 1
      --

      Our little girl Susan is a most admirable slut, and pleases us mightily - Samuel Pepys (1633-1703)

    7. Re:Why those suburbs? by Ghouki · · Score: 0

      don't forget South Central L.A ..err ..i mean Otara ..

      --

      insert witty comment here
    8. Re:Why those suburbs? by barnaclebarnes · · Score: 1

      I think this thread has just gone over the heads of 99.9999% of the /. readers...

      Being a shore boy I'm thinking of forking the firefox tree and releasing a series of 'Bay' releases.

      --
      [Please type your sig here.]
    9. Re:Why those suburbs? by janiz · · Score: 0

      Why K-Road if there is already Pornzilla?

    10. Re:Why those suburbs? by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 1

      I dunno. Maybe it's one of Ben's favourite holiday places?

  13. Firefox IE by FiReaNGeL · · Score: 5, Informative

    More useful features, nice interface and CUSTOMIZABLE! Extensions are so good... but we'll have to see if it's too much for a simple end user.

    My favorite one : WeatherFox! (URL:http://weatherfox.mozdev.org/). Crafteh (wish I knew his real name) developped this beauty following my suggestion on the MozillaZine forum and did an AWESOME job. Weather prediction anywhere in the world in your status bar... soooo usefull! Use it!

  14. Better handling of extensions by fastdecade · · Score: 5, Interesting

    One cool thing about Firefox is support for extensions, extra search engines, etc. Totally configurable and that's the kind of users it's going for.

    If firefox is to hit mainstream, some of the more popular plugins need to be incorporated directly into the product. At the very least, offer for download a chunky version with lots of stuff already installed. But even that won't cut it. Some features, like tabbed browsing, can't just be added on as extensions because they interact badly with other extensions.

    Also, there are backward-compatibility problems with each new release. Developers of open-source extensions aren't going to keep updating their work, so supporting at least the more important extensions should be considered essential from a release perspective, and perhaps they should be incorporated into the core project where possible.

    There's nothing wrong with an extension arhcitecture per se. In fact, they have worked very well in open source, e.g. Eclipse and Linux. And that's true for firefox too. However, the management of extensions requires careful consideration. In Firefox's case, there's room for improvement.

    (BTW maybe this has nothing to do with the interview but it's slashdotted, that's my excuse for waffling on.)

    1. Re:Better handling of extensions by Trillan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Which plugins do you think should be integrated? I'm opposed to integrating them, really -- leave the bloody thing along, it's going to end up bloated enough as is -- but I wouldn't mind checking them out.

    2. Re:Better handling of extensions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of the extensions were already compatible with 1.0 PR, but had version support limited to .9. You could often hack them yourself to .10 manually and then install them. Would you rather have this inconvenience, or an extension that screws up your new version because there was no version checking?

    3. Re:Better handling of extensions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The one I hear most often is Tab Browser Extensions. Personally, I find tabs in Firefox barely useable without it.

    4. Re:Better handling of extensions by Phoinix · · Score: 1

      Extensions which introduce popular stuff in other browsers as "All in one guestures" (similar to Opera) and top rated/downloaded plugins as "Adblock".

    5. Re:Better handling of extensions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Too true.

      I tried DLing a search engine extension and it crashed FF when I tried to select it. This was an extension from the FF site itself too, not a warm fuzzy.

      Also, the method of installing plugins for viewing content is a litle scary. It merely says that there is no handler and give a button that says "Install pluging now..." or something. Er, WHAT plugin? for WHAT data type? I'm supposed to blindly click on buttons to DL and install unknown software? That doesn't encourage good security practices...

    6. Re:Better handling of extensions by Compenguin · · Score: 1

      I would reccomend integrating the miniT extension. It's super small and makes tabbed browsing usable.

    7. Re:Better handling of extensions by fastdecade · · Score: 1

      Most of the extensions were already compatible with 1.0 PR, but had version support limited to .9. You could often hack them yourself to .10 manually and then install them. Would you rather have this inconvenience, or an extension that screws up your new version because there was no version checking?

      I'd rather have a third option: an extension that the Firefox team considered important enough to upgrade themselves, or not break, when stepping up to 1.0. Where's the logic in every user manually hacking plugins? Besides which, it will certainly not go mainstream if users have to hack XUL on the side!

    8. Re:Better handling of extensions by fastdecade · · Score: 1

      Yeah agree, other extensions try to launch new windows or something and the tabbrowser extension just pops up a blank tab. To be level with opera, firefox needs a proper API for launching windows which makes the window/tab issue transparent to other extensions.

    9. Re:Better handling of extensions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, in the weeks leading up to release, a lot of the extensions were available pre-hacked. There were already a number updated on the "official" extension sites.

    10. Re:Better handling of extensions by kryptkpr · · Score: 1

      Bookmark Sort

      A very necessary feature that for some reason has been left to an extension.

      --
      DJ kRYPT's Free MP3s!
    11. Re:Better handling of extensions by WhiteDeath · · Score: 1


      Probably a better solution is to have a set of "unofficially supported" extensions for which the mozilla team keep a stable copy of the source, updated by the original author.

      The mozilla team then updates these extensions for new browsers where necessary (but never adds features - that's the authors job), and make the updated xpi file available with new browser releases, as a separate single download, or as individual downloads.

      --
      $0.02? sorry we don't supply opinions in large quantities.

    12. Re:Better handling of extensions by Trinition · · Score: 1

      One cool thing about Firefox is support for extensions...

      Not that I want to start a flame war, but IE also supports customization.

      Honestly, how many of your Firefox salesmen even knew that? You may begin the obligatory security/monopoly/non-opensource bashing of MS now to try and hide the fact that FireFox's "new features" aren't really new, but "the truth is out there".

    13. Re:Better handling of extensions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is the motivations. Most of the IE "extensions" are for some sort of commercial gain. Yes, there are exceptions like Spybot, but they're in the minority. Most of the Firefox extensions are created by fans of Firefox who want to customize little bits of things, or extend the capabilities. Very few of them are related to any financial gain.

    14. Re:Better handling of extensions by Trinition · · Score: 1

      Most of the IE "extensions" are for some sort of commercial gain.

      Did you even look at the link? It was telling you how to make extensions, not selling them to ya.

    15. Re:Better handling of extensions by Hast · · Score: 1

      Personally I prefer radial menues to plain mouse gestures. They accomplish the same thing but you don't need to memorize the gestures before you start using them. (My fave for Firefox is RadialMenues, it's a bit of a bother to find though.)

  15. Won't help by DogDude · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I hate to burst your bubble, but Firefox won't help. I've seen the same number of viruses and spyware attempts go through Firefox, only to be stopped by my anti-virus software. Firefox may have some nifty features, but I wouldn't call it any more secure than IE.

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
    1. Re:Won't help by seizer · · Score: 5, Informative

      That comment just doesn't reflect reality, DogDude.

      Firefox blocks popups out of the box, doesn't support ActiveX at all, doesn't let you run EXE files directly without saving them first, isn't tied with explorer.exe, etc. How many sites do you know that have spyware which affects Firefox?

      I know of none. Can you point me to any please? The only site I've come across which could cause issues is http://www.xpehbam.biz/5 which loads a java class which exploits the Microsoft JVM (NB: not Firefox), and installs a dialer. If you're running the SUN JVM, you are of course safe.

    2. Re:Won't help by sloanster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I hate to burst YOUR bubble, but your statement seems to fly in the face of certain hard facts, as underscored by the chronic microsoft ie specific security woes which have buffeted microsoft users for the past few years.

      While there's no panacea, and this is no time to relax our security vigilance, there's no question that firefox is a much safer choice of browser than ie - to deny that is just plain silly.

    3. Re:Won't help by gl4ss · · Score: 2, Insightful

      take two clean computers.

      now install firefox on the other and leave the other using ie.

      now, put average guys to look for porno on the computers... after couple of hours which one is going to be absolutely infested and which one isn't? which of these computers you can use without getting mysterious popups?

      sure even firefox can't help you from getting spyware you intented to install(bonzi and whatever)..

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    4. Re:Won't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well I can mention one anecdote. I was searching for a crack on astalavista, and one site that had an interesting file I wanted to check out, insisted through a dialog box, that I must click yes and install their firefox extension, before I will be allowed to download the file from their site. Of course I refused, so who knows what it was. Strangely enough, my virus checker reported start.exe contained a virus. Another app packaged with a different crack. Oh the joys of windows.

      I suppose the lesson is don't run proprietary software that requires a crack. I think I'm going to setup a user for browsing and a user for mail on my linux box, so my home dir is safe in case I do something retarded, since even the brightest people can be boneheaded some of the time.

    5. Re:Won't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      If you're running the SUN JVM, you are of course safe.

      Yes. We all know that only Microsoft produces exploitable software. It is simply not possible that SUN of *shock* Mozilla may have security leaks dwarfing those of Redmondian products.

      Because, you read Slashdot 10 times per hour, so you know what's going on in the real world, huh, buddy?

    6. Re:Won't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yes, that bit about FF asking users to blindly install software without even mentioneing what it is or what it is for is very anti-security. I was pretty suprised by that.

      Once people get used to just DLing and running programs, plugins etc because a tool bar pops up and asks you too, there goes any hope of a secure system.

    7. Re:Won't help by seizer · · Score: 1

      My apologies for the casual wording, and the ire it evidently raised in you. I meant, of course, to say that this particular exploit that I was detailing was only effective on MSJVMs, and that the Sun JVM was immune to that particular one.

      Now as long as that's clear...

    8. Re:Won't help by DogDude · · Score: 2, Informative

      I don't have specific sites. Random porn sites that are transitory, most DEFINATELY have various trojans. Firefox lets them through, and my virus checker (http://free-av.com) picks them up. All kinds of trojans. Granted, there are probably fewer because Active X doesn't work, but depending on how much time I spend surfing, I average catching between 1-3 trojans a day that come by way of Firefox.

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    9. Re:Won't help by DogDude · · Score: 1

      I can assure you, that if I didn't have a good, up to date anti-virus program running, that my machine would be filled with trojans and backdoors. Firefox lets plenty straight through. I know I'm not imagining thing, when my computer makes a bizarre beep, and my virus checker pops up a window asking what I'd like to do about WormX.

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    10. Re:Won't help by SamNmaX · · Score: 1
      Firefox blocks popups out of the box, doesn't support ActiveX at all, doesn't let you run EXE files directly without saving them first, isn't tied with explorer.exe, etc. How many sites do you know that have spyware which affects Firefox?

      As several people have mentioned, there have been some spyware targetting Mozilla, and I have personally run into websites that attempt to install spyware through it's plugin install feature. It looks like the newer versions of Mozilla and Firefox require upgrades to come from update.mozilla.org, thus for spyware to easily get through it must have been put up on that site.

    11. Re:Won't help by ssstraub · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't have specific sites. Random porn sites that are transitory, most DEFINATELY have various trojans. Firefox lets them through, and my virus checker (http://free-av.com) picks them up. All kinds of trojans. Granted, there are probably fewer because Active X doesn't work, but depending on how much time I spend surfing, I average catching between 1-3 trojans a day that come by way of Firefox.

      If you average catching between 1-3 trojans a day that come by the way of Firefox, which of course means you aren't CHOOSING to download these files (that would be no fault of the browser), then surely you'll be able to come up with specific sites and post them here for us to see.

      Otherwise it's just pure BS.

    12. Re:Won't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's much, much, *much* more likely that you're getting these trojans through a completely different source and just blaming Firefox. You could have some other resident, hidden trojans that are downloading these things; remember that with XP and 2000 (I assume you're using one of them), once you have one trojan or worm, the floodgates are open for more to install themselves. Some will download porn adware, and some will even generate pop-up ads, hoping that you the user will think it's your browser. These trojans could even get through via a different machine on your local network if you have one, or if you have a poorly secured DSL router.

    13. Re:Won't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's cause you have some other crap running in the background, probably stealthy trojans from when you used to use IE.

      Prove your assertions by posting one link that installs a trojan through Firefox.

    14. Re:Won't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      If all you're doing is looking at porn then you don't need Trojans.

    15. Re:Won't help by nwbvt · · Score: 2
      So because it doesn't block every attack it is no safer? Driving sober won't stop every automobile accident, that doesn't mean we should all just go out, get wasted, and get behind the wheel. Even if the browser doesn't guarentee complete security, clearly it can still be a better alternative than IE.

      BTW, shame on whoever modded the parent troll. We can have an intelligent debate here over the relative merits of using Firefox instead of IE. Disagreeing with popular opinion on /. does not make one a troll.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    16. Re:Won't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Driving sober won't stop every automobile
      > accident, that doesn't mean we should all just go
      > out, get wasted,

      Dam straight.

      I'll drink to that!

    17. Re:Won't help by DrXym · · Score: 1
      I wouldn't be so complacent. Firefox will get spyware eventually. In some ways it is even easier to write spyware for Firefox since you can hook into so many things using a chrome overlay and some javascript. We're not talking website Javascript here - we're talking "power of god" javascript with full access to any XPCOM object that Firefox requires to do its job.

      Want to sniff urls? No problem. Redirect urls? No problem either. Open popups? Easy peasy (even if the user has disabled popups). Send data to some URL? Trivial. Search your drive for files? Sure thing. Run native code? No brainer.

      All through a little extension written in chrome that would even run cross-platform unless it invoked a native DLL. And it can contain native code too if it needs to.

      So perhaps users only install signed extensions and have learnt to trust where they install stuff from? Nope. No extensions to my knowledge have been signed because getting a cert to sign an XPI is a pain in the arse that no one bothers. It's a good reason why extensions should use a PGP web of trust model or someone should produce a free root CA for signing extensions.

      Consequently users are already trained to ignore the "unsigned" warning and install extensions based upon what they claim to do, not who wrote them.

      Now Firefox 1.0PR1 improves things a little by requiring users to add domains to their 'trusted' list before they can install an extension from a site. But this is an even more broken than normal package signing. Users are required to 'trust' the domain, but they have no idea if the package has been tampered with, or they are subject to man in the middle attacks or spoofing.

      So the day of spyware will come. And it pays not to be complacent about the supposed security of any software. Firefox might be better than IE, but it isn't perfect.

  16. I suggested to my boss today........ by ARRRLovin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    .........that we (hypothetically) could lock down IE using policies so that IE could *only* browse intranet sites. Then install Firefox as the "Internet Browser". He said it would be too much administration for our PC support group.

    I came back with, "More administration than cleaning and recleaning spyware and adware from users' machines on a daily basis? Symantec and Adaware are supposed to come out with a corporate solution in Q2-05 at the cost of roughly $20-30 a seat. This would cost us nothing but the time we spend orchestrating a rollout."

    I could see the gears turning, which was encouraging. :)

    --
    -Randy
    1. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You can't lock it down completely for intranet only. Remember that you still need to access Windows update. Damn msft.

    2. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by ARRRLovin · · Score: 1

      You can if you have an internal Software Update Server.

      --
      -Randy
    3. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by savagedome · · Score: 2, Funny

      Mods, how is this funny? This is interesting, maybe insightful or at the least informative? Underrated if you will. Flamebait if you are hardcore IE'er. Troll if msft gives you a pay cheque. Redundant if you don't know what it means. But not funny. ARRRLovin is making a good point. Come on.

    4. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by Mateito · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Note to geeks from a PHB in training:

      Without knowing the particulars of your boss, this is generally not a good approach to convincing a PHB you want something done.

      A suggestion:

      Instead of planning "comebacks" for when boss says "no", present your ideas in such a way that he says "yes" the first time. Changing a "no" to a "yes" is a lot harder than extracting a "yes" in the first place.

      Write down how many hours a day you spend cleaning spyware off computers (a) then give a half page summary of your proposed solution and the number of hours (b) it would take to install, debug it etc. Be as honest as possible with the time. Show boss that after x=f(a,b) days you will be ahead and have more time to work on projects and thus cut costs (use the word MONEY somewhere) in his department.

      Managers are usually goaled on revenue... and thus these are the terms in which you have to express things in order to get that "yes" the first time.

    5. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by ARRRLovin · · Score: 1

      We're too bogged down with other more pressing projects at the moment. This was just a "throw it at the wall and see what sticks" practice, merely a suggestion to see if he would consider it after the other fires were put out.

      --
      -Randy
    6. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by radish · · Score: 1

      Enterprises don't run windows update. They get the patches, test them, and then push them out as part of a regular rollout.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    7. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by Peyna · · Score: 1

      Show boss that after x=f(a,b) days you will be ahead and have more time to work on projects and thus cut costs (use the word MONEY somewhere) in his department.

      The best thing you could do is show them how this small effort could eliminate someone's job. That's how you save the most money. Of course, it's also a good way to not make any friends at work.

      --
      What?
    8. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a rollout, then another one every six months when it goes up a version number, plus the occasional patch session. There _are_ vulns in firefox, and it should be kept updated.
      Also, you'll have to deal with the users complaining extensions get broken every time you upgrade.

      Still, if we're lucky the extension thing won't be an issue after 1.0. Maybe they'll even make an auto-updater...

      Switching is a good thing, but it's not as clear-cut as you made out.

    9. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by Mateito · · Score: 1

      ooh .. we are cynical. Most IT chiefs I know are clamoring for more people, but can't get the funds. Getting rid of the bullshit tasks clears people up for important work. I can't think of a single person I know who would regard wasting 4 hours a day cleaning up spyware as reasonable use of their skills. And if that's the extent of your skills, why the fuck are you in IT?

    10. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by burns210 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Software Update Service(soon to be WUS, Windows US) is an intranet Windows Update server. Client workstations can point to it for Automatic(scheduled) Updates and installs of patches you provide. SUS doesn't even use WU directly... Our enterprise is blocking v5(and others) of windows update to avoid SP2, but SUS (we are currently testing) pulls down patches without problem.

      SUS is only one of many patch management/deployment solutions, and SUS only (only!) deploys Windows 2k/XP/2k3 security patches, critical patches and service packs. Office patches and other Microsoft software, along with custom patches and third-party patches are not supported, and explicitly blocked.

    11. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by Trinition · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Changing a "no" to a "yes" is a lot harder than extracting a "yes" in the first place.

      I think my father's advice is even better:

      "Sometimes, it's easier to beg forgiveness than to get permission."

    12. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and before you go back to your boss, why not come up with an actual plan.

      Start here: http://firefox.dbltree.com/

      -jeff

    13. Re:I suggested to my boss today........ by ricotest · · Score: 1

      Most semi-large companies have a local version of Windows Update so updates aren't downloaded from Microsoft's server for every computer. I assume this is done through software and the repository can easily be made part of the intranet.

  17. GOOD Improvements by rueger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    These things are of course a matter of personal preference, but I find that the innovations in Firefox are almost invariably sensible and useful.

    All too often software developers add things that seem good to them, but which the end user finds irritating or just confusing. Opera is a good case in point, with lots of gee whiz cool features that I just never got around to using. That has never happened to me with Mozilla or Firefox.

    It seems that with every release I'll find some new little feature that suddenly becomes essential, or at least enhances my browsing experience in some nice way, but without detracting from other things.

    The latest was the search bar that pops up at the bottom of the screen when searching in the page. How brilliant! After years of search boxes popping up on top of the text that you're reading, someone figured to drop it in a place that wasn't intrusive.

    Sure, there are still things that I would like changed - like moving more of the configuration away from the "about:" system, but all in all I just like Firefox and find that its greatest feature is that it doesn't get in my way - it just does the job and lets me concentrate on content.

    1. Re:GOOD Improvements by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The latest was the search bar that pops up at the bottom of the screen when searching in the page. How brilliant! After years of search boxes popping up on top of the text that you're reading, someone figured to drop it in a place that wasn't intrusive.

      I installed the new version of Firefox the day it was released, and didn't notice anything different. I went to search for something, hit ctrl-f, typed normally, and found it, no problems.

      About ten seconds later I suddenly realized "wait a second, where was the search box?" I hit ctrl-f again and . . . basically stared in total surprise.

      It's brilliant. It's simple. I can't think of a single downside beyond "will people think to look for it there". Kudos to the Firefox team.

      The only setting change I need now is something to prompt for overwrite when I try to create two identically-named bookmarks - this is a feature I use all the time in IE, and it's literally the only thing keeping me from switching over to Mozilla 100%.

      --
      Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
    2. Re:GOOD Improvements by G-funk · · Score: 1

      I haven't tried the new one, but that sounds excellent! I agree though, it would be hard to find. Perhaps the top of it should glow or pulse or something along those lines to make sure the user is paying attention. Sounds kinda wanky and OSXish I know, but it'd work.

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    3. Re:GOOD Improvements by Augusto · · Score: 1

      The new search bar is perfect, I was plesantly surprised when I saw it. I guess it would be nice to have some attention grabbing animation so that it's a bit more noticable, but this is so much better than the horrible search dialog we've been used to.

      --

      - sigs are for wimps.
    4. Re:GOOD Improvements by nothings · · Score: 1
      I had the same experience with the new search bar. I'm convinced that something neither of us saw is a good thing: the search bar should probably be at the top, not the bottom. Of course, if it's at the top not the bottom, it'll cause the whole page to jerk down when it opens, but that already happens switching between 1 tab and 2 tabs (unless you disable that).

      Similarly, and this is probably more important, when I had a failed search, I didn't see the response on the search bar because (a) it was at the bottom of the window and (b) it was all the way past the buttons. Search status messages should be right adjacent to the search-text field, not past the buttons.

    5. Re:GOOD Improvements by hkmwbz · · Score: 2, Informative
      "All too often software developers add things that seem good to them, but which the end user finds irritating or just confusing."
      Speak for yourself. Not everyone is into the new and "in" stripped-down software craze. You may love it, but you only represent yourself, not everyone else.
      " Opera is a good case in point, with lots of gee whiz cool features that I just never got around to using. That has never happened to me with Mozilla or Firefox."
      That is Mozilla (SeaMonkey), actually. It's what Firefox wanted to get away from in the first place. But Opera is a lot more elegant than SeaMonkey.

      Actually, Opera is a very polished package overall. Everything just works, and there are loads of useful features. And you don't have to install extensions to get this functionality, which is a plus in my book. Firefox extensions are often buggy, and go in all directions, whereas Opera's a tiny package where everything is created to work seamlessly together. One package, one goal, that's Opera. Extensions by different people with different goals, that's Firefox.

      I'm up and running with Opera immediately when I install it. When I install Firefox I have to spend a considerable amount of time getting what I consider to be basic functionality.

      But hey, we are all different. My point is that you shouldn't speak on behalf of everyone else, and pretend that stripped-down software is for everyone. For end-users, a smoothly integrated software package is often the way to go.

      "The latest was the search bar that pops up at the bottom of the screen when searching in the page. How brilliant! After years of search boxes popping up on top of the text that you're reading, someone figured to drop it in a place that wasn't intrusive."
      Yeah... This sort of brings up another important point. Opera had find as you type ages before Firefox did. Opera also had mouse gestures, and tabbed browsing, and so on. Opera is very innovative, and with each new version there's something useful there to enhance your browsing.

      Many Firefox extensions are simply attempts at duplicating Opera functionality!

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    6. Re:GOOD Improvements by juhaz · · Score: 1

      It's brilliant. It's simple. I can't think of a single downside beyond "will people think to look for it there". Kudos to the Firefox team.

      I can, and you haven't looked for the downsides (or ever used taf) very hard if you can't see them... In fact, I hate it. At the moment, that is, it has potential and I believe these will be fixed but it's far from perfect at the moment.

      It regresses type-ahead find, badly. For example, I can't just start typing and get links-only search, even if the all necessary settings are set up correctly, the search bar breaks it and only allows "full" search by default, I explicitly need to click ' to get the damn links search.

      I'd be also sometimes nice to have same search phrase remembered "across" tabs, but I can see how this might also cause problems... however, the old search dialog did, and thus it should, considering people are used to that. Or possibly another shortcut for "browser-wide" or "window-wide" searches.

    7. Re:GOOD Improvements by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I noticed it too while searching and was pleasently surprised.

      But what really made me smile was this. In my first search I needed to go backwards (had skipped too fast past the point of interest) and thought to myself how nice it would be to have an easy way of searching backwards. Something like, well, like pressing shift-enter instead of enter, for instance.

      So I did. And so it did. Nice!

    8. Re:GOOD Improvements by sgtrock · · Score: 1

      Yes, Type Ahead Find works for links. I just tried it in Firefox 0.9.3. Want all text instead of links? Use the forward slash '/' key before starting your search. Works fine! Go ahead, try it! :)

    9. Re:GOOD Improvements by juhaz · · Score: 1

      I just tried it in Firefox 0.9.3.

      Well, sure it works in 0.9.3 because the search bar thingy we're talking about was included in 0.10PR.

    10. Re:GOOD Improvements by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I preferred it the old way, too, (for links only) but now if you type a ' first it'll be links only... still not as good as before (IMO) but better than nothing.

    11. Re:GOOD Improvements by TractorBarry · · Score: 1

      I'd also second that it should open as a new toolbar on the top of the screen.

      After all every other firefox control is at the top of the screen and that's where users would expect it to be. I've always thought it bad UI design to make the user start trawling the mouse all over the screen (depite being a hardcore "keyboard only" man myself)

      So I'd second that it's a splendid feature but I think the UI is slightly wrong.

      --
      Sky subscribers are morons. They pay to be advertised at !
  18. mozilla browser was bloated, firefox is not by geekschmoe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The main reason I was so interested in firefox to begin with (and the same reason I use it today), was that it focused on trimming out the unnecessary stuff from Mozilla. This makes startup/respopnse time much quicker. It used to take +/- 15 seconds to start mozilla, as opposed to +/- 3 seconds for firefox. Granted, I always run on older hardware, but still.

    The other contenders for a fast browser (konqueror and opera) don't render pages correctly a lot of the time. Konqueror's KDE daemons make it slower to start up. Opera's banners make it rather annoying to use.

    1. Re:mozilla browser was bloated, firefox is not by sammcj2000 · · Score: 0

      thats what 'stay in ram' is for, takes me less than .3 of a second to start mozilla ... ? unless perhaps you have a small amount of ram (512)

    2. Re:mozilla browser was bloated, firefox is not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Konqueror's KDE daemons make it slower to start up

      Actually, once KDE has started, Konqueror loads almost instantanely. If you run it outside KDE, yes, it's take a while to load.

    3. Re:mozilla browser was bloated, firefox is not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      K-Meleon is pretty fast and uses Gecko, so it should render the same as Firefox. It's kinda ugly though.

  19. bear in mind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...that ad-aware counts each cookie as an item. Therefore, if there are multiple Windows accounts, each account has its own IE profile and cookies. So cookies can be counted over and over, and by themself, aren't that malicious.

    Overclockers is running a compo on the biggest infection right now (self inflicted though). Check out the current race leader!

    1. Re:bear in mind by Atrax · · Score: 1

      of 282977 objects scanned, 14163 are spyware. that's almost exactly 5% of items

      5%? hell I'm glad that machine wasn't my responsibility. And Adaware doesn't even get everything (I usually run S & D as well if I'm being thorough)

      even taking into account that many would be cookies, this guy's been really unsafe in his surfing habits. Record at my last place something like 400. Now I work somewhere a bit more savvy.

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
  20. Defracturing would be nice by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1, Insightful
    It would be good to see the motivations for Epiphany (GNOME integration) and Galeon (simplicity...?) rolled back into Firefox. I am somewhat dubious as to a fractured market of dozens of gecko browsers. OR at the very least I would like to see the alternatives support the Firefox plugin architecture.

    perl or python as javascript replacements would be cool (although they would likely not take off)

    Other than that I really can't complain - the extension mechanism lets developers scrathc their itches quickly without derailing or sidetracking the main browser effort...the collection of extensions is already incredible.

    1. Re:Defracturing would be nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but Firefox is a cross-platform application that doesn't conform to Gnome UI standards, doesn't use many of the Gnome APIs, etc. It's never going to be part of Gnome.

    2. Re:Defracturing would be nice by marsu_k · · Score: 1

      IMHO Epiphany and Galeon are both just redundant. I am a Gnome user myself, and have never really seen the point in either of them. So Epiphany is supposed to be for Gnome integration? Currently for me Firefox opens new links in new tabs from any Gnome program, and clicking a mailto: link from Firefox opens it in Evolution. Do you really need more integration? I think we've seen examples of what happens when a browser is too integrated into a system ;-)

  21. Code names by builderbob_nz · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The code names for the previous versions of Firefox include Three Kings, Royal Oak, One Tree Hill and Greenlane.
    Gee, I wonder which city he grew up in? Good to see a fellow JAFA making a difference (JAFA = Just another f...... fantastic Aucklander)
    --

    Karma? Hey I just call it as I see it.
    1. Re:Code names by TheShadowHawk · · Score: 1

      Hmm.. wouldn't that be JAFFA? Instead of JAFA?

      It's okay thou. As an Aussie, I know you Kiwis occasionally have trouble with letters. ;)

      --
      Friends don't let Friends use Internet Explorer.
    2. Re:Code names by builderbob_nz · · Score: 1

      Well as they say, at least we know that XXXX is actually spelt with a 'b' and 'r' and two 'e's.

      --

      Karma? Hey I just call it as I see it.
  22. Re:Firefox IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks very much for that. I wouldn't have had the idea to even search for it. But now it happily lives in my status bar thanks to you.

  23. Re:mozilla over firefox by sammcj2000 · · Score: 0

    --- sorry for the spelling there, especially the ULGY == UGLY...

  24. LiveHTTPHeaders by john_anderson_ii · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The number one reason I switched to Firefox is the LiveHTTPHeaders extension. This handy little gadget docks in your sidebar and displays outgoing HTTP requests and incoming responses in real time. It's a must for anyone who works with server side application technologies, load balancing, content switching, or caching. Good stuff.

    Oh, yeah, the pop-up blocking is great too, so is tabbed browsing.

    --
    Be Safe! Sleep with a Marine. Semper Fi!
    1. Re:LiveHTTPHeaders by jackmakrl · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I went ahead and installed the LiveHTTPHeaders, thanks for the tip.

      Now perhaps someone can explain to me why Slashdot has Futurama quotes in their response. When I load Slashdot I see X-Fry and X-Bender headers with quotes from the show.

      Cool.

    2. Re:LiveHTTPHeaders by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 2, Informative
      That's a pretty lame number one reason for switching as there are plenty of other tools out there for view HTTP traffic.

      There's a equivalent (free) tool for Internet Explorer called Fiddler. In addition to viewing HTTP traffic it has a framework for programatically 'fiddling' with requests and responses.

      Ethereal will let you view HTTP traffic regardless of which browser you are using, however it takes a bit of getting used to.

      Nonetheless, if you're using Firefox, LiveHTTPHeaders is definitely the way to go.

    3. Re:LiveHTTPHeaders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try a little program called Proxomitron.

      It works as a local proxy, shows you all that stuff, and even lets you *modify* it according to rules on the fly.

      But yeah, for a browser, definitely use Firefox/Mozilla over alternatives, especially *shudder* IE.

    4. Re:LiveHTTPHeaders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "LiveHTTPHeaders 0.9 could not be installed because it is not compatible with this version of Firefox. (LiveHTTPHeaders 0.9 will only work with Firefox versions from 0.8 to 0.9+)"

      I know someone who's vulnerable to a certain security hole...

      Seriously though, this extension is very useful at times, I just wish they'd update it more often or something.

  25. Firefox most reliable? by Megaphoneman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I spend a reasonable amount of time testing developments to our company's online DAM product. For sometime now I have insisted on including testing with firefox as well as the usual suspects (IE, safari, IE for Mac, Moz) While there are screeds of comments about trouble in certain browsers and how they should "try reading the HTML spec" before releasing the latest version of their browser, so far there have been no issues posted about Firefox. Long may it continue!

  26. Plugins Don't Work Seamlessly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Will never catch on with the neophytes running Windows unless popular plugins install with a single button click and work seamlessly. Any idea why the Flash photo galleries on the USA Today site keep prompting me to reinstall Flash even though version 7.0.14.0 is already installed with Firefox/Win2K.

    I've installed Firefox on the computers of two relatives, both have inquired about the problems rendering USA Today's contents. Unable to solve the problem I had to tell them to use IE. Yuck! I will gladly forego using photo galleries on USA Today in favor of using this browers but others won't.

    1. Re:Plugins Don't Work Seamlessly by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Plugins do in fact work seamlessly. Its not Firefox's fault that not all plugins you expect from IE are available yet on Firefox in that format.

      Consider how easy it is to install extensions to the browser; click, install, restart browser.

      Do you seriously want a browser that auto-installs Active-X plugins like IE?

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    2. Re:Plugins Don't Work Seamlessly by Darthmalt · · Score: 1

      try having firefox report that it's ie 5+ (if it can i dont know) usually solves most of my problems in Opera

    3. Re:Plugins Don't Work Seamlessly by g-doo · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, it's not Firefox's fault. It's USAToday.com's fault for writing their Flash detection code poorly. I've contacted them twice in the past, and their only response was that they didn't support Mozilla family browsers.

      Flash on Firefox works perfectly on pretty much all the other sites, and not everyone visits USAToday.com.

    4. Re:Plugins Don't Work Seamlessly by Trinition · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Consider how easy it is to install extensions to the browser; click, install, restart browser. (emphasis mine)

      There's a problem right there! Yes, it is more difficult to program frameworks that load/unload plugins dynamically, but it certainly is possible.

    5. Re:Plugins Don't Work Seamlessly by Skeezix · · Score: 1

      I love firefox, but plugins to NOT install seamlessly. I hit a java site today with the latest release of firefox and it said "down load plugin?" So I click "yes" and it says the plugin can't be found. The amusing thing is that I have the java plugin installed on my system. It works in every other mozilla-based browser. I'm not sure what's up with that, but it's definitely not seamless.

    6. Re:Plugins Don't Work Seamlessly by juhaz · · Score: 1

      There's a problem right there! Yes, it is more difficult to program frameworks that load/unload plugins dynamically, but it certainly is possible.

      Well, I wouldn't call it "more difficult" since apparently Gecko can already do it, with simple "javascript:navigator.plugins.refresh(true)", works fine as a bookmarklet.

      Seems like putting something like this in by default should be very easy, it's just a piece of javascript after all... The plugin installer could show a page with refresh script after it has installed the plugin.

  27. Your HTML is NOT valid 3.2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you check the w3c validator, you will see it finds 129 errors (that may fluctuate due to the content, but there ARE errors).

    Oh, and since you've BLOCKED the w3c validator, I had to go through a Coral Cache link.

  28. Tabbed browsing loses something in the translation by Megaphoneman · · Score: 1

    I've tried explaining how useful tabbed browsing is to people but I end up falling back on "Just trust me" They always understand once they've used it.

  29. Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by rd_syringe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If Slashdot's HTML is standard, why do you block the wc3 validator? What possible reason could you have for that?

    Since an AC here was so informative in posting it, I'll post it to: Coral Cache link of 189 errors in Slashdot HTML.

    "This page is not Valid HTML 3.2!" says the validator.

    Converting the static code to CSS WAS a helpful experiment, because it's an illustration of how much you could save by modifying your code to generate it. The bandwidth savings alone are awesome. But, hey, "it doesn't scale well," right? The excuse for any user-submitted feature suggestion (because heaven forbid Taco implement something he didn't think of).

    Grr. The editors of Slashdot are frustrating.

  30. I've had no problems with Flash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Flash all works fine for me, and I think the new version will even install it in-browser for you.

  31. You are wrong, it is not valid HTML 3.2. by Trillan · · Score: 3, Informative

    Despite slashdot's attempts to block the w3c validator, it's still quite trivial to run it against the source code.

    File: Slashdot News for nerds, stuff that matters.htm
    Encoding: iso-8859-1
    Doctype: HTML 3.2
    Errors: 180
    This page is not Valid HTML 3.2!

    1. Re:You are wrong, it is not valid HTML 3.2. by TravisWatkins · · Score: 1

      Sadly, if the doctype was switched to HTML 4.01 Transitional and URLs were encoded properly they would have a _LOT_ less errors than with 3.02.

      Address: http://slashdot.org.nyud.net:8090/
      Encoding: iso-8859-1
      Doctype: HTML 4.01 Transitional
      Errors: 138

      With this most of the errors are from using & in URLs instead of & amp; (space added to prevent rendering).

      --

      "But I'm still right here, giving blood and keeping faith. And I'm still right here."
  32. Dare I say it? ...TBE by MachDelta · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I know this is bound to light a fire under a few peoples pants, but most of TBE (Tabbrowser Extensions) really should be stuffed into Firefox itself. It's just got too many good features to be totally left in the cold as an "extension". It's one of the two extensions I consider critical to my 'Zilla browsing experience (the other one being All-in-One Gestures, because mouse gestures are, to quote a friend, "teh fucking pwn")
    Lemmy start a small laundry list of TBE's perks though:

    -Single window mode (EVERYTHING opens in a new tab)
    -Drag & Drop tab rearranging (its just common sense)
    -Undo close tab (possibly the BEST feature of the entire extension. I use it daily)
    -Modifyable tab bar (move it around, scroll it, make it double layered, etc)
    -Customized tab behavior for new links (hypertext/bookmarks/history/javascript/external apps/etc: choose if they open a new window, tab, or load in an existing one. Very nice for steamlining your browsing experience.)
    -Tab grouping (including pretty colours!)
    -Tab locking (lock a tab to a specific page)
    -Auto reloading of tabs

    I could go on and on... TBE is like everything AND the damn kitchen sink (which is why some people seem to have a seething hatred of it). Really though, would it kill Mozilla to add just a few of the more popular features? I know extensions are supposed to be this big, grand, wonderful idea, but I think a LOT more people (especially average joe's) would be appreciative rather than pissed off to have a couple more handy dandy features. You've got to remember that if you want your browser to go mainstream, its got to have a bit of a "smack you in the face" slant for all the little old ladies and joe-sixpacks out there that aren't gonna spend an hour sifting through the extension library. Leave the "OMG my browzer has NO bloat n' runs 1.00283% fastr on my AMD becuz I compiel'd it myself" to the geeks who know and love that kind of stuff.

    Just my $0.02 anyways. In the meantime i'm just gonna keep loving the hell out of this browser. Firefox RULES! \o/

  33. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by el-spectre · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It has nothing to do with "scaling well", doing a full conversion of a major dynamic site from old HTML and tables to XHTML/CSS is a lot harder than changing one flat page.

    Grr. Armchair web developers are so frustrating.

    --
    "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
  34. What happens to the net when everyone has AdBlock? by Pausanias · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is potentially the beginning of a huge change in the way advertising works on the internet. As people get turned on to Gecko, they will get turned on to features like AdBlock. If Gecko captures 50% market share, you can bet many of those people are viewing neither ads nor unwanted Flash content, if they're anything like me.

    Does this mean an huge impending change in the way advertising works on the internet? Will companies like the NYT, who make a lot of money from ads, start embedding advertisements in ways such that AdBlocking them with regexp filters would also block out the non-ad images?

  35. WE GET IT, SLASHDOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think by the twentieth Firefox article posted this week, I got the picture that SLASHDOT LOVES FIREFOX.

  36. Smart Keywords by JohnWiney · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So I'm one of these slow guys who hasn't figured out smart keywords. So I go to "help" and "index" and type "smart keywords," just like the software geek says. Guess what? Nothing.

    1. Re:Smart Keywords by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I haven't either.

    2. Re:Smart Keywords by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Smart Keywords are great, here's how they work.

      Right-click and go to the Properties menu on any of your bookmarks. You'll see that you can enter a keyword. Now if you type that keyword in the location-bar it will take you to that bookmark. Ok so that's a keyword, cool, but what's so "smart" about that?

      Let's say you have a site that you often visit, and often search on. For example let's use Google. Instead of bookmarking http://www.google.com , the main page, type in a search for something, and then bookmark that page. Now look at the URL in your bookmark properties, find the search term you used, and replace it with %S . Make the keyword google, and your smart-keyword is ready to go. Type "google slashdot" in your location bar, and it will do just that. This works with any site that holds the search terms in their URL's. Quite useful!

    3. Re:Smart Keywords by cpaluc · · Score: 4, Informative

      I hadn't either - until I just read about them and tried them out.

      Go to a site that has an input box for doing a search (eg. dictionary.com). Right click in the input box and select "Add a keyword for this search ...". Then give it a name and a keyword (eg. dic). Now all you have to do is type 'dic anthropomorphic' in the URL box and Firefox will go to dictionary.com and look up the word for you.

      I've been using it for 1/2 hour and I'm hooked. This will save heaps of time here at work. Eg 'pb joe' to look up joe in the phonebook on the intranet - no need to go to the page.

      I've tried converting some people to Firefox before. I haven't had much luck (tabbed browsing etc didn't do it for them - go figure.) But it seems like this feature might just do it for one of my colleagues.

      Also note, there should be a bookmark in you 'Quick Searches' bookmark folder that will give more info.

    4. Re:Smart Keywords by CJ+Hooknose · · Score: 1
      cpaluc wrote: Go to a site that has an input box for doing a search (eg. dictionary.com). Right click in the input box and select "Add a keyword for this search ...". Then give it a name and a keyword (eg. dic). Now all you have to do is type 'dic anthropomorphic' in the URL box and Firefox will go to dictionary.com and look up the word for you.

      Fsck. Me. This could be really useful for a lot of people. Why hasn't this been advertised more? It's not in the Firefox Help for 0.93 (Help->Help Contents, search for keyword 'smart' returns 0 results) even though the feature is there. Oh well, you learn something new every day.

      --
      Give a monkey a brain and he'll swear he's the center of the universe.
  37. Re:What happens to the net when everyone has AdBlo by TheAwfulTruth · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This has been happening for quite some time. Like years.

    Sites (like Yahoo, IGN etc) are already making you step through ad pages before seeing content. Sometimes you can block that too, but sometimes not.

    The more we fight against ads, the more annoying and intrusive the ads will become :(

    --
    Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
  38. mod insightful by LnxAddct · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    wow so many nonexistant attributes all over the place.

  39. You forgot the last two steps! by Agent+Green · · Score: 1

    3) ???

    4) Profit!

    --
    // Agent Green (Ian / IU7 / KB1JQO)
    // IEEE 802.3: All 10base Are Belong To Us
  40. How'd Jamie's post get to +5, anyway? by Trillan · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Either 5 people modded it up without any verification in the ten minutes it took people to post proof that it was wrong, or some other factor is at work!

    1. Re:How'd Jamie's post get to +5, anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People are suckups. "Maybe if I mod up this editor, I'll get mod points!"

    2. Re:How'd Jamie's post get to +5, anyway? by Trillan · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Heh. The conspiracy theory is more entertaining, but I'm sure you're right. :)

    3. Re:How'd Jamie's post get to +5, anyway? by commodoresloat · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      It's not a conspiracy theory. Slashdot editors have unlimited mod points.

  41. Note: Reason for difference. by Trillan · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    The reason for the difference between my scan (180) and other others here (189) is that I took a copy of the current page, added the meta content line (which needs to be added if you're scanning from a local hard drive instead of over http) and uploaded the site to the w3c validator.

    If anyone is interested in reproducing this, you need to add this element to the head:

    <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">

    (The charset was determined by right-clicking the web page (as rendered over http) and checking the properties.)

  42. Firewall Port by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

    Anyone know if there is any specific network ports that can be blocked to prevent these spyware?

    1. Re:Firewall Port by DA-MAN · · Score: 4, Funny

      Try blocking port80, that should get most of them. If that doesn't work, try port 21 as well.

      --
      Can I get an eye poke?
      Dog House Forum
    2. Re:Firewall Port by sharkey · · Score: 1

      Don't forget ports 25, 110 and 119!

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
  43. Non-karma whoring link for the lazy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's a clickable WeatherFox.

  44. Here I thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Goodger was a verb or some Mozilla project. I had a hell of a time figuring out what the title meant.

  45. Re:What happens to the net when everyone has AdBlo by Pausanias · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well, I have been using the same AdBlock settings since 2001 and I rarely see an ad on Yahoo, NYT, or anywhere else. You just have to be clever with your regexps ;). In cases where you have to step through an ad page to get to the desired information, I usually get a blank screen with a "next" hyperlink on it. I just click on "next," and never have to see the ad.

    I download the ad, but tell AdBlock not to display it. Just doing my bit to bring down the system.

    The point is, the vast majority of ads are completely blocked by the filters, as they have been since 2001. And as long as Gecko had 2% of the market share, sites didn't care. Now they'll have to.

    ... let the fun begin!

  46. there is a googlebar with page rank by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
  47. Think AdBlock will always be a niche by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I myself know of Adblock - but I choose not to use it. Sites that have ads that are too annoying to use, I just don't use.

    I'd rather have sites stay around longer because they are supported by advertising revenue. I don't mind a few ads as a price, and I would mind whatever payment scheme would have to replace them.

    But that's just my personal stance. In the larger sense, I think that the populace at large does not care about ads so much that they seek out blocking solutions, or would even go to the effort of using an ad blocker if they could. After all, the US populace is exposed to ads so often we are just about blind to them anyway.

    Popups are a differnt matter as they generate constant unpleasant irritation, and people do go to great lengths to eliminate irritations from their lives.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Think AdBlock will always be a niche by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Generally they get paid for clicks, so if you don't click their ads, you are just as guilty as the ad-blockers.

    2. Re:Think AdBlock will always be a niche by ricotest · · Score: 1

      I use Adblock, but share your opinion. Sites that have ads that are too annoying to use, I block the ads from and continue to use it. Otherwise I leave them there. Sure, I might be contributing to the downfall of this annoying site, but I'd prefer it if their banner views were lower so they might be persuaded to change their advertising to something less annoying.

    3. Re:Think AdBlock will always be a niche by balster+neb · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, though i do still block some ads (from the more annoying ad hosting services).

      Still, its worth pointing out that I have never found a commercial website talking about Firefox and its extensions ever mentioning anything about Adblock.

    4. Re:Think AdBlock will always be a niche by TiggsPanther · · Score: 1

      I can see it becoming a problem. I'm not sure that there is a viable solution though.

      The main problem is that more and more people don't want to be advertised at, but in response adverts in general are getting more and more in-your-face. And especially where the Internet allows you to find things according to your own criteria you find adverts more annoying as it's more people trying to tell you what you should be looking at.

      I do prefer sites where the adverts are relevant to the page subject. If I'm looking for information or walkthroughs for a video game then an advert for the latest console may well interest me. However if I was looking for a recipe for a good pasta sauce, for example, then the games console advert wuold be more likely to tick em off.
      Although I can see how although this works for specific-topic sites it falls down on "free page hosting" sites like Geocities or whatever as any page could be about any subject.

      I'd rather have sites stay around longer because they are supported by advertising revenue. I don't mind a few ads as a price, and I would mind whatever payment scheme would have to replace them.

      Payment schemes very much depend on how much they cost, and what other benefits there are. If "Ad-free Browsing" is a bonus of a subscription that brings other features then fine. Paying simply to not get adverts seems stupid to me because of the following reasoning.

      Adverts are usually trying to persuade me to spend money. Adverts have little effect on me as I don't usually want to spend much money - certainly not through other people trying to persuade me. Plus if I really want to know about a product I'll do my own research.
      So the "Pay money so that you don't see adverts" approach is completely lost on me, as it's being persuaded to part with my money so that I don't get people persuading me to part with my money. Or, to put it another way, if I wanted to spend money I'd have bought a subscription. So the adverts are totally lost on me.

      On the whole I don't block banner adverts though. Well except for Flash ones. But that's mainly 'cos they take time to download and are too damn distracting.
      The ads here on /. aren't too bad. Most are interesting, and the ones that aren't are at least relevant. (No-one trying to sell me cheap air-fares or ringtones on a site where that's totally irrelevant) Plus they remind me I really must wisit ThinkGeek when I've got a bit of spare cash.
      And on sites where the ads are annoying? Well I just do what many other people do and simply avoid those sites.

      --
      Tiggs
      "120 chars should be enough for everyone..."
  48. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by el-spectre · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Nah, a good troll is subtle and informed. This was just random ranting w/o knowing what the fuck you are talking about, AC.

    --
    "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
  49. Firefox is coming along nicely by curtlewis · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's lean, mean and quick. It's got a nice feature set, but I do find myself wanting:

    - A more exposed menu to temporarily disable popup blocking.

    - An option to open new tabs in the background rather than switching to them.

    My favorite aspect of Firefox is that it doesn't try to do everything. It's just a browser, like... well.. IE. Only it's better. It doesn't have that Craptive X stuff.

    Web designers have gotten sloppy in the last few years, coding only for IE, causing problems for those that don't use IE. The trend is changing and I welcome our new extra workload for lazy web designer overlords!

    1. Re:Firefox is coming along nicely by sleighb0y · · Score: 2, Informative

      What version do you have?

      As of the latest PR, they added a more visible pop-up blocker interface. And the "Open new tab in background" has been around for a while.

    2. Re:Firefox is coming along nicely by comwiz56 · · Score: 1

      You can middle click a link to open a tab in the background

    3. Re:Firefox is coming along nicely by curtlewis · · Score: 1

      version 0.9.3

      Just upgraded to 1.0PR and noticed a few desirable additions, but it still lacks some key features. Coming along nicely, though.

  50. quick searches by Christopher+Anthony · · Score: 1
    Actually, if you use the tweak ui program from Microsoft, you can put quick searches into IE. Microsoft stopped developing IE when they said that future browser innovation would come mainly from plugins, which are really pretty easy to write. IE is definitely the most customizable browser around, mainly because it is just a control that anything can be done with.

    I still prefer Firfox, but you might as well get your facts straight. If you don't even know the competition, how can you beat them?

  51. Not Even Close by N8F8 · · Score: 1

    I don't see Image search or Froogle. Plus you can't configure it very well.

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
    1. Re:Not Even Close by Mant · · Score: 1

      You don't even need the Google search bar for those. Just use the normal search box, and click on "Add Engines". In the page it takes you too, type Google, and the list includeds Froogle, Images, Groups and all sorts of other Google Goodness. Click on the one you want to add it to the search box.

      I also use the Advanced Highlighter Button extention, as it does the search term highlighting I really liked from the Google toolbar, but now with any Search Engine. In fact, with these I've actually removed the Googlebar, as it was just taking up space.

      Still the latest Googlebar I had did Images, You click on the menu by the 'G' and choose "Goggle Images". Froogle will probably turn up soon.

    2. Re:Not Even Close by covertbadger · · Score: 1

      Use the smart keywords that Goodger mentions in the article. e.g. go to google images, right-click in the search field, and select "Add a keyword for this search...". Call it gi or something. Then if you type "gi alyson hannigan" in your address bar, Firefox automatically searches google images for a certain foxy redhead. Job done.

  52. Bah NZ locations by Nailer · · Score: 1

    I reckon this browser needs one last rename.

    Firefox Aye Bro.

    1. Re:Bah NZ locations by Ghouki · · Score: 0

      cher

      --

      insert witty comment here
  53. Is Goodger a new extension? by signingis · · Score: 2, Funny

    Ohh... It's a guy. Okay. Carry on.

    --

    I prefer a void in conversation to a vacuous one.
  54. Computer science is not a science yet. by mewphobia · · Score: 1

    Couldn't they just make a proxy that records the times that each packet is recieved, and then use this timing everytime?

    so the packets would be in the same order, and the reflow bugs would be reproducable?

    I just find it hard to understand how we can't reproduce things that happen in such a closed environment (a computer). It's like debugging is still in the dark ages. In science, you need to make experiments reproducable or you get laughed at.

    When will computer science be a real science?

    1. Re:Computer science is not a science yet. by mewphobia · · Score: 1

      Further to my last comment - We doesn't firefox force a redraw when the page has finished loading? If the fix is as simple as changing the text size etc. to get it to redraw, why can't we just automatically do this when all elements have loaded?

    2. Re:Computer science is not a science yet. by CTho9305 · · Score: 1

      1) That's a hacky solution. It's better to find the actual cause of the problem.
      2) That would increase the time it takes to render a page, and performance is supposed to be a strong point of Gecko (or Firefox).

    3. Re:Computer science is not a science yet. by mewphobia · · Score: 3, Interesting

      While I wholeheartedly agree to the spirit of your comments, I think they need addressing.

      1) Yes it's a hack. Yes it's better to actually find the cause of the problem. I hate hacks as much as the next guy - but to the user it would solve all these "reflow bugs" easily and simply. There is nothing to stop them being fixed in the background and for this hack to eventually be taken out. But to a user, if a page looks screwed up, and it doesn't in internet explorer, it's firefox's fault.

      Make it a preference that defaults to on, make all pages render correctly today, and worry about performance improvements later.

      Functionality beats performance anytime.

      2) I would suggest the refresh be double buffered, and just swap buffers when it's done. The page will take the same time to load, but after x (the time it takes it refresh the page) ms, the page will also look right.

    4. Re:Computer science is not a science yet. by MORB · · Score: 1

      A computer is not a closed environment, otherwise it wouldn't serve any purpose.

      A lot of things that happen in a computer are tied to external factors.

      For instance, the adresses where the various structures and objects are allocated by an application depends on the order in which they have been allocated and freed. And this, in turns, depends heavily on what the user does. What file he opens, what function he uses, and so on.

      Now imagine a buffer overflow bug. Depending on what is located beyond the buffer, which is simply random due to the reaosns outlined above, the buffer overflow can either crash the app, make the app behave weirdly, can corrupt some data, or can do nothing noticeable.

      This is just one example. If you factor in the various synchronisation problems that can occur between threads, interruptions triggered by peripherals and so on, you can understand that what occurs in a computer isn't entirely predictable.

    5. Re:Computer science is not a science yet. by mewphobia · · Score: 1

      Okay you got me. A computer isn't a totally closed environment.

      But anything that happens in software, can be reproduced in software. And everything that happens in a computer, is software. Interrupts are a slightly different story, but in modern operating systems they are virtualised enough to make the distinction irrelivant.

      Give me a situation that cannot be reproduced due to physical limitations of computers. If it happens once, you should be able to reproduce it. You CAN reproduce it, but current tools don't let you.

      I have myself coded quite large multi-threaded systems. The one in particular i'm thinking of was basically an automated testing system, which commonly (depending on the testing scenario) spawned 150 threads, each with it's own RTP (Real time protocol) client. It had a bug at one stage which involved sometimes (rarely) clearing a read mutex after already reading the data associated with it. Because the data had already been sent, but the read mutex was clear, the thread would deadlock - the data had arrived but it had no way of notifying anyone. Due to the multi-threaded nature of this application, most of the time it would be okay. But when context switches were at the wrong times, deadlock!

      Yeah, this seems like random behaviour. But it's not. If the operating system's scheduling algorithm was simpler, say if it only context switched after the mutex was clear, it would be sweet.

      We (programmers) have total control over our computers, yet we continue to debug in an environment that isn't controlled. If the bug is context switch/timing related, why can't we just run it a few times until the bug occurs, and then replay it with the same timing of context switches etc.?

      In context of a buffer overflow bug, why can't we just store what's in memory to a file, in such a way that we can see what structures are where, and then inspect it at will? Yeah i've used memory inspectors - they could be several orders of magnitude more user friendly.

      That's what I mean. It's computationally possible, but we don't do it. We are still in the dark ages of computer programming.

    6. Re:Computer science is not a science yet. by Nurgled · · Score: 1

      Opera at one time had a feature to automatically reflow the page once it had loaded because it had some of these render-while-loading bugs. I've not used recent versions, so I don't know if it's still there...

      My point, though, is that this can be quite annoying. Depending on the severity of the change when it's re-flowed, text and links can end up being quite a large distance away from where they appeared the first time, so just as I'm about to click in a text box it jumps up 10 pixels and I miss and hit a submit button or something. Very annoying. Instead, I tend to just make use of Opera's manual "Refresh Display" feature. Sure, it doesn't hide the problem under a hack, but at least if the page loads and is readable despite not being "quite right" I can get on and use it without the layout suddenly changing on me a few seconds later.

  55. WFM by bogie · · Score: 1

    I can't say that your problem doesn't exist but have you tried with .10 and a fresh profile? As it stands the Flash plugin work seemlessly and the whole process is very slick. First time you go to a Flash site and hit install it just works without a restart. The same will happen with other plugins in the future IIRC. I haven't been prompted again for Flash as well.

    To be honest once I saw the changes pouring in after Firefox was "feature complete" I got really annoyed and thought Firefox 1.0 was going to be a steaming pile of half-finished shit. Seeing how far they have come though since .9 and how promising the plugin and extension architectures are I am now very hopeful. 1.0 will feature moron proof access to web plugins and extension with the ability to update without hosing your profile. Its gonna be sweet.

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    1. Re:WFM by hobo2k · · Score: 1

      Yup, I upgraded from 0.9 to 1.0PR today. The USA Today photo gallery was indeed broken on 0.9, but works with 1.0. So that's one less excuse for using IE.

  56. Who should i blame then... by Insipid+Trunculance · · Score: 5, Funny

    i was going to blame /. for the way the web site renders in Firefox.

    Then i read that its not Slashdot ,its actually firefox.

    Then i read that it actually is /. since its HTML is not valid.

    So can i continue blaming /. or shall i play safe and blame MicroSoft.

    many thanks for your invaluable opinions.

    --
    Wanted : A Signature.
    1. Re:Who should i blame then... by Ziviyr · · Score: 1

      Blame Slashdot, reload often.

      --

      Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
    2. Re:Who should i blame then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same problem happens on Froogle's grid view, so I doubt that it is Slashdot.

  57. XSLT is great, but WTF? by Curtman · · Score: 1

    What does XSLT have to do with anything? Sure gecko browsers like Firefox support XSL transforms, but they don't support XSL:FO. Or were you using that page as an example of how things should be? If you were, you might be surprised if you click 'View Page Source'. It's HTML (not XML), with CSS.

    Any time you see a tag like <br> without a matching </br>, thats not XML. In XML it's <br/>.

    1. Re:XSLT is great, but WTF? by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1
      I guess I'll clarify; Thank you for this well-written response post.

      What I was really getting at is that slashdot could set up their data as pure XML, using XSLT to transform it into XHTML. This is what the linked site talks about. This way, the data, transform, and layout would be separated, and anyone who wanted to could modify how slashdot looked to *them* simply by adding in their own additional transform or css. This format would also make it much easier to fix some of the bugs that have cropped up in the slashcode over the years. Of course, it would still involve the same rewrite that would be needed to bring it up to HTML4.0 standards, but in the future, the next time an update is needed, it would be much simpler.

    2. Re:XSLT is great, but WTF? by Curtman · · Score: 1

      Personally I thought this was a great idea when it appeared on Slashdot almost a year ago. The result looked great. The data is already available as pure XML as well, so you could use client side XSLT on that to display it however you like. CSS is perfect for the job though, and XSLT is a solution in search of a problem.

  58. Re:Firefox IE by Ziviyr · · Score: 1

    Favorite one I never used, Flashblock.

    All flash is blocked, you click the ones you want to display. If only the (un)installing worked.

    --

    Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
  59. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by MadChicken · · Score: 1

    Is it? Remember the word "dynamic" You can change *one* set of table code and ta-da all of the tables automagically get changed.

    The problem is we need semantics, and that requires actual design... a few drop-in code changes can't necessarily substitute for thought and planning.

    XHTML would be ideal, yeah, but actual valid HTML 4.01 with good CSS would be a welcome change, too. Tables are OK, but see all those FONT tags? Yikes.

    OK I am in an armchair right now, but I'll be right back to web development tomorrow.

    --
    SYS 64738 NO CARRIER
  60. And just what do you mean by that? by calculadoru · · Score: 1

    I'm getting pretty tired of this whole 'Firefox doesn't render Slashdot correctly' thing. WHICH VERSION OF FIREFOX DOESN'T? Because versions 0.9.1-3 worked fine, and so does the latest one, and so will the official release. I swear to Buddha I don't know just WHAT people mean when they whine about it.

    IT BLOODY WORKS FINE!

    Sigh. Calming down now, sorry for the rant.

    --
    The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it. -- G.B. Shaw
    1. Re:And just what do you mean by that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's really, really sporadic. I have two computers here. One has Windows 2000 with Firefox 1.0 PR and no problems rendering Slashdot. The other has XP with Firefox 1.0 PR and I see problems ~50% of the time. Similar extensions, same prefs file (copied the profile from XP to 2000), different behaviors. Anyway, they've fixed it, and hopefully (crossing fingers) they'll be able to include it in 1.0 final.

  61. Re:Firefox IE by g-doo · · Score: 1

    No, it's not too much for a simple end user. Many simple end users (including the relatively computer illiterate) are adopting Firefox or Mozilla, especially at universities across the nation. And they love it.

  62. This is all well and good, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When are they going to make it so that keyboard focus always follows the FUCKING VISIBLE TAB? I might be a little more tolerant of its occasional completely forgetting about the keyboard scroll commands if it actually worked most of the time.

  63. Real Men by commodoresloat · · Score: 2, Funny
    Real men use tables for layout, and that's that. A real programmer would never prefer CSS's long spelled out english words like border-color in favor of HTML's ULs and TDs.

    Yeah! And real men read web pages using only cat, parsing the HTML in their heads!

    1. Re:Real Men by recursiv · · Score: 1

      wget perhaps?

      --
      I used to bulls-eye womp-rats in my pants
  64. Props to the Kiwis by Logicdisorder · · Score: 1

    New Zealand might be small but by fuck we have some fucking smart people. Props to Mozilla, you have the fine NZ hookup!!!

    --
    "The most dangerous creation of any society is that man who has nothing to lose." - James Baldwin, American author
    1. Re:Props to the Kiwis by taycalmac · · Score: 0

      NZ is just Australia with extensions. HA HA HA HA Oh er...Sorry

      --
      A clean chord is a happy chord...
  65. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by batkiwi · · Score: 1

    If slash was developed properly, it would be almost EXACTLY as simple as changing 1 flat page. Have you ever looked at slashcode? It's the only code I've seen which is worse than the abombination that is bugzilla.

  66. Re:Firefox IE by Trinition · · Score: 1

    Just because you can make something a plugin, doesn't mean you should. Shoudl we also make an RSS client in Firefox via an extension? Or would that but up against the one made for FireFox. Or how about a POP3 checker? Or instant message client? Or a bread slicer! Yeah, that'd be better than just plain old sliced bread.

    Personally (admission to not being objective), I prefer my functionality to be partitioned into separate programs. While making extensions is presumably easier than writing a full app, maybe the Mozilla team shoudl consider making a small container that can be used to run one-off standalone "extensions". Personally, I think WeatherFox beats the stupid thing from the Weather Channel, but since I don't run MoZilla/FireFox, I won't be using it anytime soon.

  67. Your sig. by Ma�djeurtam · · Score: 2, Informative

    From the page linked on you sig :
    ------------
    Before you panic because I'm picking on Slashdot, let me inform you that I asked Rob "CmdrTaco" Malda, the guru behind Slashdot, for permission to post this information, and he stated in his reply email:
    Have fun. Feel free to submit patches back to us if you come up with anything useful. Slashdot's source code is open source and available at http://www.slashcode.com.
    ------------

    Did you or anyone else involved with alistapart submit a patch to the slashcode? I'd love a 2004-compliant /.!
    Now, we only need some frequent ./ posters to link the alistapart site. Let's begin lobbying Taco right now! Who's with me? :-)

    --
    Instant Karma's gonna get you, Gonna knock you right on the head (John Lennon, 1970)
  68. Slashdot Code: Open Source making excuses on fixes by tyrione · · Score: 1

    It is rather ironic that we have the technical skills, in droves, to develop dynamically publishable content, yet we immediately whine about the costs of doing it when the stuff is already Open Source.

    So much for utilizing projects like Apache Forrest or better yet Cocoon 2.1.5.1.

  69. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by el-spectre · · Score: 1

    riiiiiight, which means a complete redesign and a lot of work. And the slashdot folks have stated that they are working on it.

    I swear, if I had a dollar for every hack (in the negative sense) who stood on the sidelines and went "you know, that could be done better"....

    --
    "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
  70. FF Errata by earthstar · · Score: 0

    Yaeh firefox renders slashdot correctly.
    But there have been many instances when the comments overlap with the section in left side-"sections,main,apache".
    That section on the left and the comments sometimes get mixed up...makin a part of the comment unreadable.
    Iam sure others would hav also seen this anomaly.
    i uuse FF 0.8.I'll get FF 1.0 when it comes.

  71. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by jamie · · Score: 2, Funny
    Presumably because w3.org has an ill-behaved script that triggered our self-defense scripts at some point in the past. If they published the IP they used in some obvious location I'd be happy to unblock it. But I couldn't find it in their FAQ or anything.

    The conspiracy theories are fun to read though... hey, I said we emitted HTML 3.2... I never said it was valid :)

  72. so funny! by earthstar · · Score: 0
    how likely it is that any of the /. editors actually cares enough to do anything in response to the complaints.

    You thought the slashdot editors would be reading comments like us?They would be busy making money or doing somethin else.

    When that is the case,where is question of them taking action based on complaints in comments?

  73. New egg! by earthstar · · Score: 0

    speaking of Adware and spyware in FF, the advert newegg.com on the 1st comment page actually has link to : Mediaplex ,which i suppose, isnt a very respectable site?
    Isnt mediaplex ad harverstor?

  74. Absolute power by wldkos · · Score: 0

    I hope firefox stays on corse for being the best browser, even if it ever get's to the "main" mainstream. I guess it happens when you need funding, but still....

  75. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Then you don't emit HTML 3.2. You may try, but you're failing. You emit something similar to HTML 3.2 which isn't HTML 3.2.

  76. Comment posting problem by earthstar · · Score: 0
    I think I can ask you this.
    Iam on dialup.
    When i type in comments and hit submit button,the comments get submitted with one ISP.And in another ISP,When i hit Submit button, i get " you cannot submit comments to this page" , from slashdot. This applies to any article - if submiting isnt working with ISP2 thenit works when i try in ISP1.
    What could be the problem?

    with Both ISP's i can browse slashdot.org. I use win 98 SE.

  77. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by Feztaa · · Score: 1

    Slashdot does emit code to an HTML standard, it just happens to be HTML 3.2.

    Yep, you sure didn't say it was valid, but "emitting code to an HTML standard" is something you're certainly not doing.

  78. firefox money by earthstar · · Score: 1, Interesting
    how do the firefox chief engineer and other developers get paid?From whom? How do thjey support themselves?I guess the developers work full time, and FF is free.

    where does the funding come from?

    1. Re:firefox money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Venture capitalist waiting in the woodworks for the right time to take it over an dominate. Look they all want to dominate.

  79. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    If you're not going to produce valid HTML 3.2, why not just call it XHTML? "Hey, we produce XHTML!" There won't be any difference. Heck, I just checked the validator, and you're showing less errors for HTML 4.01 Transitional than you are for HTML 3.2. Maybe you should start saying it's 4.01?

  80. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Ever try emailing them?

    Or, in the alternative:

    1) Put up a subdomain: xhilhdioshpfisdhfpoishdopfihsidopfhosdihfopsdhfopi sdhfpoisdhfopisdhfopisdhfposdihosdfhii.slashdot.or g

    2) Have something (anything) listen on port 80 for any connection whatsoever.

    3) Submit above domain to validator script.

    Voila, you now know where the w3.org validator connects from. This is strictly a guess, but it's probably an IP somewhere within their netblock.

    Just a thought.

  81. Yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Validator just says "forbidden". I guess that one way of dealing with the problem... sweeping it under the rug.

  82. I think you may by warrax_666 · · Score: 1

    have misspelled netcat. Don't mention it, glad to be of service.

    --
    HAND.
    1. Re:I think you may by Elminst · · Score: 1

      No no.. he's right....
      You just wget the actual page first. then cat it, and wget the next page you want to read. ;)

      --
      No unauthorized use. Trespassers will be shot. Survivors will be shot again.
    2. Re:I think you may by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

      Exactly. netcat is for wimps!!!

  83. Unfair comparison by pdamoc · · Score: 4, Informative
    Firefox, the browser that's smaller yet smarter than just about anything else available.

    Firefox Setup 1.0PR.exe - 4,742,005 bytes
    Opera 7.54 - ow32enen754.exe - 3,666,195 bytes
    People should stop comparing Firefox to IE, that's really unfair, its like comparing a power-plant based on nuclear fuel with one based on coal. It is a difference in age.
    However when we compare Firefox with Opera we can clearly see that Opera is a smaller download, it includes a very smart (the smartest I've used) email client, a news reader and an IRC client.
    The day when Firefox/Mozilla will have a email client as smart as Opera's M2 and it will be every bit as accessible as it is now M2 is the day I will consider switching. Till that day I'll still be an Opera fan with all the other browser installed as an alternative.
    1. Re:Unfair comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Till that day I'll still be an Opera fan with all the other browser installed as an alternative.

      You can't say that here! Heresy! You have to say that [slashdot meme du jour] is teh sux0r!!!!1!

      It's the download manager I like, and I am sure I was using tabbed browsing in Opera around the release of whateverfirefoxwascalledthen 0.2
      - posted from Opera 7.54 :-D

  84. Firefox messes its own page!!! by earthstar · · Score: 0

    i have Firefox 0.9.2 .
    Firefox seems to have messed up its own page!

    You will be able to see that , the "Most recent" listing overlap!!
    Does this occur for Ver 1.0 PR guys also?

  85. The google bar isn't needed by Kristoffer+Lunden · · Score: 1

    I used to think that the google bar was the killer plugin all categories, first on IE, then the unofficial one for Moz/Firefox. Supersweet.

    But now, I've uninstalled it and I miss only one feature - that is not even Google related - the only one I actually used that was special, the "UP" button. I can't for my life imagine why that is not a standard button in any browser, especially with the dropdown it provides. Anyone that fixes that one part as a standalone plugin is my hero forever. Make it so I can put it beside the url bar or something. =)

    Anyhow, reason the google bar is unnecessary is Bookmark Keywords (see your Quick Searches folder) together with Find As You Type. Nowadays I only type "ALT+D g search terms ENTER" when I want to search google for "search terms", and I have more shortcuts for images, like "im" and so on. Moreoever, this makes it consistent with my other fast searches, like dictionary, wikipedia, several forums etc. I do admit that Find As You Type is not initially as smooth as clicking the search words in a bar to go to the places in the text, but on the other hand, if you like me usually have your hands mostly on the keyboard, it is faster, especially with the right settings (no '/' to start finding etc). And nowadays, in 1.0PR, it is a small bar with highlight and all that...

    Try it out, it really is both smoother and faster than a specialized bar. And I got some viewport space back, too (important on my laptop). :)

  86. Firefox rant by wikinerd · · Score: 1
    Begin:Rant {

    Firefox has too few features when compared to Mozilla, Opera or Konqueror (my favourite). Although better than MSIE, Firefox developers should think again whether the path they walk will allow them to maintain a strong share and reputation in the browser market.

    Users now switch to Firefox because they want to escape from MSIE. That's great, and I truly believe that very soon Firefox will be used by at least 50% of the web users, including companies, and later its market share may be even higher, assuming that MS will not unveil any fixed or usable MSIE version in the near future.

    However, in the long run, users will notice the lack of features in Firefox and start going back to featurefull browsers like Mozilla, Opera and Konqueror. I do believe, however, that Firefox will continue being used by corporations exactly because it is very light without many features.

    It is worth noting that a Firefox developer wanted to remove the "View Source" menu option from CVS. But the HTML source is useful to anyone, not just developers.

    Firefox developers should not expect that the user will install tweaks and addons. Firefox right now has a powerful engine but only a small portion of this power is available to the end user. Users will soon demand more power.

    It is also very annoying to have to install a number of addons and tweaks in order to make Firefox work unveiling its full power. Now consider how many users will have the patience to reinstall addons and tweaks after a HDD format or a Windows reinstallation... They will not accept that hassle so they will soon move to the powerful Mozilla or another alternative such as Opera or Konqueror (for KDE users).

    } End:Rant

    1. Re:Firefox rant by andrewweb · · Score: 1

      As a recent firefox convert, I'm wondering what great features I'm suddenly missing by not using IE/Moz/w.h.y?

      I use my browser for visiting websites, which compose of formatted document, images, and various other content such as flash or whatever. This, firefox handles as capably as IE or (your favourite browser here) ever did.

      With IE, the firs thing I installed was the google toolbar; FF has a useful though not as full-featured one already. But I couldn't sort my bookmarks (as IE does) so I needed an FF plugin for that. Swings and roundabouts then.

      The point is that in my experience no browser does all you want - that's the whole reason for extensions. Why should I download something full of bloat I will never need? Haven't we been railing against that for years?

      The bottom line really is that as a web browser, Firefox is pretty capable as-is, and again I really have to ask exactly what *critical* features I'm missing with just the plain install...

    2. Re:Firefox rant by hkmwbz · · Score: 2, Informative
      "Why should I download something full of bloat I will never need? Haven't we been railing against that for years?"
      Define "we". A lot of people actually like full-featured programs that can be used without having to browse through tons of extensions to get more functionality.
      "I really have to ask exactly what *critical* features I'm missing with just the plain install..."
      Mouse gestures, properly handled tabbed browsing, fast forward, proper zoom, sessions, continue where you left off when you closed the program, hotclick, quick prefs... And more. Those are just essential browser features to me. I also need stuff like an e-mail client with a properly indexed e-mail engine which allows me to search through tens of thousands of messages in less than a second. Opera does that.
      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    3. Re:Firefox rant by andrewweb · · Score: 1

      I think you prove my point there.

      Those things that are essential to you are seriously of no interest to me.

      So why should I download all those things when I don't want them?

      I wonder if you would be happier had firefox shipped with every extension you also *haven't* installed? There certainly appear to be plenty to choose from. How about firefox-complete.zip at 10 times the download size?

      If you want a discussion on software bloat, you can always google for one - there are plenty to be found.

      At the end of the day, I guess it's a matter of preference and choice.

      So I will choose to download a small package and then add the bookmark sorter and adblock extensions. And be perfectly happy with it left alone like that.

    4. Re:Firefox rant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, dude... Opera is actually a smaller download than Firefox.

      And yes, I know Opera is compressed, but even when uncompressed, Opera is smaller.

    5. Re:Firefox rant by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      "How about firefox-complete.zip at 10 times the download size?"
      Yeah, exactly. I think you just proved my point. Opera offers all these things in a smaller package, smoothly integrated and working out of the box. No hassle. No ten times the download size, no wading through loads of crappy extensions that try to mimic Opera's functionality.

      And yes, Opera is still a smaller package even if you decompress the executables that are compressed using ASPack. Compare it on Linux - Opera is a couple of megs smaller there, too. Even smaller if you download the shared version.

      I guess Firefox fits better in with the "build it yourself" mentality. Maybe that's why I primarily use Windows? I prefer to get the job done, and I don't have time to fiddle around.

      (Of course, I use Windows because I'm used to it, but there is this "fiddling around" mentality in Linux, as it does require a lot of fiddling around, at least in my experience.)

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  87. HTML is as good as XHTML by Rits · · Score: 3, Interesting
    HTML 4 is a very old standard (deprecated IMHO)


    Deprecation is not a matter of opinion in the world of webstandards :)

    HTML 4.01 and XHTML 1.0 offer exactly the same capabilities, only XHTML offers ease of use inside XSLT based publishing systems. Anyone else might just as well go on writing HTML 4.01.

    What matters is that you write valid HTML, and that you separate style and structure, farming out all presentation to the linked style sheet. So I agree with the sentiment to use 'Strict with CSS'.

    I see a lot of invalid XHTML on the web, where the use transitional or proprietary markup like 'topmargin' and 'center'. I always wonder, why did they add those slashes? What's the point?
    --
    If you don't like having choices made for you, you should start making your own. - Neal Stephenson
    1. Re:HTML is as good as XHTML by BladeMelbourne · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The point is that it's XML, HTML 4.01 is far older and has been superceded. Anyone making a new website would be foolish to use HTML 4.01. Just the same as someone who purchases a brand new car - powered by steam. It would only be a matter of time before a rewrite in XML (XHTML) would be required.

      Deprecation is not a matter of opinion in the world of webstandards

      Is that why the W3C site isn't written in HTML 4.01? Is that why people who make build websites for a living (like myself) code XHTML?

      Just because ASP.NET serves any non-MSIE 5+ browser HTML 3.2 by default doesn't mean that it's the right choice.

      And just as much invalid XHTML that you see on the internet, I bet there are more than 10 times the amount of invalid HTML. Easily.

      I agree with you on CSS ;-)

    2. Re:HTML is as good as XHTML by joshbosh · · Score: 1
      Anyone making a new website would be foolish to use HTML 4.01.

      I disagree. Consider reading the following article: Sending XHTML as text/html Considered Harmful.

      Is that why the W3C site isn't written in HTML 4.01?

      Many regularly-updated sections of the W3C's site aren't written in XHTML (e.g., Web Accessibility Initiative).

      Is that why people who make build websites for a living (like myself) code XHTML?

      Tim Berners-Lee's documents aren't marked up using XHTML.

      I suggest you spend some time reading posts made to the comp.infosystems.www.authoring newsgroups, whose contributors include, among others, academics who've marked up their documents properly years before all the blogging designers were polluting the Web with their "guidance".

    3. Re:HTML is as good as XHTML by BladeMelbourne · · Score: 1
      I have never been harmed by XHTML being served as text/html - and I do not know of anyone who has. I will continue to use the MIME type text/html until MSIE understands application/xhtml+xml (or whatever most web servers and browsers end up using). Harmful is not even the word I would use - maybe counter-intuitive or mis-specified. This is only one line sent by the webserver response in the headers - it doesn't make the XHTML "harmful" in any way.

      Also, Tim Berner-Lee might have been a positive influence in the early days (an now to a lesser extent), but that doesn't mean that he "builds websites for a living". This is evident by the quality of his site. Sure, it serves it's purpose, but it's written using technology that has changed very little since 1997. The newer standards are designed to make updates easier, to make more things possible and to enrich the end user's experience. There is a big difference in job tasks between those who have a say in the standards and those who actually use the standards every day. And there would be a large difference in coding talent too.

      I'm not saying XHTML is perfect, but let's face facts - it's better than HTML and it will be the markup of choice sometime in the near future. HTML will fade to the background, except for those academic zealots who are affraid of embracing change and the benefits that it offers.

      XHTML Strict is a challenge for people to learn, especially when they have been coding HTML for years. They have unlearn the HTML way and change the way they design and build pages. XHTML Transitional is a nice step-up however.

      XHTML was designed to replace HTML. HTML works ok, however due to its age it is not as compatible with more recent technologies such as XML. XHTML offers the good that HTML did, whilst being more flexible and "future proof".

      I suggest you read the following, and heed their "guidance":
      http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/
      http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/Activity

      And yes I understand the irony of typing invalid HTML into Slashdot whilst advocating XHTML ;-)

  88. slashdot is NOT html 3.2 compliant by perler · · Score: 2, Interesting

    just for the record, go into opera, load slashdot, press ctrl-alt-v (validate frame) and you get back a document with some hundred validation erors against html 3.2

    PAT

  89. Patents by unit01 · · Score: 1

    With all the features firefox has what laws can be used to stop microsoft cloning. Who owns the patents on features such as tabbed browsing? It's scary how internet exlorer 7 is rumoured to have tabbed browsing and pop-up blocking. They just need to do an automatic update of internet explorer and firefox will be forgotten by windows users. Or can firefox stay ahead of internet explorer for the long haul?

  90. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by SenseiLeNoir · · Score: 1, Offtopic
    hey, I said we emitted HTML 3.2... I never said it was valid :)

    Microsoft incorporates security in its products, its just not valid security!

    COme on guys! I am sure you can do better than that feeble excuse! ;)

    --
    Have a nice day!
  91. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I swear, if I had a dollar for every hack (in the negative sense) who stood on the sidelines and went "you know, that could be done better"....

    Why don't you get similarly incensed by critcisms from the Slashdot crew regarding problems with software from a certain company in Redmon, WA?

    Sycophant.

  92. Wrong title by sjoerd_visscher · · Score: 1

    Nobody noticed that the article contained absolutely *nothing* about Firefox's future?

  93. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by juhaz · · Score: 1

    It has nothing to do with "scaling well", doing a full conversion of a major dynamic site from old HTML and tables to XHTML/CSS is a lot harder than changing one flat page.

    That may be so, but they could at least try to make it output valid HTML 3.2 if we're stuck with the old HTML. Should be much easier than a total redesign with XHTML and CSS.

  94. Its more...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The counter hasnt been updated yet, but SpreadFirefox reports 720,000 downloads in 3 days!

    Eep!

  95. My bosses are more down-to-earth by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1
    One day, my boss will choke on his "we should just design for Microsoft IE and if it doesn't work in your Mozilla then maybe you shouldn't use it." Bastard.

    My managers have been quite happy for me to use Firefox. However, since Firefox still doesn't get the file: protocol, and the widely-quoted fix still doesn't seem to work, it's still screwed on just about any intranet in the universe. So, now I'm going to be officially forced to go back to IE at work, because we've just set up a serious intranet, too. :-(

    This has been one of the most-duped bugs in the history of Mozilla (it goes back to way before FF's time). It has numerous votes, and should be straightforward to fix, but hasn't been because of a (dubious) security concern. Not exactly the finest example of OSS fixing important problems quickly and being better than the CSS alternatives!

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  96. Re: For the record... by Adhemar · · Score: 1
    For the record... Slashdot does emit code to an HTML standard, it just happens to be HTML 3.2. That's a standard. Call it "outdated" if you like but if it works, it works, right?

    W3C's HTML validator finds in the current front page 164 errors. (I had to save the page locally on my hard disk, and validate the uploaded file. Trying to validate the URL http://slashdot.org/ had 403 Forbidden as a result.)

    So, the current Slashdot is not in the "outdated" HTML 3.2 standard. There's no problem with an older HTML version, although I prefer XHTML. The problem is it is not valid HTML 3.2.

  97. Overcomplicated Solution by Nurgled · · Score: 1

    I do this with a filtering proxy, but here's a version for those who don't use such a thing:

    Run an Apache instance somewhere on your network. Add to it a VirtualHost with an alias configured as *.slashdot.org, as follows:

    <VirtualHost *>
    ServerName blah.slashdot.org
    ServerAlias *.slashdot.org
    Redirect / http://slashdot.org/
    </VirtualHost>

    Now make a list of all of the sections which have color schemes you don't like and add them to your /etc/hosts file (or c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts if you're that way inclined) with the IP address of the Apache instance you just configured. It'll look something like this:

    192.168.0.2 it.slashdot.org
    192.168.0.2 games.slashdot.org

    Those hostnames will now go to your Apache rather than to the real slashdot, and the virtualhost will bounce you off to plain ol' slashdot.org. If you've got several machines to do this to, you might like to consider setting up a nameserver and having it be the master for slashdot.org, but bear in mind that you'll have to change it if slashdot's IP changes. Also, it can make it a bit of a bitch to read the section front pages, but I don't generally do that anyway.

    Alternatively, a much easier solution is just to configure your account to use the "Light" template rather than the standard template. If your browser's default rendering doesn't appeal to you, take a few moments to write a user stylesheet which you do like to look at and other sites will benefit from it too. It's best if you use a browser like Opera which allows you to switch between "what most browsers have as default" and "my user stylesheet" so that badly-written sites don't get tripped up by your unusual choices and cause white-on-white text.

    I actually do both of these things, because even in the light template some of the beige continues to show through, for example on the comment form.

  98. XSLT and XSL-FO by Nurgled · · Score: 2, Interesting

    XSLT is for tranforming XML data between different XML formats or sometimes from XML to non-XML formats. It doesn't have much to do with "structuring layout". (I routinely use XSLT to transform Simplified Docbook into HTML, LaTeX and XSL-FO)

    XSL-FO, on the other hand, is an XML application for describing (loosely) typesetting parameters. It's actually almost parallel with CSS in purpose, but CSS is more rich in functions relating to on-screen interactive content, like support for links and behaviors. XSL-FO could be used, for example, as an internal data structure resulting from applying CSS to some XHTML, although of course in practice browsers just use their own stuff. The relationship between XSLT and XSL-FO is that originally they were one lump (called "XSL") which was used to translate XML documents into FO documents for rendering, but W3C noticed that XSLT has more uses outside of that and split it into two separate specs.

    Incidentally, passivetex is an XSL-FO interpreter for TeX. If you're happy specifying typesetting parameters at the lowest level it can be quite useful, but I prefer to just go straight to LaTeX since I trust it to "do the right thing" with regard to page layout and presentation most of the time.

  99. LiveJournal's HTML by Nurgled · · Score: 1

    Given your web design philosophy, I must assume that you create your own LiveJournal styles, since the stock ones use some really bad HTML display hacks. LiveJournal's layouts seem to be focused on ig'nant kids rather than people who actually care about CSS and semantic markup.

    1. Re:LiveJournal's HTML by CamTarn · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I hacked mine up from scratch to output proper styleable HTML. That said, LJ just debuted a new style which does the same thing, but better (my own style had a lot of hardcoded stuff.) They're obviously getting a clue, which is rather nifty.

  100. Tax deductable donations by eberry · · Score: 1

    For all the U.S. residents you can make a tax deductable donation to the Mozilla Foundation.

    --
    Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Lois, this isn't my Batman glass. - Peter
  101. Fixing Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I really think Slashdot updating their HTML would be _much_ harder than what was suggested above.

    Not really. It's already been done but promptly ignored.

  102. Re:FP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ok, you rock , that was truly fabulous!!!

    you rock

  103. Are validators all that valid? by SetiAlphaOne · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I guess I'm just that old. Maybe it's time we write a validator that takes cross-browser code into consideration...

    Let's talk about "Valid". Valid in this sense means that it conforms to a printed standard with absolutely no deviations whatsoever. That's bullshit, for starters.

    If a browser does not recognize markup, it is disregarded. So, as a browser sees it, this code may be perfectly valid. Maybe not so for a textbook course on grading only the source, but hey... you get what you pay for.

    Anyone remember the actual Browser War? You know, when table tags were new? Remember when they came up with background colors for pages, or better yet the background image? What a revolution! ... and then there was a schism in html coding. The big contenders (Netscape & IE) were hurriedly adding features to their browsers before they were included in an HTML standard in order to gain market share. Beyond that, if one camp's method became the standard, the other camp would not adhere to it but would keep their method of markup. Of course, the word "standard" then didn't seem to carry as much weight as now. That's probably why there were so many issues. [Blink tag, hello? Now there's a blink CSS that works in mozilla yet not in IE.]

    Look at the first few 3.2 "errors" for starters:

    No type allowed when designating an RSS feed? (Isn't that an anachronism?)

    No topmargin, leftmargin, marginwidth, marginheight... come on. If you didn't have that back in the day you didn't start rendering at the top left of either IE or NN.

    Bgcolor? Face? NOBR? Come on. Maybe this looks like a foreign language to those of you who haven't been in the field forever, but you need to have a drink and loosen up. Browsers don't care. Your bandwidth is not being soaked up with the occasional cross-browser code snippet.

    I realize that now we have a legion of designers who believe that if the page doesn't look right the browser needs to be updated to properly implement CSS. Great, I won't be holding my breath. The CSS Level 1 standard has been around forever and it STILL hasn't been 100% implemented across browsers.

    Even now, there are ppl in boardrooms who get upset if their multimillion dollar projects don't look and function the same in IE6 and NN4. That's right, NN4, because one of their clients somewhere hasn't upgraded for a while. Go ahead and prance in there to explain degrading gracefully to them. I'm sure they'll be very interested.

    1. Re:Are validators all that valid? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe it's time we write a validator that takes cross-browser code into consideration...

      Then it wouldn't be a validator, but a linter.

      Let's talk about "Valid". Valid in this sense means that it conforms to a printed standard with absolutely no deviations whatsoever. That's bullshit, for starters.

      Bullshit? It's a useful tool to check whether you are conforming to the specification. If you are using it to check for compatibility with browsers, you are misusing it.

      If a browser does not recognize markup, it is disregarded. So, as a browser sees it, this code may be perfectly valid.

      No. It would mean that it has an acceptable rendering in that browser. It would not mean that it was valid. "Valid" has a very specific meaning in terms of SGML, XML and HTML, and by misusing the term in that way you are only confusing the issue.

      No type allowed when designating an RSS feed? (Isn't that an anachronism?)

      Of course it's an anachronism; the type attribute for that element type was added to HTML 4 in 1997 - Slashdot is claiming to use HTML 3.2, so their HTML style is about seven years old.

      No topmargin, leftmargin, marginwidth, marginheight... come on. If you didn't have that back in the day you didn't start rendering at the top left of either IE or NN.

      "Back in the day"? I thought you were against anachronisms? Using this proprietary code is not necessary any more, the browsers that support them have all supported setting the margins in CSS for years.

      Bgcolor? Face? NOBR? Come on. Maybe this looks like a foreign language to those of you who haven't been in the field forever, but you need to have a drink and loosen up. Browsers don't care. Your bandwidth is not being soaked up with the occasional cross-browser code snippet.

      Yes it is. Or do you not understand the mechanisms behind CSS and HTTP at all? If you put the styling directly into the page, you have to transmit it with each and every page load. If you put the styling into an external stylesheet, not only will you reduce that to around one load per visit per visitor, but likely much less, as shared caching is much more effective with static stylesheets than with dynamic HTML documents.

      Great, I won't be holding my breath. The CSS Level 1 standard has been around forever and it STILL hasn't been 100% implemented across browsers.

      No, and it was never intended to. However, the types of browsers that CSS 1 is intended for support CSS 1 almost uniformly, which means that using CSS 1 isn't the hit-and-miss affair you make it out to be. Maybe five years ago it was, but times change. It seems you are the anachronistic one here.

      Even now, there are ppl in boardrooms who get upset if their multimillion dollar projects don't look and function the same in IE6 and NN4.

      You mean there are clueless people about? Amazing! I never would have guessed!

      That's right, NN4, because one of their clients somewhere hasn't upgraded for a while. Go ahead and prance in there to explain degrading gracefully to them.

      How about explaining to them the advantages - such as lower bandwidth consumption, faster page load times and lower maintenance cost? The cost/benefit usually outweighs a single client getting a page that isn't as pretty as everyone else's.

  104. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The parent is Offtopic? either someone doesnt have a sense of humour, or is having a bad day!

    To paraphrase aurther C Clarke: "The intelligence of moderators on Slashdot is constant, the problem is, the population keeps rising.

  105. Yes I know by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Generally they get paid for clicks, so if you don't click their ads, you are just as guilty as the ad-blockers.

    Yes, that is why for sites I like I actually use the ad links a few times a month. Really. That's why I prefer not to block ads, so at least I can click on an ad I have some interest in.

    I go out of my way to help people I think are doing a good job.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  106. Re:Oh? Then why do you block wc3 validator? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then you don't emit HTML 3.2. You may try, but you're failing. You emit something similar to HTML 3.2 which isn't HTML 3.2.

    Yep. By that logic, I am speaking French right now. It's just not valid French.

  107. "Scaling well"--it's a running joke, sheesh by rd_syringe · · Score: 1

    The reason I said that is because there's a running joke that Slashdot's developers always respond to feature suggestions by saying "it sounds nice, but it wouldn't scale well." History shows this to be pretty much true.

    It had nothing to do with "armchair web developers." Sigh.

    1. Re:"Scaling well"--it's a running joke, sheesh by el-spectre · · Score: 1

      Are you still on about this? I think you've proven your ignorance already, move on.

      --
      "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
    2. Re:"Scaling well"--it's a running joke, sheesh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's an old joke, sure, and here you are repeating it. Funny thing is if it had been someone else and the joke had the character "M" sitting next to the character "$" you would be jumping up and down and screaming bloody murder.

      Hypocrite.

  108. Found an "Up" button by Kristoffer+Lunden · · Score: 1

    Heh, now I did find an "Up" button that lets me put it where I want it, great! Would sill like the dropdown that the google bar has, but this is indeed good enough!

    http://extensionroom.mozdev.org/more-info/goup

  109. No. You are obviously by warrax_666 · · Score: 1
    a complete moron if you use wget. It automatically escapes/encodes form(!) data for you. Dear lord, the youth today... want everything handed to you on a silver platter. Wget. Sheesh.

    :)

    --
    HAND.