Firefox Ported to Mac OS X for Intel
daria42 writes "Mozilla Firefox has been ported to Mac OS X for Intel, with the assistance of Apple who provided some preliminary patches. Mozilla foundation employee Josh Aas write on his blog that while the patches were out of date by the time Apple sent them to him, they were still useful. "The Apple patches were extremely valuable because they did a lot of work for us and at least pointed us right to many of the problem areas instead of us having to figure out what we need to do," he wrote."
Maybe i'm being cynical but it seems very much in Apple's interests to ensure that a vast quantity of popular software will work on their OS on the Intel platform.
It says more about basic commerce than support for Open Source software or the Mozilla Foundation etc.
A large, but cross-platform program with lean (mostly) platform independant code has been ported to Yet Another Platform(tm)!
Anyway, cudos to Apple for pointing Josh into the right direction.
Yet another critical IE vuln in the wild. What the hell are these guys up to? Go and give them hell and maybe they'll release a patch faster.
Breaking news: Firefox compiled for Intel processors sucks exactly as much as Firefox for PowerPC processors.
Film at eleven.
Could we please stop linking to worthless ZDNet already?
Here's the original weblog post. Much more informative. And you don't need to worry about slashdotting it either, Mozillazine is quite used to us by now, what with an average of hitting the slashdot frontpage about once a week.
Some background on Josh, btw, while I'm waiting for my timeout to be able to post again to expire: he was hired by the Mozilla Foundation specifically to work on making Firefox better for the Mac.
Dammit, how long do I have to wait to post as AC three times in a row??? 17 minutes already. Geeze... It's easier to karma-whore than to just try and post some useful things.
After Firefox runs on Intel-based BSD-systems (NetBSD, ...) for quite a while, I wonder what the big obstacles were that prevented FF from working. Or was this GUI-only?
- Hubert
Mac OS X != BSD.
Yes, it has bits of BSD under the hood, but it's not just another BSD.
Join the Free Software Foundation
This is like the age old - does it play ogg yet ? check in that feature check list. Apple is really more interested in supporting what feeds the Apple is Cool vibe.
Behind all the cool design and fancy colors, Apple is still an opaque black box. Their essential motto could be termed as you don't need to know - which is very attractive to the layman user , but abhorrent to a true computer engineer.Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum videtur
This is not only great news for Mozilla, but excellent news for Safari, which draws a lot of technology from Mozilla.
My personal preference is actually Safari. I've tried all of the browsers available for OS X, and found the features Safari has to be pretty compelling. The ability to toggle on secure browsing (no cookies, caching, etc) is nifty, and all the little hooks into other OS X software really adds to the usefulness of it all.
"I'm a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar."
-Hoban Washburn
I thought with what Steve Jobs said that you just had to click a preference for "[x] Intel [x] PPC" and it just rebuilt. Now we find something as open and cross-platform as firefox needs patches to build? I don't feel so confident about the intelmac all of a sudden.
I want a Mac Mini with a 2G Pentium-M, 1Gig Ram, and 100G HD.
Where is it, Steve??
Sam
This is not only great news for Mozilla, but excellent news for Safari, which draws a lot of technology from Mozilla.
What ever you have been smoking, I would like to try it too...
You'll have fresh native copies of Firefox and [competing Mozilla-based Mac browser] Camino for your shiny new Intel Macs when or soon after they come out."
I wouldn't exactly call Camino "competing," unless you'd also say the same of the suite. They're both Mozilla projects; it's not like Camino is made by some competitor. Camino would have less of a reason to exist if Firefox behaved more natively, but, while it's improved, you can still tell that it's not quite there yet (e.g., buttons and other controls on Web page forms and probably even more things that I don't realize coming from a Windows background).
R.Mo
I have a 2.2 ghz AMD box on my desk, and a 2x2ghz G5. The AMD has a gig of ram and Win2k, the G5 has 2g ram and OS X 10.4.
Firefox HAULS ASS on the Win32 box. It's visibly slower on OS X - the UI is sluggish, and rendering isn't nearly as snappy, using current versions of both. But mostly, the UI is sluggish.
I'm no coder, but the hows and the whys of it are, I'm sure, fairly easy to explain. Here's hoping!
Smallest. Userbase. Ever. :-)
Even Microsoft wants FireFox to run well on Longhorn . Is it any surprise that everyone wants their latest hyped product to run FireFox?. This is like the age old - does it play ogg yet ?
I dub thee, the newest troll-inventor for Slashdot!
"Yes, but does it run Firefox? (tm)"
Firefox is simply fastest on Windows, period.
5 17
HOWEVER... the latest nightly builds (from the development branch that will eventually become Firefox 1.1) are much faster than the official 1.0.4 you are probably currently using. Also, if you have a newer G4 (PowerPC 744x/745x series... 1GHz or better "G4+") or a G5 you can grab an optimized build for even more performance.
Grab the G4 version here:
http://homepage.mac.com/krmathis/
Grab the G5 version here:
http://forums.mozillazine.org/viewtopic.php?t=256
As of this posting, the newest version for each is the 20050704 (July 4, 2005) build. I am posting this from the July 3 G4 version, it zooms compared to Safari here on OS X 10.4.1.
That ought to make it feel snappier.