SeaMonkey 1.0 Alpha released
An anonymous reader writes "SeaMonkey 1.0 Alpha was released last week. Users of the Mozilla Suite or Netscape should check it out - it contains numerous new features and bugfixes when compared to Mozilla 1.7, but offers the same basic look and feel. There are a few screenshots on the SeaMonkey blog showing off some of the features. For those who don't know, SeaMonkey is the continuation of the Mozilla Suite after the Mozilla Foundation ceased shipping new releases."
As I recall, don't subscribers just get the chance to prepare their posts, but cannot actually submit until its gone live?
(trip master monkey uses this to great effect)
Avast me mateys! Aargh! It's International Talk Like A Pirate Day!
Aargh! Me SeaMonkeys! Aye, they waited for the right date to announce it.
Bljarne!
Okay the browser is called SeaMonkey... Humans "may" have evolved from monkeys... and the Internet is mostly used as a redundant porno delivery service.
That is a perfectly named browser!
A bullet sounds the same in every language. So stick a fucking sock in it...
Besides, it's easier to tell users to click seaclunky/setup.exe than first firefox/setup.exe, next thunderbird/setup.xe etc.
I remember distictively when Firefox first came out, the users were bragging they were leet.
I remember that, too. During recess, they would all gather around the swing set and the teeter-totter and tease us:
We are lee-et and you-ou're no-ot.
Neiner, neiner, nei-ner!.
We use firefox and you-ou do-on't.
Neiner, neiner, nei-ner.
And the Principal never did anything.
Good times.
Software Wars
Go ahead and troll rate me for calling Firefox users/developers leet if you want.
It's spelled 1337.
Troll!
And here I thought Firefox was just the browser component of Mozilla without all the other useful components. Why would you insist on using a less-functional, cutesy program (whether it is called Pheonix, Firebird or Firefox) when Mozilla can do everything it can and a hell of a lot more?
If there is one upside to open source software is that legacy software will never die so long as some people actually want to use it and find it useful. Instead of re-inventing the wheel, they can go on improving existing, proven programs. Even then, features can be ported to those newer apps (say, oh I don't know, via Gecko).
(See, kids: there's more than one way to spin a discussion! Disclaimer: I use Firefox, but I still respect the SeaMonkey users' decision to keep using it.)
We're geeks... We're the sorcerers of the modern-day world. --