Firefox 2.0 To Debut Tuesday
An anonymous reader writes "Firefox 2.0 for Tuesday, says the Seattle PI. They give a quick recap of some of the new features, and discuss the ongoing IE vs. Fox debate." From the article: "Version 2.0 also improves on the tabbed-windows interface that Mozilla innovated and that Microsoft introduced for the first time last week with IE7, its biggest upgrade since 2001. Analysts said IE7 is a significant improvement over its predecessor, but the big question is whether it will stem Firefox's growth at Microsoft's expense. Firefox's share of the browser market has grown to 9.8 percent of the U.S. market this month, from 2.9 percent in October 2004."
geez, "tabbed-windows interface that Mozilla innovated" that is beginning to sound like microsoft innovation. Long before firefox existed, I was using tabbed windows in opera. Give credit where it is due.
The war with islam is a war on the beast
The war on terror is a war for peace
"Version 2.0 also improves on the tabbed-windows interface that Mozilla innovated and that Microsoft introduced for the first time last week with IE7, its biggest upgrade since 2001. "
Opera is going to surprised to hear that.
Tuesday? The day when security patches for IE are released?
Anyone know if there any significant changes that web developers will have to account for/be able to take advantage of?
-1 Uncomfortable Truth
Comment removed based on user account deletion
It depends on whether this was due to misstatements by mozilla people, or if it was just a stupid writer. Never underestimate how ignorant journalists can be.
One of the annoying things about the new firefox interface is you can't have as many tabs in the bar at once anymore. Sure, it has a scrolling interface, but I liked the sort of spatial representation of the old system. Is there a way to change the minimum size of the tab headers in the new firefox?
Not that it matters who came first, but Mozilla did actually have tabs earlier than Opera. What you were using in Opera back then was actually MDI, not tabs.
But of course other browsers had tabs far earlier than any of these two.
You know, Microsoft's street address also says a lot about their mentality.
There were tab-based browsers before Mozilla or course (Opera for instance), but none where you could open pages in either a new tab or new window.
throw new NoSignatureException();
When has Mozilla claimed that in innovated tabbed-windows interface? You are quoting Seattle Post-Intelligencer, not Mozilla.
Hey Folks,
They're both free apps under Windows! How does it really hurt MS if FF gets 100% marketshare? In fact, if FF were to take over it might actually benefit MS. How? IE has been their worst blackeye of the past couple of years. More problems with than than everything else. If MS could make all the bad IE press go away, don't you think that would be a positive? I realize this is like suggesting to Apple to let Dell build their hardware, but does that make it a bad idea? As long as FF adheres to Open Standards, everyone can compete with web-sites equally with it.
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
Innovated does NOT mean or imply invented. Firefox's parent browsers were the first popular ones to employ them and firefox has improved them. Therefore there was some innovation involved.
If you still have trouble with the definitions, there are plenty of dictionaries around.
Its Sunday after all right now, so why not pray for FireFox? This is FireFox 2.0 Beta running on my Windows XP PC.
1. Starts without maximizing itself to the full PC screen area. Always leaves space available. In contrast SeaMonkey correctly occupies the full PC screen area when starting (but SeaMonkey makes me create a new profile except for once.). FF thinks its full screen according to its maximize/window button but is mistaken.
2. FF fails CSS rendering because it uses an antique CSS engine.
http://www.webstandards.org/action/acid2/
Those are my FF issues. What are yours?
Thanks,
Jim Burke
The changes are nicely summarized in this page.
I find "Client-side session and persistent storage" to be quite interesting, and wonder if any major web apps will make use of it in the near future. There are also JavaScript 1.7 which makes JavaScript more Pythonic, SVG support, and several other features.
python>>> q="'";s='q="%c";s=%c%s%c;print s%%(q,q,s,q)';print s%(q,q,s,q)
With the built in spell checker, I expect about 12% of the web's users to look smarter by at least 50% on Tuesday, with the number expected to grow as Firefox spreads.
Oh You POS
Yes it's BS, but Mozilla didn't write the article so you can hardly blame them for it.
Spelling mistakes, grammatical errors, and stupid comments are intentional.
I've just checked.
RC1 of new TabMixPlus version (with FF 2.0 support) is already available.
Good news for me.
I choose friends for sigs
.. is that it actually lets you decide how much memory is used for cacheing. Firefox, on the other hand, has no such limit and I've seen its memory usage go sky-high, both in Windows XP and OSX.
But where can I get my IceWeasel 2.0 ?
In Bob we trust.
9.8% ????? Are you kidding me, that's gotta be a very conservative estimate going by the stats on the website I work on. Granted it's an Academic oriented community, but we have more unique firefox users than IE users.
Most other tabbed browsers were single-window-only, as far as my experience goes. FF also allows multiple windows, remember.
Also, did Mozilla say they invented it themselves, or is the writer getting things wrong? Answer that before you place blame.
I hope it won't leak quite so much memory. That'd be nice.
Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca
Yes. Stop spreading the myth.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabbed_browsing
Um, definitely not. When you can only run IE7 on Vista, XP or 2003, it won't be stemming the growth of Firefox at all. What a ridiculous question.
Firefox's share of the browser market has grown to 9.8 percent of the U.S. market this month
This has gotta be one of the weirder (mis)uses of the term "market". After all, the competing "products" aren't for sale, and a "market" is usually a place where people sell things.
Of course, it can be difficult to establish a market when the "market leader" does the ultimate price-war thing and gives its product out for free. They did kill Netscape Corp, of course, but somehow they still didn't capture the "market".
There are some bizarre (bazarre?) economic theories at work here, I think.
Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
We've been heavily using the SessionSaver plugin feature with Firefox 1.5. When (not if, when) Firefox 1.5 uses up all the system memory and Linux kills it, we restart a minty-fresh new instance of it and all our windows come back.
It turns out that SessionSaver doesn't work with Firefox 2.0, and it doesn't really need to because Firefox 2.0 has a session saver feature built in. I have several dozen pages open, and I'm wondering: is there any convenient way to bring those pages forward? Basically I just want to import my session.
If no one knows any way to do this, I'll probably whip up a quick Python script to convert the SessionSaver saved URLs into a format that Firefox 2.0 can understand.
P.S. I really hope that Firefox 2.0 will take longer to use up all the memory and fall over. Or even, dare I hope for it, not leak significant amounts of memory at all.
steveha
lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
i've been looking at ff2 and i couldn't find anything new. every single feature stated as new was already present in 1.5 using extensions like antiphishing, feeds, etc. it seems more like the extensions went into the core. but, do we want a huge monolithic core with lots of features or a smaller one wich i customize with extensions according to my needs?? my veredict: i'll stay with 1.5 for a while!
I could get similar results only in 1.0.x versions browsing all day long: opening, closing, rearranging and restoring several tens times an hour.
In fact I haven't seen FF using more than 100M RAM for a long time.
Maybe that's because of pictures switched off/on?
I choose friends for sigs
While people are busy commenting "the Netscaping" of Symantec and McAffee, people are missing the more obvious one:
The Netscaping of Firefox.. Quite a fit, eh?
IE7 has the power and ability to burry Firefox in the ground. And I don't want lame excuses like "but Firefox has X and IE7 doesn't".
You know this doesn't matter.
Too bad Firefox 2.0 release is going to be shadowed out by the release of Frozen Bubble 2.0 coming up on the same week :^)
Teaser here. Rumors has it the game will be networked..
Can't stand the FF dumbed down preferences. I was SO glad when the seamonkey project started. Renders faster,too, for some reason. Got a better look and feel to it. I keep upgrading FF, and inevitably just close it and go back to seamonkey. Sometimes I use Konq but not too often, but could live with just that.
My actual all time favorite browser is iCab though, pity that dev don't get religion and go to open source and linux.
.
I'm a Windows user. I used to think that Firefox used too much RAM - I have about 30 tabs open in 2 windows, and it consumes over 140MB. In my book that's A LOT.
Few days ago I installed IE 7. I know, installing brand new MS software is a bad idea. But I'm reinstalling this OS soon anyway, so I wanted to give it a try. I opened the same tabs in the browser. Some of them didn't have my cookies, so slightly different pages loaded. But to my surprise, IE7 was taking up over 400MB of RAM. That's almost 3 times as much as Firefox. It got sluggish compared to Firefox. (I have a gig of RAM in a decently fast computer)
I'm sticking with Firefox. I'll test out 2.0 when it comes out, and baring bugs or bloat, I'll be using it as my main browser on all 3 computers I use.
m
With the new spellchecker they will also be introducing a new attribute to the input tag: http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Controlling_s pell_checking_in_HTML_forms
Is this a non-standard attribute? Are we going back to each browser adding stuff and hoping the other one stays relatively compatible? I'm not saying whether this is a good or a bad thing. I was just curious.
U ar right.
Julia Cameron
Oich ù agus hiùraibh éile
I use Portable Firefox on my computers since it's much simpler to transfer my profile to new computers and to keep my settings in case of a Windows reinstall. Hopefully I won't have to wait too long for PF 2.0 to come out.
I used to be a bugzilla poster and nightly tester a long time ago.
I haven't been able to find where the FF2rc-nightly builds are hosted.
Some Google results are dead links and others are FF3 builds. Can anyone point me in the right direction? Got a good URL?
Or can I use a FF3 nighly to check against a FF2rc bug?
The IE 7 "Quick Tabs" feature is very cool. It shows a tiled view of all tabs open with all pages rendered so you can quickly find your way and click a tab. I don't think any previous web browser has this feature.
So 2.0 drops on Tuesday, and the biggest topic /. has to discuss about it is whether or not Mozilla actually pioneered tabbed browsing or not? Come on....
I've been using the 2.0 betas since they were publicly available, and have to say it's a big improvement. The individual tab closing button (it's nice...just give it a shot), the spell checking, improvements in the preferences interface....all around, a very nice job!
OK, I finally have to comment on this. Browser market?!? WTF? I have never paid for a web browser. The only browser I have seen that had the gall to ask for money was Opera which kept me away from it for ages, then when they went free, mouse gestures sent me running screaming.
So how can there be a market for free products? Can someone clarify? Is this just a loose use of the term "market"?
I'll never understand why people flip out about it, I never understood the whole Netscape-IE antitrust thing, I mean they're all free, how can anyone be losing revenue? It was totally absurd, micosoft was punished for distributing a browser with its OS? I'll never understand that, Why wasn't apple punished for distributing Safari with its OS? Why wasn't QNX punished for distributing Voyager with Photon? Why isn't KDE punished for distributing Konqueror? Etc...
For that matter, why isn't microsoft being punished for distributing a calculator with its OS? This is clearly an affront to all calculator software developers!!!! It's killing the competition! Antitrust! Antitrust! The sky is falling!!!
I gotta wonder sometimes. Legislators and regulators will never understand science and technology, but it never stops them from pretending they do and making assinine arbitrary judgements. I guess its a question of giving themselves the illusion that they are still in control.
BTW, IE7 will not kill Firefox, IE7's messy CSS handling and slow rendering sent me back to Firefox pretty quick. I prefer Firefox's memory hogging (to be addressed in 2?) to the poor rendering performance of IE7 (though its nice to see it finally almost properly handle pngs). IE7 still randomly pads objects in on the page in unpredictable ways.
I also feel obliged to comment on javascript 1.7. Javascript must die! No one in their right mind would spend any time developing javascript. If I want to write an application I'll write an application. If I want to write/script a webpage then I'll write a webpage. There is no in-between despite what javascript proponents might think. Please do not waste everybody's time with that crap.
Anyway, back to the question: if effectively all web browsers are free how can there be a "market" for them? Why does it matter? (aside from standards compliance and webpage development and testing)
Opera is better out of the box, but Firefox is better once you start installing extensions. Provided you need them anyway.
I rarely criticize things I don't care about.
Let me know when IceWeasel 2.0 is out. Now *that* will be a great browser!
Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
I think IE7 might be just a little too late. IE6 is embarrasing, and not just for nerds. Yes, your mother may not be using it (unless you installed it for her) but for a lot of people in the younger demographic, IE is something that they won't touch with a ten-foot poll. They've gotten used to Firefox and like it. They have the extensions that the use like the rest of us. I don't think that they're going to jump to get IE7 just because it has tabbed browsing.
IE7 isn't going to be as big as a help for Firefox as IE6 is, sure, but that doesn't mean FF will loose current users over this.
I only second that, which the author did not take into account.
Version 2.0 also improves on the tabbed-windows interface that Opera innovated and that Microsoft introduced for the first time last week with IE7
There, fixed it for you.
is there an article comparing two pieces of software and readers take one feature and get into an argument over who made it first.
SSMI
For me the big question as such is:
should we care to support Firefox 1.5 now?
We know we'll have to support IE6 for years to come, even IE5. But Firefox users typically upgrade their browser quickly.
So: do I check my sites in FF 1.5? Do I even keep it?
Before you tell me "but they all render perfectly and the same": it's not true. I keep Firefox 1.07 for this reason here, since it handles quite a bit of elements/CSS in a different manner (even clearing floats differs a little in some cases).
There's also lots of bugs fixed in 1.5, but not in 1.07. And there's also new oddball behaviours in 1.5 not present in 1.07...
FF has 10% market share. I'm just split if it's worth it going into so much detail.. maybe I'll just support 1.5 for a few months and move to 2.0.
Please share your opinion.
Besides having far better CSS support than Firefox 2.0, Konqueror also uses only a fraction of the resources. Opening the exact same sites in Firefox and Konqueror will often show a major difference between the two in terms of RAM usage.
For example, when I simultaneously open about 15 of the blogs and websites I read daily, top reports Firefox 2.0 rc3 as using 149 MB of virtual memory. Konqueror, on the other hand, uses a cool 28 MB for those exact same sites. Opera uses 31 MB. So as far as I can tell, Firefox is the lame duck when it comes to effective memory usage. This is with a build right from mozilla.org, without any additional extensions installed. I also disabled the cache for all three browsers, since I've heard that Firefox has a policy that leads to excessive memory usage.
A problem I have had with the Firefox 2.0 release candidates is crashes. This doesn't happen with Konqueror, or any other application I'm using, so I doubt it's faulty RAM. These crashes aren't easily reproducible, and I frankly don't have the time to bother debugging an application that I really don't use, and that crashes the few times I do try it out.
I tried the new Internet Explorer 7 and it sucks. The rendering of it is still only slightly better than IE6, it is nowhere near passing the Acid2 test. The user interface sucks, the menubar is under the toolbar, the new tab button is iconless when not hovering on it, etc, etc.
:D
Mozilla Firefox 2.0 rocks, I am running RC3. I love the spellcheck and stuff. I don't like how they re-arranged the tabs though, I liked the tabs better how they were in Firefox 1.5, luckily its possible to configure them so they become like they were in 1.5 using the about:config thing.
Microsoft made a new version of Internet Explorer but Mozilla Firefox still holds the crown.
By the way, I run adblock and noscript, that is sweet!
IE can go full screen - and I mean full screen. Even the toolbars autohide up into the top of the display.
Firefox has always left the toolbars around to eat up valuble screen real estate. The application goes full screen, but not the web page.
If firefox wanted to 1-up IE, they could make the toolbars autohide, and then even make the scrollbar autohide. Then it would be true full screen. How's that for marketing speak?
But in all honesty, this is a feature I would enjoy.
Spoon not. Fork, or fork not. There is no spoon.
Many users asked for a bundled packet of extensions distributed with Firefox or even simple inclusion of nice features in the browser.
In days of 1.0.x I had about 4-6 extensions installed.
After 1.5.x was released I reduced their number to 2 because I don't need others any more.
Now I often don't install extensions at all because Firefox is already sufficient for my browsing.
I don't need forecasts or bookmarks manager. I just want a convenient browser.
I choose friends for sigs
Opera.
I'm using Firefox 2.0 for at least 2 months... I'm already on RC2 since 2 weeks.
The inteface is crappy. I installed it and asked my wife to use it. She was frustrated in 5 minutes. No menu on by default. No favorites on by default. The bookmark manager is bad.
What the hell was MS thinking? IE7 doesn't touch Opera or FF.
I am a big fan of Firefox in terms of philosophy and features, but have been driven to Opera (which I actually prefer for most things) due to the ridiculous amounts of memory that Firefox consumes. With multiple tabs open, I can routinely see Firefox over the course of a day or two of remaining open consume upwards of 900K, and it will continue to grow until it is shutdown and restarted. This is a serious issue for many Windows Firefox users, and the developers seem either unwilling or unable to focus on fixing it. This should have been the number one priority for version 2 in my opinion. It results in a shoddy product that would be unacceptable in a commercial application. Why is it that this elephant just sits in the room while FF developers pretend it's not there. Restarting an application should not be the solution to any problem, let alone one this serious. It's widespread and should have been addressed a long time ago!
I cast serious doubt on Mozilla's claim of tab "innovation" but IE7 definitely perfected it by allowing me to REALLY turn it off! (Middle mouse button and all)
People who think they know everything really piss off those of us that actually do.
Only two browsers are "Major" and that's a combined Mozilla/Firefox and a combined Internet Explorer. And that's being generous to Moz/FF. The others are curiosities. Fine software perhaps, but certainly not "major."
People who think they know everything really piss off those of us that actually do.
I already use the Google Toolbar for Firefox that has built-in spell checking. When I get Firefox 2, I may get rid of the Google Toolbar, as that is really the only reason I use it.
Opera pioneered tabbed browsing, not Mozilla.
You just put egg on your face with that comment because clearly Mozilla copied that idea from Opera. Is it OK for Mozilla to copy but not MS?
Hm... release day is Tuesday. How soon there will be a little piece of spyware attached to Bookmarks via Microsummaries? :(
Yet I can't seem to find the way to turn it off
Hyperom.com
I find this rather surprising.
Who do they have playing Gant?
Are they going to make the MiG-31 look different in the special effects?
Will it be better than the original movie?
http://imdb.com/title/tt0083943/
Oh, nevermind.
everyone remember when Windows ME was rushed out because their main competetor, Apple, just released a new OS and they didn't want to lose the market share....hmmm, now the only question is, which is which? :-P Looks like IE is losing so far, lol.
Is it just me or is it not going to upgrade to Vista in here?
Gah. With proprietary CSS extensions, they all have the moz prefix. Why couldn't they have taken advantage of XML\XHTML's namespacing features and put the attribute in its own namespace (i.e. moz:spellcheck). For what its worth, though, been using the FF2 betas/RCs for a while, and I love this feature.
#include <signature.h>
They already have Firefox 2.0 themes out.
Can I bum a sig?
Opera did not invent mouse gestures. Mouse 'strokes' have been part of the UI for Mentor Graphics EDA applications since the early 90's, and weren't invented there, either. The first appearance at Mentor was in IC Station, in response to competing tools from either GE Calma or Computervision.
No, I will NOT admit that Opera was first. They weren't.
Several years ago, Opera was the only modern and fast Web Browser that used and perfected the tabbed browser interface.
Opera was known as "The Tabbed Browser" for such a long time, while Mozilla users debated in their forums about the silliness of tabs.
That's the reason Opera users and developers feels that's unfair all the credit FF has. The same with mouse gestures, pop-up blocking, that you can undo closing a page, the ultra fast history cache, etc.
In fact, FF 1.0 was still a POS compared with Opera while their zealots said FF was much better because of the license. FF 1.5 was the first version usable (for a Opera user), with its fair share of extensions. FF 2.0 could be better than Opera for the first time (we must test it!), however FF has got almost 80% of its 'features specification' from Opera.
We are Turing O-Machines. The Oracle is out there.
the memory usage is a problem only when you're displaying pages with lots of large images
... now I see why so many Slashdotters feel this is a very serious issue.
Ah
"Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
Tabs are definitely nice, but they're hardly a selling point anymore. There comes a time when it doesn't matter if you invented a feature or not, everybody's now using it, and if you don't keep developing new cool features, you'll be nothing but a subsection in a Wikipedia article somewhere.
Everybody and their cousin now has tabs. It may have taken them more a seriously embarrassing long time, but even Microsoft has seen the light. Therefore, it's no longer worth talking about. Tabs are here; stick a fork in them, because they're dead. At least from a selling-point perspective.
What is FF2.0 going to offer the average person that's going to make them care, now that IE7 has tabs as well? I don't see many features that are as slick as tabs were. The best thing I've seen is inline spell checking. Microsoft still hasn't figured out that it's not just for word processors anymore (and you'd really think that they would; seeing as Word basically popularized the whole red-underline-means-you're-wrong thing). But at least based on what I've read, IE7 isn't going to do it, and that gives FF a small advantage, at least for people that use online forms. As more and more Web 2.0 / interactive stuff comes out, this becomes a nicer and nicer feature to have. (Heck, it's why I use Safari instead of Firefox right now.)
We need a new killer feature to replace tabs, now that they've become germane. I'm not sure that an inline spell-checker is it, but it seems to be the best thing going at the moment.
"Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
you'll be able to get it instantly. if you let firefox update itself, it will install v2.0 without interfering with it's portable-ness automatically.
Maybe i am the only one having this problem but with firefox 2.0 rc3 it crashes every 5 min on me. that is unusable. I hope it gets fixed for the final revision.
We need a new killer feature to replace tabs, now that they've become mundane. I'm not sure that an inline spell-checker is it, but it seems to be the best thing going at the moment.
Yeah, can't really come up with a good excuse for making that error. It's Monday; let's go with that.
"Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
I've seen this comment before....
Is this a non-standard attribute?
We wanted web pages to control the spellchecking defaults to some degree. For example, webmail applications will want to automatically turn it on for subject lines, even though it is normally off for <input> elements.
We discussed with the WHATWG web standards group to come up with the attribute. I'm not sure about the status of this in any of their specs, as I'm not sure there was any strong consensus. That's one of the problems coming out with a new feature not currently supported in any other browser or mentioned in any standards.
- Brett (Firefox spellcheck contributor)How is anyone supposed to read when they have to look at this:
1 /b4004001.htm?chan=search
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/06_4
Sheesh
Sorry for offtopic, but adding a new attribute that controls the spell checker reminded me of two similar functions. I would like to have a system solution for disabling text selection (because selecting web application interface is dumb) and disabling text completion for input boxes (because for some boxes the completion simply does not make sense). You might be familiar with this -- does WHATWG work on something like it?
But if you are a writing web pages for say Slashdot with over 60% FF users then it's worth catering to.
you are correct, opera never invent it, it was introduce to their browser in Apirl 2001, Opera 5.x It was invent a long time ago before 2000, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouse_gestures
As long as there are web sites that are built for IE (important stuff like online banking) this is a reason for people to stay with IE and Windows. I hear it all the time. As IE looses more marketshare, companies are compelled to think about shutting out potential customers. That will lead to their web sites being compatible to web standards. That will make one less rason for people to switch away from windows. That again will lead to some chair throwing in Seattle.
I've now used Firefox exclusively for about a year and a half and as far as i'm concerned Microsofts neglect for IE for so long means that on principle alone, i'll never go back.
But I do some website testing and as a result felt it was in my interests to install IE7 now that it is released and see what its like.
Yes - shameless UI tweaks borrowed from Firefox and Opera (did we expect anything else?) but the one thing I do really like is the new magnifier feature for web pages. It just works really rather well and seems to handle most pages well.. and doesn't break formatting at all on any site I tried it on. It even scaled up Flash movies to 400% without making my machine die on its backside.
So certainly for people with sight issues, it'd be hard not to reccomend!
"Hey! Unless this is a nude love-in, get the hell off my property!!"
Gaaaaahhhh. Code to the already existing standards. The browsers then are meant to support your site, not the other way around.
"Windows 98, its biggest upgrade since 1995. Analysts said Win98 is a significant improvement over its predecessor, but the big question is whether it will stem Ubuntu's growth at Microsoft's expense."
IE7 is better than IE6. So what? Both are too little, too late. No significant number of people is going to switch from Firefox back to MSIE.
Microsoft should put MSIE into maintenance mode, adopt Firefox, and actually be a market leader with superior technology, for once.
Microsoft's case of not-invented-here syndrome is what made the company almost miss the Internet boat, and if they're not careful, they're going to make the same mistake again.
I sometimes wonder what a technology company (as opposed to a marketing company, which is what Microsoft is) could do with the resources that Microsoft has.
http://outcampaign.org/
Like 83% of all statistics, this one was made up on the spot.
The thing I like most and why Opera is not my primary browser, is because of its open-source nature, Firefox is easily recompiled/ported to other architecture. Whenever a new architecture spawns into existense, there's almost immediatly a Linux distro for it and geeks over the world feel obligated to Firefox(*) to it just after emacs/vi, even if this new platform is just an internet-enabled toaster.
The same isn't granted for opera even if they're very present on the embed market.
---
(*) or at least a rebranded port a la IceWeasel, since Mozilla(tm) fells important to protect the "FireFox (tm)" brand's image.
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
Innovated does NOT mean or imply invented.
Yes it does. Stop falling for Microsoft Newspeak.
However, Opera came up with the concept of using them in browsers. A novel idea at the time, and most people had no idea that gestures even existed.
Clever signature text goes here.
Yeah firefox 2 RC3 keeps crashing on me every 5 minutes also, i'll be typing a slashdot comment and then suddenl
Firefox 2 to be able to run Dotcom 2?
*ducks*
Does the final release candidate still not mesh with the system theme? I don't want Firefox to have a completely different theme from the rest of my UI -- I want it to fit nicely into my system theme. Has the system theme issue been fixed in the final version? Is there some sort of workaround for this?
Can anyone tell me if Firefox will auto-update itself to 2.0 once it is released? Or os that only done for point releases?
I can't find any info on the Firefox site.
[Come Tuesday...]
Ewe are write.
Notice that they used Innovate - which is to say that they really made it work right. I'll agree with that. Opera is a fine browser - terrible to code for at times, but mostly fine. But they did not make tabbed browsing what it is, Firefox did.
Can someone give me a run down of all the things being added to qualify this as a major number release? I see anti-phishing, anything else? Are there some major things going on under teh surface which weren't evident in the FF sites and such? Is this an overglorified minor revision?
Or is this a case of them figuring htat since IE had a major number release to seem like they were keeping up they needed a major number release?
I'm a fiscal conservative, it's a pity we don't have a political party anymore
Shouldn't the title say....ON Tuesday?
While it won't be officially "released" until tomorrow, Firefox 2.0 is available now.
Interested in open source engine management for your Subaru?
I can't say I disagree with you, but isn't that sort of a slippery slope? I mean eventually you have elemenets loaded with all sorts of tags that are proprietary features of each respective browser. And that would in essense start to turn the web back into the "who supports what prorpietary junk" internet war that standards compliance was meant to end.
I don't think the spellcheck attribute is a bad idea, but I don't like the Mozilla organization throwing stuff in their either. At least I would hope they would collaberate between Opera, and Khtml before just arbitrarily doing this.
One of Firefox's insanely amazing features is its portability capabilities. With an app like FirefoxPortable, I can maintain a single, portable browser environment on a USB Thumb Drive that lets me tailor my browser experience to MY liking, and have it wherever I go--something IE simply cannot do. And by using an extension like Google Browser Sync, I can maintain many of my user preferences and bookmarks across multiple browsers at work and at home, again giving me a predictable, consistent browsing experience.
Internet Explorer is so tied to a single Windows installation that it makes such portability impossible. In fact, I'd say that the whole influx of the customizable portal stems from IE's inherent lack of portability features. Firefox is not the end-all-be-all answer, but it offers many user-tailorable functions and features that IE will never have.
I'm simply waiting for someone to create a truely portable, secure online working environment that moves with you from browser to browser, has rich features and capabilities, isn't a bandwidh hog, and doesn't cost an arm and a let. THAT will be the next "killer app"...
My mom always said, "Jim, you're 1 in a million." Given the current population, there are 7000 of me. God help us all!
Sounds like you want autocomplete="off" (most of the rest of that page is quite out-of-date).
No matter what features a browsers may have, it doesn't mean a damn thing unless it actually works for a given web-site.
There are a lot of main-stream sites that only work correctly with msie. I don't know why so many people make their sites like that, but they do. Comedycentral, a lot of yahoo, a lot banks, and so on just don't work with anything non-msie.
No need to wait for the official announcement!o x/releases/2.0/
http://releases.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/firef
Rage, rage against the dying of the light!
hello? eXtensible in XML techs is there for a reason, ok? If a browser doesn't understand a particular tag or attribute, it simple ignores them, like they've been doing for the past decades. Browsers which understand the meaning will provide a better experience.
It's not like people were getting a hard time with IE6, despite it's handicapped CSS handling, for instance.
I don't feel like it...
http://releases.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/firefo x/releases/2.0/win32/en-US/Firefox%20Setup%202.0.e xe
Uhhh.... what debate?
Anyone who has used another browser, especially firefox, would prefer it to IE unless they were forced to use it!
Sure they do. Especially ones that see that the FF market is not stagnant at 10%, but rather growing steadily. Plus, for niche markets, 10% is sufficient.
Now, of course no major corporations are going to revamp their company websites to use technology only available to 10% of their potential market, but a small, start-up company would certainly write a web-based app that works for only 10% of the market if that app is so much more better because of the tech being used.
Student Manager - Take control of your education!
Thanks for the link, I did not know about that. I wanted a bit more, I wanted to know whether is this feature (and the text selection control) is going to get standardized somewhere. I am just skimming the Web Applications 1.0 spec by WHATWG and it seems that not the text selection control nor the autocompletion is there. (I'll try to submit a comment if I have enough time to go through the spec draft.)
I know, it is. That is why I asked whether there is some solution supported by WHATWG, because that could end up being standardized and implemented in more browsers.
Galeon rocks and did implement this before Firefox.
BTW, the correct spelling is "Phoenix".
tabbed-windows interface that Mozilla innovated
And I thought Opera started that in around 1997.
Firefox 2.0 discovered live and downloadable on Monday:
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
There, fixed it for you.
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
I've noticed that IE7 has moments where it needs to think about rendering a page where Fire Fox would just do it. The new IE is nice but when those moments of hesitation occure it's like you can feel extra bloat in the browser or something holding it up. Firefox isn't without its quirks, now and then it locks up in memory and you have to kill the process because of some interaction with Sun's JVM. Not sure if it's the VM or Firefox, but thats one thing I noticed there.
~~ Behold the flying cow with a rail gun! ~~
well where were you? All my teachers, techtv when it was techtv, and most of my techie friends all have stated that ME was a quick release of what they had done so far on XP or 2000 or whatever and they released it because OS9 had just come out.
Is it just me or is it not going to upgrade to Vista in here?
It's available on the ftp site so the mirrors get updated before the official release tomorrow:
r efox/releases/2.0/win32/en-US/
http://mozilla.mirrors.tds.net/pub/mozilla.org/fi
-- Rick
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
Yeah, it's called SessionSaver, and I already use it. The same functionality is built into Epiphany already.
Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca
The look is all that's different.
Yeah, that and the behavior.
You know, Microsoft's street address also says a lot about their mentality.
Windows honorary mention: proximitron
http://www.proxomitron.info/