Slashdot Mirror


Firefox In Print

hoovernj writes "It seems that O'Reilly is ready to release two books about Firefox in March. The first is Firefox Hacks, which will be targeted at Firefox power users. And the second is Don't Click on the Blue E!, which will be targeted at less-savvy users transitioning from Internet Explorer. Could this be the end of lazy IE-only scripted webpages? (thanks to mozillaZine for the original pointer)." And reader ledmirage writes "Wired Magazine's February issue on Firefox: 'It's fast, secure, open source - and super popular. The hot new browser called Firefox is rocking the software world. (Watch your back, Bill Gates.)'."

43 of 360 comments (clear)

  1. What could firefox hacks possibly cover? by thegoogler · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Besides defining what all the value(including the user addable ones) at about:config do.. what much else is there to tell? Editing the source? I doubt the book goes into that...

    1. Re:What could firefox hacks possibly cover? by Vellmont · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Firefox has a boatload of extensions and plugins. I could easily see a book talking about the ways to use all the extensions (and which ones are best).

      --
      AccountKiller
  2. Necessary? by troon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Does anyone *really* need a book telling them how to use a browser? Doesn't that suggest that the browser UI design is inadequate?

    --
    Ydco co ,df C erb-y go. a Ekrpat t.fxrapev
    1. Re:Necessary? by freshman_a · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If someone is converting from IE, I would think they'd be a little unfamiliar with things like tabbed browsing, extensions, themes, and pretty much anything FF has that IE doesn't.

    2. Re:Necessary? by jellomizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Some people are very closed minded, and/or afraid to even go to the menus. I am sure the book covers more then the forward, back, refresh, stop, home, and location bar. Which most people use 95% of the time. But the little things like managing bookmark,configuring the options adding, theams, extentions, understaning RSS. Explaining why Active-X is bad. Most people when given a piece of software they don't at all the options they have they only go there when they need to. Heck I know many people who think clicking the start button is considered an advanced feature in windows. If it isn't on their desktop then it isn't worth clicking on.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    3. Re:Necessary? by Gargamell · · Score: 3, Insightful

      i do not know if anyone *really* needs it.

      I know plenty of people that might benefit from an IE book, so i see no reason why a FF wouldn't be helpful.

      My main point for resonding however, is that O'Reilly is obviously a very important point of tech media - AKA - marketing! Just a book being created about FF gives it a lot of "populace" credit. It is almost like a marketing milestone. This is a huge benefit to the idea in general, just like all the New York Times articles on FF we have been seen.

      I am sure we will see an "Idiots guide to FF" soon enough!

      ~tim

    4. Re:Necessary? by sharkey · · Score: 3, Funny
      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    5. Re:Necessary? by roystgnr · · Score: 4, Funny

      Does anyone *really* need a book telling them how to use a browser? Doesn't that suggest that the browser UI design is inadequate?

      Inadequate compared to what?

    6. Re:Necessary? by sepluv · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You'd be surprised. Basically, a lot of (mainly old) people are afraid of doing things on a computers (like opening menus) but not of turning the pages in a book.

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
  3. 22% of which market by InfoHighwayRoadkill · · Score: 3, Interesting

    in the FA O'reilly claim firefox accounts of 22% of the market... I just whish this were so.

    --
    another Roadkill on the Information Superhighway
    1. Re:22% of which market by forgotten_my_nick · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not that far off. 19.2% and if I recall w3schools only recently started marking the difference between FF and Mozilla (which would bring it up to 23% if it was watching the two as one).

  4. Re:Another nail... by RobertTaylor · · Score: 4, Funny

    *another* nail?

    How bloody big is this coffin?!

  5. Thats it.... by pploco · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm giving up Lynx.

    --
    Gimme that booze you little pumpkin pie hair cutted freak!
    1. Re:Thats it.... by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      One should never give up Lynx. Espectially Web Developers, if you can make a page look good in Lynx, and in a graphical browser then you really did you job well. Including aiding the visually impared. There are some sites that I think should always be lynx ready. Like X.org and XFree86 website. because if you can't get X to work you are searching for drivers and/or direction on these sites in lynx.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  6. Oh Great, Wired's going to kill it by happyDave · · Score: 5, Funny

    The Wired kiss-of-death will strike again. They can't tout a "next big thing" without absolutely killing it.

    1. Re:Oh Great, Wired's going to kill it by ader · · Score: 3, Funny

      That Wired quote should have come from the Life-imitates-Springfield dept. It had Kent Brockman all over it.

      Ade_
      /

      --
      Big Bubbles (no troubles) - what sucks, who sucks and you suck
  7. Did I miss something? by gremlins · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not that I don't agree with the idea the firefox is taking a chuck out of IE's market share but how exactly does O'Reilly releasing 2 books on firefox equal a "end of lazy IE-only scripted webpages"?

    --
    just because your a schizophrenic doesn't mean people arn't really out to get you
  8. Am I the only only old fart feeling deja vu? by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 3, Funny

    Am I the only old fart feeling deja vu? Open source...fast...not Microsoft...lemme see, that's the Mosaic browser before it became Netscape, right?

    Now what do I do with the "winsock.dll" file again?

  9. A small point by SimianOverlord · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I read the wired article, and in all fairness the IE bashing was based on IE pre-SP2. A lot of it's been tightened up. A little balance, please.

    --
    Meine Schwester ist sehr, sehr reizvoll - Nietzsche
  10. Slashdot by zoeblade · · Score: 5, Informative

    Could this be the end of lazy IE-only scripted webpages?

    Slashdot is not the place to ask. Their site constantly displays incorrectly in Firefox. They'd do well to take heed of their own articles.

    1. Re:Slashdot by Mr_Silver · · Score: 3, Informative
      Constantly? I keep hearing how Slashdot displays incorrectly in Firefox, but would you mind specifying how exactly it displays it wrong? Is something unalligned, or is it using incorrect font sizes or something?

      I get it very rarely but it is there. The contents in the middle of the page (as in, the article text and comments) are rendered too far to the left and overlap the textual links on the far left.

      You can fix it by going ctrl + and then ctrl -.

      This is partly due to a Firefox bug of which the fix never made it into 1.0 (but will be in 1.1) and crappy non-w3c compliant HTML that Slashdot uses.

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
  11. In defense of... by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I just had this conversation with my business partner the other day (we're in web development). I was thinking about it from this standpoint - even Firefox doesn't get everything completely right 100% of the time. Those problems tend to get fixed pretty quick, luckily.

    If you've ever tried to read through the W3C recommendations, you'll find them pretty dry and occasionally confusing. You can understand how browsers don't conform completely all the time.

    That doesn't excuse Microsoft from developing a way-off-base browser, allowing serious security holes past testing, or refusing to fix the problems they are aware of... There are a few things I like about IE, including some treatments of CSS and JavaScript. Just today I had to implement an auto-progressing slideshow feature into a photo gallery, and IE lets me use blend transitions (Firefox doesn't, at least that I can find).

    Despite all the defenses I can imagine, we still develop for Firefox and adjust to make it work in IE. We're both Firefox users that have to keep IE in our arsenal because that's what EVERY SINGLE CLIENT USES. None of them care to switch...and some can't because of the corporate requirements.

    1. Re:In defense of... by Xugumad · · Score: 5, Interesting

      We've started not working around every little IE glitch. For example, we brought in wonderful new icons in PNG format, then realised IE kinda made a mess out of them. In the end, we left it, as:

      1. They were still _usable_ under IE.
      2. It's blatantly an IE bug, so if the users complain, we can tell that Firefox/Mozilla/Opera/Safari/Konqueror render them fine, must be their browser.

      We're also lucky to have a userbase that likes Firefox (we're at about 40% of hits coming from Firefox, currently)...

  12. More control over EXE Files? Search Pluggins? Etc? by BobPaul · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Besides defining what all the value(including the user addable ones) at about:config do.. what much else is there to tell? Editing the source? I doubt the book goes into that...

    Perhaps he could editting some of the JavaScript files FireFox uses.

    You need to do this if you want to be able to Remove the Kiddie Gloves and let Firefox allow you to run EXE files you've downloaded out of the browser cache--with a warning of course--so that they are deleted automatically, rather than saving them to a specific folder where you'd have to delete them later.

    This is great for things like drivers that you'd install once, but if you needed to install later you'd have to go back for the most updated version anyway, so there's little reason to save offline and since there's still 2 levels of warnings that appear on WinXP SP2 (or 1 level of warning on WinXP SP1), you really haven't decreased security at all.

    I'm sure there's lots of other stuff you can do in other script files firefox uses for config.

    He could also cover making search plugins... those are relatively simple, but can be confusing for first timmers and are kinda finicky for some websites search setups (the "official" Amazon plugin add's plusses where spaces should be, something that doesn't happen when searching on amazon directly...

  13. Re:Lazy IE Only Scripted Webpages... by gilesjuk · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If everyone's sites were compliant with standards then a browser would be simple and there would be no need to fudge anything.

    IE fudges sites and this hides errors, I want to see errors in pages I develop, then I can fix them.

  14. In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Bill Gates files charges against Firefox's Blake Ross and Ben Goodger for allegedly making threats against Mr. Gates' life.

    The two deny all charges, and intend to plea not guilty if the case goes to trial, however a report from a recent "Wired" magazine article alleges that Mr. Gates should 'Watch his back'

    In completely unreleated news, Microsoft has filed to pattent the phrase "Watch your back", and will be suing the Firefox developers as well as Wired magazine for royalties and copyright infringement.

  15. Re:Star Trek Ref by Jakhel · · Score: 5, Funny

    The geek is strong in this one.

  16. Re:Lazy IE Only Scripted Webpages... by ptaff · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Biting the troll.

    You got it right: interpretation. Like if I told you "John says to Paul that he is fat". Who is fat? MSIE says it's John, Firefox says it's Paul, Opera says it's both, Safari says neither.

    The last thing you want from any language is random behavior. That's what you get from tag soup. You get no point from saying that the average person writing HTML has no clue so browsers must cope with that; it's because early browsers allowed tag soup that we're caught with it now. If malformed HTML were not possible then, people would've learned the proper syntax, like they do in each and every other programming language.

    We are now in a position where we can (and must) break the circle, using XHTML served as application/xhtml+xml, which will fail (just like a C compiler would fail on a missing semicolon) on bad-formedness. This will allow for a flawless integration of new XML modules (MathML, SVG, XForms, RDF, ...), simpler parsers and make the web evolve.

    Feel ready to own one or many Tux Stickers?

  17. Re:Perhaps by virtual_mps · · Score: 4, Informative

    Hmm. The popular trick I'm familiar with is to enable pipelining--which lets you submit multiple requests in a single tcp session; this is not the same as increasing the maximum number of simultaneous requests, although the FUDdites like to run around claiming that it is. It's not enabled by default because some lousy web servers can't handle pipelining.

  18. Re:Lazy IE Only Scripted Webpages... by guet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I *want* my browser to fudge things a bit so they look right.
    As a caveat, I use Firecrap for its stability at the moment, but I wish I had a browser that parsed HTML like IE does and functions like Firefox. It's a stupid browser, it's not that hard to write, people! Tempted to go back to freakin' Lynx...


    If it's so simple to write a 'stupid browser', try writing it yourself, should only take a few weeks, right? It will be easy to interpret the intentions of someone halfway through the world obscured by whatever tool they used to make the pages, right? It will be easy to be bug for bug compatible with a closed source program, right? I mean, figuring out what to do if they forgot to close a deeply nested table or missed out an angle bracket, that will be *easy* to work out won't it?

    Let me know when you get it finished, not that I'd want to use it, because it'd be fundamentally broken, and I'd never know if my web pages were correct when testing on it.

    The reason you don't notice the interpretation IE has of web-pages is that most people check on that - if it doesn't look right, they go back and fix it. Most people even work round any well-known bugs in their box-model etc, because they know that's what most of their clients will look at it on.

    So the IE team doesn't have to do anything, apart from be careful not to change too much : ). If you had your way no bugs would be fixed because 'they broke my pages' even though it's your pages that are broken, and fixing the bug caused them to look wrong.

  19. not microsoft, but msn by spectrokid · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Any idea how many Joe Sixpacs have their default homepage on MSN? Any idea how many MS makes in AD revenue?

    --

    10 ?"Hello World" life was simple then

  20. books beat electronic documents? by FrankHaynes · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...and I could easily see said book becoming obsolete roughly 1 month after its release date.

    Printed matter covering electronic applications seems really stone-age to me. It becomes outdated rather quickly, so a person picking up that Firefox book tries a hack a year later, but it no longer works because of changes in the code base, for example.

    But, I guess even though "information wants to be free", authors of said information don't want it to be. You can sell a book, but you can't sell a web site, at least not in the conventional sense.

    Maybe an e-book??? Nahhh, then those pirates over at slashdot would put it up on Bit Torrent and there go the profits.

    --
    slashdot: A failed experiment.
  21. 1.1 by Mr_Silver · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Whilst i'm a big fan of FireFox, it would be nice if they integrate some of the popular plugins directly into the application.

    Not all of them - just the extremely useful ones. For example I find it bizzare that I have to install a plugin just so that when I ctrl-click a link it opens in a new tab directly to the right of my current one (and not to the far right of all the open tabs). This makes jumping between the current page and a child of that page annoying because you end up tabbing all over the place.

    Plus, if you're getting people coming from IE, it would be helpful to have a few more buttons on the display by default (power users can easily remove them, non-power users can't easily add them). For example I always set new tab, back, forward, stop, reload, home, bookmarks, history, downloads and print with the address bar, go button and google search on the line below. Works for me, ex-IE users don't complain much either.

    Oh yes, and some of the hidden options in "about:config" really should have their own menu option. It would also be nice if they turned on browser.xul.error_pages.enabled by default and cleaned up the error pages to look a little more professional. I'd offer to supply templates, if I knew who to approach and whether anyone would be remotely interested.

    Apart from that, not really sure what else they could do for 1.1 (apart from some bug fixes, of course).

    --
    Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    1. Re:1.1 by tribulation2004 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You're missing the whole point of Firefox! Simplicity man! No bloat. Nothing installed that doesn't have to be installed. Everytime I install Firefox somewhere, I also install the Adblock and flashblock extensions - yet I'd never want Adblock integrated into the base product - many people don't use it, and if you don't use it, it just adds options to the interface, potentially confusing less technical people (who are exactly the people that should benefit the most from converting to a simple and secure browser).

      My Dad can easily change the configuration of Firefox if he has to (adding allowed pop-ups for example) - something he could never have managed when he was using IE (I know, I'm his tech support). The reason? Firefox is simple - there aren't a million options. Firefox is written for non-technical users, with extensions available to render it more useful to those who want more functionality.

  22. Serious problems in O'Reilly Editorship by sloth+jr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    O'Reilly has successfully transitioned from a geek publisher to yet another corporate sellout. Quality of content has really tanked, and even those few geek-oriented books that do get released are woefully thin volumes (W. Curtis Preston, whose fantastic O'Reilly Backup book should be considered the bible of backup and restore, can't write more than 200 pages on NAS and SAN? I think the topic's a bit broader than can be covered in such a thin tome).

    Tim, if you're reading this, help restore O'Reilly to the kick-ass publisher of days of yore. Kill the Hacks books. Get rid of the Annoyances. Lose the Missing Manuals. Forget about the Notebooks. Concentrate on the Nutshells and the Essentials and the Animal Books (Pocket References are good, as well). Make them well-written, well-constructed, accurate, fun, and RELEVANT. Examples of excellence: Sendmail, DNS and BIND, Unix Backup and Recovery.

  23. Re:More control over EXE Files? Search Pluggins? E by Mr_Silver · · Score: 4, Insightful
    You need to do this if you want to be able to Remove the Kiddie Gloves [osdir.com] and let Firefox allow you to run EXE files you've downloaded out of the browser cache--with a warning of course--so that they are deleted automatically, rather than saving them to a specific folder where you'd have to delete them later.

    At the risk of asking a dumb question, why is forcing a user to save an executable from the web and then open it in a two step process possibly safer than allowing them to select open from within the browser?

    At the end of the day, you're not preventing them from opening it, nor are you really making it any safer - you're just annoying the people that really do want to open the file directly.

    Someone please enlighten me :)

    --
    Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
  24. Re:Fast?? by P-Nuts · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Well for one thing Firefox is NOT fast. Its slow as h#ll especially when starting up.. mucha slower than IE6 IME.

    That's because the IE executable isn't much more than a wrapper for the MSHTML rendering engine, which is already loaded when booting Windows.

    It's a shame that on Linux and Windows the Mac paradigm is not possible: of having an application loaded with no open windows. Closing the last Safari (or Firefox even) window on OS X doesn't kill the process, so for frequently used programs, the apparent load time is very fast. Of course, it's worth actually quitting larger processes if they aren't being opened much to free up memory.

    Some Windows programs come with a background utility that keeps them open even when they are closed. (I think Office might have some Fast Office Start utility for example.) The problem with this tactic is the programs take up resources all the time.

  25. True life story . . . by harley_frog · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I work for a small university library in Mississippi as the Automation Librarian. Frustrated with spyware, viruses, and the like, infecting our public Internet workstations (and with no money to work with), I decided that change was needed. So, I installed Linux on the workstations and customized the desktop so that only the icon for Firefox was visible. That was earlier this month, and so far I haven't heard any complaints from the students. I know that I'm sleeping better at night now. Soon, I will have Firefox loaded on all our computers and tell people to use that rather than IE. Just a small effort, but as Kosh once said, "The avalanche has already started. It is too late for the pebble to vote."

    --
    It's all fun and games until someone loses the key to the handcuffs.
  26. Firefox and Print by Bruzer · · Score: 5, Informative


    Ironicly the firefox browser prints pages like crap, cutting text in half, and squishing images very poorly. I love the browser, but I always have to reprint pages in other browsers to get better results.

    - Bruzer

    --
    "Tempt not a desperate man" - Willy S.
    1. Re:Firefox and Print by linicks · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Maybe I'm missing the point, but I've found a few options under File > Page Setup to fix my initial printing problems.

      1. There is "shrink to fit page" option that makes the page print the width of the HTML.

      2. I also like to use the "Print Background (colors and images)" option.

      With these options set, every page printed looks the same as it does in the browser.

      --

      I got nothing...
  27. Re:More control over EXE Files? Search Pluggins? E by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    By making it impossible to execute in the browser, it makes it impossible to write a script to automatically execute a program.

    Psychologically, it also slows down and warns the user. The web conditions you to click along like mad, on anything that seizes your interest for a second. Having to stop and answer the dialog, then go find the exe breaks that spell.

    It's like seeing a line of flares on the side of the highway...you instinctively slow down, and look for the accident.

  28. Also an article in the New York Times by amabbi · · Score: 3, Informative
    The Gray Lady Online has an article on MSIE-alternative browsers; of course Firefox and Mozilla are mentioned, and they even mention browsers like Amaya and Safari.

    Custom Tailor a Web Browser Just for You

  29. Could this be the end of lazy IE-only scripted web by Transcendent · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Could this be the end of lazy IE-only scripted web pages?

    If so, good. I used to only like IE because of the scripting ability with JavaScript and CSS, but now after the newer versions of Firefox came out, I find it performs much better than IE in many aspects (yet, there still are a few bugs).

    For instance, Firefox supports more W3C standard CSS attributes than IE currently does (see :before usage, and the like). Also, firefox got away from the horrid Netscape implementation (which made me an IE only scripter to begin with) going for the more W3C standards, which actually makes it compatible with many, many common "IE only" scripts in use today. I was suprised that some of my websites suddenly worked with Firefox after one of their newest releases.

    I especially like how Firefox now allows you to use "document.all" when referencing an object, but gives you a nice suggestion in the JavaScript console to use the W3C standard: getObjectByID() or such. Very, very helpful.

    I hope Firefox leads the way with JavaScript and CSS... they're actually doing it right.