Mozilla Firefox 1.5.0.3 Released
Mini-Geek writes "Mozilla Firefox 1.5.0.3 has been released. As with previous 1.5.0.x patches, 1.5.0.3 can be downloaded as a small, incremental download. From the article: 'This update fixes a publicly disclosed denial of service weakness. All users are encouraged to upgrade to this version.
The bugfixes previously planned for Firefox 1.5.0.3 were shifted to 1.5.0.4, and a quick update was released shortly after the recent to address the publicly reported issue.'"
I can't wait to see what passage we will have from the Book of Mozilla.
The readings are always so inspiring and applicable to our modern lives.
Heybiff
Even the Sun goes down.
Shouldn't we just take this for granted by now? You never really see a vendor come out with a new version of something that some users are discouraged from upgrading to.
"Here everyone, have some bug fixes and optimizations... but not that one guy, or you people over there, or that lady with the sideburns.."
Slashdot Burying Stories About Slashdot Media Owned
Go to Options->Advanced->General and deselect "Begin finding when you begin typing"
Aww, and the teeming masses were just hanging on your every word, hoping to jump ship to whatever secret and superior browsing software the great Joebert uses...
Neither of those statements are true, assuming that by "people" you mean a significant proportion of the people aware of Firefox and what it offers. Unless something drastic has happened while my back was turned I am pretty sure that almost no-one who uses firefox would consider it less secure than Internet Explorer.
As for being "riddled" with bugs, even if it were determined that Firefox had as many or more identified bugs of a comparable or worse severity than Internet Explorer, that still wouldn't change that fact that safe browsing is a lot more reliant on sensible behaviour than browser stability. The lack of ActiveX in Firefox is the real saviour as far as drive-by spyware installations are concerned. And for the slightly savvier user, Javascript whitelisting via the NoScript extension eliminates cross-site scripting exploits, without crippling necessary or useful functionality on trusted sites.
(1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
I trust Microsoft as far as I could comfortably spit a dead rat
Because the downloaded file contains the differences between the binaries, and the updater leaves the rest of the binary file as it was.
See http://wiki.mozilla.org/Software_Update:MAR and http://www.daemonology.net/bsdiff/ for more.
http://portableapps.com/apps/internet/browsers/po
Also added in a few new features in the recent releases:
Portable versions of Firefox, GIMP, LibreOffice, etc