Firefox 3 Already Rules the Roost
Barence writes in with a data point on Firefox 3 adoption: it's been available for 10 days, and already one site is seeing 55% of its Firefox-using visitors on version 3. "Microsoft still has three out of ten people running an old version of its browser more than 18 months after Internet Explorer 7 launched, while Firefox has converted more than half of its users to the latest version in just over a week. That should set a few alarm bells ringing in Redmond."
The majority of people who THINK about what browser they use, use something other than IE. Firefox 3 is obviously a great leap forward for the Mozilla brand, and...well, there you go.
Yup, and you can see that when people who bought the Eee PC ask you how to go to the Internet... of course Xandros has an icon properly named "The Internet" which is Firefox.
Everything is fine until they want to copy some text from the web page and paste it to a document (simliarly to what you can do with IE6 and Word) without losing the format... Eso no se puede my dear. And the deal is broken :P
Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
This is slashdot where the news will be twisted to serve it's agenda.
The numbers are inaccurate and are being twisted, as usual.
You can only run IE7 on XP or Vista. There are a lot of windows 2000 machines still out there, and even win98 as well. If it's impossible to upgrade to IE7 then how can it be counted as if people were voluntarily sticking with IE6?
Slashdot never lets the truth get in the way of it's agenda though. Never.
I just ignore ads, and do so with ease. I never understood the need for an addon to do it
Gen MacArthur just ignored gunfire too - leading him to believe he could ignore elected officials - and automobile traffic.
Huh? How the hell are any of these innovation? Let's go down the list.
Standards compliance: they're conforming to a standard, whoop-de-do. In any case, something that makes web developers' lives easier doesn't qualify as innovation to you and me, we're end users, not developers.
More flexible (I assume you mean add-ons): this was innovation in version 1. It isn't innovation any more.
Awesome bar: Haven't used it, but it doesn't sound like a very good innovation to me. I'll give you this one, though.
Runs javascript faster: Huh? In the first place, I have never noticed a problem with IE's script execution. In the second place, doing the same thing, only faster, isn't innovation either.
Isn't integrated with Windows: Correction of a stupid thing Microsoft did also is not innovation. If you leave your ice cream out in the sun, I'm not innovating by taking it inside.
Runs on Linux: Cross-platform compatibility is, by no stretch of the imagination, innovative. Apps do this all the freaking time.
"16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
Well, then I guess either my computer is stupidly overpowered (possible, I built it for gaming), or something else is going on, because I notice no lag in IE7's interface. I also use Firefox occasionally (I can't get Flash to work in IE7 and am too lazy to troubleshoot it), and notice no improvements over IE7 in terms of speed. I simply can't agree with your experience.
"16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
Uh... if you're going to sites with malicious ads, you're doing it wrong. The first step in Internet security is to avoid the sites which try to attack you.
"16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
Actually, it's www.pcpro.co.uk (TFA's site)
Now that this has been posted on /. I can only assume those numbers for ffx3 are going to be inflated.
Geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won't leave you alone.-rms
Well, I'm not a developer. I'm a user (at least as far as web pages are concerned), and when I speak of "innovation", I speak in terms of innovations from the point of view of a user (as do most people, I might add). Saying "If you were a developer you'd see the innovation" is not valid. The innovation may be there for developers, but if it isn't innovative for users, then the innovation is pretty empty, since only a small percentage of their customers are happy with their "innovation".
"16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
I agree, but it also must be noted that upgrading ffx2 --> ffx3 is much easier to upgrade than IE6 --> IE7. Also, slow adoption of IE7 is obviously a by-product of slow Vista adoption. And then there's the fact that Firefox is cross-platform...
Geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won't leave you alone.-rms
Uh... not at all. People upgrade IE all the time, and you could probably get a lot of people to join you in shouting that IE hasn't had any innovation in ages. Upgrading your browser version doesn't mean you aren't using that browser due to inertia.
"16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
I like debating with people. I do it all the time, in real life as well as on the interwebs. That isn't trolling. Trolling would be if I were deliberately distorting facts, or making inflammatory statements just to rile people up, even though I didn't believe them. Sure, I can't prove that I'm not trolling, but it speaks rather poorly of you that you just assume someone is trolling because you don't like their opinion.
"16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard