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After 100M IE7 Downloads, Firefox Still Gaining

Kelson writes "Internet Explorer 7 hit the 100 million download mark last week. Yet in the three months it's been available, Firefox's market share has continued to grow. InformationWeek reports that nearly all of IE7's growth has been upgrades from IE6. People don't seem to be switching back to IE in significant numbers, prompting analysts to wonder: has Microsoft finally met its match?"

425 comments

  1. If you're like me by gelfling · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You upgrade IE6 with the assumption that MS will require it for one thing or another. We don't actually use it but we install it just in case.

    1. Re:If you're like me by omeg · · Score: 4, Informative

      True. Or you just want to check to see for yourself whether it really fixes some of those nasty CSS problems. There are plenty of reasons for installing IE7, but none of them imply that you will also be actually using it. Site statistics will have to assess whether IE7 is really being used a lot, not the amount of downloads.

    2. Re:If you're like me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same here. IE7 is just an automatic update, nothing more. There is no bookmark in that browser and the firewall doesn't let it talk to the internet. That's my account of 1/100000000 of the IE7 downloads.

    3. Re:If you're like me by mastershake_phd · · Score: 1

      I assumed you had to pay for it. Since when does Microsoft give things away?

    4. Re:If you're like me by Dobeln · · Score: 1

      Correct - I just upgraded after being prompted by Windows update. I mean, why not do it - it's better.

    5. Re:If you're like me by Calinous · · Score: 1

      Or you install it, and find out that for some reason or another, it won't work with one of your sites (Sharepoint Portal, configuration site for Virtual Server, just to put two examples from Microsoft).
            Also, take into account that IE7 is automatic update (from Automatic updates in Windows XP)

    6. Re:If you're like me by Calinous · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, I wonder if one would need to force IE7 to present itself as IE6, so it will work on some sites "optimized" for IE6.
      After all these years of Netscape Navigator, Opera, Firefox, Mozilla masquerading as IE6.
            Ohhh, the irony...

    7. Re:If you're like me by shotgunsaint · · Score: 2, Funny

      Oh, you'll pay for it... just not with cash, and not up front. :)

      --
      The future isn't here until I can type "car keys" into Google and have it say "You left them in your pants last night."
    8. Re:If you're like me by gertvs · · Score: 1

      OK, a downloader is not a guaranteed user, but a non downloader is a non-user. So the absolute maximum amount of users is the number of downloads. But is is probably (much) lower for reasons already noted.

    9. Re:If you're like me by Dersaidin · · Score: 1
      Same for firefox.

      I imagine google would be in the best position to gather browser stats.

    10. Re:If you're like me by PetrusMagnusII · · Score: 1

      However the same could be said about Firefox. All these people could be downloading Firefox just incase they need it someday, but actually using IE the whole time. (Or in my case I have Firefox just incase I need it, but I prefer to use Safari a majority of the time.)

      As you say, site statistics are definitely the way to go for determining usage, download stats only tell of downloads.

    11. Re:If you're like me by speculatrix · · Score: 1

      I have a couple of minority interest web sites, one is linux focussed, and it's interesting that mozilla-based browsers represent a much higher ratio of browsers than for most web sites.

      Thus you have to aggregate statistics across lots of different types of web sites to accurately determine usage; of course you also need to ignore stats from websites which only work properly on IE.

      The worst offender of any big corporate site I've come across recently is that for United Airlines, looks a total dogs dinner in FF.

    12. Re:If you're like me by nomi42 · · Score: 1

      totally true. Just installed as a regular update of the system, in case any MS software requires. But when I work under Windows, I anyway use Firefox for everything :)

    13. Re:If you're like me by camcorder · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Vast majority of distrobution of FireFox for Linux users is update systems of their distro. I never downloaded FireFox from www.mozilla.org, but I use it. So non-downloader is not a non-user anyways.

    14. Re:If you're like me by pipatron · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think google would report more ff/opera/others than is actually used, since most of the sheep probably use the default search, which most probably is microsoft's own search in IE7.

      --
      c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
    15. Re:If you're like me by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

      Does google post any web statistics anywhere?

      I would love to see them.

      --

      *sigh* back to work...
    16. Re:If you're like me by MMMDI · · Score: 4, Informative

      I run two different sites, both of which are far from being tech-oriented - one is a music site, and the other is a movie review site. The stats on both sites consistently show an increase in FF usage from month to month. I know I don't bring in a fraction of the hits that Google and the other "major" sites do, but if this is any indication...

      Thus far this month, we're looking at the following:
      MMMDI
      1,867,564 hits
      64.1% IE / 29.6% FF / 1.9% Safari (the big three)

      MvMMDI
      186,191 hits (yes, this site is still relatively new and unestablished)
      59.9% IE / 34.5% FF / 2.1% Safari (the big three)

    17. Re:If you're like me by jaweekes · · Score: 1

      That's why I use both. IE 7 for internal work sites only and Firefox for anything else, so MS cannot claim me on Web Page stats. We are a mostly MS shop and MS programs like IE better then FF, plus the company uses Group Policy to enforce the proxy, which FF avoids nicely! :D

    18. Re:If you're like me by zymurgyboy · · Score: 1
      I wouldn't base anything solely site statistics either. Some number of the IE on Win hits are certainly someone with Safari, Firefox, or some other browser using a user agent switcher to lie to a particular site just to gain access to it.

      I have to play this game with my bank every time I want to check my account. They "only support IE5 or greater on Windows or Netscape on MacOS." If you have something else, you talk to the hand.... unless you set FF to report itself as IE on Win, at which point it works just fine. Why certain corps feel the need to block access to any other browser, or worse, force people into stupid browser choices for their OS of choice (Netscape on MacOS?!? How about at least supporting the standard browser for the platform?) is somewhat of a mystery. If they just don't want to support it, even if it works, why not just say so?

      --
      If you never make mistakes, it's probably because you're not doing anything.
    19. Re:If you're like me by des09 · · Score: 1

      I didn't out up with that sh#t. I emailed their support, telling them to fix their broken website, or lose me as a customer, wgot no response, so I switched banks.

      --
      .sigless since 2003
    20. Re:If you're like me by a.d.trick · · Score: 1
      You upgrade IE6 with the assumption that MS will require it for one thing or another. We don't actually use it but we install it just in case.

      Actually, the most common answer I get from normal users who go and install it is that they did it because IE7 is 'new', and they want to make sure they keep up with all the new stuff so that they can stay 'cool'. In many cases they don't even actually like it all that much, but they use it (sometimes even over firefox) simply because it's 'new'.

    21. Re:If you're like me by zymurgyboy · · Score: 1
      I attempted the same -- and got the same result as you -- but this is only temporary anyway. I got a 0% deal on a rather substantial home improvement through these characters, and then they'll be out of my life in less than a year.

      I'll play games for 5 points on a five-figure loan, but what I won't do is buy Windows or install Netscape to please someone else. I at least get the satisfaction of knowing that they'll make little if any money off me (more likely the latter) and they get to field complaints about their crappy website for the privilege. It's quite awesome, actually, now that I think about it.

      --
      If you never make mistakes, it's probably because you're not doing anything.
    22. Re:If you're like me by frelax · · Score: 1

      Some people download firefox to try it, but chose to keep ie as standard browser. After all, it has a searchbox and tabs as well. Those visible features made firefox something special when you looked at it for the first time. (And you hadn't seen a browser other than ie.)

    23. Re:If you're like me by Richard+Steiner · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I regularly download Firefox updates to my fileserver and then install it on both my wife's box and the several that I maintain. One download, two users, several installations.

      Downloads != users.

      --
      Mainframe/UNIX Bit Twiddler and long time Windows/Linux Hobbyist.
      The Theorem Theorem: If If, Then Then.
    24. Re:If you're like me by jZnat · · Score: 1

      Considering Google ignores Konqueror users (Konqueror's KHTML engine is nearly the same as Safari 2.0's WebKit engine; they're from the same codebase), and the fact that Opera used to identify as IE by default, I don't think they'll be able to offer meaningful statistics (nor can anyone for that matter).

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    25. Re:If you're like me by huckda · · Score: 1

      and how many of those 100million downloads of IE7 got uninstalled immediately following?

      I know at least 15 that did and that's just at 1 tiny location. Using IE7 caused some webapps to no longer function...

      and yeah..download FF once .. create the image for all of the network boxes and push the image out... 1 download 100+ installs...I prefer to look at site traffic-stats than download stats.

      --
      "Just Smile and Nod." --Huck
    26. Re:If you're like me by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      True. Or you just want to check to see for yourself whether it really fixes some of those nasty CSS problems. There are plenty of reasons for installing IE7, but none of them imply that you will also be actually using it. Site statistics will have to assess whether IE7 is really being used a lot, not the amount of downloads.

      Sadly, in the real world there are plenty of websites that require IE e.g. my bank. I am an Opera user as a rule, but it (or Firefox) just won't work with my bank. And I can almost guarantee that at some point they'll "upgrade" their site so that I'll need IE7 specifically.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    27. Re:If you're like me by micheas · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Those stats look about like what my sites see,

      The only thing that was of interest is that on a few of the smaller sites ie7 has passed firefox. Those sites also have unusually low ie6 numbers, relatively high firefox on windows numbers, and are the only sites that linux shows up above 3%.

      It might be a glimpse at the direction things are going, or maybe just statistical noise. Time will tell, I guess.

    28. Re:If you're like me by dark_requiem · · Score: 1

      Experience has shown me quite well that preemptively upgrading to IE7 may not be such a good idea. I have yet to determine exactly why, but upgrading to IE7 has caused numerous problems with several of my clients related to printing emails from Outlook (and, no, they are not interested in going to Thunderbird). For example, when printing HTML emails from specific domains, they are always shrunk to fit on a single page, with no option to change this, which means the resulting printout can only be read with a magnifying glass. Or another, certain emails (not specific to a certain domain or sender) will not print with headers, no matter what. There is a workaround to these problems, but it involves forwarding the email back to yourself then printing it, which, while easy, is ridiculous to have to perform every time. Reverting back to IE6 solves all these problems, and nothing else I've been able to find will. So while MS will certainly require IE7 to access certain features in the future, for now it just creates more problems than it solves. Every user I've spoken to who has upgraded to IE7 has hated it and had nothing but problems. Maybe these bugs are just a way to convince people to "upgrade" Outlook to 2007.

    29. Re:If you're like me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe it's because you keep advertising them on Slashdot (and quite possibly other technical websites)?

    30. Re:If you're like me by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      How many FF installs got uninstalled? What's the point here, other than applying another double standard? "Support the metrics that support our cause, argue against those same metrics when used 'against' us."

    31. Re:If you're like me by huckda · · Score: 1

      Likely MANY LESS...because installing FF does not BREAK currently working pages(they actually adhere to some semblance of a standard)...more likely is it is sitting there installed with the desktop icon deleted...and merely unused.

      --
      "Just Smile and Nod." --Huck
    32. Re:If you're like me by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      Thereby making my point, as the entire discussion was about usage. Is an unused instance any different in reality and outcome to an uninstalled instance?

    33. Re:If you're like me by AJWM · · Score: 1

      I emailed their support, telling them to fix their broken website, or lose me as a customer,

      Telling support doesn't do much good; they probably couldn't give a rat's ass if they lost you as a customer ("great, one less weird browser to support"). You need to tell (at least CC) whoever is in charge of marketing.

      You can bet that if marketing gets enough complaints, they'll put pressure on the web site developers to fix it.

      --
      -- Alastair
  2. 100M IE7 downloads by ReallyEvilCanine · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Based on my experience with corporate networks and home machines, about 85% of those were pushed via Automatic Updates. I expect a maximum of about 20% of those downloads to be intentional or wanted.

    1. Re:100M IE7 downloads by mastershake_phd · · Score: 1

      Ive got automatic updates on. Still says 6.0, but who cares, Im using Firefox.

    2. Re:100M IE7 downloads by gx5000 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It was a high priority update that bollucked more than a handful of my home clients...
      I remove it before I do anything else (search for spywares, update AV and so on...)
      As far as work is concerned, I work for the Canadian gov, and we're still using WIN2000/IE6 Corp with no near plans to upgrade to either IE7 or Vista. I wouldn't mind XP on the workstations, but Vista/IE7 if definitely not in the cards...I figure sometime soon we'll need it for functionality, but hopefully that will be a long time in coming...There's no way we'll be getting anything to replace IE though, Firefox/Opera would be nice but the red tape would plunge me into a warp breach.

      --
      End of Line.
    3. Re:100M IE7 downloads by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      Logged in as restriced user? I have automatic updates on, and it only says that the update is ready when I log in as an Administrator. Just wondering if it's the same effect...

    4. Re:100M IE7 downloads by Kierthos · · Score: 1

      I believe I was able to remove the IE7 upgrade from the list of automatic updates.... either that or my memory is slipping and I didn't do it, already upgraded, and forgot about it, as well... I too use Firefox.

      I can't see IE7 being so much of an improvement over Firefox that it would make me want to switch back.

      --
      Mr. Hu is not a ninja.
    5. Re:100M IE7 downloads by clonmult · · Score: 1

      We're holding off the auto updates here (thankfully), as the guys on that side of the IS team haven't had a chance to evaluate IE7.

      I installed IE7 just to "see what all the fuss was about", and alternate between IE7 and FF2 depending on how the mood takes me. Admit that I really do like the scaling of the screens on IE7 - hold ctrl and the mouse scroll wheel to rescale, does work a lot nicer than the FF2 implementation.

      And at home I can't actually use IE7 - it just plain dies on my old Vaio way too regularly to make it viable. FF2, whilst being a resource hog, is at least stable.

    6. Re:100M IE7 downloads by extern_void · · Score: 0

      IE7 should be outcast due dopping by WindowsUpdate robot.

    7. Re:100M IE7 downloads by mastershake_phd · · Score: 1

      Im logged in as Admin. Whos logs in as user?

    8. Re:100M IE7 downloads by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      Everyone in my family, including me... (I eat my own dog food, and I am more likely to catch problems before my users complain) It's not even that hard to setup, if you know what you are doing.

      Admin is for maintenance only. A bit like "root" on a Unix machine.

    9. Re:100M IE7 downloads by kirils · · Score: 1

      and the rest 20% must be just the statistical error margin.

      --
      Do not. Touch. Down.
    10. Re:100M IE7 downloads by jallen02 · · Score: 1

      People that care about the principle of least privilege perhaps?

      Jeremy

    11. Re:100M IE7 downloads by nstlgc · · Score: 1

      I'm suspecting about 75% of that is made up.

      --
      I'm Rocco. I'm the +5 Funny man.
    12. Re:100M IE7 downloads by botlrokit · · Score: 1

      And 100% of my IE7 uninstalls were intentional.

    13. Re:100M IE7 downloads by Rockgod · · Score: 1

      85% and 20%? Actual figures?
      You just proved that 90% of the statistics are just pulled out of one's ass. ;-)

      --
      A witty signature proves nothing
    14. Re:100M IE7 downloads by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 1

      Would corporate pushes be part of the statistic? I doubt most corporations rely on 'automatic update' in their network....

      --
      Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!

      http://financialpetition.org/
    15. Re:100M IE7 downloads by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      We're installing IE7 as a security update, but we don't use or support it, instead we support FireFox 2.0.0.1, though I use Opera.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
  3. A fair test? by mattpointblank · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is it fair to compare these stats? Most IE users don't choose to upgrade, it's simply foisted on them by Windows' Auto Update. When I returned home this Christmas both my mum and sister asked me to "fix the internet" because IE7 had been installed and its new layout confused them. They certainly didn't choose in the way that someone chooses to download and install Firefox does, so the victory is even more in FF's favour.

    Please note that this isn't a Firefox fanboy post (despite my love for it), merely pointing out the facts.

    1. Re:A fair test? by thebdj · · Score: 1

      This is true. I had this same problem while I was home X-Mas. I just installed FireFox. Of course, I am hoping to transition my mom to Linux, so the best way to do this is for me to get her on Open Source apps now (like FF, OOo, and Gaim), so the transition will be a lot smoother when the time comes to rid her machine of XP.

      --
      "Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb."
    2. Re:A fair test? by blowdart · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually WU downloads an installer which then says "There's an update available to Internet Explorer. Do you wish to install it?" It's not a silent, in the background install like you seem to suggest, the user must choose to let it update. Of course users do blindly click yes...

    3. Re:A fair test? by alx5000 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Why on Earth wouldn't they call a plumber to fix the internet??

      --
      My 0.02 cents
    4. Re:A fair test? by jettawu · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Until a different OS has market dominance, I highly doubt any browser other than IE will gain market dominance.

    5. Re:A fair test? by Kjella · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, if you ask me if there's an upgrade, it could be a feature patch, security fix and whatnot. "Major upgrade with significant UI changeS" should probably be flagged a little more like what it is?

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    6. Re:A fair test? by commodoresloat · · Score: 4, Funny
      both my mum and sister asked me to "fix the internet"
      Well, did you? A lot of other people would appreciate it too you know!
    7. Re:A fair test? by Kagura · · Score: 1

      Did you let your mum and sister choose FF, or did you hoist it upon them in the same way you say that IE does?

    8. Re:A fair test? by filet0fish · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I had a similar experience. My Dad started complaining about how he didn't like "the new google." I asked what he meant since google hasn't changed anything other than their logo on holidays. He explained that since you "click the little blue 'e'" and it says google, then that is google. I then explained that he should be clicking the orange firefox. I haven't heard any complaints since.

      But that made me start thinking about how many people out there are going around saying "I hate the new msn interface." As a web developer I often forget how many people don't understand the difference between a web browser and a web page.

    9. Re:A fair test? by nametaken · · Score: 1

      Last time I did an IE7 install it wasn't a silent process. Is there some way that this would happen without a customized install script?

    10. Re:A fair test? by J0nne · · Score: 2, Informative

      It *is* flagged as a little more. When you update to IE7, you have to run through a complete wizard, complete with genuine advantage check (IIRC).

    11. Re:A fair test? by mattpointblank · · Score: 1

      I did try with my sister and she didn't like it because her friend's "websites" made on piczo.com (from what I can gather, some horrible DHTML drag-and-drop web page "editor) didn't work on it (likely due to FF's support of actual standards). I wouldn't even attempt it with my mum, she's just not ready for stuff like that.

      I think part of the problem is the language itself. Since 'Firefox' is much more a product name than 'Internet Explorer', people gt confused. "Internet Explorer" is a generic name for a software type, to me it's synonymous with "browser" (at least, compared to "Firefox") so people like my mum don't really realise they're using a specific company's product, rather they see the little blue E as the way to use the net.

    12. Re:A fair test? by a.d.trick · · Score: 1
      Is it fair to compare these stats? Most IE users don't choose to upgrade, it's simply foisted on them by Windows' Auto Update. When I returned home this Christmas both my mum and sister asked me to "fix the internet" because IE7 had been installed and its new layout confused them. They certainly didn't choose in the way that someone chooses to download and install Firefox does, so the victory is even more in FF's favour.

      This is simply what the stats are trying to confirm. You see the primary reason for the development if IE7 was to stem off all the people switching to Firefox an hopefully get most of their back and stuck on IE*. The study seems to show that IE7 isn't working. Firefox converts are not switching back to IE, in fact, Firefox growth continues to rise.

      * You may remember a time, not so long ago, when software was actually created to be useful and not just used. Forget it, it will only make you depressed.

    13. Re:A fair test? by Sporkinum · · Score: 1

      To take care of folks like that, I change the icon associated with Firefox to the IE icon. That way they get Firefox in the way they are used to using the Intarweb.

      --
      "He's lost in a 'floyd hole"
  4. How well would FF do if *it* forced itself out? by pla · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Internet Explorer 7 hit the 100 million download mark last week.

    Gee, perhaps that has something to do with Microsoft marking it a high-priority update, so everyone with automatic updates turned on will unwittingly get it?

    Not much of a claim to success to say that 100 million people, running an OS that has automatic updates turned on by default, have wasted bandwidth on a program they didn't even choose to download.

    1. Re:How well would FF do if *it* forced itself out? by just_another_sean · · Score: 1

      Indeed. I would be more interested if they could collect the numbers on people like myself and the small company I work for. We run about 35 Windows XP boxes. They have all been configured to hide the IE 7 upgrade when running Windows update. We specifically avoided it by turning off auto updates just before we knew it would be released. We then updated manually for a few days on one machine until it appeared. So we went to each workstation, ran WU manually, hid IE 7 and then turned back on auto updates.

      So back tot the topic at hand; how many people chose specifically not to download IE7?

      --
      Creationist Textbook Stickers Declared Unconstitutional by CowboyNeal
    2. Re:How well would FF do if *it* forced itself out? by prelelat · · Score: 1

      I wonder how many of these people removed it because it caused problems. I've seen it happen on a few machines.

    3. Re:How well would FF do if *it* forced itself out? by lukas84 · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's a really complicated way to manage this for 35 machines.

      I would suggest you to use WSUS to manage your Windows Updates. If that's too much for you, you can also use the IE 7 Blocker Toolkit.

      Administrating a windows network requires just as much technical competency as does administrating a linux, solaris, mac or whatever network.

    4. Re:How well would FF do if *it* forced itself out? by just_another_sean · · Score: 1

      We had a WSUS server running on an MSDN copy of Windows 2003 Server. It was great. But that's all that server was going to do in the long run and we can't justify the cost of a 2003 License just for that. We are slowly but surely replacing all of our Windows 2000 Servers with Debian GNU/Linux.

      So, yeah updating 35 machines this way once was kind of a PITA but now that auto updates are back on the clients I really don't see the one time scramble we did to avoid IE 7 as such a big deal. I guess you could point out that it's bound to happen again with a different update or what if updates break the clients but again these things are exceptions not norms and I can deal with them on a case by case basis.

      Overall I want to move away from using backend windows services, not add more. If this causes me some pain once in a while then that's OK, it will be worth it in the long run when we don't have to spend money on Windows servers and CALs.

      --
      Creationist Textbook Stickers Declared Unconstitutional by CowboyNeal
    5. Re:How well would FF do if *it* forced itself out? by nametaken · · Score: 1

      Given that the rendering is indeed better in IE7, and the security is supposed to be better, I'm glad people may have had it installed without their knowledge. It's not that I'm a fan of installing stuff without notification because I'm some technocrat that thinks he knows better than everyone else, but really, how many people would even know that they should consider upgrading (even if for good reason)? It's kinda like folks that end up with 4 hours worth of security patches to download on a machine that's been connected directly to their cable/dsl modem. I prefer that it's done for them, without intervention. Otherwise that machine is going to end up pounding away on my stuff after it gets thrashed. In fact, most of these situations usually end up being cases where the owner would have said, "Sure, sounds good to me" to updates if they saw them. Seems to me that people who don't want specific updates know how to keep them from being installed.

  5. I for one ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one welcome our new Firefox overlords.

    Okay, I'm really just after the karma points.

    1. Re:I for one ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you gain karma if you post as an AC when logged in?

      Also, does getting "+5, Funny" actually gain any karma for you? Or do you only get karma for being interesting and/or insightful?

      Your post would be a perfect candidate for "+5 Funny" if it didn't mention your karma-whoring plans. To game the karma system, you must act like you don't care about karma. Bit like religion- "I'm doing this because I want to be best mates with $GOD. It's not about $AFTERLIFE_REWARD at all."

  6. backwards compatibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One things I found from upgrading to IE7 is that certain applications that require IE (My telephone system software, Certain Dell RAC controllers, etc.) do not work with IE7. Why can't they make it backwards compatible?

  7. Upgrades by Grey+Ninja · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I installed IE7 on my Windows box. I use Firefox exclusively. The only reason that I installed it was because the automatic update manager wanted to, and since IE is a deeply embedded component of Windows, a security update for IE is a security update for Windows. Otherwise, I wouldn't have bothered.

    I switched (mostly) to Linux to get away from IE. But I still installed IE7. So no, I don't consider this news to be surprising in the slightest.

    1. Re:Upgrades by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I switched (nostly) to Linux to get away from malware; there isn't any in Linux. Sure, some of you guys could root my box with enough effort, but there is no mass produced crapware. (A professional burglar could easily get into my home as well, and there are a lot more valuable things in my house than on my computer, including the computer itself!)

      Microsoft has been promising security for years now, and has never produced. They have had more than enough chance to make a reasonably secure OS and browser, and have repeatedly failed. So, I have networking disabled in XP. There not only aren't any automatic updates, there are no updates at all! With Windows off the internet, there is no reason for updates.

      The only reason I still have it dual booting to XP is because Linux won't read the 80 gig drive that Windows has munged up in a way that Linux thinks that subdirectories are files, and that's where all my movies and MP3s are. My next hard drive will be the last of Windows.

      Any site that needs IE is a site that doesn't get my business.

      -mcgrew

    2. Re:Upgrades by delinear · · Score: 1

      I think it's mildly surprising (though pleasantly so). MS seemed sure that borrowing innovations such as tabbed browsing would win them back some FF defectors. While it's not surprising that there were 100M downloads of a product which was pretty much forced on users, it is a surprise and nice to note that the migratory trend away from IE and towards FF hasn't slowed, in other words people are still coming to realise that IE7 to FF would be a step backwards. IE7 is a massive improvement over IE6 (horrible UI aside), but still no match for FF, and it's great to see people realising that in large numbers.

  8. Well being that it is part of windows upgrade.... by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So we can assume out of all the windows users out there only 100 million out of all the people who have Windows PCs are actually upgrading their system. Is it just me or is that kida scary.

    So lets assume that 2/3 of the people in the US have windows computers that means half of the people in the US has been updating their windows systems and the the other half and the rest of the world hasn't.

    I know most companies are waiting for a SP release of IE 7 before upgrading. Even though a person uses firefox it really shouldnt exclude them from using getting IE 7 because of the integration between windows and IE can still be a security problem. I am not saing IE 7 is more Secure then firefox or even IE 6 but IE 7 will be updated longer into the future then IE 6 and IE 7 Problems will be fixed faster then IE 6's

    --
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  9. Bad Metrics by blowdart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or, if you're any type of web designer you use both to check your sites work. Simply quoting download numbers is a completly bogus way of proving popularity. You'd think something like InformationWeek would know better than to report this pointless bit dick waving.

    1. Re:Bad Metrics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what percentage of internet users are web designers? Enough to affect the statistics in any significant manner?

    2. Re:Bad Metrics by ChetOS.net · · Score: 1
      --
      "If God had intended us to walk he would not have invented roller skates." -- Willy Wonka
    3. Re:Bad Metrics by Big+Nothing · · Score: 5, Funny

      And since 92% of the population in the western hemsiphere are now "web designers", that would actually account for all downloads made so far.

      --
      SIG: TAKE OFF EVERY 'CAPTAIN'!!
    4. Re:Bad Metrics by satirenine · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm a developer and I've installed a stand-alone version of IE7 so that I can still check stuff in IE6. Regardless, I primarily develop for Firefox because, yeah.

    5. Re:Bad Metrics by SpaceLemur · · Score: 1

      Or because there are some web designers out there who seem to only test on IE, so their damn sites break in FF.

    6. Re:Bad Metrics by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      "If you're any type of web designer you use both to check your sites work."
      *inserts the word 'useful' before 'web designer'*

      And hear hear. On any given project, so long as you've built it with a single point of maintenance design paradigm, this, and debugging, only takes a few hours.

      That said, I really need a Mac. Gotta make sure those lame-ass Safari users can view my clients' work.

      --
      110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
    7. Re:Bad Metrics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simply quoting download numbers is a completly bogus way of proving popularity.

      And yet people don't seem to mind that Mozilla.org do it with Firefox and issue press releases about it. In fact, if you point out that download numbers are bogus in a Firefox discussion, you get modded troll.

    8. Re:Bad Metrics by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Run konqueror, it's based on the same rendering engine as Safari so it will be a very close approximation.

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    9. Re:Bad Metrics by compro01 · · Score: 1

      or there are more than a few malicious assholes who test in firefox to make sure that it doesn't work.

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    10. Re:Bad Metrics by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      I know that. I've done that. I have a Xubuntu laptop with Konqy installed specifically or that. They have inconsistencies that really annoy me.

      Example:
      I'm working on a webpage for the Wharton School. In Konqy, everything but the slideshow shows up fine (the slideshow doesn't fade, but it still works as a slideshow). I look at it on one of the library computers, and bam, nuffin works quite right.

      WebKit is significantly different from the KHTML codebase as to be irritating for anyone in web development who can't afford to plotz down $500 for a Mac Mini.

      What I don't get about it is that the Wharton School CAN afford to, but despite my requests, won't.

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    11. Re:Bad Metrics by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Any serious web developer does so on a Mac, where they have access to both the webkit, icab, opera, and gecko rendering engines natively, and to khtml and ie via Parallels.

      (For that matter, native khtml won't be too long now, I anticipate it within the year).

    12. Re:Bad Metrics by Kelson · · Score: 1
      Simply quoting download numbers is a completly bogus way of proving popularity.

      Perhaps that's why the article is focused on the fact that the marketshare stats reflect a different reality than the download numbers:

      According to Net Applications, Internet Explorer accounted for 79.6% of all browsers used in December 2006, a drop from the 80.6% during the previous month. Firefox's use, meanwhile, measured 14% in December, up from 13.5% in November. Also gaining ground in the last month of 2006 was Apple's Safari, which climbed to 4.2% from 4%, and Opera, which saw its share increase from 0.7% to 0.9%.

      Net Applications' data put IE 7's market share during December at 18.3%, up dramatically from November's 8.8%. But IE 6 lost more than IE 7 gained, dropping from 70.9% in November to 60.7% the next month.

    13. Re:Bad Metrics by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      Any serious non-contracted web designer does so on the equipment provided. I'm an employee, you understand. I work on what I'm given. Hell, I'm primarily a Linux user, but Wharton is a Windows shop. So, I bring my laptop along to test Konqy, and get at least SOME compatibility with webkit.

      By the way, who cares about iCab? It's used by the 1% of the 4% of the computer using population that uses Apple with OS 9.

      By the way:
      Testing a page rendering in virtualization is a Bad Thing. There's too many variables between the system and the actual browser that may interfere with rendering. You can flout all the stability statistics you want, but I've USED paralells; there are ... unacceptable inconsistencies.

      I do it on native hardware if I can. If I wanted to do things through virtualization, I could VMWare to OS-X (Yes, you haughty little Mac User, it works the other way too). I don't, because I want my testing results to be accurate.

      --
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    14. Re:Bad Metrics by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Any serious non-contracted web designer does so on the equipment provided. ... So, I bring my laptop along to test Konqy,

      Thought you only work on the hardware provided.

      By the way, who cares about iCab? It's used by the 1% of the 4% of the computer using population that uses Apple with OS 9.

      1) If it's just a numbers thing for you, test on IE6/7, and ignore everyone else. I test on everything possible, not because many use it, or because I like it, but because that's how you make it usable for everyone. On a more practical note, testing like this often exposes subtle problems early, rather than after you've already invested time and effort.

      2) It runs on OSX, though it has some legacy OS9 support.

      3) While still a about in third place (Webkit in first, either opera or gecko in second, I can't tell which) as far as CSS3 goes, I did notice that it does text-shadow last week. The author hinted that he might get around to doing border-radius here before Opera does, too...

      Testing a page rendering in virtualization is a Bad Thing. There's too many variables between the system and the actual browser that may interfere with rendering.

      I believe you're referring to WINE, and it's inability to do some things on IE. Virtualization will render things correctly though, at most you'd have to worry about stability, and whether you have to keep resetting the VM as it crashes during testing.

      I could VMWare to OS-X (Yes, you haughty little Mac User, it works the other way too).

      Actually, I'm a linux user too. Only have the mac at work, though I've grown to like it. It's one of the few correct decisions my boss has made so far (the other being to use Catalyst on the backend).

      Nevermind that you'd have to use more VMs on windows to test everything, than you do on OSX.

      PS I won't tell Steve Jobs that you're pirating OSX for VMware use. ;-)

  10. Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by crhylove · · Score: 2, Funny

    That's poorly worded at best. Firefox has pushed all the innovation in web browsers (unless you count Opera, other FOSS browsers). IE hasn't done anything new in nearly a decade. Open Source is always superior to proprietary (long term), for the simple fact that Open Source gets fixed faster, and by a bigger pool of coding talent.

    Plus, last I checked, Mozilla doesn't have a vendor locked in OS X clone that is the hegemonic dominant force in the industry with which to leverage their sub-par browser.

    The fact that Firefox even has 2% of the market (and obviously it's much higher) given this environment that so strongly favors IE, speaks volumes to the superiority of the browser, the superiority of the code, and the superiority of the Open Source model of software development.

    My prediction is that IE will not have a version 9. If it does, nobody will pay any attention. Version 8 will be nearly as laughable a joke, but still have some market dominance just based on sheer MS monopolism, and the lethargic ignorance of the average Joe computer user.

    Version 10 of IE will be Firefox automatically installed in Windows 2012, because otherwise Windows will fall even farther behind Linux and OS X in user adoption and market dominance.

    rhY

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
    1. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      I am very dissatisfied with Sunbird. It is a pity the project does not take up although Mozilla has all the cash to broaden its product portfolio. With KDE ported to Windows we will have Amarok for Windows soon. That project will kill iTunes. And if Amarok won't Songbird will.

    2. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by thebsdguy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ofcourse. Tabbed browsing is the innovation the world has been waiting for so long. You claim IE has not done anything new in a decade. Well, what new can be done in a web browser? Oh yes, if your talking about some mindless widgets or something similar which only 14 year olds have time to play around with, then yes, firefox takes the lead. Don't waste your time giving a lecture on the security aspects of both browsers. Firefox had its share of security issues and even though IE might have had more, its not much to jump around about. Firefox 2 was a pretty crappy upgrade. Heavier on the machine, stupid color themes, etc. Seems like someone is trying to compete with IE. Also remember there are people like me (probably few, although in ratio) who install firefox just to see what the hype is about but obviously use IE (on windows, Opera on FreeBSD)

    3. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Giometrix · · Score: 1

      "Open Source is always superior to proprietary (long term), for the simple fact that Open Source gets fixed faster, and by a bigger pool of coding talent."

      While I agree that Fire Fox is superior to IE (at least right now, IE7 was a rush job; I'm sure that IE8 will be more carefully laid out), I'd be careful about saying that OSS is always superior than closed source. Long term, this MAY be true for the popular packages (i.e. Linux, Fire Fox, eclipse), though for less popular packages I often find the quality of OSS to be lacking. I'm guessing that the developers move on to something else and nobody really takes over the project, while in a proprietary package the vendor has an incentive to keep the product fresh so that people keep buying it.

      Anyway, that's just my observation.

      --
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    4. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by vhogemann · · Score: 1

      Actualy,

      I think Microsoft should drop IE today. They're just wasting resources... IE makes no money for them, and nowdays every site out there works on almost every browser. If Microsoft wants to dominate the internet, they should focus at the server side, where FOSS is a real menace to them.

      Also, I think Microsoft is loosing money by being this giantic monolith. They should split the company into an OS company (Windows), an Enterprise Solution provider (SQL Server, Office, .NET), a Hardware company (XBox, Zune) and a Content provider (MSN).

      How many opportunities has Microsoft lost in the name of their stablished monopoly? SQL Server for Linux, BSD and Solaris? MS Office for Linux desktops? .NET on Big Iron? There's lots of money to be made, but Microsoft can't do it, because it won't compete with itself (Windows).

      --
      ---- You know how some doctors have the Messiah complex - they need to save the world? You've got the "Rubik's" complex
    5. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Open Source is always superior to proprietary (long term), for the simple fact that Open Source gets fixed faster, and by a bigger pool of coding talent.

      That has to be ignoring half a kazillion markeds where the leading product is a commercial product which is vastly superior to any OSS equivalent (but usually with a price tag to match). If I wanted to point out where OSS has usually succeeded, I would say that OSS thrives in markets that have stagnated and have little or no competition. Linux, Firefox and OpenOffice are all good examples of that. It seems that in these markets OSS products can improve and live where commercial products would fail to sell and die.

      --
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    6. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

      "I think Microsoft should drop IE today. They're just wasting resources... IE makes no money for them, and nowdays every site out there works on almost every browser."

      I think they should dump IE and bundle Firefox. The only problem is that if they did that, Firefox instantly becomes the number 1 target for malware, and given that Firefox already has constant security updates, I don't have much faith in them handling the resulting attacks as well as MS has (which isn't that well to begin with). Same goes for Opera. Opera has had amost zero security updates in its lifetime. Are we to believe that it's perfect, then? The fact is that Opera has only 0.2 percent share and we have no idea how secure it is. I bet that it's much less secure than IE or FF, as those browsers have had security updates to fix holes while Opera's holes just live on and on, undiscovered (pure speculation, of course).

      "Also, I think Microsoft is loosing money by being this giantic monolith. They should split the company into an OS company (Windows), an Enterprise Solution provider (SQL Server, Office, .NET), a Hardware company (XBox, Zune) and a Content provider (MSN).

      How many opportunities has Microsoft lost in the name of their stablished monopoly? SQL Server for Linux, BSD and Solaris? MS Office for Linux desktops? .NET on Big Iron? There's lots of money to be made, but Microsoft can't do it, because it won't compete with itself (Windows)."


      They should split, but not along the lines you describe. And Office for Linux? Give me a break. The resulting revenue wouldn't come close to the cost of development. Linux marketshare is too small, and most Linux users don't believe in paying for software. Is there ANY commercial software that makes real money on Linux? Nope. And that includes companies that don't have an OS "monopoly" interest. And Microsoft already makes Office for Mac, so Office isn't being used to protect Windows marketshare even today. But Mac users actually buy software, which is why you do see commercial software for Mac that you don't see on Linux (and Mac has an order of magnitude larger userbase according to web activity stats).

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    7. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Khuffie · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Firefox has pushed all the innovation in web browsers (unless you count Opera, other FOSS browsers).

      Of course! Let's not count Opera because it doesn't match with our precious open source theory! Ignore tabs! Mouse gestures! All these 'innovations' that Firefox pushed! Yay puppies and kittens!

    8. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Calinous · · Score: 1

      They are keeping some projects alive by pumping into them billions of dollars from the Office/Windows monopoly (XBox division didn't have a profitable quarter from their launch, I think, and Zune seems to have the same goal).
            Also, consider that Microsoft is using its stack of software (if partial) to force the rest of the stack on the consumer (incompatibility with other applications, forced obsolescence)

    9. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Calinous · · Score: 1

      "That's poorly worded at best. Firefox has pushed all the innovation in web browsers"
            What should I say? Some inovations of Firefox were present in Netscape Navigator 6 and 7. Also, Firefox (ex Firebird) was split from the Mozilla suite.

            You should replace Firefox at least with Mozilla in your argument

    10. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by crhylove · · Score: 1

      Ok, for the sake of accuracy, you're right. But I'm not a huge fan of all things mozilla, however I AM a huge fan of all things firefox.. :D

      --
      I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
    11. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      That's poorly worded at best. Firefox has pushed all the innovation in web browsers (unless you count Opera, other FOSS browsers). IE hasn't done anything new in nearly a decade. Open Source is always superior to proprietary (long term), for the simple fact that Open Source gets fixed faster, and by a bigger pool of coding talent.

      What have you been smoking? What exactly has Firefox introduced that can be considered innovative? Tabbed windows and plugins? Those features were already available for other browsers, including IE.

      Want an example of a real innovation? Try XmlHttpRequest. You know, that API that underpins practically all of the AJAX, web 2.0 innovation that is happening. Microsoft introduced that with Outlook Web Access 2000. Name one thing that Firefox has introduced that has had the same impact on the way that we use the internet.

      I really like Firefox. I started using it when it was still in beta. But I switched to it because it had a simple, clean interface that did just what I needed it to do, not because it was innovative.

    12. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by crhylove · · Score: 1

      Well, I meant for FOSS projects that are still active. I'll agree that Firefox, Linux, and a handful of other apps fit my description exactly, but there are plenty of examples that are debatable. OpenOffice/MSOffice, Nvu/Dreamweaver, Shareaza/Kazzaa, Gimp/Photoshop, Audacity/Others. Long term I've got winners picked in all these categories, and FOSS is it.

      That's where the (long term) came in! :D

      The only commercial software I still use, need, or prefer to FOSS alternatives is Winamp (which I doubt makes anybody any real money, anyway), and Nero.

      I think a good FOSS Nero clone is definitely on the horizon, though, and ditto for Winamp.

      FOSS has obvious development advantages. Some of them may require patience to appreciate, but FOSS is not going anywhere, and is rapidly growing into the hegemonic dominant force in several areas, starting with Firefox.

      It's not that I hate Microsoft, or any of these corporations. They just have plenty of corporate customers who USE their products that will greatly benefit from investing in and using FOSS.

      Why would a school district for instance bother with Word, when they can have abiword or open office for free? There's no upside, and lots of downsides to sticking with MS. In 20 years, nobody will use Microsoft Word.

      Open Office will be EVERYWHERE, unless some other FOSS project supersedes it, which I'm guessing will happen since OO is a big bundled group of programs over java, and not the best implementation that separate superior apps will prove to be. Look at Firefox vs. Mozilla Suite for a perfect example of what needs to happen for Open Office.

      rhY

      --
      I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
    13. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by crhylove · · Score: 1

      Well that clean interface itself is an innovation. However, you'll notice I used the words PUSHED innovation. Not innovated by itself, but pushed OTHER innovations into the mainstream. That was intentional. What good is innovation without being pushed? Opera is a perfect example of what I mean. Because it is not FOSS, it was not pushed, and all of it's innovation is basically worthless from where I'm sitting (except of course for what innovations firefox borrowed and then pushed by being FOSS).

      rhY

      --
      I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
    14. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by delinear · · Score: 1

      I may be wrong, but I think the GP is acknowledging that innovations such as tabbed browsing came from Opera and other browsers, but it was the much higher (web) market share and more effective marketing of FF that made these features better-known and a threat to MS/IE. That doesn't take anything away from the achievements of Opera (which is an awesome browser, regardless of its heritage), but at the same time it's hard to argue that Opera has been the driving force in bringing these innovations to a wider audience.

    15. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Khuffie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The original poster was discounting the innovations that Opera brought for the mere fact that it isn't open source. He kept on touting the horn of open source software, how it is always vastly superior (in terms of code, efficiency, fixes, features), ignoring the fact that Opera is still a faster, more optimized browser than Firefox, has introduced many of the 'innovations' that Firefox claims as its own, and ignores the fact that Firefox has had a memory leak bug for ages that has yet to be fixed (while claiming that Firefox gets fixed faster because it's open source).

    16. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Anyone else noticed that the stagnant markets are the ones where microsoft have achieved dominance?
      Microsoft are too big and ruthless for commercial companies to compete against, so their only competitors are open source where there's no single company to go bust or get bought out.

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    17. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by compro01 · · Score: 1

      and nowdays every site out there works on almost every browser.

      you're kidding, right? why do you think so many firefox users need to use IEtab?

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    18. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      > Also, I think Microsoft is loosing money by being this giantic monolith. They should split the company into an OS company (Windows), an Enterprise > Solution provider (SQL Server, Office, .NET), a Hardware company (XBox, Zune) and a Content provider (MSN).

      The hardware and content provider companies would quickly go bankrupt...

      > How many opportunities has Microsoft lost in the name of their stablished monopoly? SQL Server for Linux, BSD and Solaris? MS Office for Linux
      > desktops? .NET on Big Iron? There's lots of money to be made, but Microsoft can't do it, because it won't compete with itself (Windows).

      SQL server isn't a terribly good database, they bought out an existing database (sybase) and went from there... Without the ability to leverage windows, it wouldn't sell much when competing against MySQL, Postgres, DB2 and Oracle.
      MsOffice for Linux might sell, but that would be less profitable than selling both the OS and the office suite, and msoffice would probably not have taken over from Wordperfect were it not for the unfair leveraging of windows.

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    19. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by cnelzie · · Score: 1

      There's still the difference that those Firefox vulnerabilities weren't all listed as providing full "root" level access to the attacker.

          Whereas a significantly higher number of the IE Exploits have given "root" level access to the attacker.

          It's not just the number of vulnerabilities a particular program receives, but the severity of the vulnerability that is also important.

      --
      If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
    20. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by BenoitRen · · Score: 1

      The efforts for a calendar solution are split between Lightning and Sunbird. Sunbird is new, Lightning is the continuation of the calendar extension that has been around for years.

    21. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by BenoitRen · · Score: 1

      Looks like you forgot to read the passage where it said that security vulnerabilities are fixed faster, especially if the exploit is public. It makes all the difference.

    22. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by BenoitRen · · Score: 1
      Look at Firefox vs. Mozilla Suite for a perfect example of what needs to happen for Open Office.

      Bad example. The Mozilla Suite (now SeaMonkey) is a fine product. It's not bloated, unlike what popular opinion says. That's just what some developers were thinking, and everyone accepted it as fact.


      SeaMonkey is, in my eyes, better than Firefox. Why? Their patch review process is more thorough and keeps quality code in mind. SeaMonkey's interface isn't gimped. The preferences window is complete, no need to dig in about:config. SeaMonkey is more robust and doesn't leak memory.

    23. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      But budgetwise I observe no investment into Sunbird. Mozilla gained a lot of money from its products. Now they should invest into other products. I mean Firefox 1.5 or 2.0, I don't really care. But what is done to take Sunbird to 1.0? Mozilla was a poor project, now that they are rich they can liberate other parts of the market as well. As long as Sunbird or Lightening makes no progress Thunderbird has absolutely no chance to combat the Outlook lockin.

    24. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by bunratty · · Score: 1
      SeaMonkey is more robust and doesn't leak memory.
      I use SeaMonkey also, but it does leak memory according to David Baron's leak-gauge. I'm sure all browsers leak some amount of memory.
      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    25. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by bunratty · · Score: 1

      Firefox has hundreds of leaks. Many have been fixed over the past year. Other browsers leak memory, too.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    26. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure that I would classify minimalism as an innovation, but I do see your larger point. Thanks for clarifying.

    27. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by BenoitRen · · Score: 1

      Is this on trunk? Because it does leak there.
      Which version?
      What extensions?

      Submitted a bug about that yet?

    28. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by bunratty · · Score: 1

      Nightly trunk and branch builds with no extensions. I've submitted bug reports for all the leaks I've been able to reproduce with any reliability.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    29. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by BenoitRen · · Score: 1

      How about actual release builds? Because those are the ones that really count.

    30. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by bunratty · · Score: 1

      Sure. It's not as if bugs suddenly disappear when they release a final release build.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    31. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by SuSEboy · · Score: 1

      "Seems like someone is trying to compete with IE" Uh, yes. Firefox has been competing against IE since it's inception.

    32. Re:Mozilla is NOT Microsoft's match... by Calinous · · Score: 1

      I too have used Netscape 4.72, Netscape 6 and 7 (the suite), and then I moved to Firefox and Thunderbird. I haven't installed Mozilla on a single PC (and only seen it on one).
            Go Firefox!

  11. Met its match? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know about that....A Giant Blue E (that looks like Uranus) vs. A Frickin' Carnivorous Dinosaur head.

    Tough call.

    1. Re:Met its match? by Flibz · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I'll thank you to leave my anus out of this!

    2. Re:Met its match? by VorpalRodent · · Score: 2, Funny

      It hasn't happened yet, but someday scientists will rename that planet to end stupid Uranus jokes once and for all. I predict: Urrectum.

      --
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  12. It's fugly for one thing. by LighterShadeOfBlack · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Now I'm not usually one to get all up in arms about the appearance of a program, but IE7 looks well and truly ugly to my eyes, and for the 5 minutes or so that I bothered buggering around with it I couldn't for the life of me figure out how to move the toolbar icons and the addressbar in any useful way. Contrast that with Firefox, which handles the toolbar UI configuration very well and MS looks immediately to be onto a loser.

    While people might argue about all manner of things like standards support, security, and rendering speed; the initial ugliness and apparent difficulty/impossibility to configure the UI to my liking is probably going to put more people off IE7 within 5 minutes than anything else.

    I presume there is a way to change the UI (hell, even IE6 could do that) and maybe it's actually quite obvious if you take the time to look, but quite frankly why should I when Firefox can do it right off the bat in an intuitive manner? I think that's the way a lot of casual users see it too.

    --
    Spelling mistakes, grammatical errors, and stupid comments are intentional.
    1. Re:It's fugly for one thing. by Slashdot+Junky · · Score: 1

      I have the same gripe as you. Although I'm not running IE7, my mother got it via the forced install by auto-update. I don't like it, because the address and seach bar can't be changed and/or moved. IE7 should have an available IE6 theme and allow the same control over the UI elements as IE6. I still have no interest in using the browser UI to search, so I should be able to hide the search field. Google's webpage works just fine, and with it, "searching" functions the same way from computer to computer, regardless of what browser is used and how the browser is configured/extended(3rd party search toolbars/Firefox extensions).

      Later,
      -Slashdot Junky

      --
      .
      Landfill Mining Co.
      Managing the (Un)natural Resources of Tomorrow
    2. Re:It's fugly for one thing. by fondacio · · Score: 1

      The real irony here is that Internet Explorer had superior UI customization from version 4 - it allowed you to move the menu bar, the toolbar, put all of them on one line and determine the place of every single icon yourself. This is one of the reasons why IE4 was superior to Netscape 4. In Mozilla, the UI was dictated by clueless Netscape marketing people, as a result of which its developers were only able to implement toolbar customization in Phoenix. One could argue that toolbar customization is one of the few innovations that Firefox ows to IE, and Firefox still does not allow you to put the entire UI on one line the way used to. Now Microsoft has voluntarily removed one of the few remaining strengths of IE from version 7, and I have heard similar complaints from people who wonder what has happened to the UI that they were familiar with.

  13. 100 million IE downloads = 50 million IE users by MartyJG · · Score: 4, Funny

    That's one download because it's a 'critical update', and another download to get a second copy of the installer to actually complete the installation when you realise the first one is broken.

    Seriously, the number of borked IE installations I've seen recently is stupid. Perhaps they should measure satisfied customers instead?

    I've actually increased the number of Firefox users thanks to IE7 - it was the quickest way to get the laptop back on the net to get the newer build of IE7.

    --
    insignificant sig
    1. Re:100 million IE downloads = 50 million IE users by cakefool · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they should measure satisfied customers instead?

      The user of this PC appears to have died laughing whilst reading your post. Expect his estate's lawyers to contact you.

    2. Re:100 million IE downloads = 50 million IE users by Trumpet+of+Doom · · Score: 1

      Satisfied customers? All 12 of them?

  14. 98M forced downloads to IE7 by Vandil+X · · Score: 1

    Seeing as how IE7 is listed as a Critical Update, many home users "downloaded" IE7 as part of their visit to Windows Update or through Automatic Updates. I doubt many home users downloaded the IE7-blocking tool.. Granted they had to click through a wizard to install the downloaded update, but with it being labeled as "Critical", I'd imagine many just clicked through the wizard to get the update installed to be "secure."

    I think it's more like 98M forced downloads of IE7 and 2M deliberately-installed downloads of IE7.

    --
    Up, Up, Down, Down, Left, Right, Left, Right, B, A, START
    1. Re:98M forced downloads to IE7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >I think it's more like 98M forced downloads of IE7

            You forgot the duplicate downloads due to people un-installing IE7 and finding out the next day that automatic updates re-installed the bugger. I then found the registry hack to prevent it installing the third time.

          A complete pain in the arse when you have setup someones PC with firefox when they start complaining that all their links have gone and they keep being asked for their passwords as IE7 decided that it was going to be the default browser instead of what you set it to be.

  15. Inaccurate count by Firefalcon · · Score: 1

    Of course, as some other posts have already said, these download figures for IE7 include Windows Update automatic downloads, whether they were then installed or not. For almost all my clients I've then had to uninstall it as they couldn't get their heads around the layout, or it broke sites they needed to access, but I'm guessing they still counted towards this download figure.

    1. Re:Inaccurate count by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like I have multiple Firefox downloads going unused. And I installed Opera on my computers, but haven't used it in months. It's not just IE that gets unused downloads.

      And your "clients" are pretty stupid. As in dumb, unintelligent, etc, if they "couldn't get their heads around the layout". Seems that all slashdot consultants have utter morons for clients.

    2. Re:Inaccurate count by compro01 · · Score: 1

      And your "clients" are pretty stupid. As in dumb, unintelligent, etc, if they "couldn't get their heads around the layout".

      well, the new IE7 interface is pretty differant from IE6/firefox/most other browsers. some people (me included) do not like it.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
  16. IE7 on Linux: get it while it's hot by adnonsense · · Score: 4, Informative

    At least one of those downloads was by my humble self and now graces my humble Ubuntu desktop, thanks to the excellent IEs 4 Linux package.

    (Disclaimer: I do web dev work and need it for testing purposes. And I feel all dirty and sordid with every time I fire it up).

    1. Re:IE7 on Linux: get it while it's hot by WhoBeDaPlaya · · Score: 1

      Yay, I get to mention this everytime a browser thread comes up.
      BrowserCam

    2. Re:IE7 on Linux: get it while it's hot by Selanit · · Score: 1

      BrowserCam is lovely if all you care about is whether the page looks okay. If you want something more complicated - like, say, testing a JavaScript - then it's useless. Still a good tool, but with definite limits.

  17. Considering... by Bananatree3 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    that the 14% is coming from a huge group of volunteers and only a small number of dedicated, paid developers while that 80% is from the largest software monopoly in the world. Not to mention that Internet Explorer is shipped with practically every OEM machine in the United States.

    Considering these circumstances, it is amazing to see how well Firefox is doing considering the odds.

    1. Re:Considering... by OriginalArlen · · Score: 1

      Internet Explorer is shipped with practically every OEM machine in the United States. Correction -- MSIE is shipped with every Windows computer in the world.
      --

      Everything I needed to know about life, I learnt from Blake's Seven
    2. Re:Considering... by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      That's not an entirely fair comparison. You really should be comparing the Firefox team to the IE team, as the whole of MS isn't developing IE or aiding it in any way whatsoever.

      Yes, MS has huge resources at its disposal, but what fraction is actually available to the IE team?

    3. Re:Considering... by Steve001 · · Score: 1

      Bananatree3 wrote:

      that the 14% is coming from a huge group of volunteers and only a small number of dedicated, paid developers while that 80% is from the largest software monopoly in the world. Not to mention that Internet Explorer is shipped with practically every OEM machine in the United States.

      Considering these circumstances, it is amazing to see how well Firefox is doing considering the odds.

      This is why comparing the number of IE users to the number of Firefox users does not provide a valid propularity comparison. Windows users have IE on their system regardless of their wishes.

      But individuals who use Firefox have made a conscious effort to use it. I doubt many people have Firefox on their system unless they intend to use it. Also, unlike IE, as far as I know you can safely uninstall Firefox from your system.

      I have IE on my system for one main reason: I'm afraid if I delete or remove IE it I will damage or destroy Windows. As far as actually using IE on my system, I almost never use it. In fact, in the past year I cannot remember ever actually using IE. If I'm surfing the web and I encounter a website only allows IE, I simply go elsewhere.

  18. Yay, I'm one of those 100 million by strider44 · · Score: 1

    I mean I haven't actually *used* the program to browse for anything, but I downloaded it to check it out, and then swapped immediately back to Firefox.

    1. Re:Yay, I'm one of those 100 million by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The same can be said for many people that downloaded Firefox. They tried it out, didn't like it, and switched back to IE.

    2. Re:Yay, I'm one of those 100 million by Slashcrap · · Score: 1

      The same can be said for many people that downloaded Firefox. They tried it out, didn't like it, and switched back to IE.

      It was probably too much effort to keep using Firefox.

      Every time their computer finally boots up they already have 15 instances of IE displaying various free XXX search engines. Might as well just use one of those instead of starting something else.

    3. Re:Yay, I'm one of those 100 million by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will agree that people have downloaded Firefox and then went back to using IE or Opera or Safari or Konqueror or Dillo or Lynx or any other browser. However, I believe the story is stating that even though IE7 has been downloaded 100 million times, Firefox is still gaining in the site statistics. That is more of a show of Firefox use than it is of IE7 use.

  19. Download != Use by Morky · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just because I downloaded IE7 doesn't mean I use it any more than I have to.

    1. Re:Download != Use by Rachel+Lucid · · Score: 1

      Seconded and Thirded.

      I unwittingly nabbed it as part of the autoupdates, but only keep it around for Windows updates and MAYBE Maple Story (which refuses to display on anything else).

      My Dad picked it up, and finally switched TO FireFox because it sucked so badly. As a bonus I also got him to switch to Thunderbird.

      You have no idea what kind of minor miracle those accomplishments are.

  20. Re:Yes, IE has met its match by EzInKy · · Score: 1


    14% vs 80%... ya, that's one hella of a match.


    Considering one comes pre-installed and is unremovable while the other requires users to make an effort to download and install I'd say yes, it is one "hella" match.

    --
    Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
  21. Re:If Only.. by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

    For some of them it might be the first step.
    Once all applications that are important to you run on Linux, the switch is much easier :-)

    --
    C - the footgun of programming languages
  22. Indeed I do by rpjs · · Score: 2, Informative

    Use IE on the sites I develop, but that usage is only hitting the internal dev server, and won't appear in any site stats. I certainly don't use IE for going anywhere else, unless the site breaks in Firefox, and even then I use IETab.

  23. tagged 'cheerleading' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Article summary: Here's a vague statistic! Does this mean that we've finally slayed the ancient beast, bringing forth an unprecedented era of free software, good will, unshowered nerds, and 'view source' buttons?

    Go team!! Gimme a 0x46! Gimme a 0x49! Gimme a 0x52! Gimme a 0x45! Gimme a cheer[0]! Gimme a 0x4F! Gimme a 0x58! What's that spell? VICTORY! Gooo team! Push the stack, pop the stack, saaaaaame stack!

    1. Re:tagged 'cheerleading' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, I meant to mod this funny, not overrated. An nice, old-fashioned 'submit' button would be nice when moderating.

    2. Re:tagged 'cheerleading' by watzinaneihm · · Score: 1

      You know, if you had posted this as a logged in user, rather than as an AC, the problem would have fixed itself. /. will rollback your moderations when you comment on the same article

      --
      .ACMD setaloiv siht gnidaeR
    3. Re:tagged 'cheerleading' by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      He probably moderated multiple people and didn't want to undo their mods.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  24. Re:Fppp motherssssz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Eppick Phael!

  25. Re: Microsoft finally met its match? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe when it comes to browsers...

    But they still can buy the most "correct" statistics.

  26. Re:Well being that it is part of windows upgrade.. by cyxxon · · Score: 3, Informative

    Don't forget that a lot of companies don't just install Windows upgrades because MS releases them. They undergo rigid inhouse testing and then later are deployed from their own update servers, so they would not be counted as donwloads from Microsoft anyway.

    Also, IE7 is (at the moment, fix upcoming in SAPGui release 20 IIRC) incompatible with SAP software, so any admin worth his salt will block this update if the company also uses SAP software (which I bet are quite a lot of desktops). And this problem is AFAIK a blunder by SAP, saying things like "uh, nobody gave us IE7 early enough, how were we supposed to fix our code".

  27. Netcraft Confirms it: FF is dying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IE reaches 100M downloads, a amount firefox will never reach.

  28. the killer extension by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The longer that firefox maintains its current user base, the closer the time comes when a killer extension is released by someone (maybe you!). This killer extension would be something that so dramatically improves the browsing experience that pretty much everyone has to get it to be "really on the internet". By the time Microsoft rips off whatever it is, it will be too late. That is the best reason to support firefox, its extensibility means that at any moment, it could become develop a (albeit temporarily) insurmountable competitive advantage.

    --
    stuff |
    1. Re:the killer extension by cranberryhiker · · Score: 1

      I don't think so. If it's important enough, Microsoft, with their gazillions of dollars and legions of very good programmers (not the mediocre ones - they're the footsoldiers - I'm talking about their Special Forces) could rip off something truly innovative and game-changing in a very short time. Certainly faster than the market takes to turn. And with some "Strategic Preannouncement" shenanigans, they can buy themselves enough time to do it.

    2. Re:the killer extension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This killer extension would be something that so dramatically improves the browsing experience that pretty much everyone has to get it to be "really on the internet". By the time Microsoft rips off whatever it is, it will be too late.

      I love this line of thought that so many Firefox (and other OS software proponents) go on about. As long as they have something that Microsoft's program doesn't, say tabs in browsers (which I personally find abhorrent, but whatever), they do little but complain that Microsoft fail for not having said component. And as soon as Microsoft adds said component or something to its effect, it's off that complaint and onto the 'Microsoft are ripping us off' bandwagon.

    3. Re:the killer extension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Before any such extension can be written, the author would have to see what's in Opera 10 first. Otherwise how can the author determine what the extension is?

    4. Re:the killer extension by OglinTatas · · Score: 1

      The killer extension will replace adblock--instead of just blocking ads it will replace them with pornography of the genres you select in the preferences panel. If I could just stop playing WoW maybe I'll write it. mmm blood elf porn...

  29. Not the right time for comparisons by teslatug · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is not the right time for comparing IE7 effect on Firefox. The time will be when Vista comes out and new PCs come preloaded with Vista and IE7. At that time, people will get rid of the old PCs and we'll see whether they're sufficiently satisfied with IE7 that they won't bother with downloading Firefox. At the same time we'll also see if people used to IE6, when presented with IE7's new interface, might switch to Firefox. Whichever way the pendulum swings, that's when we should watch it.

    1. Re:Not the right time for comparisons by mobby_6kl · · Score: 1

      That's exactly what I thought, too. I use Opera, but the same applies here. I'm not going to switch back to IE immediately, even if it's better than Opera (snow, hell, etc). It's a matter of bookmarks, settings and customizations which I just wouldn't bother to move to IE unless I had to reinstall everything from scratch.

    2. Re:Not the right time for comparisons by mysticgoat · · Score: 1

      when Vista comes out and new PCs come preloaded with Vista and IE7. At that time, people will get rid of the old PCs

      The assumption that people are going to dump their familiar old machines in favor of an expensive new machine that comes with a longer learning curve is unwarranted, and probably wrong.

      Historically, people don't change their PC until they see a compelling reason. So far, no compelling reason to change has popped up over the horizon. When and if it does, it might drive the crowds toward Linux rather than Vista— it all depends on on what exactly will be compelling them to change.

      The Magic Eight Ball is unhelpful: all it says is "Outlook not so good." We all knew already that Outlook wouldn't be the compelling reason.

  30. Met its match? by bhmit1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "has Microsoft finally met its match?"

    Um, no. There will always be some microsoft tool that requires their browser causing some form of lock-in. Heck, using microsoft's action pack subscription web page to purchase software requires IE. What the numbers mean is that web designers are finally paying attention and making their sites support firefox and a few other standards based browsers or risk loosing a good chunk of their customers. And now that everyone's favorite web pages work in firefox, they can start making a piecemeal migration away from vendor lock-in. However, just because they can use firefox for most things, you can be sure that microsoft will ensure there is lock-in someone and default to their browser giving them a 75% chunk of the market for life. The next chunk of the monopoly to fragment will be office with various online tools and openoffice making advances. But, I expect that will be another 2-4 years before we see anything like firefox's progress.

  31. Re:Well being that it is part of windows upgrade.. by Ka+D'Argo · · Score: 1

    So we can assume out of all the windows users out there only 100 million out of all the people who have Windows PCs are actually upgrading their system. Is it just me or is that kida scary.

    Actually, you also have to take into account IE7 requires validation of the license/installation of Windows to be installed and used. So 100mil is a decent figure (counting or not counting people who auto updated). But then you have to figure in the millions of people who can't install IE7 or at least don't due to it needing a legit copy of Windows to do so. I'd love to use IE7 for the few seldom times I need IE (sadly there are still a few sites on the net that only allow IE to be used for their services) but unfortunately I can't install it for *ahem* reasons being.

    --
    Aw Frell this
  32. 100M dowloads? Seriously? by Timex · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How many of those were imposed by the Automatic Update routine?

    I have two WinXP systems (and several non-XP systems). Both of them got IE7 without me deciding to upgrade-- it just happened. (I've GOT to fix that.)

    On the other hand, all of my systems, be they Linux, Mac, or Win*, have FireFox. I've even taught my kids to use FF instead of IE.

    --
    When politicians are involved, everyone loses.
  33. Popularity by EaglemanBSA · · Score: 1

    Sure, I think it's met its match, until firefox dominates the market share and writers of malware, viruses, etc. begin focusing on it instead of IE. The real question is, how well will firefox respond to a barrage of such people if and when that happens?

    --
    Quiz: True or False -- On a scale of 1 to 10, what is your middle name?
    1. Re:Popularity by bunratty · · Score: 2, Informative
      Probably about as well as they have done in the past:
      For a total 284 days in 2006 (or more than nine months out of the year), exploit code for known, unpatched critical flaws in pre-IE7 versions of the browser was publicly available on the Internet... In contrast, Internet Explorer's closest competitor in terms of market share -- Mozilla's Firefox browser -- experienced a single period lasting just nine days last year in which exploit code for a serious security hole was posted online before Mozilla shipped a patch to remedy the problem.
      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    2. Re:Popularity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...until firefox dominates the market share and writers of malware, viruses, etc. begin focusing on it instead of IE.

      Why can't we put a stake in the heart of this bogus argument? IE's problems do NOT stem from its popularity; they come from stupid design decisions and even stupider implementation issues by Microsoft!

      Early in IE6 history, I was forced to load IE6 by some piece of software. Within 1 week of loading it, I was owned! The offending agent was actually embedded in advertising loaded by a legitimate site! I've used Firefox now for a coupla years and have never once had my system compromised through a firefox security flaw.

      IE's problem is that Microsoft just makes it all too easy for the bad guys!

  34. For me.... by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's been there in the "Software Update" for weeks. Or better said, I always log in as "Restricted User" (as does my wife) and I then don't get notifications about that particular "Software Update". It's only when I have to login as "Administrator" that I get the notification. Logging in as "Administrator" doesn't happen often, and when I do, it's usually to fix something and I don't have time nor motivation to launch the IE7 update.

    So my machines all still have IE6, but nobody uses it... They all use Firefox. The rest of the family all have their machines setup to be used in "Restricted User" configuration and that way IE7 doesn't install. Why, I do not know, because other updates do install. So people doing the "right thing" (running non-admin) don't get it automatically. Funny, isn't it?

    1. Re:For me.... by Tatarize · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Ditto. I think that I am one of those "downloads", but when they are roughly automatic and I don't care at all about installing it, should you really get to count raw download? If so, am I making a mistake by downloading Firefox once and using that single little install to spread it around the network at home? If raw numbers count, my house systems have about 4 "copies" of IE7 and 1 copy of Firefox, even though nobody in the house uses IE.

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
    2. Re:For me.... by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      Hehe as a non pro XP user i had noticed too that logging in as an unprivileged user does not notify you of any updates. I'm really constantly amazed about the lag between windows and the other OSes out there, when astroturfing and online debates stop, and real work needs to get done. Hope vista is way better, for you vista users.

      I noticed that ie7 "phones home" a lot, might it be antiphishing, WGA issues. And its user interface is different from a certain broad mozilla/ie6/opera convention. So I'm getting FF installed for users who complain. Maybe that explains something.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    3. Re:For me.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you know, as "soft" as this sounds, reading this article really makes me happy. No, Its not because I have problems with M$ or not because I consider open source great, but just because firefox is a super piece of software! I find it unfair that M$ released IE - killing so many providers..but still it was their. Out came firefox, not perfect but really good. Light & fast and able to display most of the pages that could only be on IE. Now, M$ tries to monopolise the market again but they failed.

    4. Re:For me.... by nschubach · · Score: 1
      I noticed that ie7 "phones home" a lot, might it be antiphishing, WGA issues. And its user interface is different from a certain broad mozilla/ie6/opera convention. So I'm getting FF installed for users who complain. Maybe that explains something.
      I don't like "phoning home" at all if you want my opinion. Why would you need to constantly call up Microsoft (figuratively) to find out if the site your on is valid? Wouldn't that be like giving MS usage statistics on your PC anyway? Why should they know what websites I browse?

      Damn, I have to go wire up my apartment to burn out and wire my PC to degauss in case someone breaks in!
      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    5. Re:For me.... by quantum+bit · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hehe as a non pro XP user i had noticed too that logging in as an unprivileged user does not notify you of any updates. I'm really constantly amazed about the lag between windows and the other OSes out there, when astroturfing and online debates stop, and real work needs to get done. Hope vista is way better, for you vista users.

      I don't use XP a lot but do maintain a network of them at work. It makes sense though, why notify a user of updates that said user won't be able to install anyway? (for lack of admin rights)

      There is a group policy option that allows the update service to display updates to normal users (and elevate privileges for the install). I don't know if the home version of XP includes the group policy editor, but even if it doesn't the option should be able to be enabled via a registry edit.

    6. Re:For me.... by Bert64 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Really? strange...
      I found (on XP and 2003) that if your logged in as an unprivileged user with automatic updates turned on, the updates get installed in the background and a dialog pops up when theyre finished asking if you'd like to reboot to complete the installation.
      Only, your an unprivileged user so you cant trigger a reboot, so the dialog is greyed out... You can't get rid of it, even if you log out it will come back if you log back in, you have to log out, log in as an admin and then reboot the machine!
      If a user doesnt have privileges to reboot, they shouldn't be given the option.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    7. Re:For me.... by Drachemorder · · Score: 1

      IE7 downloaded automatically for one of my coworkers, but it also managed to hose up her ability to view any website somehow. I had to revert her to IE6 to make things work again. And I know what you're going to say ... but she's a manager and not computer-savvy enough to use Firefox. As much as I'd love to push our company in that direction, reverting to IE6 was the easiest way to get her running as fast as possible. She was working from home, and since there was no obvious way to access the web and download Firefox, IE6 it was. But, I wouldn't be surprised if something similar happened to someone else somewhere and it caused them to switch to Firefox.

    8. Re:For me.... by binkzz · · Score: 1

      You don't have to be computer savvy to use FireFox?

      My mother and aunt love it, and they're about as unsavvy as they get. They even do their banking online with it now.

      --
      'For we walk by faith, not by sight.' II Corinthians 5:7
    9. Re:For me.... by DittoBox · · Score: 2, Informative

      Put this on your DC, it works great. With the right setup and administration you can save lots of internet/network bandwidth by serving updates off the DC instead of off the real Windows Update. You can also choose to not deploy updates, if they conflict with software or are problematic in other ways.

      http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserversystem/updat eservices/default.mspx

      --
      Good. Cheap. Fast. Pick Two.
    10. Re:For me.... by Gnavpot · · Score: 2, Insightful
      why notify a user of updates that said user won't be able to install anyway? (for lack of admin rights)


      1:
      Because there is not necessarily a 1:1 relationship between persons and user accounts, even though a lot of people seem to think this. One person can have a limited account for everyday purposes and an administrator account for administrative purposes.

      2:
      Because the user will then be able to call someone who has the necessary rights.
    11. Re:For me.... by Rei · · Score: 1
      Do you think it could have to do with IE7 correctly rendering sites that used broken CSS to make IE6 work?

      I've been developing a website with a fluid layout for my sister's wedding recently, and I've had no end to the annoyances of IE6. For example: You'd think that IE would be able to figure out, in the following code:

      <DIV STYLE="top: 20%; bottom: 20%;">
        <IMG SRC="test.jpg">
      </DIV>
      ... that the image should be scaled down to 60%. Mozilla can do this basic math. But for IE, oh, no. To make it work, you have to do this:

      <DIV STYLE="top: 20%; bottom: 20%; height: 60%">
        <IMG SRC="test.jpg">
      </DIV>
      That's an acceptable workaround for that case, but what about this case?

      <DIV STYLE="top: 25mm; bottom: 20%;">
        <IMG SRC="test.jpg">
      </DIV>
      If you want to do that, you have to use javascript :P And what happens if you are so bold as to not explicitly spell out the height or width of an image? Why, it displays it full size, making your page hideous.

      Great product, Microsoft.
      --
      Yes, I've read a poem. Try not to faint.
    12. Re:For me.... by quantum+bit · · Score: 1

      I would never run IIS on a DC, but we do have a dedicated WSUS server :)

      I actually don't use the policy for user initiated updates -- we do it all on a schedule. Just thought it might come in handy for home users or smaller shops (though those probably let users run as admin anyway).

    13. Re:For me.... by Pollardito · · Score: 1

      It makes sense though, why notify a user of updates that said user won't be able to install anyway? (for lack of admin rights) so that they can notify someone that does have the rights (but it's probably them anyway)
    14. Re:For me.... by ubergenius · · Score: 1
      Err... While that code should easily render properly in a browser, that wouldn't validate. The tags should be lowercase, not uppercase, you didn't terminate your tags:

      <img src="test.jpg" />
      ...and you didn't put the ; after your final style in each

      <div>
      .
      --
      Student Manager - Take control of your education!
    15. Re:For me.... by yo_tuco · · Score: 1

      What is your DOCTYPE in your html? Browsers usually have two layout modes depending on your DOCTYPE.

    16. Re:For me.... by Rei · · Score: 1

      Only XHTML requires lower case. In HTML 4, it's recommended, but not required. I'm used to upper case from past development, and I use HTML 4, so I'm sticking with it for now. I'll force myself to change eventually. ;)

      The lack of a semicolon was a typo (this wasn't taken from actual code), but yes, it would render. I haven't found a browser that complains about a lack of closing semicolons. Which is actually annoying, because if I forget a semicolon, everything looks fine until I add another style element. :P

      --
      Yes, I've read a poem. Try not to faint.
    17. Re:For me.... by Rei · · Score: 1

      <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
      You think there might be a mode that works in IE6? I googled for a good bit, but couldn't find any solutions to this problem. Mozilla has no problem with it.

      --
      Yes, I've read a poem. Try not to faint.
    18. Re:For me.... by Ciaran_H · · Score: 1

      Regarding your first two points, who said he was using XHTML? Those are only XHTML rules, not HTML ones.

      The semicolon thing I can agree with, though.

    19. Re:For me.... by neongrau · · Score: 2, Informative

      an ending ";" is never required. it's a separator telling the rendering engine that the definition ended and the following is a new one. when there are no declarations following, it's neither needed nor required. see the specs. even on w3c.org they omit them. saves a byte of bandwidth everywhere ;)

    20. Re:For me.... by riscthis · · Score: 1
      I don't like "phoning home" at all if you want my opinion. Why would you need to constantly call up Microsoft (figuratively) to find out if the site your on is valid? Wouldn't that be like giving MS usage statistics on your PC anyway? Why should they know what websites I browse?
      I believe the Microsoft implementation only sends a hash of the URL to their servers, not the URL itself.
    21. Re:For me.... by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, often when a non-computer savvy person switches to firefox it is like "But I lose all my bookmarks ! And I don't have my weather bar! And what about this macromedia install ? Firefox really suck !" I think it may be easier to explain all the reasons to your aunt than to your boss. Using firefox is a piece of cake, switching to it requires a bit of time and patience when you don't even know what a file is.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    22. Re:For me.... by binkzz · · Score: 1

      I don't mean to disagree with you for the sake of being annoying, but FireFox lets you import all your internet explorer bookmarks, and has weather bars as well.

      It's true that you will have to spend a few minutes after the installation of firefox to install flash and the weather bar, but I don't think the end user would really notice the difference afterwards. Even pointy haired bosses.

      --
      'For we walk by faith, not by sight.' II Corinthians 5:7
    23. Re:For me.... by Emetophobe · · Score: 1

      Why don't you just uncheck Internet Explorer 7 from Windows Update? No more annoying popup windows asking you to update...

    24. Re:For me.... by budgenator · · Score: 1

      When I installed Mozilla on the wifes WinXP, it imported all the MSIE bookmarks automagically and placed them in a folder called "imported Internet Explorer bookmarks"(or something similar), all the flash, shockwave and acroreder crap was already used by MSIE so it didn't need to be installed either. The hardest part was getting her used to tabbed browsing.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    25. Re:For me.... by budgenator · · Score: 1

      You can't self close tags such as /> in html only in xtml; well the browser usually doesn't care but it wouldn't validate at W3C

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    26. Re:For me.... by budgenator · · Score: 1

      That would make me crazy, when the network light starts flashing for no apparent reason I worry about trojans.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    27. Re:For me.... by Lars83 · · Score: 1

      The better question is why you're using the browser to resize images.

    28. Re:For me.... by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      Because I might want to install it someday. I only get the popup under Admin anyway, and I'm pretty much never logged in as that. It's already downloaded. If I want to install it manually afterwards, I need to redownload it. Waste of bandwidth.

    29. Re:For me.... by Rei · · Score: 1

      Fluid layout.

      I personally don't feel like having Gimp create, say, 1000 images of different size, then having Javascript pick which one to use ;) And in reality, modern browser scaling is actually pretty good. Just don't scale up, obviously.

      --
      Yes, I've read a poem. Try not to faint.
    30. Re:For me.... by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      That sure didn't happen for IE7 update. I'll see what happens with other updates on the box i log in as luser.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    31. Re:For me.... by Lars83 · · Score: 1

      PHP and PERL (and others, I'm sure) will create thumbnails on the fly. Especially if you're factoring the image down to a messy number like 80%, it really doesn't look as sharp to have the browser take care of it. Nevermind that you're wasting bandwidth and user download time to send them a big image that is only being partly used.

    32. Re:For me.... by Rei · · Score: 1

      I don't know how long it's been since you last tried having a browser scale an image, but IE6 and Mozilla do a nice job of it at the very least. Perhaps this concept of "browsers scale images poorly" was once accurate, but it doesn't appear to be accurate any more. And honestly, I'd much rather have their browser take care of the work than have to deal with scripting the creation (and subsequent time-delayed deletion) of thumbnails serverside. I don't want that sort of complexity. The bandwidth use is a legitimate criticism, but a) Images only take up perhaps 10% of your average page, b) I have plenty of bandwidth for the load requirements, c) with jpegs, it's not so simple of a loss of quality as you scale down, because you don't have full quality on your originals. The quality is "faked" by using a limited number of cosine components in 8x8 squares. People viewing a lower-res browser window will get images with less pixel width, but more "information" per pixel. Which is really what you want, now isn't it? If the image has to be displayed lower res, you want it to be higher quality for that res.

      --
      Yes, I've read a poem. Try not to faint.
    33. Re:For me.... by Tatarize · · Score: 1

      Converting people to Firefox (I've done it several times) seems to consist of installing it and putting an icon up on the desktop (which is typically part of the install process).

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
  35. Has IE "met its match"? by dave420 · · Score: 1

    When FireFox's market share is the same as IE's, then yes. At all other times, no.

    1. Re:Has IE "met its match"? by true_hacker · · Score: 0

      I think you are forgetting one case : when FF's share is greater than IE's. Boy, that will be the day..

    2. Re:Has IE "met its match"? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      No - "all other times" covers that :)

  36. Stupid meaningless statistics by Moraelin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's consider the following facts:

    - IE7's requirements say it will only run on XP or Windows Server 2003. Hence you'd expect that (most) people who downloaded IE7 are indeed on XP or Win 2003 machines.

    - all XP and Windows Server 2003 computers came with IE6

    I'm sure you can fill in the blanks there, because it's a simple case of "X => Y, Y => Z". If X="you upgraded to IE7", Y="you're on XP or Win 2003", Z="you had IE6". Did anyone really need a statistic or study to tell them that, surprisingly, unexpectedly, those who upgraded to IE7 had IE6 on their machine before?

    Pretty much the only mildly interesting word in there is: "most". Did some people actually go through the trouble of making IE7 install on a system that doesn't run it? E.g., on Win 2000? I can only hope there weren't too many.

    So basically this is such a useless revelation, that I can only hope that it was some attempt at manipulation. Because the depressing to think that someone was genuinely stupid enough to think they're onto some brilliant discovery and market trend.

    So the one-word wisdom there is: duh.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    1. Re:Stupid meaningless statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Did some people actually go through the trouble of making IE7 install on a system that doesn't run it? E.g., on Win 2000? I can only hope there weren't too many.

      I did - on Linux. It's extraordinarily handy for quickly testing sites I am developing without having to dig out Windows. In fact, I'm running 4 versions of IE (5.0 to 7), Iceweasel, Opera and Konqueror all on one desktop.

      Simple instructions for anyone interested are here.

    2. Re:Stupid meaningless statistics by Shaper_pmp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Errrrm, not quite.

      The article shows that, yes, people who use IE6 are now upgrading to IE7. However, it also shows that the Firefox adoption trend hasn't wavered.

      In other words, people are switching from IE6 to IE7, but not from Firefox to IE7.

      The story isn't that people are upgrading from IE6 to IE7 - as you point out, that's pretty much a given.

      The story is that people aren't "upgrading" from Firefox 2 to IE7.

      In other words, MS's attempt at a Firefox-killer is provably failing miserably in its aim, and Firefox continues to go from strength to strength.

      --
      Everything in moderation, including moderation itself
    3. Re:Stupid meaningless statistics by edavid · · Score: 1

      I remember reading about installing IE7 on linux with wine. But must be very few installations.

    4. Re:Stupid meaningless statistics by Machtyn · · Score: 1

      Well, if you are like the people in this thread, you need MSIE on a linux box for cross-platform web development.

    5. Re:Stupid meaningless statistics by PsychicX · · Score: 1

      You switch when you are discontent with what you have. Firefox users, and IE7 users, are not generally discontent. Plenty of IE6 users are. That's all there is to it.

    6. Re:Stupid meaningless statistics by Kelson · · Score: 1
      So basically this is such a useless revelation, that I can only hope that it was some attempt at manipulation.

      Which, the 100 million downloads that the IE team reported? Or the fact that it hasn't shown any signs of slowing Firefox adoption? Because it doesn't take a genius to realize Microsoft was hoping IE7 would reverse or at least stem that tide.

    7. Re:Stupid meaningless statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those numbers are intended to be a consideration when interpreting current browser marketshare numbers, they were never intended to mean anything on their own.

      Consider that if FF's market share is around %30 and growing, it could be argued that once IE7 updates go out to everyone running XP and Server 2003, FF's market share would go down again. But if you also include the statistic that 100 million systems have already been upgraded to IE7 and FF's metrics are still increasing, it shows that while people have IE7 installed on their systems, they still choose to use FF instead. You see, the number being interpreted isn't the 100m download number, it's the browser marketshare trends (easily found via google).

      Basically, there has been a legitimate question of whether FF could keep gaining marketshare on IE if there were a major new version of IE that created the perception that IE was "current." Would users still go out of their way to install FF. The current browser marketshare numbers seem to indicate that FF can become more popular even with IE7 out there on users machines.

      It's always important to remember which statistics are being interpreted and which statistics are being included to give additional context to the interpretation.

    8. Re:Stupid meaningless statistics by Moraelin · · Score: 1
      So basically this is such a useless revelation, that I can only hope that it was some attempt at manipulation.

      Which, the 100 million downloads that the IE team reported? Or the fact that it hasn't shown any signs of slowing Firefox adoption? Because it doesn't take a genius to realize Microsoft was hoping IE7 would reverse or at least stem that tide.


      No, the awful "nearly all of IE7's growth has been upgrades from IE6" truism in the summary.
      --
      A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    9. Re:Stupid meaningless statistics by Kelson · · Score: 1
      No, the awful "nearly all of IE7's growth has been upgrades from IE6" truism in the summary.

      OK, I'll admit that was a bad way to phrase it, given that at a technical level, they're all upgrades. How about "nearly everyone using IE7 switched from IE6"? Would that be precise enough?

    10. Re:Stupid meaningless statistics by Moraelin · · Score: 1

      Good enough for me. Or the article itself has a quote that IMHO conveys that idea perfectly well: "[The growth of IE 7] seems to be exclusively at the expense of IE 6," says Johnston. "It's not eating into the Firefox share at all."

      --
      A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    11. Re:Stupid meaningless statistics by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > The story is that people aren't "upgrading" from Firefox 2 to IE7.

      Okay, but I would have predicted that too.

      What I really want to know is, are people moving from IE7 to Firefox, and are they doing it in numbers comparable to what the IE6-to-Firefox numbers looked like? I think it's probably too early to measure this, but I consider this to be the more interesting question.

      Because if IE7 doesn't slow the migration, then a significant market share will leak before IE8 comes out. Because I can't imagine a credible IE8 release arriving much sooner than late 2008 at the earliest, and by then IE market share, at the rates IE6 was starting to lose it, could be down below 80%. Which would be good for webmasters, but Microsoft wouldn't be so pleased.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    12. Re:Stupid meaningless statistics by Shaper_pmp · · Score: 1

      Fair point.

      FF is still eating IE6's lunch, which is good.

      If FF starts eating IE7's lunch as well, that's awesome.

      However, I don't think it's long enough since IE7 was pushed to all users to get a good read on it yet. Techie types will have already downloaded, tried it and switched or stayed. Novice users will take a few weeks (maybe even months for the trend to become clear) before they get pissed off enough to switch, or before a friend introduces them to alternatives again.

      --
      Everything in moderation, including moderation itself
  37. IE7 made my girlfriend switch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's even better than IE just gaining users through the update.

    My girlfriend complained that her favorites were gone "after an update". Well, finally I had another chance to tell her "you know you could just use another browser". Well, she didn't like the idea, but yesterday I saw her actually use that Firefox thingy :-)

    Seems like that bookmark bar & menu aren't that bad, after all.

    Thanks MS!

  38. And don't forget the formats by Psicopatico · · Score: 0

    Say one user's computer gets IE7 as an update.
    Then, for any reason, the system gets crazy and the user re-formats the harddrive and reinstalls the OS.
    Hence IE7 download counter gets a free +1.
    And so on...

    --
    Mastering the English language is fucking easy: all you have to do is to put an f* word in every fucking sentence.
    1. Re:And don't forget the formats by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      No problem. Then you won't have any issue subtracting a good 20+ downloads from the Firefox counter from my systems for variations on same, too... right?

  39. ie tabbed browsing by cmoguy · · Score: 1, Funny

    i used firefox for years but found the new ie7 tabbed browsing (mainly the tab that launches a new tab) more intuitive and have since fallen in love with it. i tried to replicate it on firefox but after an hour or so of trying to i was unable to.

    because i use both an antivirus (trend-micro) and spyware program (spyware doctor) i feel i have canceled out the security threats of using ie.

    1. Re:ie tabbed browsing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hello Sir,

      I find your ideas Intriguing and would like to SubScribe to your Newsletter.

      Thank You!

      Anonymous Coward

    2. Re:ie tabbed browsing by Calinous · · Score: 3, Informative

      Why did they mod you funny?
            While using an antivirus and a spyware program is good (along with a firewall and so on), you should take into account that antivirus programs offer their security with delays. Between the start of an attack until the moment all the updates are on the system, usually more than a day occurs.
            And you should take into account that IE has open holes (Firefox probably has some too) that can be attacked by any totally new virus

    3. Re:ie tabbed browsing by cmoguy · · Score: 0

      i wasn't trying to be funny... why is it so hard to believe that someone could like the functionality of product A over product B?

    4. Re:ie tabbed browsing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell? You mean you actually move your mouse up to a little tiny section of the screen and click on a little tiny box every time you want to open a new window rather than just hit ctrl-t?? I rarely, that is, can't remember the last time a website managed to hijack my FF browser and redirect me against my wishes. This, of course, happens quite frequently when I "use" IE7...more correctly - IT uses me. And when this happens I become infuriated when trying to click the minuscule and poorly placed stop button.

      IE6 was button happy with its COMPLETELY useless smattering of worthless buttons, like the ridiculous MSN button and other buttons that I can't imagine more than 3 people ever had a use for while using their browser. Now M$ has gone completely the opposite way. I guess the dolts working there looked at IE6 and FF, and saw that Firefox has half as many buttons by default, and is taking market share...what's their solution? Make a browser with half as many buttons as FF! Brilliant!! Too bad its nearly unusable as a result.

      Personally, I ABHOR the stupid about:tabs crap that IE7 sees the need to display every time I try and open a new tab. At the least, it should mention something about tabbed browsing being a feature that users of other browsers have been enjoying for YEARS, and IE7 just recently implemented as a stop-gap measure to try and stem the tide of users switching away from craptastic IE6/7.

      Plus your usage of anti-virus and anti-spyware as some kind of safety measure enabling you to use IE7 as safely as FF is just plain ignorant. Using those same security programs with FF would be just that much more secure. A quickly crafted analogy would be like saying you enjoy eating a boot for dinner rather than a pot-roast because you have some gravy for flavor and carrots for nutrition...but that same gravy and carrots with the pot-roast is obviously far far far superior.

    5. Re:ie tabbed browsing by Calinous · · Score: 1

      I think the "I have canceled the security risks" was modded funny.
            I'm not sure I would like the "create new tab" tab of IE7 - however, it is a smart idea

  40. Two reasons by ReallyEvilCanine · · Score: 3, Informative
    1) You're logged in as a restricted user and only the Admin can give the update installation the go-ahead
    2) Your admin installed the IE7 Blocker Toolkit for corporate administrators ( http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?linkid=65788&siteI d=3&oId=2100-7350-6098500&ontId=1009&lop=nl.ex)

    We warned our customers' admins about this back in August but they ignored us... until October 18th. Then they started submitting Prio-1 tickets, the fuckwits.

    1. Re:Two reasons by mastershake_phd · · Score: 1

      I do have that Microsoft Genuine Advantage thing telling me my Windows isnt legal. But I do get the updates are ready to be installed click here to reboot thing time to time. I thought Microsoft had decided to still give updates due to all the false positives.

    2. Re:Two reasons by Volante3192 · · Score: 1

      You can't use 'Windows Update' through the website and activeX control. They always pushed out critical updates to 'Automatic Updates.'

      Least that's the last I heard about it...it could very well have changed and no one told me.

  41. Re:100M dowloads? Seriously? by BCW2 · · Score: 1

    I suspect over 90% of those were from automatic update. I have yet to meet one person that went out and intentionaly got IE7. I have already removed it off of a dozen or so customer boxes and explained about "notify" on auto update. It's a great way to avoid WGA too.

    --
    Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  42. not using .. yet. by naelurec · · Score: 1

    Its still new, give it time. Firefox vs IE6 was a no brainer .. there were major security issues with IE6, non-standards compliant, feature poor (ie no tabs, pop-up blocker, etc..) and these outweighed the issues with Firefox (separate download, no official MSI or group policy settings).

    As IE7 gets more established and issues with IE6 are determined to no longer be an issue, there is less motivation for both home and corporate users to continue to invest time into Firefox (downloading, making MSIs, maintaining two browsers (IE + Firefox), etc..) when IE7 integrates smoothly into the "Windows experience" (comes with the OS, automatic updates, programs using MSHTML use it by default, etc..)

    Hopefully I am wrong and Firefox continues to grow or atleast maintain marketshare. If anything, it should limit browser-specific sites (Which I absolutley hate).

    1. Re:not using .. yet. by bunratty · · Score: 1

      I think Firefox 2 vs. IE7 is still a no-brainer. Secunia reports IE7 still has more security vulnerabilities than Firefox 2. IE7 still lags in standards support compared to Firefox 2. I do agree that Mozilla needs to put more emphasis on getting Firefox to corporate users, such as making Firefox MSIs available. When they do, that will just make Firefox all the more popular.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  43. YES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes it has. Now let's move on to the news.

  44. Both IE *AND* Firefox upgrade automatically by giafly · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Most IE users don't choose to upgrade, it's simply foisted on them by Windows' Auto Update
    To the 50% of posters who said things like the above. True, but Firefox does the same thing whenever a new version comes out. So what's your point?
    --
    Reduce, reuse, cycle
    1. Re:Both IE *AND* Firefox upgrade automatically by bunratty · · Score: 1

      First, Firefox's download counter doesn't include upgrades. Second, the fact that IE7's numbers are rising does not mean Firefox's numbers are falling, just that IE6's numbers are falling. Third, it's not like people are eager to get IE7 -- they just get it automatically.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    2. Re:Both IE *AND* Firefox upgrade automatically by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      Only when you run as Admin... (True for both Firefox and Internet Explorer 7)

      You can also easily disable the auto-update for Firefox.

    3. Re:Both IE *AND* Firefox upgrade automatically by mpcooke3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Firefox updates are only pushed to active Firefox users.
      IE7 is pushed to most XP users (that is probably most computer users) regardless of whether they use or ever chose to install Internet Explorer originally.

      So basically, they are *totally* different since windows update uses Microsofts monopoly position in the Operating System market to push new web browser products.
      If McAfee antivirus was deployed in a windows update then the number of McAfee antivirus installs would shoot up regardless of whether Symantec Antivirus has it's own auto-update system or not.

      Matt.

    4. Re:Both IE *AND* Firefox upgrade automatically by hangareighteen · · Score: 1
      To the 50% of posters who said things like the above. True, but Firefox does the same thing whenever a new version comes out. So what's your point?
      Probably because their point revolves around the fact that most people did not _choose_ IE7. Even if upgrades did count on the ff stats pages (they don't), you still had to make a _choice_ to download it in the first place. And when we're talking about "product popularity" choice is the only bit that actually matters.
    5. Re:Both IE *AND* Firefox upgrade automatically by compro01 · · Score: 2, Informative

      firefox 1.5.0.x doesn't force an upgrade to 2.0, which would be comparable to going from IE6 to IE7.

      firefox does push point updates though, as does IE.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    6. Re:Both IE *AND* Firefox upgrade automatically by andy9701 · · Score: 1

      In addition, I don't think that Firefox 2 was pushed out via Firefox's update mechanism, at least for Firefox 1.5 users. I had to go and download it myself (as did a coworker).

  45. Re:Well being that it is part of windows upgrade.. by div_2n · · Score: 1

    I'd put the blame on both Microsoft and SAP. Microsoft for making such a shoddy browser with IE6 and SAP for building around it.

    The problem is that even if SAP got the fix in place by now, I'd wager it wouldn't be massively deployed if the admins running it value their job. Testing updates in ERP software is (or should be) mandatory regardless of how minor they may be.

  46. It doesn't play well with others by lazlow · · Score: 1

    I had uninstall Internet Destroyer 7 on several of my companies machines because services stopped working after it was installed. So, the real questions is: How many of those download have been unistalled? How many are really being used of each browser?

  47. downloads mean shit by Marin3 · · Score: 0

    at work i exclusively Firefox and i only found out that i had ie7 when i had to login with the admin account to install some software. Never ran it or anything. So 100M downloads mean nothing. If I could remove IE entirely from my Computer i would have done it by now.

  48. here's the real question by joenewbreed · · Score: 1

    here's the real question: how many IE7 t-shirts has microsoft sold?

    1. Re:here's the real question by MadMidnightBomber · · Score: 1

      Is that the one that says "IE7: Because looking at porn should be dangerous" ?

      --
      "It doesn't cost enough, and it makes too much sense."
  49. Okay Genius by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What percentage of Firefox downloads are just voluntary and legitimate upgrades rather than new users?

  50. IE7 is unstandard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you remember the article comparing Vista to OS X. Well, _in addition_ to those OS X features listed there that Vista has snubbed, the IE7 also has the "gear" icon, which takes all options. In OS X, this is intuitive, because you still have the menu-bar on the top of the screen. In IE7 however, the gear icon is the ONLY way to get to the options, and lots of the customization and common-tools are breaking the "Windows GUI standards", if you can call whatever Microsoft has for that. In addition, something is seriously borked in the toolbar, I agree with you.

    I actually tried to use IE7, just to avoid having to install Firefox in Bootcamp, but like you, found I just couldnt stand the new UI of IE7.

    In fact, I expect MORE people to switch to Firefox, DUE to IE7, and this article is a comfirmation of that.

    Microsoft seems to become more and more clueless by the month now.. I mean, they got Office right for business users, but almost everything else lies in ruins. Well, XBox360 seems to get more popular that PlayStation3, but nothing much else is moving in favour for Microsoft (except their monopoly).

  51. I, for one, by GreenEnvy22 · · Score: 1

    I've switched to IE7. I was all about firefox and Opera the last couple of years, but IE7 brought the features I wanted and is compatible with more pages (not by any fault of FF/Opera, just due to so many websites being written to IE6's bugs).

    1. Re:I, for one, by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      I still haven't seen the features I want from internet explorer. So what if they have tabs. That's so old school. How about proper CSS support. How about a nice plugin system like Firefox has. If MS has a plugin system, it sure it going under utilized. How about a theming system, again, if it exists, I haven't seen any indication that it actually exists.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  52. In all honesty, some of these things work both way by kiwimate · · Score: 1

    I do have Firefox installed on my system -- actually, I'm typing this post in it right now. I like how fast it is compared to IE on some pages. And there are occasionally some sites where it just seems to be having a slow takes-forever-to-load day in IE, so I fire up Firefox and bang, it's right there. But then I also some days find the reverse is true.

    More to the point, though, there are things that, as a casual Firefox user, I just can't be bothered figuring out. Example: about 10% of the time, when I click on a hyperlink, Firefox downloads it to my system instead of following the link. What the... okay, that's annoying.

    And, by the way, while I'm at it, how about the fact it automatically downloads updates and then forces them to install the next time I open Firefox, without asking me. So, of course, because I'm working on a work laptop and standard user permissions are non-admin, it takes forever to start up because it ultimately fails to install those updates. Doesn't stop it from trying the next time, though...again without asking me.

    And back to my original complaint...when I do want to download something, I have no option where to put it; the downloaded file automatically goes on to my desktop. I don't want it there! I want it...well, I want it where ever I want that particular file, which changes depending on the file. Why can't I browse and tell Firefox where to put it instead of being arbitrarily forced to put it in the same inappropriate location?

    Those of you who are about to dash off replies telling me I'm stupid, of course I can, it's right under this menu or this is how you do it and what an idiot I am...you're missing the point. I'm sure most if not all of these complaints are addressed somewhere. But these are first impressions and they are negative impressions to me.

    End result: I used Firefox for a while and still use it quite a lot...but I use IE just as much because there are some ways it does things which are friendlier to me. By the way, I know the tech in the cube next to me also tried Firefox and eventually discarded it because there were too many niggling little annoyances and she preferred the way IE did things. Anecdotal, I know, but there you are.

  53. Strategic advantage by Idbar · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think the strategic advantages of IE6 over Firefox were lost when switching to IE7 and there is no return.

    To me, these advantages where:
    1. Program loading time: IE6 used to open quicker than firefox and also some pages. Not anymore
    2. IE6 used to show pages differently to what firefox did, I think that was changed. Or people is really interested in writing the code for Firefox (or compatible) and It has been a while since a page was incorrectly displayed or told me so.

  54. I'm surprised.... by snoozerdss · · Score: 1

    That no one has mentioned the fact that IE7 is an automatic update in Windows ;)

    --
    Snoozer.
    1. Re:I'm surprised.... by miro+f · · Score: 1

      maybe you should try looking up...

      --
      being vague is almost as cool as doing that other thing...
  55. ummm, 2001 called? by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    That killer extension is tabbed browsing. Sure, IE has it now, but it is way late in the game (even Safari was earlier, and it explicitly is disallowed by Apple's Human Interface Guidelines). And it was the killer extension that drove many to Firefox and mozilla. I still get "oh, cool!" from people who watch me use it and have never used it before. Sure, there was a commercial emacs that had this feature as far back as 1988, but when tabbed browsing first hit mainstream web browsers it was revolutionary, and IE has been taking a back seat to mozilla-based browsers (and to safari) ever since.

  56. Re:Yes, IE has met its match by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is removable.

  57. Ie7 vs. firfox by panchi2131 · · Score: 1

    it just shows how eager were people to get rid of IE 6 problems they faced not knowing what is in future for them :p Ps. i dont use either IE or firefox :)

  58. bogus downloads by S3D · · Score: 2

    I myself downloaded IE7 because I just missed checkbox in the custom download options while getting security updates. That doesn't mean I'm actually using it.

    1. Re:bogus downloads by fonetik · · Score: 1
      "I myself downloaded IE7 because I just missed checkbox in the custom download options while getting security updates. That doesn't mean I'm actually using it."

      Damnit! Now we'll have to change the title to "After 100 million IE7 downloads and 99,999,999 installations..." ;)

  59. Love Firefox, but... by MollyB · · Score: 1

    I can't access my bank online with Firefox 2 with either my slick Linux notebook, or my ancient Windows box. The bank's login page (which I can't get past) helpfully informs me that the site supports Firefox 2, but I can only use IE 5.5 on the Wintel (w/NT 4.0) machine to access my account. The funny (!?) part is that Firefox 1.4 worked fine previously... Has anyone else had these difficulties? (FF 2 are plain vanilla installations w/ Java and Javascript enabled...)

    1. Re:Love Firefox, but... by Number6.2 · · Score: 1

      would the IE compatibility plug in help in this case? I use it at work for IE only sites, and it does the trick for me. Check out the Firefox extension site.

      --
      "If god did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him" --Voltaire
    2. Re:Love Firefox, but... by pato101 · · Score: 1

      helpfully informs me that the site supports Firefox 2,
      Have you sent and email to them informing that the site is no longer compatible to Firefox 2? My bank used to be in trouble with mozilla long time ago and I told them via email, I was told they knew and that they were working on it. Finally, after some time it begun working :-).

    3. Re:Love Firefox, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would love to help you with your Firefox problem, but first I need some more information. If you can post the name of your banks website and your login name & password I will get right to work on the problem.

    4. Re:Love Firefox, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't help. The login page only gets you to a secondary form where the user inputs additional miscellaneous info. Nevertheless, your generous offer is declined. Have you tried phishing? I hear it can be lucrative for those with skill... =)

  60. Its not a monopoly by CrankyOldFart · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    from the denting-the-monopoly dept.


    -rant on-

    If its free its not a "monopoly".

    If its free, there is no "market".

    Why doesn't anybody complain about Safari, or Voyager or Konqueror being bundled with thier respective OS distributions? (Yes, I know Konqueror belongs to KDE, but think Knoppix and the like)

    IE is not integral to Windows. Some of its dlls perhaps but not IE itself. IF you cannot figure out how to remove all the stupid web page integration in Explorer and the desktop then you have not tried very hard.

    Why does no one complain that Windows (and other OS's) bundle notepad, calculator, hyperterminal, wordpad...

    Do people really want an OS that includes nothing but a functional command line? (In some cases yes, but a boot floppy for any OS will give you this - except Macs, they never could figure out how floppies work)

    This shit really grows tiresome. Who fucking cares? Get a life people. Just use a the browser you like and get on with it.

    I'm not defending IE here (it needs none), I'm just questioning the illogical, asinine, knee-jerk MS hater reaction.

    Should MacOS not include Safari? Should QNX not include Voyager? Why no irrational outrage over those? Huh?

    The whole anti-trust thing is just completely retarded, it just goes to show how the law will never comprehend technology, yet will always pretend they do to give themselves the illusion of control.

    A web browser is just that, not an instrument of global domination as some would think. For fucks sake, get a grip people.

    I will not say what browser I use, it does not matter, it works (basically) and I'm happy with it for now.

    Now Javascript is another matter, it is the work of the devil and a genuine threat to quality software experiences.

    -rant to be continued at an unspecified time-
    1. Re:Its not a monopoly by MORB · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why doesn't anybody complain about Safari, or Voyager or Konqueror being bundled with thier respective OS distributions? (Yes, I know Konqueror belongs to KDE, but think Knoppix and the like)

      Because those OS distributions are not occupying 90% of the market, and are not essentially shoved down the throat of everyone who wants to buy a PC.

      When you have a product that is a monopoly, you have additional rules to follow. It includes not taking advantage of this monopoly (the OS one) to force an unrelated product (IE) on your customers. What is so hard to understand?

    2. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Because those OS distributions are not occupying 90% of the market, and are not essentially shoved down the throat of everyone who wants to buy a PC.

      When you have a product that is a monopoly, you have additional rules to follow. It includes not taking advantage of this monopoly (the OS one) to force an unrelated product (IE) on your customers. What is so hard to understand?


      Myth. Such a "monopoly" does not exist. I understand your misconceptions and dogma perfectly.

      No one forced any OS on me when I bought my ASUS TUV4X, PIII Tualatin, Western Digital HDD...

      Had I bought a prebuilt system (for much less) There would have been nothing stopping me from formatting it and installing the OS of my choice (except perhaps for the cheap hardware).

      It is not my fault that consumers are stupid and think that the cheaper system with the same numbers is a better deal. Stupid consumers get what they deserve.

      I bet your P4 has a 16K L1 cache doesn't it?

      CrankyOldFart (silly karma and moderation systems will not stop me from posting, you smug asshole)
    3. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I bet your P4 has a 16K L1 cache doesn't it?


      Actually, let me amend that...

      I bet your AMD64 processor is completely redundant as you have no real need for more than 4GB of addressable memory, but you think you're cool because you have a totally unnecessary 64 bit processor.

      CrankyOldFart
    4. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HaHa! I can post as much as I want and you can't do anything about it!

      CrankyOldFart

    5. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can post as often as I want and you are powerless!

      CrankyOldFart

    6. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Y'all want some more-a?
      Right here on the floor-a?

      How about you flora?
      How about you fauna?
      You wanna?

      CrankyOldFart (channeling Frank Zappa)

    7. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I know, Frank Zappa is not dead, but was he ever really alive?

      CrankyOldFart

    8. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      HaHa! I can post as much as I want and you can't do anything about it!


      Wow. Way to make your point.

      I hope your case-worker gets there soon with your meds.
    9. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MORB sucks moosedicks!

      CrankyOldFart

    10. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MORB cannot think independently. He believes that freewill magically disappears when a person purchases a computer.

      CrankyOldFart

    11. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm still posting... You know I'm right.

      Use your illusions, buddy, use them.

      CrankyOldFart

    12. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MORB: Lalalala... I can't hear you!

      CrankyOldFart: I'm still right.

      MORB: Lalalala... If I ignore you I can cling to my absurd misconceptions and dogma.

      CrankyOldFart

    13. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Wow. Way to make your point.

      I hope your case-worker gets there soon with your meds.


      Back atcha buddy.

      Where's your precious account now? Hahahahahaa! Scared to sign the post? Why do you care? Can't change your IP address?

      Keep clinging to your illusions that keep you secure in your smug and irrational superiority complex.

      Let me guess, you think global warming is a myth, you think that capitalism is sustainable and responsible management of the earth, you have at least three guns, you have three kids a dog and a house, you believe that the earth was created by a god in six days, you think that no one will ever build an antimatter weapon to destroy the earth if we don't all wise up and listen to the facts...

      CrankyOldFart
    14. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I hope your case-worker gets there soon with your meds.


      Let me guess, you visit a doctor at least three times a year and have more prescription medications in your bathroom cabinet that the average aids patient.

      You also believe that medicine can actually do anything about the human condition.

      You also read Nu Scientist and think its real science.

      You also think that medicine and psychiatry are sciences.

      I hate to break the bad news to you, but you construct your own reality, and yours happens to be strongly affected by what you're told, not what you have actually thought out.

      CrankyOldFart
    15. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just can't believe how stupid some "smart" people are.

      Hey MORB, why can't you post on this with an argument that actually stands up to logical scrutiny?

      Why can't you post a personal attack on your account? Scared you might be recognised as the idiot you are?

      Haha, MORB is a chickenshit unquestioning slashdot groupthink karma whore.

      There is no browser "monopoly", there is no browser "market". Sorry if the facts rock your fragile little world.

      Hey MORB, I have a bridge to sell you...

    16. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I just can't believe how stupid some "smart" people are.

      Hey MORB, why can't you post on this with an argument that actually stands up to logical scrutiny?

      Why can't you post a personal attack on your account? Scared you might be recognised as the idiot you are?

      Haha, MORB is a chickenshit unquestioning slashdot groupthink karma whore.

      There is no browser "monopoly", there is no browser "market". Sorry if the facts rock your fragile little world.

      Hey MORB, I have a bridge to sell you...


      Oops, forgot to sign that:

      CrankyOldFart

      I'm not ruled by what other people think of me, like MORB.
    17. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      M...

    18. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      O...

    19. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      R...

    20. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      B...

    21. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I...

    22. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      S...

    23. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      G...

    24. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A...

    25. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Y...!

    26. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Myth. Such a "monopoly" does not exist."

      The US DOJ found Microsoft enjoys a "monopoly power". And if that is calling your baby ugly, too bad.

    27. Re:Its not a monopoly by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      Wow. Not even sure where to start. Medicine isn't a science, but you talk of AIDS patients prescriptions. Whatever happened to your construct of reality?

    28. Re:Its not a monopoly by eldepeche · · Score: 1

      I am a stupid douchebag. Win2k is 1337. I will hack your boxen. I do not understand US and European antitrust law.

      CrankyOldFart (Just because I don't have a fucking clue will not stop me from posting, you informed asshole.)

    29. Re:Its not a monopoly by eldepeche · · Score: 1

      If you're on page 1, just skip straight to page 3.

    30. Re:Its not a monopoly by MORB · · Score: 1

      I bow before your well presented and thought-provoking argumentation. You proved your point quite nicely, but what that point might be could use some clarification.

      Myself, I think that your point is that you are a crazed lol-cow on crack.

    31. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MORB is a chickenshit unquestioning slashdot groupthink karma whore who can't cope with a conflicting viewpoint so responds by silencing the dissenting view with the capabilites given him by being such a slashdot sycophant.

      Clearly my assessment of you is correct. As you seem unable to refute it. Go back to sucking the dried turds from the assholes of your slashfag superiors dickface.

      CrankyOldFart

    32. Re:Its not a monopoly by MORB · · Score: 1

      responds by silencing the dissenting view with the capabilites given him by being such a slashdot sycophant.

      Huh, what? I posted my first reply to you yesterday, and I only checked back today out of boredom and saw there was 10 replies (that I didn't even receive any email notification about), including your crazy ranting over getting banned or something, probably for a totally unrelated reason - but somehow you attribute it to some magical power I would have over slashdot.

      I have no idea what the fuck happened here, nor do I care - but I can assure you that I have nothing to do with it. I don't know anybody here.

      However, seeing how immature and paranoiac you seem to react about the whole thing, you getting banned for some reason or another doesn't surprise me too much. A lesser being would have tried to figure out what happened by contacting the slashdot team, but you chose to do the right thing and post a boatload of paranoid and immature comments all over the place.

      Heck, I wouldn't be surprised if you merely forgot your password and thought I banned you with my mystical black magic powers because you disagreed with me.

      Seeing people foaming at the mouth over an internet forum is pretty entertaining. Continue being a good lolcow and reply to this with more insanity if you will.

    33. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing of the sort you self-important twit.

      I posted a simple fact: web browsers are free therefore than can be no "market" or "monopoly" on web browsers.

      This upset the slashdot perverted little view, unable to accept a fact, I was modded down and awarded negative Karma, preventing me from making more than ten posts per day on that registerd account, therefore I am continuing to post anonymously.

      Clearly slashdot moderators do not want people to realise that a "monopoly" or "market" for web browsers is an absurd concept. It conflicts with the dogma that Microsoft is some machination of the devil himself to keep open source software down.

      In case you are wondering what I think of open source software take a look at this post of mine:
      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=217264&cid=176 46156
      Not what you expected? I'm not surprised. You see, my knowledge and opinions are based in fact, not irrational dogma.

      Go back to sucking slashass, so that you can help put down dissenting views that are based in fact instead of irarational and "paranoiac" dogma. Methinks you are starting to look pretty foolish.

      That said:

      MORB is a chickenshit unquestioning slashdot groupthink karma whore.

      CrankyOldFart

    34. Re:Its not a monopoly by MORB · · Score: 1

      Oh, so you're projecting on me you're anger of being modded down. How is that my fault, exactly? I don't agree with modding down for difference of opinion, and I never modded down people for defending an opposite viewpoint to mine myself.

      You can't hold me responsible for the actions of the majority here, can you?

      As for my opinions, I have formed them myself from 7 years of professional experience of development under windows environment mostly with microsoft tools (which means that a large majority of my time is spent working with microsoft products), and before that using microsoft products when I was a student, and generally having doing programming as a hobby on various systems for about 20 years. So my opinions are based in facts aswell.

      Oh, and thanks for my new signature.
      There is no use debating with someone who just diss your opinions as irrational dogma, therefore I will not try to resume our original discussion from before you threw a tantrum for being modded down.

      You think I care about my karma on slashdot? I barely ever read it these days. Karma is pointless anyway except if you like to mod, and I actually don't and rarely do it even when I get modding points.
      You are the one who seems to be caring way too much about this stuff, really (you claim not to care in some of your insane posts, yet you post as an Anonymous Coward - hypocrisy much?)

      I am glad to have been able to clarify what happened, which is even more stupid and less worth getting worked up over than I thought and won't bother with you anymore. The whole thing might be encyclopedia dramatica material though, but I'm lazy so it will probably not come to pass.

    35. Re:Its not a monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'll care about karma when its used to gag you as it was me, when you express an opinion or state a simple fact that upsets the childish moderators here. You'll be very pissed off.

      I could not care less if anyone here loves me or not, I just want to be able to have my say.

      I made a post that stated a simple fact about the mythical "browser market" and was awarded negative karma, thus preventing me from posting with that registered account again that day.

      I don't really care that it was modded down, however I am highly offended by the censorship that was applied to me. It says a lot about slashdot, I realised then and there that this is not a forum for free speech, you are only allowed to post as a registered user if you don't say anything that contradicts the typical groupthink around here. (I hate to use that word).

      It was me that was gagged the other day, tomorrow it could be you.

      I find it especially offensive considering slashdotters love to scream censorship about every second thing, yet exercise a most insidious form of it themselves. It is disgustingly hypocritical.

      My outrage and anger at you was misdirected and uncalled for, and for that I apologise.

      Everything nasty I said to you I hereby retract and throw in the face of the chickenshit moderator who gagged me. I know he is reading this thread with sick pleasure at his power to squash the facts by awarding negative karma.

      Where is the chickenshit censor? Too scared to reveal himself I'm sure. Fuck you mister censor, I would gladly beat you to a pulp. Don't believe me? Lets make arrangements to meet so I can beat the living shit out of your fascist ass. Honestly I will beat you within inches of death and take great pleasure in it.

      The problem is that is probably some kid who doesn't know any better and hasn't got a clue about the actual subject of the thread.

      The CrankyOldFart account is not banned, but I will never post under a registered account again, as it can simply be gagged with one negative karma point.

      Its bloody silly that I should even care, nevertheless it is offensive to be gagged by some smartass kid.

      Cmon chickenshit, come out of hiding and face the music asshole!

  61. Automatic updates is push, not download by gertvs · · Score: 0, Redundant

    IE was included in the automatic updates. It was already on most users computer as an update. This is push, not pull/download. In most cases IE was installed unvoluntarily.

    1. Re:Automatic updates is push, not download by snoozerdss · · Score: 1

      Really? I wasn't aware that IE7 was an auto update? I couldn't have figured it out by the 100 friggin posts above yours that mentioned the same thing... oh and IE does suck but I've heard it was an auto update? Do you have any info on that? or am I the first to post this breaking news?

      --
      Snoozer.
  62. Firefox has more than 100mil downloads... by Coopjust · · Score: 1

    Firefox surpasses 100M downloads (dated October 19th, 2005)

  63. Some websites still don't work in IE7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I actually turned off automatic updates to avoid IE7. Simply because several of our campus websites just don't work in IE7. Some of them only work in IE6(not even firefox). There is no way I will upgrade till our campus web developers upgrade the sites. Otherwise if I would like to do things like submit my homework online or drop a course I'll have to go to the lab and run IE6....

    I have heard of other websites not working in IE7, has anyone actually seen this happen?

  64. Re:In all honesty, some of these things work both by Secrity · · Score: 1

    EVERY program has to either default or ask the user what to do for every option. If you produce a popup and ask the user how they want to have an option set, they are just going to get confused and annoyed, and select the default (usually by just pressing whatever button appears will get rid of the popup). From what I have noticed, Firefox defaults are pretty intuitive.

    If you don't like the defaults, change the options.

  65. Re:Yes, IE has met its match by EzInKy · · Score: 1

    Having moved totally to Linux about three years I can only go by what I've read, but my understanding is that Microsoft said that it couldn't be completely removed because it was a core part of the operating system...and if it is not why would they automatically update it to IE7?

    --
    Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
  66. Re:100M dowloads? Seriously? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    stop lying. The IE7 installer doesn't auto install via Windows Update. It downloads and then a seperate wizard is launched that requires multiple steps before the install, including a license validation check. I find it hard to believe that someone as technically asstute as your sound (on the surface) clicked 5 or 6 prompts on accident.

    IE7 doesn't just happen. You chose to install it.

  67. Yeah, so... by yAm · · Score: 1

    ...in Saddam Hussein's last election, he got 100% of the vote.

    --

    Chris

    So Buddha walks into a pizza parlor and says: "Hey, make me one with everything."

  68. Met its match? by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Now that's a bit of a stretch, don't you think? I use and love Firefox. It's what I'm typing this in right now. But I use both browsers on a daily basis. There are some sites that only look right in IE7 (due to web developers optimizing for IE at the expense of standards), and there are some sites that don't like IE7 yet (and thus work better in IE6 or -- since that isn't available if you have IE7 -- in FF). And then there's sites using ActiveX (such as Microsoft's Outlook Web Access) which only work at full capacity in IE.

    Sure, FF is making inroads. It's my browser of choice (almost exclusively because of extensions, though, and not due to any other groundbreaking feature in FF). But to construe that "abandoning" IE is ridiculous. Both are useful.

    --
    In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
  69. Re:In all honesty, some of these things work both by stubear · · Score: 1

    You can fix most of these by going into preferences. However, there is one truly annoying things that Firefox does not allow me to do that IE7 does allow is setting the default search engine. You get Google whether you want it or not. If you want to use another search engine you need to click the drop down button, but be careful because you can still hit the Google button and initiate the search using Google. Not only can you set the default search engine in IE7 you can create your own custom search engines on the add search engine page. Web sites can even hook into the search field and become a temporary search provider allowing users to search their site. Search in IE7 definitely blows all other browsers away.

  70. IE7 corrupts $MFT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been putting off allowing IE7 to install. The box was a fresh install maybe 45 days old and I was happy^h^h^h used to IE6. On Friday evening I finally decided to let it install. Upon reboot I received a "corrupt $MFT" message. No amount of chkdsk could correct it. I finally thought I could just just rollback to the previous restore point only to find that system restore would allow me to choose any point I wanted but would not complete! Google shows many other instances of this problem yet MS hasn't addressed it. Nice going, guys!

  71. IE7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, a disclaimer:

    Without a doubt FF is a nice product. I don't use it on Windows because I just need to. IE7 has been fine for me. I did use it for a while when IE didn't have tabs.

    I've never run into a client that had FF installed as policy. I rarely run into a non-techie client who has FF installed at all. My client pretty much run the gambit of medium to huge; only an odd sub-200 person company.

    Any client that has ever asked me to include front-end design has explicitly listed IE. No one has asked me for Opera or FF. Netscape got dropped a few years ago.

    I'd really like to know how these stats are compiled. Not because I'd like to see FF fail or succeed, but I just like to know what the real numbers are.

  72. Re:Well being that it is part of windows upgrade.. by allscan · · Score: 1

    Exactly why Microsoft released a patch that will prevent Windows Update from installing IE7 for corporate users or home users like myself that don't want it just yet. The company I work for has boat loads of in-house intranet applications that all need tested on IE7. Not to mention our customers calling because their application doesn't work when we specifically told them NOT to upgrade due to compatibility concerns.

  73. Re:100M dowloads? Seriously? by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

    I don't bother teaching kids that. I just remove IE from the desktop, change the Firefox icon to a globe or something, and label it "Internet." Come to think if it, I do the same thing with adults, too.

    --
    I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  74. Or, if you're like me.... by CodeShark · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You have to make sure that your intranet application renders properly (in spite of Microsoft's continued non-compliance with many CSS features) on what has always seemed to me to be a buggy, bloated, easy-to-malware infest piece of junk software application masquerading as a browser.

    In fact, one of the studies we are doing internally at my company is looking at the cost of deploying Firefox exclusively inside the firewall. Interestingly enough, the main resistance at this point is that if we don't continue to support IE internally, our web developers won't have the skills to deploy and secure web applications OUTSIDE of the firewall.

    --
    ...Open Source isn't the only answer -- but it's almost always a better value than the alternatives...
  75. I Like IE7... by bealzabobs_youruncle · · Score: 1

    It is fast, stable and uses about 1/3rd of the memory FF does. I know that isn't a popular opinion around here, but FF isn't really all that special for the vast majority of user needs. And I don't really think the security debate work any longer as IE7 has made serious strides in this area. I'll go one furhter, I never had a security problem with IE6 as I don't surf for porn or cracked software; the only two kinds of web sites were my A/V software ever went off.

    1. Re:I Like IE7... by Slashcrap · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't surf for porn or cracked software; the only two kinds of web sites were my A/V software ever went off.

      So it only alerts when visiting websites you don't visit?

    2. Re:I Like IE7... by bestiarosa · · Score: 1

      Touché.

      --
      :(){ :|:& };:
    3. Re:I Like IE7... by bealzabobs_youruncle · · Score: 1

      I said went off, past tense, I just don't find it wortht the effort any longer.

    4. Re:I Like IE7... by bunratty · · Score: 1
      It is fast, stable and uses about 1/3rd of the memory FF does.
      In my experience Firefox uses less memory than Internet Explorer. Don't take my word for it however:
      PC World
      Zimbra
      Robert Scoble
      Browser Memory Benchmark
      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  76. Re:100M dowloads? Seriously? by Dionysos+Taltos · · Score: 1

    I outright banned my kids from using IE. I removed it from the Apps folder, then blocked the download site for IE in Safari. I did the same for AIM. I told them if they want to screw up a computer, then get a job and buy their own computer. Until then, there will be no IE and no AIM.

  77. Re:Well being that it is part of windows upgrade.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    And this problem is AFAIK a blunder by SAP, saying things like "uh, nobody gave us IE7 early enough, how were we supposed to fix our code".

    I might suggest that the blunder of SAP is rely on Microsoft for HTML rendering and other IE functions. SAP can deliver its product for Windows WITHOUT requiring or using IE in any way at all. There are smarter ways for a company interested in self-preservation to develop a more independent codebase that works in the Microsoft platform. And, in this case, would have avoided the negative public relation blunder of SAP being "the reason we cannot upgrade to something safer/better" from millions of customers' point of view.

    You listening, SAP?

  78. Active X by NineNine · · Score: 0, Troll

    You're right. Firefox won't be IE's match until it can at least handle ActiveX properly, and I can easily embed Firefox in my applications with a simple COM control.

  79. Re:In all honesty, some of these things work both by fader · · Score: 2, Funny

    And, by the way, while I'm at it, how about the fact it automatically downloads updates and then forces them to install the next time I open Firefox, without asking me.

    Edit - Preferences - Advanced - Update - Uncheck "Installed Add-ons"

    Why can't I browse and tell Firefox where to put it instead of being arbitrarily forced to put it in the same inappropriate location?

    Edit - Preferences - Main - Select "Always ask me where to save files" under Downloads.

    The reason these things are like that by default is because, for most people, they're the Right Choice. If you don't like them, they're extremely simple to change. Being asked where to put a file every bloody time annoys me (and everyone I know) to no end. Similarly, many (if not most) people using Firefox have permissions to update their own extensions, but many don't know how or don't think to check for updates. Should they be kept at old versions because you are too lazy to uncheck a single box in a preference window?

    --
    - fader
  80. Automatic updates shouldn't count by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It shouldn't even count as a download when Windows just grabs the file on its own time among the updates and asks if I would like to go ahead and put it in. I mean, I didn't ask anyone to download IE7, but why would I not go ahead and install it if it's already downloaded for me? And what about the copies of Firefox I get off portableapps.com so I can use them on a USB drive? Do those count in these goofy download counts? What a racket.

  81. Offloading Liability by hGMFliP · · Score: 1

    Many IT personnel, especially outsourced IT personnel, install all Windows Updates carte blanche because it is Microsoft's "recommended configuration." I've installed IE7 on a number of customers PCs, not because I thought it was a better browser, but because it is Microsoft's recommended configuration.

    We know that Windows Updates have a higher-than-normal potential to break something, but, it's better to do all updates than not do them. Then, if/when it breaks, at least it is because we performed an action that Microsoft recommended, rather than it breaking because we *neglected* to do something Microsoft recommended. Liability offloaded.

    This philosophy has had an interesting side effect. A small, but significant, percentage of my customer-base have been on the receiving end of a few Microsoft Updates gone sour, so they ended up switching to Mac.

    --
    This message was posted using recycled electrons.
  82. Re:Well being that it is part of windows upgrade.. by freeweed · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Your SAP comment is good.

    The bigger issue, though, is that most businesses still haven't moved off Win2k. No XP/2003, no IE7.

    --
    Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
  83. Re:Well being that it is part of windows upgrade.. by delinear · · Score: 1

    Not only that, people who don't have XP/Vista (and in the corporate world there are a LOT of people still using Win2k+IE6) don't even get a choice in the matter.

    Actually... if I were conspiracy-theory-minded, I might think IE purposely made IE7 more standards compliant so when people make their sites work with it, all those company's have to upgrade from IE6 move to XP/IE7... then IE8 will probably bring back the broken standards and proprietary code, forcing people to upgrade again to Vista... and then... Ouch! My tinfoil melted...

  84. IE7 downloaded but then removed by derniers · · Score: 1

    put IE7 on the home PC, we have one PC and many Macs at home, tried it out for a bit and then removed it....... like many of the above posters my users (aka "family") would have to hunt around to find IE so they all use firefox or safari, firefox on the PC has dropped malware incidents dramatically

  85. Not Funny. by crhylove · · Score: 1

    This isn't really funny if you consider how many people design their MySpace page. It's downright frightening, actually.

    Now how many MySpacers check their work on both IE and Firefox...... That's probably funny, somehow.

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
    1. Re:Not Funny. by Windows+Breaker+G4 · · Score: 1

      I am not sure if "design" is the right word, I think butcher might be more appropriate :P

      --
      brickspeed.net for your old Volvo performance addiction
    2. Re:Not Funny. by jZnat · · Score: 2, Funny

      Judging by the average MySpace page, I wouldn't be surprised if the "designer" didn't bother to check what it looks like in any browser...

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
  86. Re:Yes, IE has met its match by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Netscape was able to do better than that.

  87. killer extension: translation by tilminator · · Score: 1

    Ro me, Rikaichan is the killer extension: Just hover the cursor over a Japanese word, and the translation will pop up. Way faster than any other dictionary approach I have tried.

    --
    -- up-modding policy: make a good point, write self-contained.
  88. IE is dead to me ... by hackershandbook · · Score: 1

    Why should I bother?

    I didn't like IE6.x and removed all icons to prevent people using it (ok .. certain programs require the rendering engine .. so it stayed but was ... very hard to find)

    Not that I want to start a "religious war" or anything ... but I actually prefer FireFox ..

    .. or maybe I'm just scared to see what my websites actually *look like* in IE6.x/IE7.x ..

  89. Re:In all honesty, some of these things work both by delinear · · Score: 1

    I won't tell you how to change the download location or call you an idiot. What I will say in FF's defence is that this (and many other things) are incredibly easy to do with very little thought or effort required. The problem is that the majority of users are used to the way IE works, and because FF is different they can find it intimidating at first, but with a little exploration it's actually a lot more intuitive to the casual user and massively more useful to the power user.

    As for why it downloads everything to the desktop... well, I can take an educated guess that you've never had to work in an IT support role. It can be a nightmare talking people through downloading a patch over the telephone when they have no clue where it went or how to find it - IE might have put it in their documents folder, or the last location that their kid downloaded something to, it's like finding a needle in a haystack. I can only begin to imagine how much stress these users experience when trying to do this without a tech on the other end of the line to help. Most casual users like the fact that they can find their downloads, more experienced users can quickly and easily find the option to change the default location - the majority of (though evidently not all) users are happy.

  90. IE 7 on XP Has Little Advantage Over Firefox by ThinkFr33ly · · Score: 1, Interesting

    IE 7 on XP really doesn't offer much to Firefox converts. Aside from perhaps the nifty tab screenshot thingy, and a really good RSS reader, Firefox has all of IE 7's features, plus it has the "comfort" factor.

    But IE 7 on XP isn't really the big deal here. IE 7 on Vista is what Mozilla should be worried about.

    IE 7's protected mode feature trumps the number one reason why people switched to Firefox (in my opinion): security. That's why I switched to Firefox. I was sick and tired of being at risk while I was surfing. Switching to a browser will very small market share gave me security through obscurity.

    But IE 7 in protected mode is mostly likely the safest, full featured browser one can use. While people upgrading to Vista might stick with Firefox, I have a feeling that most people getting a new machine with Vista pre-installed will have little reason to switch to Firefox.

    Furthermore, as the market share for IE 7 on Vista increases, I suspect malware writers will start to target Firefox more and more. It would certainly be a strange turn of events if Vista and IE 7 actually made Firefox less safe to use.

    1. Re:IE 7 on XP Has Little Advantage Over Firefox by ThinkFr33ly · · Score: 1

      Flamebait? Really? Wow.

      Well, we'll see.

      I'm going to bookmark this post so that in a year or so I can repeatedly link to it when we start seeing a sharp increase in Firefox vulnerabilities.

    2. Re:IE 7 on XP Has Little Advantage Over Firefox by Killer+Koala · · Score: 1

      [quote]IE 7 on XP really doesn't offer much to Firefox converts. Aside from perhaps the nifty tab screenshot thingy, and a really good RSS reader, Firefox has all of IE 7's features, plus it has the "comfort" factor.[/quote] IE7 still beats Firefox in many ways - better tab functionality, better phishing utility, user-customizable embedded search engine, and of course support for ActiveX and ASP. Among others of course. The main reason I could see people switching to Firefox is security but I wouldn't put any bets that it'll solve all my security problems. I have an anti-virus and spyware tool and that's my security.

  91. How big is a kazillion? by mysticgoat · · Score: 1

    That has to be ignoring half a kazillion markets where the leading product is a commercial product which is vastly superior to any OSS equivalent

    Ah! I've been waiting for a chance to find the equivalent value of 1 kazillion in any of the known number systems, and lo! Here it is! A chance at Mathematical Fame! Right on Slashdot!

    So let me work this out for you all. You can be my jury.

    Markets without a significant FOSS presence:

    1. CAD. AutoCAD still rulz
    2. CAM. Well, maybe that's the same market, but we'll count it anyway. An off-by-one won't matter in the final analysis.
    3. Accounting. GnuCash is coming along, but not there yet
      Space exploration— oh wait. NASA is using a lot of linux now
    4. Point of sales processing? Except web-based POS is mostly done with Perl or PHP on Apache. Uh, Lets count this anyway, for all the mom&pop stores and farmers co-ops and such.
      That's it? I think so.

    So count those up, and the total is 0.5 kazillion, 'cuz parent post said so. Therefore 1 kazillion is equal to 8.

    Funny, I expected it to be more. Maybe 1 kazillion is a very large value of 8...

    So, my jury, have I satisfactorily established the equivalence of 1 kazillion in known numeric systems? Will my name now be known for all time as a Major Contributor to Mathematics, like whatzhisname with the triangle thingy?

    You be the judge...

    BTW,
    ...OSS thrives in markets that have stagnated and have little or no competition.

    I think not. Here's a timely and relevant quote:

    The existing base of quality FLOSS applications with reasonable quality control and distribution would cost firms almost Euro 12 billion to reproduce internally. This code base has been doubling every 18-24 months over the past eight years, and this growth is projected to continue for several more years.

    From Economic impact of open source software on innovation and the competitiveness of the Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) sector in the EU (Nov 2006)

  92. IE7 Seems to break things.. by arrgster · · Score: 1

    I had a guy call me the other day that told me after he did the update certain website stopped working. I told him to download Firefox and everything is fine... One thing we did seem to have a real problem with is Java. In that situation I'm not sure if IE7 broke it or something else but we did have to reinstall java after the IE7 update...

  93. tag: no- yes-maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please, consider using a single "no-yes-maybe" tag.

  94. For those questioning the "stats" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I remember Firefox running a full page ad in NY Times when they hit million "downloads" Here's google new archive search. http://news.google.com/archivesearch?q=firefox+dow nload+million&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&btnG=Search+Archiv es I'm fairly confident the news was slashdotted, but can't find it now. Disclosure: I'm no fan of IE (I'm no fan of Firefox 2.0 either. I'm on 1.5.0.9)

  95. Opportunity Cost by anneha · · Score: 1

    Sure, this is the best face of OSS, but what is the true opportunity cost of developing free browsers, as opposed to an OS? Microsoft makes money through the sale of OSes, not browsers, and if OSS developers wanted to better tackle the beast, more efforts should be spent on an OS that can truly take on Windows. Just a thought...

    1. Re:Opportunity Cost by DaMattster · · Score: 1

      Sure, this is the best face of OSS, but what is the true opportunity cost of developing free browsers, as opposed to an OS? Microsoft makes money through the sale of OSes, not browsers, and if OSS developers wanted to better tackle the beast, more efforts should be spent on an OS that can truly take on Windows. Just a thought... Not just a thought, but a good one. I have been thinking the same for a while. However, the popularity of Firefox may advance the cause because the internet and web-based software do not become as tightly coupled to a Windows/IE platform. Soon, people will make demands that websites be Firefox compatible. This demand will force the opening of .NET or cause MS to loose market share. Microsoft's strategy is very dependent upon keeping others dependent on the tightly coupled Windows/IE package. If you can achieve a heavy enough demand for Firefox compatibility, MS's hand will be forced.

    2. Re:Opportunity Cost by anneha · · Score: 1
      Agreed.

      I think Firefox compatibility is required. It seems all we are discussing is the allocation of resources, which seems skewed in favor of a free browser due to its success (as opposed to GNU/Linux). Not that I would stop people working on their pet projects...

  96. Re:Well being that it is part of windows upgrade.. by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

    So we can assume out of all the windows users out there only 100 million out of all the people who have Windows PCs are actually upgrading their system. Is it just me or is that kida scary.

    What's kida scary is that people actually think installing a new version of a web browser qualifies as a system upgrade. Yes, I know that due to IE's integration with Windows internals it kind of it, but people still shouldn't be thinking that way.

    By the same token, it's kida scary that some people are automatically and unquestioningly applying every system patch to their OS that Microsoft pushes out. I have my system set to manual notification, and don't proceed with any security update until a few days have passed and there hasn't been any Slashdot article titled "Latest Windows Patch Breaks Everything". Do people trust Microsoft patches to be that flawless???

  97. Active usage stats by suv4x4 · · Score: 2, Informative

    TheCounter gets a very good sample of the Internet userbase, so instead of arguing like retarded kids what "X downloads for IE and Y downloads for Firefox means" we can see what people USE:

    http://www.thecounter.com/stats/2007/January/brows er.php

    19% for IE7, 11% for Firefox. End of story.

    "But IE is preinstalled, but Automatic Updates, but, but."

    Yea, we know. And? Firefox doesn't need skewed stats, nor it needs lame excuses. All of you, grow up :P

    1. Re:Active usage stats by Kelson · · Score: 1
      19% for IE7, 11% for Firefox. End of story.

      If you're looking at a snapshot, sure. If you're looking at trends, however, it's not the end of the story at all. In that case, still using TheCounter, you'll see that Firefox usage has climbed from 8% in October (the month before the releases of Firefox 2 and IE7) to 11% in January, and that total MSIE use has dropped from 87% to 84% in that same period of time.

    2. Re:Active usage stats by suv4x4 · · Score: 1

      you'll see that Firefox usage has climbed from 8% in October (the month before the releases of Firefox 2 and IE7) to 11% in January, and that total MSIE use has dropped from 87% to 84% in that same period of time.

      That's kinda natural since when you add them up they still gotta make 100% ;)

      Also you're understimating a major factor for a "trend" here: you're looking at a pre-IE7 trend. Most people who installed Firefox fell in two groups: developers, AND companies/home users fed Firefox by developer suggestion (for security reasons).

      Now that IE7 is out, and Vista is about to be out officially (not the "fake" early launch) this trend may reverse itself.

      Browsing with Firefox is a pain. Few tabs and it's stuck. I personally use Firefox for development and Opera 9 for other browsing. The difference in speed and resource usage is incredible.

      And gotta tell you, IE7 is much closer to Opera in that respect (speed, resources) than to Firefox.

    3. Re:Active usage stats by Kelson · · Score: 1
      Also you're understimating a major factor for a "trend" here: you're looking at a pre-IE7 trend.

      How is looking at the change from just before IE7 was released to 3 months after IE7 was released a "pre-IE7 trend"?

    4. Re:Active usage stats by Simetrical · · Score: 1

      you'll see that Firefox usage has climbed from 8% in October (the month before the releases of Firefox 2 and IE7) to 11% in January, and that total MSIE use has dropped from 87% to 84% in that same period of time.

      That's kinda natural since when you add them up they still gotta make 100% ;)

      I'm not sure my elementary school math teacher would agree that you have to get 100 when you add 84 and 11.

      --
      MediaWiki developer, Total War Center sysadmin
    5. Re:Active usage stats by suv4x4 · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure my elementary school math teacher would agree that you have to get 100 when you add 84 and 11.

      Statistics aren't based on Elementary School Math, they're based on Very Complex Math.

  98. Let's Add A Few by Petersko · · Score: 1

    First we'll toss in one some people will kick and scream about: Graphic Design. Yes, I know all about the Gimp. And naturally the artists know that it's a poor substitute for the industry standard.

    Sonar and Cubase have no reasonable alternative - just a bunch of separated projects (usually midi or audio editors, but not both simultaneuously) that sort of work if your drivers run just right, and none of them coming anywhere close to the feature sets of the commercial packages.

    Games. Enough said.

    1. Re:Let's Add A Few by mysticgoat · · Score: 1

      First we'll toss in one some people will kick and scream about: Graphic Design. Yes, I know all about the Gimp.

      I disagree.

      Not about the GIMP; for production work on raster images it doesn't make sense to leave the known comforts of PhotoShop or Paint Shop Pro for a FOSS equivalent that might do the job as well, but offers no significant improvements. Yet tomorrow's graphics designers are currently on student budgets and are learning The GIMP because of that— something that should be making Adobe nervous about tomorrow's profits.

      But Blender and POV-Ray are major presences in animation and ray tracing work: many of the younger people working in the field cut their teeth on these, and still use them for exploring some concepts. Inkscape has compatibility benefits over Illustrator and is beginning to attract commercial use for that reason, even though it is a long way from its v1.0. Scribus is poised to shoulder its way into first tier desk top publishing.

      FOSS has become majorily important in the graphics sector.

      I don't know anything about audio mixers. Maybe the value of 1 kazillion is closer to 10 than to 8. Maybe FOSS products like Audacity are making significant inroads among the independent bands. I've no idea.

      I know nothing about games, either. I know a lot of tomorrow's animators and game designers are developing their techniques with Blender and POV-Ray— I expect that they will continue to use these to some degree when they get paying jobs.

  99. High FF usage example by Eric+Pierce · · Score: 1

    This is great news!

    I run the VirtuaWin site (http://virtuawin.sourceforge.net/) which, since I began tracking web stats last Sept., shows Firefox visitors (by unique IP) at +60%. It's probably that high because it's a power user type app (virtual desktops for Windows), but it's still encouraging to see.

    EP

  100. Re:Prompting normal people to wonder: by delinear · · Score: 1

    Well, amongst others:

    People who care about web standards support
    People who don't use windows
    People who care about open source solutions
    People who realise competition gets them a better deal
    The security conscious
    Web developers
    Companies (with or commissioning websites)
    IT support/Administrators
    Microsoft
    A large proportion of Slashdot

    The list goes on but I think you get the point...

  101. Firefox is in decline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lately, I've been seeing a lot of former Firefox users switch to an obscure new browser called Bon Echo!

  102. Patch 21 by sapped · · Score: 1

    Yep, we had to upgrade the SAPGui to patch 21 to fix this problem. All of the help documentation was turned into blank screens by the IE7 update. It beats me why SAP chose to integrate IE that tightly into their product.

    It should really have been a simple call to launch whichever browser was on your system and tell it to display an HTML file instead of the compiled HTML crap that they used.

  103. Drilldown On This? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It would be interesting to see the rationales for upgrading each one. How many people have IE7 because it was an automatic update? How many got it because they wanted it (the program was available for voluntary download for a while before it was added to the auto update)? How many downloaded it and installed it, but then switched to Firefox, or reverted back to IE6? How many computers didn't upgrade to IE7 because of the Genuine Advantage software that's required prior- either because they hate WGA, or because WGA says their copy of Windows is pirated?

    Having tried both, I've favored Firefox 2 if only because it has the one thing that IE7 lacks- a familiar interface. There's really no reason for the alterations in layout that they made with IE7- given that nearly every application and utility that's been produced since Windows 3.1 has had the menu in the same place, shifting it, and everything else, really made no sense. The only rationale I can think of was to try and make the program look entirely new when really it's not that much different than IE6. That or perhaps some scheme to make the Firefox interface seem strange and unusual- although unless they alter every other program they have, will prove really stupid on Microsoft's part.

  104. The M$ Death Spiral. by twitter · · Score: 1

    14% vs 80%... ya, that's one hella of a match.

    Try treating IE as a "standard" and you will lose. That was the Mozilla plan all along and it has worked perfectly. Real competition is coming back to both the browser and OS space, which is death for M$ who's only strength was a large captive audience.

    The bad news for M$ is that they can't use browser share to force their way into the server market. That 79% is the total IE share. IE 7 only has 25% after three months of mandatory update, which has put it in all sorts of surprising places. Their IE 6, "winner" only has 60%. The 20% non IE share keeps developers from using IE only crap - no business is going to turn away one in five customers, especially when that one in five is the more likely to spend early adapter type.

    This really is the spiral of doom for M$. They can't push their stuff, so the rest of us are no longer punished for not having IE. Because non IE browsers are better, the market share will continue to increase making it even harder for them to force IE only on people, and so on and so forth. Their push of IE 7 was a desperate measure that has failed and showed their weakness. They used every ounce of their strength and lost. As the Internet is the main reason to own a computer, their weakness in browser space is also a weakness in OS space. They think the new interface is going to spur Vista sales, but it's going to be just the opposite. User dissatisfaction with the never ending upgrade train is going to drive people to alternatives. Now is the time to give people free software. They just might try it and be happy before they spend a thousand dollars on a low end, soon to be M$ obsolete, Vista machine.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  105. The 25% surprise by twitter · · Score: 1

    The real surprise is that IE7 only got 25% of the market, using all of their might. That may be huge, but it's nothing that can be called a "standard" that will always work. I think this has huge implications for the browser and OS markets.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:The 25% surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please stop quoting yourself as if you're some kind of authoritative source.

      You're not. You're just a cock.

  106. Don'y you mean 1E8 downloads of IE7? by Harlow_B_Ashur · · Score: 1

    Or if you prefer engineering units, 100E06 units of 10E06 maybe?

  107. How to advocate free software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    twitter, please read this carefully. Following this advice will make Slashdot a better place for everyone, including yourself.

    • As a representative of the Linux community, participate in mailing list and newsgroup discussions in a professional manner. Refrain from name-calling and use of vulgar language. Consider yourself a member of a virtual corporation with Mr. Torvalds as your Chief Executive Officer. Your words will either enhance or degrade the image the reader has of the Linux community.
    • Avoid hyperbole and unsubstantiated claims at all costs. It's unprofessional and will result in unproductive discussions.
    • A thoughtful, well-reasoned response to a posting will not only provide insight for your readers, but will also increase their respect for your knowledge and abilities.
    • Always remember that if you insult or are disrespectful to someone, their negative experience may be shared with many others. If you do offend someone, please try to make amends.
    • Focus on what Linux has to offer. There is no need to bash the competition. Linux is a good, solid product that stands on its own.
    • Respect the use of other operating systems. While Linux is a wonderful platform, it does not meet everyone's needs.
    • Refer to another product by its proper name. There's nothing to be gained by attempting to ridicule a company or its products by using "creative spelling". If we expect respect for Linux, we must respect other products.
    • Give credit where credit is due. Linux is just the kernel. Without the efforts of people involved with the GNU project , MIT, Berkeley and others too numerous to mention, the Linux kernel would not be very useful to most people.
    • Don't insist that Linux is the only answer for a particular application. Just as the Linux community cherishes the freedom that Linux provides them, Linux only solutions would deprive others of their freedom.
    • There will be cases where Linux is not the answer. Be the first to recognize this and offer another solution.

    From http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/linux/docs/HOWTO/Advoca cy

  108. Disable Automatic Update! by antdude · · Score: 1

    Just disable it and run Windows Update (WU) manaually every Tuesdays. Also, tell WU to ignore IE7. No notifications. :)

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    1. Re:Disable Automatic Update! by jasen666 · · Score: 1

      I just disable WU completely. I used to be religious about getting windows updates, but these days my systems run smoother without them. I just install SP2 and leave it. Firewall, AV software, & FF keep me pretty safe.
      Oh yeah, I'm living on the edge.

    2. Re:Disable Automatic Update! by antdude · · Score: 1

      I always keep my Windows updated, but I don't use a firewall, real-time memory resident AV and other protectors (e.g., SpyBot), and SeaMonkey (used to be Mozilla). IE6 is used rarely. I always do manual scans with updated SpyBot, Ad-Aware, NAV 2002, etc.

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    3. Re:Disable Automatic Update! by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think I could even live without Windows Update. Heck, I bet I could live with a fully unpatched WinXP (SP0 ;-) ) My machines all run an antivirus (AVG Free) and I have an OpenBSD firewall in front of them with both incoming and outgoing ports filtered. Surfing is pretty much only allowed with Firefox, Thunderbird is the email client of choice and OpenOffice.org is used for productivity tasks. Last step would be to ditch Windows entirely, but my wife isn't ready for that and I'm still working on it myself (have a Debian workstation now, but well, not much time to play around with it much )

  109. That time is now. by twitter · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    The time will be when Vista comes out and new PCs come preloaded with Vista and IE7. At that time, people will get rid of the old PCs and we'll see whether they're sufficiently satisfied with IE7 that they won't bother with downloading Firefox.

    Vista is out but what's worth watching is how badly it damages new PC sales. Forcing IE7 and the massive UI changes for Office and Vista are like a punch in the face for longtime M$ fans. Vendors are licking their chops, dreaming of upgrade train riches. They have been waiting for five long years and are very hungry. If Vista sales disappoint them, it's all over for the M$ monopoly. All of them have their toes in the GNU/Linux market. If Vista is a big enough failure, those vendors will jump ship like developers did years ago. M$ and closed source have been stale for a long time, Vista is shaping up to be putrid.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:That time is now. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      All of them have their toes in the GNU/Linux market.

      ROTFLMAO!! Do you really believe this stuff or are you some sort of paid troll?

  110. *sigh* More FUD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is this kind of posting ever going to get old on /. ?

    Do the mozilla users and developers REALLY need to have their ego stroked this much? Are they really that insecure?

  111. IE7 in the lead? by kimvette · · Score: 1

    Perhaps not for long. With Firefox, IE7 has matched its meat. It's going to really lick IE's ass.

    (that demolition man bit is the first thing that came to mind when I read "has Microsoft finally met its match")

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  112. How to advocate free software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    twitter, please read this carefully. Following this advice will make Slashdot a better place for everyone, including yourself.

    • As a representative of the Linux community, participate in mailing list and newsgroup discussions in a professional manner. Refrain from name-calling and use of vulgar language. Consider yourself a member of a virtual corporation with Mr. Torvalds as your Chief Executive Officer. Your words will either enhance or degrade the image the reader has of the Linux community.
    • Avoid hyperbole and unsubstantiated claims at all costs. It's unprofessional and will result in unproductive discussions.
    • A thoughtful, well-reasoned response to a posting will not only provide insight for your readers, but will also increase their respect for your knowledge and abilities.
    • Always remember that if you insult or are disrespectful to someone, their negative experience may be shared with many others. If you do offend someone, please try to make amends.
    • Focus on what Linux has to offer. There is no need to bash the competition. Linux is a good, solid product that stands on its own.
    • Respect the use of other operating systems. While Linux is a wonderful platform, it does not meet everyone's needs.
    • Refer to another product by its proper name. There's nothing to be gained by attempting to ridicule a company or its products by using "creative spelling". If we expect respect for Linux, we must respect other products.
    • Give credit where credit is due. Linux is just the kernel. Without the efforts of people involved with the GNU project , MIT, Berkeley and others too numerous to mention, the Linux kernel would not be very useful to most people.
    • Don't insist that Linux is the only answer for a particular application. Just as the Linux community cherishes the freedom that Linux provides them, Linux only solutions would deprive others of their freedom.
    • There will be cases where Linux is not the answer. Be the first to recognize this and offer another solution.

    From http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/linux/docs/HOWTO/Advoca cy

  113. And Those Who Install IE7 Overwhelmingly Regret It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not only is Firefox gaining, but IE7's badness is probably helping to push Firefox to the top, as people install IE7, have problems, and run away.

    At The Internet Patrol site, we wrote up an IE7 article last month, and it is overwhelmingly our top article now with dozens of comments, nearly all of which are from people who installed IE7 and now regret it - many having broken systems since the IE7 install. (You can see it at http://www.theinternetpatrol.com/ie7-microsoft-int ernet-explorer-7-should-you-install-it )

  114. Quite well, actually. by Kelson · · Score: 1
    How well would FF do if *it* forced itself out?

    Admittedly, this is a completely unscientific study based on one website, but I did some analysis on my own site's logs. Keep in mind that Firefox 1.5 and 2.0 have auto-update, and so far that auto-update has only been applied within a major revision. So 1.5 users have only been auto-updated to newer 1.5 releases so far.

    Of all Firefox hits to my site, the three most popular versions are 2.0.0.1, 1.5.0.9, and 1.0.7. That's the latest in the 2.0 series, the latest in the 1.5 series... and the last in the 1.0 series before 1.5 came out. Virtually everyone on 1.5 or 2.0 has updated to the newest release in that series. Virtually no one updated to 1.0.8.

    If this is any indication, when Mozilla puts the 1.5->2.0 update into the automatic channel, the vast majority of Firefox 1.5 users will convert over to 2.0.

  115. Nice to see you are hacker friendly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since most people write exploits to FF so they can springboard their attacks to an unpatched IE install, you are doing the hackers and botnet creators of the world a huge service by not patching IE.

    You go, girl!

  116. I have questions by ukemike · · Score: 1

    I haven't bothered updating to IE7 on my home or work machines (both XPSP1). Is there a risk associated with having IE6 still on my computer? I rarely use it (maybe 3 times in 2006). I guess what I'm really asking is does IE6 have vulnerabilities that can be exploited by it just being installed on my PC? Here's another: It was my understanding that one could not uninstall IE6 from an XP machine. I know that XP used to use IE6 for updates. Now that there is a separate update system in XP do I still need IE? Could I upgrade to IE7 then uninstall it? Wouldn't that be ironic?

    --
    -- QED
    1. Re:I have questions by nasch · · Score: 1
      It was my understanding that one could not uninstall IE6 from an XP machine.
      I know someone who tried that once. Keep in mind that there is no uninstaller for it, so you're left with just deleting executables. Bad things ensued.
    2. Re:I have questions by Shaper_pmp · · Score: 1

      If a machine is used to connect to the internet and it has IE6 on it, IE is a risk, end of story.

      Even if you only use Outlook to browse mail, some versions of Outlook use the IE engine to display HTML-formatted e-mails, and that opens them up to exploitation.

      Don't get me wrong, you can use IE6 for years, and as long as you generally keep patched up-to-date, stick only to reputable sites, and those reputable sites also don't get cracked/compromised, you may never catch anything nasty. However, you will be at risk, sometimes even when running the very latest patched version (MS has improved its turnaround time on patches for exploits, but it's still too long in some cases).

      Now IE7's out, at some point in the future MS will stop releasing patches for IE6. At this point IE6 will be open to any further security holes, and these won't ever be fixed by MS.

      Of course, the same goes for Firefox, Safari or any browser, but IE is the worst of the bunch. It has often a more lax security fixing regime, ActiveX support (possibly the most boneheaded and ridiculous security-flaw-by-design ever), and it's so tightly integrated into lots of other apps that you're often not even aware when you're using it (so you're more exposed than you realise).

      In short, there's no reason to upgrade to IE7 apart from the reasons there always are to keep up with the latest version of an app. Oh, and the fact it's even least half-way to being a standards compliant web-browser (only took MS ten years or so).

      HTH ;-)

      --
      Everything in moderation, including moderation itself
  117. No compelling reason? by Kelson · · Score: 1
    Historically, people don't change their PC until they see a compelling reason. So far, no compelling reason to change has popped up over the horizon.

    If everyone had relatively new WinXP machines, that would be an issue. But there are plenty of older machines that are reaching the end of their useful lives. People in that crowd would be looking into getting a new machine soon regardless of whether it came with XP or Vista. I'm sure there are still people buying their first computers, and families with shared computers still buy computers for their kids when they get old enough.

    Most people who buy a new computer with Vista aren't going to be upgrading because it's Vista. They're going to be upgrading because this is when they're ready to get a new computer, and Vista's going to be the OS it comes with.

  118. Performance Concern by Metroid72 · · Score: 1

    I've unchecked it a few times from Windows Update (And I remember checking the "Don't tell me about this update" a few weeks back and I still got it again last night).

    I don't use IE, but I'm just afraid to install it becuase I don't know how my PC will perform afterwards (memory usage). I used it when it was the best option (IE3 and IE5) but sadly, each upgrade came with a significant performance hit at the OS level.

    I know Microsoft will manage to make it a pre-requisite for a critical update down the line, but I just hope it's not a memory hog like MSMoney is.

    Oh well...

  119. I prefer Firefox. by xanadistic · · Score: 1

    I always use the latest version of Firefox before using IE. I have updated IE, though, just because I tend to update everything on my computer so it will be safer(maybe). I have that extension on Firefox that allows you to open the page or a link in IE if you think it is not going to work correctly in Firefox. There are still certain pages that have some sort of JAVA application or some sort of Quicktime embedded video that work better in IE7 than they do in Firefox 2.0 for some reason. I am sure I could download an extension or make some sort of adjustment on Firefox that would make it work just as good with these applications so that I do not have to open IE7, but I am not that tech-savvy. Still, I use Firefox for everything, and I hope more and more extensions are available(and updated!) for Firefox 2.0. The Firefox browser seems to move quicker and smoother than IE7. When I do bring up IE7 for some rare reason, it takes a long time to load, and I have a very fast computer so I don't know why it does that. Firefox takes a little time to load the first time I bring it up, but then it moves at lightning speed. However, there are times when I have had to close Firefox, and when I try to reopen it, I can't, and I have to go into Task Manager or restart my computer so there are still quite a few bugs that need to be worked out for both browsers. However, I think the mentality behind Firefox will always keep it better than IE.

  120. Re:Well being that it is part of windows upgrade.. by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    SAP one of the few Software title that explains who their clients are (a bunch of SAPs). SAP is in the group of software that it is cheaper to make and maintain your own in house, or even with $100 an hour contractors.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  121. Re:Well being that it is part of windows upgrade.. by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    Well if you are going to spend the rest of your life determining if a patch is good or bad. Then I would agree with you. But if you just want to get your work done on your home PC then you better off just doing all the updates, then trying to pick an choose and research if it works or not.
    I know you probably don't want people to Upgrade their windows systems so at some point a major virus will all all the windows systems in one shot. But in reality keeping everything uptodate is on the average better then just letting it Rot because it could be bad.

    It is like the argument for seatbelts or airbags where there are some circumstances where people have died because they have worn their seatbelts where if they didn't they may have survived. But in reality because of seatbelt laws the death toll of people have dropped significantly from car accidedance.

    Yes if you just blindly patch your system you could get bitten by a bad patch. If you want to spend hours researching every patch that is released then you will be overall safer. But if it comes to patching all the time or not patching. You are safer if you patch your systems to the full extent.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  122. Metrics don't matter when game is fixed by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Here at work we use Firefox, as we're a mostly Linux shop.

    However, a few of us have WinXP or Win2K boxen. We only use IE to download Windows updates.

    So, the metrics would say we have one-third IE users and 100 percent Firefox users - but in reality, we have 100 percent Firefox users.

    Now if they could stop downloading updates to our printer drivers that then stop working with our printers - on our Win machines - we would probably spend even less time using IE to download updates.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  123. Re:Well being that it is part of windows upgrade.. by Mascot · · Score: 1
    And this problem is AFAIK a blunder by SAP, saying things like "uh, nobody gave us IE7 early enough, how were we supposed to fix our code".

    I can't speak for SAP, but where I work (a competitor of theirs) we don't certify for the latest and greatest IE/Service Pack/OS until it has actually been finalized and released. And that certification does take some time.

    If the customer decides to roll it out without waiting for our certification and any necessary patches, then that's their choice. If they also do it without even bothering to do internal testing to ensure the product still covers their critical functions, that's their suicide. Considering ERP products of this sort tend to be rather central to the business, it's somewhat depressing how many actually do such things without performing any testing at all.
  124. You're kidding, right? by oopsdude · · Score: 1
  125. Message for the IE team by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The equation is pretty simple for me.

    I do not trust Microsoft. MS got lazy and produced a crap, bloated browser that was embedded into the kernel of the OS (what a SHOCKER of an idea for stability and overall OS performance - but good for monopolisation) that broke every standard it could to "extend and embrace".

    Fact is, MS continues to break standards and continues to bully people. If I dump Firefox now, I know full well that MS will run IE into the ground, make it bloated, break more standards and use it to leverage the market in an unhealthy way.

    MS has a LOT of PR work to do. History tells us a lot about a company and what it will do next. Look at how long it's taken IBM to restore some faith into public perception.

  126. Are Microsoft Numbers Truefull by Bazzible · · Score: 1

    I went over to the in-laws to make sure that they were on the internet after they switched from DSL to Cable. The Road Runner Tech installed IE7 "because it is required to use the internet!" They had firefox installed as the default browser, now IE7 is on their system. I have not had to go over and clean up their system for over six months now that they we're not using IE6. I was kinda Pissed when I found out he did that without asking them. Gruff said.

  127. Bill Gates said it best by Kelson · · Score: 1
    There are plenty of reasons for installing IE7, but none of them imply that you will also be actually using it.

    "So much software gets downloaded all the time, but do people actually use it?" -- Bill Gates, May 2005. Of course, he was talking about a certain other web browser...

  128. What was that?? by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

    "Yet in the three months it's been available, Firefox's market share has continued to grow."

    I think I hear a chair bouncing off a wall in Redmond!

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  129. Switched back to IE by dave562 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Disclaimer: This tale is completely anecdotal so please refrain from your impulses to respond with how that's not how it works on your computer. Also try to refrain from calling me a moron or anything like that.

    I've been using Firefox 2.0 since beta and before IE7 came out. Like a diligent /. reader I've been keeping up on the arguments from both sides. The one that stuck out in my mind was that Firefox has a pretty bad memory leak. At the time I read it, I didn't pay much attention to it because I never noticed any slowdown or stability problems when using Firefox. That was until a few weeks ago.

    I started playing WoW a while ago and have recently been using Thotbott. I will have WoW open in one window (Full screen) and Thotbott running in Firefox in the background. After a while, WoW started chunking big time. I eventually figured out that if I closed Firefox, the chunk went away. On my system (P4 3.0ghz, 1GB RAM, XP SP2), IE7 doesn't cause WoW to chunk. I can leave Thotbott open in the background all day long.

    Although I do use Firefox for most my browsing, it isn't the IE killer that it often gets made out to be.

  130. Ooh, a Sarcasm Detector! by paladinwannabe2 · · Score: 1

    Now that would be a useful invention!

    --
    You are reading a copy of my copyrighted post.
  131. Which kind of killer? by snowwrestler · · Score: 1
    The longer that firefox maintains its current user base, the closer the time comes when a killer extension is released by someone (maybe you!).

    I totally agree! The extension model of Firefox almost guarantees that it will become a vector for exploits at some point.

    This killer extension would be something that so dramatically improves the browsing experience that pretty much everyone has to get it to be "really on the internet". By the time Microsoft rips off whatever it is, it will be too late. That is the best reason to support firefox, its extensibility means that at any moment, it could become develop a (albeit temporarily) insurmountable competitive advantage.

    Ohhh, that kind of killer extension.
    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  132. Bah! Both are evil.. by msimm · · Score: 1

    We recently had a problem with a clients website. In Firefox it displayed as expected, but IE(7/6) it didn't. We traced the problem to a piece of javascript code forgetting to close an open object tag.

    Now the question is which browser was right? Firefox simply closed the tag and displayed the broken code as it was (originally) intended to be. IE closed the tag and disregarded the remaining code (closing only tags) showing the problem.

    Both browsers have their quirks. IE7 is new and figuring out when its doing something wrong and when its simply showing you that *you're* doing something wrong can be tedious. Firefox certainly has its own quirks (moz- properties in css?) and is maybe (from a web developer POV) a little too forgiving.

    Between the two and a little WC3 validation I can generally keep myself pretty happy with the results. Sure, it would be easier to simply worry about one or the other. But thats simply not the playing field.

    As a side-note it was funny to note that the client, who is not a small company, seemed to be using FF and didn't notice the problem either. Opps!

    --
    Quack, quack.
  133. Re:In all honesty, some of these things work both by drew · · Score: 1

    I think he was talking about browser updates, not extension updates. In which case, he should be unchecking "Firefox", not "Installed Add-ons".

    And while we are talking about intelligent defaults, in a sane OS setup, the user running the browser wouldn't have permission to update it. While we know this isn't always the case, it seems to me that the 'smart' default would be to not try and perform the auto-update if the permissions necessary to do so aren't present.

    --
    If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
  134. It will be required with Windows Update by VGfort · · Score: 1

    Just like its required to have SP2 for XP, it will be a requirement pretty soon to do Windows Updates with IE7.

  135. Re:Prompting normal people to wonder: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People who care about web standards support

    Who would continue to support Internet Explorer even up to a hypothetical point of say 75% Firefox, 20% IE. Assuming this somehow happened in the near future, not way in the distance with FF 5 and IE 12 and so forth.

    People who don't use windows

    Uh. No. People who don't use Windows don't, or at the very least shouldn't, care in the slightest how one Windows-only program is faring against something else. It's none of their concern.

    People who realise competition gets them a better deal

    Define 'better deal'. They're both free, the last time I checked.

    The security conscious

    *The extemely paranoid

    Somewhat interesting that I have used IE for years and years and had no problems with viruses and the like. Hm...

    Web developers

    are part of the first group you mentioned. Except for the developers who don't care about standards I suppose, but then they have no reason to care about Firefox.

    A large proportion of Slashdot

    Yes. We know. Everyone knows by now.

  136. Re:In all honesty, some of these things work both by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    Yeah, Firefox doesn't behave very well, and the programmers there are to blame completely. In Firefox for Debian GNU/Linux (soon to be Iceweasel) they've edited the code to prevent it from looking for updates outside of the APT system.

  137. Re:In all honesty, some of these things work both by quintesse · · Score: 1

    Like in every packaged version of Firefox in every Linux distro because it would of course conflict while the whole package + central repository idea.

  138. Firefox will not beat IE. by Simetrical · · Score: 1

    I remember the good old days when Netscape was a much better browser than IE.

    I remember how I stuck loyally to Netscape for a few years.

    And I remember the day when reviewers finally said, folks, Netscape really isn't as good a browser anymore. And I switched to IE.

    Now we've come full circle. Netscape's latest incarnation is better than IE, just as its predecessor was. But it also has access to far, far less money than IE, just as its predecessor did. IE7 is just the tip of the iceberg. Microsoft is going to be the one taking back the Web, with 8 and 9, just as it took it over the first time with earlier versions. It's going to rewrite its browser so that it's faster, more featureful, more innovative, and more standards-compliant than Firefox. And then the cycle will quite possibly repeat.

    Am I wrong? Maybe, and indeed, I hope so. But IE is not defeated as long as Microsoft is not defeated, and Microsoft is not defeated as Windows is not defeated. We will not be seeing the death of IE anytime soon unless Microsoft gives up on making its own browser. Giving up isn't something Microsoft is known to do often.

    --
    MediaWiki developer, Total War Center sysadmin
  139. IE7 and FF? by Soiden · · Score: 1

    How much people, from that 100m that have IE7, have it just upgraded and actually use FireFox? I think a huge percentage.

    --
    Minti: What's that huge shuriken in your back?! Kin: It's the instrument of my victory.
  140. market by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Latest firefox releases sucx anyhow. Marketshare? that fits very well with the "turn" firefox has taken.

    Firefox has been hijacked, say goodbye to a lost child.

  141. Re:For me....'FireFox' dumps Bookmarks !!! by irjsi · · Score: 1

    FireFox has just erased my 'Bookmarks' for the second time. Any assistance would be appreciated. IE, Opera, Mozilla and FireFox installed; FireFox, most used, contained most extensive library of Bookmarks. Thank you, Roy Stewart, Phoenix AZ irjsiq@gmail.com

  142. Like car stereos by GWBasic · · Score: 1

    Browsers are like car stereos: some people will always go out-of-the-way to install an aftermarket car stereo; others will only install an aftermarket car stereo when it has a tangible feature that their existing one doesn't have. My parents just wait until they buy a new car!