Mozilla Firefox 3 Features Screencast
An anonymous reader points to a mention at MozillaZine of "a screencast by Mozilla developer Mike Beltzner, demonstrating some of the new features in Mozilla Firefox 3, which is due out very soon. Weighing in at under four minutes, the screencast gives a concise overview of why you should be excited about Firefox 3. Due to its visual nature, the screencast shows Firefox's features far more clearly than the many written previews that have been published. A picture really is worth a thousand words."
New features like extra-fast form submission?
DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
Cool.
You could just download it.
I'm really annoyed by the new popup history/bookmars panel. Having the history open in the sidebar by default was fantastic and if you used "Sort by Last Visited" (which you should) then you can type in kittens or whatever and find it, just like the guy did with the 'awesome bar' in the demo.
I've got like 4,200 bookmarks...I tried organizing them a few times...that was a lesson in futility.
Physics is imagination in a straight jacket. ~John Moffat
You would think a /. user would be smart enough not to link directly to a flash file when submitting a story on /. considering 2% of users on here have flash.
"During My Service In The United States Congress, I Took The Initiative In Creating The Internet." -Al Gore
Dagnabbit, I can't find the conversion chart for that one anywhere, and I really want to know what I weigh in minutes.
Caveat Utilitor
I am a seasoned Linux maven, and Flash playback works perfectly for me.
Just saying.
DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
Not only will this let me I better organize my porn links, but I can avoid those Icky Malware sites, too!
Thank you Team Mozilla! The world is a better place because of your hard work.
Now, where'd I put my tube of lube...
Pacifist paratroopers yell, "Ghandi!" when they jump.
Looks very interesting, but will it trash all your very useful addons and have you swearing for the previous version?
Take Nobody's Word For It.
is that Gmail will no longer load for me. I have to use the basic html version. So guess what? I'm using IE.
Ever since I started using SVG with Firefox 1.5, I've been waiting for animation capability. The SMIL patch is apparently working reasonably well, but it's just not getting applied to 3.0. This is really sad. I appreciate all the bug fixes and performance improvements, but it's really frustrating that plugins always seem to get higher priority than web standards. Just apply the patch guys. Thanks.
I don't get excited about browsers...
Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
... then what is a 4 minute screen cast worth? 15 frames per second x 60 seconds per minute x 4 minutes x 1000 words wow 3,600,000 words!
If I install the RC, will it update itself to the released version, or will that be an uninstall/new install?
I have to say FireFox 3 has some features I can't believe have been missing up until this point. The awesome bar, looks awesome.
In fact, i find it amazing most areas of browsers haven't been "just searchable" like FireFox 3 is now, having seen how much sense this makes.
Good job guys, you're setting a high bar for the rest to follow (no doubt).
throw new NoSignatureException();
Of all the bone headed dumb ass things to do, some complete retardo moved the mouse back/froward buttons from 6/7 to 8/9. There was already massive confusion amongst users about configuring xorg.
http://support.mozilla.com/en-US/kb/Mouse+buttons+do+not+work+as+Back+and+Forward
Now this stupidity!
Why take a great product and screw up the most basic usability features?!! This is in the same league as Mr Clippy.
It's almost enough to make me want to use IE.
This sneak peak at Firefox wasted an hour of my life, watching treadmill kittens on You Tube!
Wow, the summary is totally right for once - watching the screencast makes the features actually seem desirable.
/want/ to download FF3 and get to having some of those neat widgets.
Normally you just download the software and are sort of pleasantly surprised when you find a new feature, or similarly disappointed when there are none. In this case, it actually makes me
test this stuff for the rest of you
I haven't had any real problems and flash and gmail work well for me and more importantly my wife who if she can't get her jokes and animations gets cranky with me.
Those of a DBA bent or with frequent bookmarking habits may want to look at the SQLite extension to manage the SQLlite db.
When FF3 is released - am upgrading to 3.1 to make life hell for myself for a month or two.
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.9pre) Gecko/2008060222 SeaMonkey/2.0a1pre ID:2008060222
The Singularity is closer than you think
Quant
I use ff2 and i have the same issues with gmail loading in its 'standard' view...the ff help page says "delete your cookies" which works but it slows my browsing down alot after I do it b/c each page has to upload their cookies to me...(esp. b/c i have to go to the NYTimes registration generator all over again every time i delete my cookies)...
is there anything that can be done? i'm not switching browsers...
ff3 looks good, but I hope that some of those 'awesome bar' widgets can be turned off individually...don't want all that taking up my cycles...
Thank you Dave Raggett
Holy crap. This guy is talking WAY too fast.
Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
There's more of us, so watch it!
damaged by dogma
I'll wait until there is an extension that cleanly removes the awesomebar. What a retarded waste of development time (and a really stupid name). It is a feature that will require an extension writer to waste even more time getting rid of it and replacing it with FF2 behavior. Howabout spending that time cleaning up the gobs of memory leaks..
HTH.
My good deed for the day. Now I have to go rob a blind child to keep the universal karma in balance.
Deleted
Dagnabbit, I can't find the conversion chart for that one anywhere, and I really want to know what I weigh in minutes.
It's a sliding scale.
Time = money.
Multiply how much your time is worth by the length of the video.
Weigh that money (in cash, no coins; round off to the nearest paper bill).
Et voila, le profit!
My consulting fee is in the mail...
I noticed in the screencast that they went to google to see why a site was reported as a malware site. Do they constantly forward stuff to Google to do these checks? That wasn't explained. What do they send and when do they send it? I'd like to be told if they're doing that.
What were they thinking there?
Honestly I don't like all the new terms and "presentational" stuff. I feel in their attempt to make the browser more accessible they're doing the exact opposite.
Why do we need a little officer named Larry to identify the websites? Why does he have to turn different colors? Is the presence of absence of information in the site-lookup not enough?
Favicons? Why not just give the site identifier a "?" icon so its function is more readily understandable? Have we forgotten how important universal symbolism is to the user experience?
The method all these new features take to presenting themselves seem to bog the experience down more than make it valuable and usable. My mother, whose PC I've recently transitioned to Firefox, is not going to remember "favicons" and what it means when Larry the site-identifying-police-officer-icon turns different colors.
The SWF from Mozilla doesn't seem to be loading. Here's a YouTube link to the same video: http://youtube.com/watch?v=Q_JBKNiRRJ4
When will the firefox team steal opera's "fast forward" feature?
I still want my "Find..." dialog back. :(
All hope abandon ye who enter here.
Most people who connect to Slashdot use Windows. It's the reality of working in the computer field today.
Vint Cerf said it's true. Quote from your sig: ' "During My Service In The United States Congress, I Took The Initiative In Creating The Internet." -Al Gore'
Several years ago I asked Vint Cerf about that, and he said it is true. Vint Cerf, and many other people, connected a lot of computers together, in a project called ArpaNet, which was then a scheme by the U.S. government to make killing people and destroying property more efficient. Originally you could only connect if you worked for a company with "Defense" (killing-related) contracts.
Al Gore made ArpaNet the public utility it is today. Vint Cerf, and others, had technical power. Al Gore had the political power to take the network away from the control of those who study how to kill, and make it available to everyone. Al Gore's initiative was strongly opposed by many of those who had access, including someone I knew at Tektronix at the time, because they didn't want commercial involvement.
Most politicians at the time didn't even know how to type. Keyboards were for secretaries. The head of IBM at the time didn't have a computer in his office! (Former IBM CEO Lou Gerstner said that in his book, Who Says Elephants Can't Dance?)
Al Gore's involvement showed technical foresight then far more advanced than that of almost all or all politicians today.
There are two parts of the Republican Party, a real party, and a party of corruption. The party of corruption sells favors from the U.S. government to whomever pays the most. One of the ways they do that is by finding angry people and helping them act out their anger by supplying them with words that have been market-tested for believability. Example: The Republicans are not "Conservative". That apply that term to themselves because they know it will get votes.
Being hostile toward Al Gore was part of what they did to put George W. Bush in office, only that.
The article links to a .swf file, but all it does in my Ubuntu FF3b5 is bring up a screenshot. I have the flash-nonfree plugin installed. I'm obviously missing something, but what?
Interesting in these days of web marketing.... These guys are confident enough in their market research and execution that they are willing to demonstrate the new features in a 'cast like this. Most companies (unnamed, cause the list is so long..) would rather: - release some text, maybe a screenshot or two (thinking games software now) - repeat the same story over and over and over... and then - leave it up to the community to generate the hype for them. Things may not be perfect, but this is marketing I can appreciate. Try that with your favourite brand of gasoline.
Is there a way to see a list of "reported attack site" sites, or to add to them? I want to be sure goatse and on.nimp are on there.
CORPORATION, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility.
"Due to its visual nature, the screencast shows Firefox's features far more clearly than the many written previews that have been published. A picture really is worth a thousand words."
or, you know... you could just install it and see for yourself.
I mostly miss the feature "as fast and stable as konqueror". At least in linux is as unstable as a 4 years old win95, and crawls to death trying to scroll down this webpage's comments.
As long as about:mozilla shows up, I'm happy.
You kids and your fancy screencasts. When I was little, all we had were videos and we liked it that way.
[no text]
FF2 had "Open parent folder" in the downloaded window. This button is missing in FF3. I want to annotate websites and save them locally. Browser should display them automatically next time I visit that website! Didn't Mosaic have this feature?
WTF is a "screencast"?
audio but no video in mplayer. doesn't play in the browser either in linux. dumb.
In Firefox 3 (with Linux Mint) when I type a search in the google box, I get my web results as normal.. but there are none of the links at the top that I find handy... For example in FF2 I could type "Sacramento" in the google search, get my results and I would have links at the top.. "News" "Maps" .. so I could click on "Maps" and get the google map.. To do the same thing in FF3 I actually have to go to google first... not a major problem, but I was used to the other way... Is this a Mint thing or a FF3 thing ? ... the options in managing the search engines doesn't show an alternate google search.
waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
For all you fedora/pusleaudo ( and maybe ubuntu ) users don't forget to install libflashsupport for the flash sound!
While I'm sure that there are about:config enteries that will fix all this stuff, I wonder if this sort of thing is really such a good idea.
I want to enter and address and have it fail if I mistype it.
I don't want want browser pulling up anything I didn't explicitly tell it to. I don't want an address bar that guesses anything. I don't want a browser to list links to "sugested" sites as I start typing anywhere.
It seems like more and more firefox wants to take control (and privacy) out of our hands. At least by default anyway.
Firefox has all kinds of ways already to send your input to some 3rd party website or "service" (usually google) to make "helpful sugestions" etc.
There's something very wrong with the idea of a browser connecting to a 3rd party to "guss" at what I wanted and then rendering whatever it finds there. It's not like googles "i feel lucky" search hasn't been used by malicious folks before.
Am I the only one who finds this sort of thing creepy?
Am I alone in wondering why we should have to modify about:config settings disable things like suggestions, keywords, fixup, browser.send_pings, autorefresh, etc after every fresh install just to get a browser that isn't taking me where *it* thinks I should go and tracking me while I'm there!
"A picture really is worth a thousand words."
Anyone who says that hasn't seen my art.
My picutres are worth about 3 letters. I'll let you figure out which 3...
is such a geek term for something, I feel ashamed recommending it to 'normal' folks. "Hey guys, come and look at the new Mozilla Firefox 3 RC2, its got an AWESOME BAR!!!"
like phosphorescent desert buttons singing one familiar song
Its going to be a wonderful tool to tag the files, folders in the hard drives locally and retrieve them back using the awesome toolbar. Many a times i keep all the files i am working on the desktop, then i organize them into folders, and put a shortcut to the folder on the desktop to retrieve it fast. But firefox 3 might change the way i am going to organize. I always wonder when the browser would become the desktop, this is one step more towards it.
My only measure of this is I have gone through all the comments and I have yet to see a comment of the form ...
"Opera had this 16 months ago" In fact this is the first mention of the Opera browser that I noticed
It's basically auto-complete, but impossible to disable. Furthermore, isntead of keeping addresses that I actually typed into the address bar, it shows frequented sites. That is stupid. I have a bookmarks folder for a reason, it can be searched. Take away the awesome bar!
"He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." --Paul Atreides, Dune
Is that a video?
Why not call it a video?
What is it with people making up nonsense words all the time.
I tried Firefox 3 for a while. It's great for general browsing. There are 2 major downsides, though --
First, it's butt ugly. Installing themes helped some, but not completely.
Second, half of my plugins don't work. I use Firebug, WebDeveloper, and Selenium all the time. Selenium and Webdeveloper don't work yet, and Firebug for FF3 is not yet ready for prime time. I downgraded to FF2 so I can continue to work.
So they made the URL bar more annoying and even less like a URL bar, moved the bookmark button into the URL bar, made the favicon display the name of the company that owns the site, and added a bookmark search.
Am I missing something? How is this a point release?
If you ask me, this is inexcusable. Shouldn't many more people have this problem? Doesn't Vista by default try very aggressively to set up a v6 connection automatically?
I swear I am just amazed (I'm not sure if I should be anymore however) at the amount of idiotic hypocrisy that I have found on Slashdot recently. Changing the User Interface is ALWAYS going to happen and just because you got used to some pre-1990s feature doesn't mean it should get in the way of the new users coming on board. It also by NO MEANS WHAT SO EVER, should come in the way of the natural evolution of software. Exactly the same thing happened with Office 2007 came out with their brand new UI. For Christ sake, how can anyone think the old UI was better than the new one? It just ISN'T. Likewise with the new "awesome bar". Its far more uniform with technology of today (tagging, searching and relevance) than the old location bar.
I tried that...i deleted all the google and gmail cookies individually and it changed nothing...
Thank you Dave Raggett
Watching this video *on* firefox 3 on my laptop with 1024 x 768 resolution doesn't work!
For some reason if the whole flash doesn't fit on the screen, firefox won't let me scroll to see the rest of it. Bug?
The biggest reason to use FF3: they finally fixed the stupid memory leaks.
at first glance.. i despise the fact that the favicon or "identity" button can change color and grow to show more information.
if its not Broken don't fix it. The Location bar was fine, all the "new" features of it basically does what the search bookmarks/history sidebar already did...
an "awesome sidebar" would have been good....not being given the choice of how to use something as fundamental as the location bar,or even the adjective to describe it is .... microsofty.
what makes(made?) ff great was that it was a simple browser without any of the stuff you didn't want or need.... and if you CHOSE to have crap you wanted or needed, thats what the addons were for.
We need an extension that checks visited sites against netnanny and erases the naughty ones from the FF history.
It took a couple of days getting used to the awesome bar (I also had the problem that "sl" for slashdot gave a lot of irrelevant sites).
:-)
However, either it learns, or I'm unconsciously getting better typing the right words.
And best of all - you can delete the items displayed by hovering above them and pressing "delete".
So you *can* clean the embarrassing porn links away
so at 25fps for 4 minutes, the video is worth 6 million words. That's almost 2x "War and Peace".
That address bar is brilliant.
:/
I've seen several complaints across the web about it and I simply do not know how.
I am the first person to complain when something changes un-necessarily (Windows Vista's explorer in classic mode is nothing short of an abortion, a filthy disgusting abortion and I mean every goddamned word of that, you'd be surprised how many little bugs are in it)
That being said, this firefox bar is virtually flawless, it seems to remember what I normally open based on what I type, how often I go there, how many times I hit the down arrow for another option etc.
As a hardcore keyboard user, I love it.
The only flaw is one of the benefits and that's how it hunt and pecks through your bookmarks.
If you share your machine and say you have bookmarks like 'tranny gets railed by 15 guys' it could be kind of bad if your co-worker jumps on your PC and starts typing in 'tran' for transmission or transformers in the address bar
Baring that though, it truely is gold.
Oh and it's genuinely and substantially faster.
Now just fix google browser sync, tabs menu and we're good to go.
There were two things about the demo that stood out as an "Ah-ha!", to me. The front man was using a screen recorder with audio attached to show how a product worked. This technique could be modified to teach a lesson that is taught in school. Kids that miss a day because of some other activity scheduling could get the lesson on their time, not class time. Then another "Ah-ha!" happened. This could be bundled with open source products to show how the product is envisioned to work. One of greatest short comings of software in general is its learning curve. This concept could lower the learning curve Geometrically.
No it shouldn't. Get an extension.
> But the code is all open source, so if lots of people side with you, I'm sure we'll see a new browser branch off from FF2 that backports all of the FF3 speed improvements.
Or you could fork the feature-bloated Firefox to create a leaner, meaner, cut down browser. Maybe it could be called Fenghuang ?