Firefox 3 Plans and IE8 Speculation
ReadWriteWeb writes "Information about the next versions of Firefox and Internet Explorer suggest that the two biggest browsers are heading in different directions. Mozilla has published a wiki page detailing its plans for the next version of Firefox, codenamed 'Gran Paradiso'. Among the mandatory requirements listed for FF3 are improving the add-on experience, providing an extensible bookmarks back-end platform, adding more support for web services "to act as content handlers" — all of which show that Firefox wants to be an independent information broker rather than a simple HTML renderer in its next version. Also in the works is Microsoft's IE8. According to ActiveWin.com, a Microsoft official at CES told them that work has already begun for IE 8 and it may be released as a final product 'within 18-24 months'. Looking ahead, it's obvious that IE will continue to hook into the advanced functionality that Vista offers."
Have Firefox implemented email yet?
"the next version of Firefox, codenamed 'Gran Paradiso'"
Why are they using code names?
I can understand how it could be necessary for things like the original Mac and Windows 95. But why for yet-another-version of an established product?
As I see it, either they might as well call it "the upcoming Firefox v3", or they should not (want to) discuss it publicly at all.
Or is it just to keep Marketing occupied with something harmless?
"Good news, everyone!"
keeping up and cutting edge sounds great, but i hope if they plan on adding all of these features they spin off a lite verison too. is it just me or is firefox starting to get a bloated, almost like ie. features are great if they provide useful functionality; but sometimes lightweight, fast, and simple is all you need/want for just browsing around.
Honestly with the issues I had with IE6 I moved to FF 1.5. Then when IE7 came out I upgraded, but found it almost as loose as IE6, just with tabs. Not to mention IE7 doesn't have extentions. I don't know what I would do if I didn't have half of the extensiosn I have for FF. I'm not even mentiioning the portable version I carry with all of my extensions on it.
Firefox 2 has ben extremely stable except with a few quirks, which stems from my computer being slow as hell. I look forward to what Firefox 3 bring to the table.
In Soviet Russia, dots slash you!
They just got IE7 out, give them 3-4 years, they are working on it.
Did someone say cake?
Does that include the ability to only run on Vista?
Will they implement detachable (and attachable) tabs? Konqueror has had this forever, so Firefox has some catching up to do.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
I for one am very much looking forward to improvements in the Bookmarks department.
... probably why it was never deemed important enough to implement the store-your-bookmarks-on-an-FTP which has been discussed for so long.
How it was in Mozilla was actually better than Firefox now, the context menu in the app/toolbar menus were so good you'd hardly ever need to use "Manage Bookmarks".
Anyway, people are allegedly no longer using bookmarks in favour of tag clouds and what-have-you
"Good news, everyone!"
It will include an improved add-on experience, provide an extensible bookmarks back-end platform, add more support for web services "to act as content handlers" - all of which show that Internet Explorer wants to be an independent information broker rather than a simple HTML renderer in its next version. Oh, and it'll come up not long after Firefox v.3...
:).
It worked last time
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
MS-Approved Craplets For Everyone!
I wonder if this will be known as FFVI in Japan?
Wise men say, "Forgiveness is divine, but never pay full price for late pizza."
Hole-y crap!
I think their main priority should be to make it lightweight. Smaller memory footprint. Pleeeeeease.
Sent from my desktop computer
... with no added features as long as it stopped crashing.
Granted, this only really happens when I have 50 or so tabs open across a few windows, but that is fairly normal usage for me and boy is it annoying.
Yes, my ram's good. No, it doesn't matter if I have any extensions. No, nothing on the "yeah, this problem really doesn't exist, but if it did, you could try these steps to fix it" problem denial page.
The built in session restore feature is nice (as long as your connection can handle 2500 outbound connections at "once" as the dozens of images and the like load up, but ff 2.0 crashes at least once a day for me.
I still use it over opera and ie, but...
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Security / Privacy Context UI redesign (the lock icon sucks; needs more detail)e nts#P1.2FMANDATORY_Features
http://wiki.mozilla.org/Firefox3/Firefox_Requirem
have you read the Moderation Guidelines Addendum?
Is anyone working on the little things? Stuff like the URL bar not getting the focus half the time when creating a new tab, or the status bar not saying "Done" when a page is actually finished? The continuous minor irritations of things like that are what make up a large part of a user's general feelings about a product, and one of the reasons I"ll always prefer to use Safari when I can.
Media that can be recorded and distributed can be recorded and distributed.
-kfg
I'm a little concerned about Firefox 3's new direction as "Information Broker" -- especially after reading TFA.
It seems to me that what we're about to witness is the steady creep of corporate interest into the browser.
Already, Mozilla makes millions from its partnership with Google (via the search box in the upper right).
As information broker, I think we're going to see pre-selective integration with applications and web services.
This is great for Amazon, Google, eBay, Yahoo!, etc.
So have we traded Microsoft for a handful of competing companies who sought to dethrone the former?
------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
improving the add-on experience
Yeah, it could be better - though officially supporting and easing the search for addons would be fine with me.
providing an extensible bookmarks back-end platform adding more support for web services "to act as content handlers" -- all of which show that Firefox wants to be an independent information broker rather than a simple HTML renderer in its next version.
Whoa, hey, time to get off this train. I understand this whole convergence thing, and sometimes it's good, but I'd rather try and stay a bit more basic. I'm really not interested in a 40MB FF download, and the resource hogging that goes with it. I know that the pressure is to produce a be-all, end-all application, but I'd really just prefer an efficient browser. In fact, if I had my choice (and I don't - I don't/can't do code), I'd have the whole thing installable in a single sub-folder that could just be moved wherever, whenever I wanted. The install program would simply create the folder, copy the files, and put a shortcut in the start menu - and that's just because I'm lazy.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
"extensible bookmarks back-end platform"
Can somebody translate this to English?
I find it interesting that there are no radical changes even on the drawing board, and that IE and FF have reached essentially the same state. We'll have vicious flame wars about how Opera users cannot imagine how FF users live without Feature X, and vice versa, but in general the web browser appears to have reached the end of their iterated approximation to the Right Web Browser.
And it's not as good as you'd hoped. Ajax applications aren't quite good enough for prime time, but there doesn't appear to be any way forward without sitting the IE/FF/Opera/etc developers in a room and getting them to agree. And even if they did, the violation of the basic web browsing contract with respect to the "back" button isn't going to have a pretty resolution.
Similarly, basic CSS pages look pretty good, but advanced ones aren't reliable. That's as much to do with CSS's failures as the browsers: designers are forced into contortions which push the edges of the implementations.
It appears to me that the next advance will have to be a step backwards before it goes forwards. For years the browser advanced because programmers added incompatible features which the other browsers gradually took up. That was easy when it was Netscape running the show, and IE was quick to follow. Now IE runs the show, and isn't willing to follow FF, at least not quickly.
Perhaps stasis on the browser side is a Good Thing. Make the existing feature sets more bullet proof, and the innovation will come from the web sites themselves.
Crashula, Crashenstein, and the Crashback of Bloatre Lame!
stuff |
I'm not sure what you're talking about. FFVII was the best one (according to the fanboys who probably never finished it anyway). Personally I thought FFX was excellent.
You are talking about Final Fantasy aren't you?
Summation 2
It's probably not so clear from the article but Firefox3 contains a relational database, sqlite which can be accessed from Javascript. This allows for a whole new class of applications to be implemented as extensions.
After all the promises of better CSS support in IE7, the Acid Test still looks downright embarrassing.
Add CSS borders around images and then make them change colors when hovering. Looks like it should in IE. In FF, it looks like a bucket underneath the image instead of a box around the image. Something like |_|
Make a div or table float to the left or right and place a table of data beneath it. In FF, the floating item is super-imposed into the table instead of pushing it down.
After dealing with IE7 in a lot more hands-on basis, it seems like some of the more obvious bugs have been fixed. And yet, some of the far more annoying ones (bizarre li padding -- either the whitespace bug or too much padding in a LI despite padding/margining to 0 (and yes, I've got a valid doctype)) still are around. Of course, MS "fixed" the !important hack, which would have made the situation reasonable. I know, hacks are bad, but IE conditional comments feel far more offensive than the !important hack.
I am not Herbert.
Meet the new browser, same as the old browser.
This problem went away for me when I recreated my firefox profile (which had been around since the 0.3 days or so). I then imported my old bookmarks, and it worked like a charm since.
Anyone know if this is in the pipeline for FF3? *sigh*
I had the same experience. For me it turned out that the Google Toolbar was causing the problem. I now use Googlebar instead and Firefox is solid and stable again.
You got half-way there with the part about microformats being created by others. The key is that microformats (the "extend" part in this case) discussed so far are described openly and free to use.
If Firefox starts supporting, say, hCard and hCalendar by making it possible to send the data to the Thunderbird address book or the calendar app of your choice, there's nothing to stop Opera, Apple, or indeed Microsoft from doing the same thing. Other browser developers don't have to reverse-engineer the features, or sign an NDA, or pay for a patent license.
Embrace is good. Extend is OK too, when done in a way that makes the third step, "Extinguish," difficult to do.
I understand that Firefox wishes to be more than a web browser. But looking at the FFX 3 requirements page I find one very weird requirement:
P2/HIGHLY DESIRABLE features:
Honestly, WTF? Is this really a feature that should be in something that mainly is a web browser? I would understand if there was a need to add a general Kademlia DHT API to easy delivering information, but isn't a chat application something that should be covered as an extension. Typically a chat application runs constantly while a web browser (or "information broker") generally isn't running constantly. I fail to see the logic behind this.
Thanks! Makes more sense now.
As a web designer, I'm automatically dismissive of this. Browser makers working and agreeing on the way CSS should look and act is way more important than new features.
Actually, I believe this is a good thing. Firefox is an open source project, and it can never be reverted to a closed source one. The money that companies like Google pour into Firefox development goes towards supporting something that will always remain open source. This is a win for everyone. Companies that make their living through the browser, such as Google, Yahoo!, Amazon, etc. get an open standard that they can all base their work on something that none of them own outright. They are forced to share. Smaller developers such as myself get the benefit of an increasing reliable standard upon which to develop. When the developers, both large and small, are all working on an open, standardized platform, that means that there is more we can do, and this then benefits the users.
Internet Explorer's days are numbered - at least the proprietary parts of it are. As innovation on the web begins to gravitate more and more towards the Firefox platform, I am predicting that Microsoft will be forced to follow in the footsteps of Firefox. The stakes are just too high, and Microsoft does not have a monopoly on the Web, like it does on the desktop. It will really come down to the needs of Microsoft, vs. the needs of Everyone Else. Since Everyone Else is bigger, they will eventually be the ones calling the shots about what direction the Browser takes.
All this seems to point to vertical desktop space being overutilized and horizontal desktop space being underutilized. So why force tabs into vertical space? Give me the option to put them on the side(s).
...work has already begun for IE 8 and it may be released as a final product 'within 18-24 months'. Translation:
...we are now waiting patiently for the Mozilla team to come up with new innovation for us to claim as our own. Once that has happened, IE8 may be released as a final product 'within 54-76 months'.IE8 needs SVG, and the right way - PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE for the love of god PLEASE
Like what? A shitty version for people who don't want to pay up? One that turns itself off if you go to unapproved websites? One that takes 5 min to boot? One that you will need to buy a whole lot of additional software to use productively? One that uses a supercharged, re-designed, re-written, and vastly more efficient worm and adware propagator? One that requires a 3 MHz quad-core cpu qith 256 Mb cache, 4 Gb of RAM, and 1 Tb of HD space?
I'll stick with Ubuntu and Firefox.
...are we scared yet?
Whoa, you can customize Final Fantasy 3? US or Japan? FF3 US is still my favorite out of the series...
a bbreviate
Oh. You're talking about Firefox? Please don't use "FF" to abbreviate Firefox, which is one word. Use "Fx" or "fx", instead. See also http://www.mozilla.org/support/firefox/faq#spell-
Have you driven a fnord... lately?
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Maybe Microsoft should focus less on "Vista Integration" and more on CSS support for their browser. Among the 3 Big Browsers (IE, Firefox, and Opera) Opera is the only one that actually passes the Acid2 Browser test. Check it out for yourself.
http://www.webstandards.org/action/acid2/
Firefox does a decent job, but not one I would expect from a browser such as Firefox. However, IE's support for it is terrible. I'm redesigning my website and the CSS works in every browser I've tried except IE, what is up with that?
Come On MS, I know it's tough, but can you make a browser that at least attempts to comply with web standards? Your browser has been around way longer than Firefox and Opera, but your support is the worst of the three.
Software Reviews>
Now I'm reading all the comments as: "When I had problems with IE6 i moved to Final Fantasy 2.5..., wait, what?"
I [may] disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but Firefox has had a mouse gestures extension for quite some time.
Geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won't leave you alone.-rms
The Gran Paradiso is the tallest peak of the Graian Alps at over 4,000 metres, and gives the name to Italy's oldest National Park (1856). And by the way, "Gran Paradiso" is a masculine name, so it does definitely not fit a woman.
Victims of 9/11: <3000. Traffic in the US: >30,000/y
Opera had it before Firefox did. Well at least i'm sure they did.
This same comment, in one form or another, comes up every time there is a story on a new version of Firefox. I read the article, I skimmed the features list, what bloat is being added? The only thing that seemed that they would cause any excess bloat are the extended bookmarks.
Other than that it's improving the functionality and usability of things that already exist, or building a simple framework that will let other systems (extensions or webservices) provide additional features like microformats and identity management.
They are not bundling a mail client, chat client, html editor, voip phone, or anything else, so stop implying that it's becomnig just like Mozilla.
http://www.mhall119.com
Group policy and MSI deployment of Firefox. I can already repackage Firefox as an MSI using AdminStudio, but I can't control it as much as I'd like via Policy.
:)
It would be nice to see the ability to edit the proxy settings automatically or other things. Disable popups, add a 'trusted' site etc. Just little features here and there that make life easier as a Windows domain admin
The price is always right if someone else is paying.
Seriously, most of these complaints with Firefox could be solved by looking for an extension that provides the functionality you want. There are a shitload of them. These features can't and shouldn't all be included in the browser by default; the customizability of Firefox is its biggest asset IMO.
Geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won't leave you alone.-rms
Actually, the way I read the "information broker" article doesn't seem like a problem. It's essentially an extension of the browser's current role in deciding to open a PDF in Acrobat Reader, Preview, or Evince, to open an email link in your default mail client, etc. Only now it'll be able to open based on data in a page. Got an ISBN number? Open it in your favorite online bookstore. Contact info? Add it to your address book.
It's a lot like Opera's ability to highlight text on a page and send it to a search engine, a dictionary, or a translation service.
As long as the sentiment behind "The personal toolbar is the personal toolbar, not the whorebar" remains intact, and as long as it's possible to choose competing different services/apps, the risk of corporate encroachment is minimal.
... like Firefox was in the early days? That was the feature I wanted, not the bloatware it's turned into by V2.0. I don't need no stinkin' tabbed browsing or ActiveX, I want a small footprint, high performance & security basic browser who's developers aren't afflicted with bouts of creeping featurism...
Yes it has had the extension for quite sometime but Opera has had it as a built in feature for many years. I don't know when they were first introduced since I first used Opera in 2001 and it already had mouse gestures.
Firefox 2 was very unstable for me too. I've been running Firefox 3 Alpha 1 for about a month now, and it's been very stable compared to Firefox 2.
I for one welcome our new information broker corporate overlords.
on a more serious note, it's open source. someone will fork it or write an extension that disables what you (they) don't like.
-1, Alarmist
Stop Computers/Cars Analogies on S
Wait, Opera has ducks? Or is that just a fowl accusation?
I'd suggest upgrading your memory. My machine at work has 512MB of memory and I run Eclipse, Firefox, Windows XP in VMWare (128mb virtual ram), Exaile, and a few other apps. No problems.
"The Federal Reserve is a fraudulent system."--Lew Rockwell
End The FED. -
Still don't see anything about roaming usage. It's been promised for a long time, and unheard of almost a long.
The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
Just my luck. Now that I've used up all my mod points, I find a post begging for my help on its journey to +5 funny.
You all have Oo.o and Firefox, so get World Wind.
IE8 will have a new feature where it will tap into your webcam and keep a constant stream to someone at Microsoft's HQ watching to see if you sing along to a copyrighted song and when you do, they'll send someone to break down your door and arrest you. Yay DRM!
Google's Super Secret Search Algorithm: SELECT @search_results FROM internet WHERE @search_results = 'good'
I'd like the abiltity for a tab to be `chrooted` from the rest, or other `chrooted` tabs so that I could login twice under different accounts to my webmail on the same website, login twice under different accounts when developing a website. I really should get around to that feature request...
Here's what I want, a side bar like the one for history that has a nested list of pages I've opened from each domain. So you'd have a listing for
Slashdot.org
|
- http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl/etc/etc/etc
- http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl/etc/etc/etc
The pages are still "loaded" in the background so that when you click on them it doesn't have to retrieve anything and maybe a little popup preview when you hover over them.
Sometimes I have a lot of tabs and it's annoying to deal with them.
No sig for you!!
...and this is why! Well, this probably isn't why, but nevertheless...
a bbreviate
http://www.mozilla.org/support/firefox/faq#spell-
~ Aero
I've heard this "HTML" thing may make it possible that the corporate interests will creep into our web browsers.
Oh wait, it has allowed that for a while now. Heh, sorry.
These are just technologies. They allow people to handle data more intelligently. A web page may say "here's an ICBM coordinate" - it's up to the user to make the choice whether to fire up Google Earth, look it up from Yahoo, or reach for the plain old paper atlas. It may say "here's an RSS feed". If the user subscribes to "Boring Marketing Deals" feed, that's their problem - I'm using it to subscribe to primarily interesting feeds. If people figure out a way to profit from these things - well, who are we fooling, of course someone will find a way to profit from them.
And Mozilla Foundation may make money from Google deal - but the crucial bit is that they allow other search extensions to be installed. Open specification. I use other search engines besides Google all the time, and Firefox lets me.
I'm frankly not worried at this phase - the amount of good these things can do for average people far outweighs the amount of evil it can do.
I use both Windows and Linux simultaneously on adjacent monitors. They seem to be the same stability wise. (The browser version that is... The uptime on the linux box was 200+ days before the extended power outage this weekend, and the windows box needs to be rebooted at least weekly.)
This is why I have my LCD monitor turned to portrait mode, seriously.
I have 2 20" Dell LCDs (1600x1200). One is in landscape, the other is in portrait mode.
Text applications (Word, Firefox, etc.) go to the portrait LCD. Non-text applications (games, Excel, VmWare) got to the landscape LCD.
This is also fairly easy to do with a laptop and an extra LCD. At work they give us a laptop, a docking station, and an LCD.
If I only had 1 LCD, I would go portrait.
I understand we have 4:3 monitors because we used to hook the Commodore up to the TV, but now with LCDs I going portrait mode.
Yes but that's Microsoft all over again. Google is "bundled" with the browser, and Google will expand into every possible area, re-creating all the best extensions until there are no more indie developers.
------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
As a heavy tab-user (who has a lot of tabs from the same domain, usually) this would be quite useful. Not to mention the increased vertical space.
Firefox(/extension) developers, are you listening?