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PCWorld Dubs Firefox Best Product of 2005

Peaceful_Patriot writes "PCWorld's list of the 'Best Products of 2005' is out and Firefox tops the list. Also notables are GMail at number 2, Apple OS X, Tiger at number 3, Skype ranks in at 8 and Ubuntu at 26!" From their Firefox article: "Are you sick and tired of Internet Explorer? Have you grown weary of the constant vulnerabilities and patches? Do you scratch your head at sudden program lockups and crashes? Are you dismayed that Microsoft hasn't lifted a finger to improve or enhance IE since it buried Netscape's Navigator browser at the dawn of the century? Yeah, me too."

5 of 303 comments (clear)

  1. Stuff that mattered. by teslatug · · Score: 4, Informative

    This was published in July. Is the story a dupe?

  2. Re:IE Really hasn't improved by DrEldarion · · Score: 4, Informative

    Try alt+d in IE for highlighting the address bar. Same key combo works in firefox as well.

  3. Re:iPod at 78 and Rio at 13 and no Nano? by jonfelder · · Score: 5, Informative

    It could be that this story is a dupe and this article was written in July before the Nano was released. Also, it must be my imagination that an Apple product is #3.

    Naaaa...must be PC bias.

  4. Dupe by Doomstalk · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not only is this article from June, but it's been reported on before.

  5. No Competition = No Innovation by serutan · · Score: 4, Informative

    Are you dismayed that Microsoft hasn't lifted a finger to improve or enhance IE since it buried Netscape's Navigator browser at the dawn of the century?

    Some people would label that statement hollow cynicism. But in fact, a Microsoft manager told me straight out when IE 6 was about to be released that it wasn't really going to have any new features, because with Netscape pretty much dead there wasn't much point in developing IE anymore.

    Microsoft had already introduced XmlHttpRequest as an ActiveX object with IE5. They had all the pieces in place back then to promote the off-channel request technique and give it a nifty name like "AJAX." Web apps could have been 5 years ahead of where they are today, and MS would have had a huge head start instead of now scrambling to catch up with Google.