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An IE-Based Tabbed Browser from China

wannabgeek writes "CNET reports that a new browser, Maxthon is gaining wide popularity in China. 14 percent of Chinese websurfers have used it ... Part of the reason, it has features that help in circumventing the Chinese government censors. CNET says it was shown at the Consumer Electronics Show in Vegas this year, and is slowly gaining foothold in Europe as well as the U.S."

2 of 163 comments (clear)

  1. Re:So what, it's windows only... by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Insightful
    There's no linux version, unless I missed something, if that's the case, mod this down. Otherwise, does anyone have it working in wine?

    You should be modded down as redundant anyway, because the title of the story begins "An IE-Based" [...] which makes it quite fucking clear that it's Windows-only, since IE/mac is gone, gone, gone.

    If linux users want to run it, they can do it in vmware on a pirated copy of windows like everyone else.*

    *Actually, I only run Windows 98 in my vmware right now, and I actually have a license for it... but this is a statistical anomaly.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  2. Re:Maxthon, Not New by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Mod parent oxymoronic.

    And no, I'm not trolling. Most of IE's problems are due to its engine.


    While it's true that third-party browsers using Trident are vulnerable to the same security flaws as IE (and, of course, share the same CSS and other rendering bugs), there are a number of flaws in IE that are corrected by third-party browsers.

    Because third-party browsers don't support IE toolbars, they aren't as affected by spyware. Third-party browsers generally have search boxes, tabs, and other features that IE lack.

    And, quite frankly, saying that IE "sucks" ignores the reality of the situation.

    From a developer's perspective, IE "sucks" because it means that I have to bend over backwards to support IE's broken CSS implementation (although, to be honest, the CSS standard sucks in many ways anyway). But even if IE stopped "sucking" in this regard tomorrow, it wouldn't make a bit of difference to me - as a user, IE's crappy CSS support doesn't really affect me (because developers work around it), and as a developer, I'm still going to have to develop for IE6 because it will represent a significant portion of my users for years to come.

    But from a user's perspective, IE isn't really that bad. From a security perspective, it's subpar, but IE has greatly improved in that regard since SP2. Users neither know nor care whether their browser has decent CSS2 support.