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IE8 Beta Released To Public

Tim writes "English, German, Simplified Chinese, and Japanese versions of Internet Explorer 8 have been released for public beta. New features include accelerators, which provide instant context menu access for a number of common tasks; automatic crash recovery, which prevents a single page's failures from taking down your entire browser; and browser privacy, a feature that didn't make Firefox 3. I'm primarily a Firefox user, and I've been using IE8 at work (MS) for the past few weeks. It's a definite improvement over previous versions, and brings a lot to the table that Firefox requires extensions for. Give it a spin, submit feedback, and help keep all browser makers on their toes by facing each other's competition."

605 comments

  1. Shows what competion can do. by xzvf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While IE8 doesn't work on my chosen platform, it shows again how open source sparks development in stagnant environments. This product would never have happened without Firefox.

    1. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Bashae · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yup, I'm wondering why the beta is available in german rather than a language with more speakers, such as spanish. Are they perhaps trying to win back the notoriously large amount of Firefox users in Germany?

    2. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I believe that German was chosen over Spanish for the betas because it's the second-most popular spoken language for programmers (at least, it used to be; I'm not too sure anymore). They cover the top two for debuggers out there, and then also include packages for Chinese and Japanese to test the character rendering and what-not.

    3. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Swizec · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If that were the case then it would've been offered in Slovenian ... we use firefox quite extensively.

    4. Re:Shows what competion can do. by naylor83 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yep, it's kind of mind-boggling what the Firefox team has accomplished indirectly.

    5. Re:Shows what competion can do. by will_die · · Score: 5, Informative

      According to the European and thier language report German is the 2nd highest known language in the EU at 32% of the population speaking the language. Spanish is at 15% and is 5th.
      For the top 5 it is:
      English 51%
      German 32%
      French 26%
      Italian 16%
      Spanish 15%

      Also by mother tounue German is at 18% and Spanish is at 9%

    6. Re:Shows what competion can do. by eggoeater · · Score: 2

      Germany has the largest economy in continental Europe.

    7. Re:Shows what competion can do. by shird · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What makes you think those people seeking an alternative browser wouldn't have chosen Opera instead? (not open source, and frankly much better than both FF and IE IMHO).

      Yes FF has a bigger market share than Opera, but Opera may have had that share if FF didn't exist, prompting MS to take the same action.

      --
      I.O.U One Sig.
    8. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Boo Hoo. Your browser is dead. Get over it.

    9. Re:Shows what competion can do. by TheP4st · · Score: 5, Informative

      Native Spanish speaking population in the world 330 million
      Native German speaking population in the world 100 million

      --
      "I have downloaded hundreds and hundreds of records, why would I care if somebody downloads ours?" Robin Pecknold
    10. Re:Shows what competion can do. by nhstar · · Score: 3, Informative

      Opera is a good choice, and a fine browser. And it is still, hands-down best for testing standards compliance (in my humble opinion).

      The only real fault they made at getting market share was waiting as long as they did before making it available for free. I don't pretend to know the finer-points of their business model, or Mozilla's for that matter, but people saw two browsers available gratis and one where you paid $35us (if i remember right...). If you could buy a Porsche or or have a VW, which would you be driving?

      --
      --- no sig to see here... move along.
    11. Re:Shows what competion can do. by jorx · · Score: 5, Informative

      Opera wasn't free until Firefox existed... so, there's that...

    12. Re:Shows what competion can do. by MobyDisk · · Score: 5, Funny

      In that case, they would have released it in Klingon. Everyone who I know who speaks even a small amount of Klingon, uses Firefox.

    13. Re:Shows what competion can do. by GIL_Dude · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually almost all Microsoft Beta code is available in the same languages at first - English, German, Japanese, and sometimes Simplified Chinese. The thing is that they are trying for coverage of the code to make sure localizations fit dialogs, etc. For example, of the languages that use an English like character set (what is it called, Roman or whatever), German tends to have the longest words / phrases. So by covering German they find out whether all of the localizations are going to fit in the space provided. In a similar way, by covering Japanese (and in this case Simplified Chinese) they are covering localizations in non-Roman character sets. Its really not about the number of users / speakers - its about the coverage of testing on the localizations and getting them to fit properly.

    14. Re:Shows what competion can do. by SirGarlon · · Score: 0

      Spanish is at 15% and is 5th.

      That's in the EU. Off the top of my head I would say it's second (possibly first) in North America, and certainly first in South America.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    15. Re:Shows what competion can do. by laejoh · · Score: 3, Funny

      It's an insider joke: Die IE8, Die IE8!

    16. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      anyone know the numbers of native spanish speaking programmers vs. native german speaking programmers in the world ? this might cease this useless discussion.

    17. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Coopa · · Score: 1

      That's rather non-sequitur and not what the parent is saying, though i agree that saying that 3rd party browsers building a larger marketshare overall has had an affect on IE updates and not just Firefox.

      Your point seems to be that if Firefox didn't exist then Opera could have done this. Wasn't Opera around prior to Firefox?

      It's all down to personal preference, i guess. Personally i have used Opera a few times in the past and found Firefox (and it's many predeccesors) more to my liking.

    18. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      now, try to get stats for "native spanish speaking working with teh internet" and for "native german speaking poulation working with teh internet"... i fear you will get the inverse values.
      a.

    19. Re:Shows what competion can do. by duffbeer703 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How many Germans use a computer every day?

      How many Mexicans, Columbians and Venezuelans use a computer every day?

      --
      Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
    20. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Tom90deg · · Score: 1

      Well, would that be second language, or "Known" language? I'd have to say English is the most known language in the US, but it'd definatly number 1 on second languages.

    21. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why not Arabic or some other right-to-left reading script. Surely that would stress corner cases in the rendering engine?

    22. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All people aren't equal. At least not in the eyes of companies.

      Rich people that speak German > Poor people that speak Spanish.

    23. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Beezlebub33 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Spanish is at 15% and is 5th.

      That's in the EU. Off the top of my head I would say it's second (possibly first) in North America, and certainly first in South America.

      I don't think so on the last one. Around 50% of the population of South America is in Brazil, and for them it's Portuguese (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_america). If you look at the statistics for internet users in South America, it's going to be Portuguese as well.

      --
      The more people I meet, the better I like my dog.
    24. Re:Shows what competion can do. by spiffyman · · Score: 0

      This is OT, but I've got karma to burn, so what the hell?

      Hey dude. If you're going to talk smack about a politician's lack of knowledge, you might try to spell "than" properly. You come off as an angry 14-year-old who hasn't the faintest clue what's going on.

      --
      So you can laugh all you want to...
    25. Re:Shows what competion can do. by FredFredrickson · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Two words: Mouse Gestures. Cannot browse without it.

      --
      Belief? Hope? Preference?The Existential Vortex
    26. Re:Shows what competion can do. by diegocgteleline.es · · Score: 0, Troll

      There're not many spanish-speaking programmers. Most of the spanish speakers live in countries where getting a internet connection is not so easy as in EEUU/europe/japan

    27. Re:Shows what competion can do. by jonas_jonas · · Score: 1

      Yes, but it changes, if you think about money (GDP per Capita).

      There is probably much more money to earn with the german speaking population, than with the spanish speaking population.

      Though, it might change in the next few decades.

    28. Re:Shows what competion can do. by muszek · · Score: 1

      Opera sells mobile version of their browser. Mozilla gets craploads of cash from Google, I guess for using G as the default search engine... there's this "search bar" with G pre-selected and AFAIR you get a co-branded start page when you install FF if it's not packaged by a 3rd party (Ubuntu for example changes it). 85% of Mozilla's $66.8M revenue came from Google in 2006.

    29. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      ermm... actually, greek language has the longest words

    30. Re:Shows what competion can do. by FishWithAHammer · · Score: 1

      Because there are a lot more Chinese/Japanese users than Arabic users.

      --
      "You can either have software quality or you can have pointer arithmetic, but you cannot have both at the same time."
    31. Re:Shows what competion can do. by psychodelicacy · · Score: 2, Informative

      But the bulk of that figure for Spanish is made up of people living in Latin America, where studies suggest only a relatively small percentage of the population uses the internet. Cuba has only recently begun allowing PCs in private homes. Some countries in Latin America have less than 3% of the population using the internet; Germany has over 40% (Data refers to years 2004-06; Source) Personal computer ownership per 100 is generally much lower than internet usage per 100 in Latin America, suggesting that this is also a market that can't necessarily choose which software is installed on the computers used.

      So, in terms of numbers there are certainly more Spanish-speakers out there using the internet, but a lot of them are in situations where internet usage is rationed and/or not entirely under the user's control. In contrast, Germany has a high rate of internet usage and a high take-up of Firefox - and most users are probably using their own machines, not internet cafes or the like. The figures don't, at first, seem to make sense, but when you take into account the low rates of internet usage and computer ownership in the majority of Spanish-speaking countries, it begins to seem less anomalous.

      --
      A closed mouth gathers no foot.
    32. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Swizec · · Score: 0

      Well to be honest, VW's aren't that great cars and even though most chav-like people have them real self-respecting citizens opt for something better.

      But I digress. Opera has always been free, the fee was just to get rid of the ads or you could, as I used to, go with a little irony and use Opera to find a code for Opera and get rid of the ads for free.

      I mean, that's why most people's IE is free, not because it comes with windows.

    33. Re:Shows what competion can do. by limaxray · · Score: 3, Insightful

      German is actually the second most communicated language, right after English. This directly translates to the fact that German is the second most common language on the internet. Granted, most of it is probably porn, but never the less it means more German speaking people would use IE8 than most other language speakers. Why is this? Because Germany has by far one of the strongest economies in the world (3rd behind the US and Japan) and thus can afford greater internet access. Actually, funny thing is the top four economies in the world are the US, Japan, Germany, and China; native speakers of the same four language released.

      Spanish, on the other hand, while spoken by many in the real world, isn't nearly as common in the information world.

    34. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Aedrin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This has been questioned before. Their simple response was that German provided more unique wording situations that may or may not work in the UI. So it's completely about testing coverage, not winback opportunities.

    35. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      dont forget brazil!

    36. Re:Shows what competion can do. by jrumney · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Microsoft has long had a policy of translating into German and Japanese first. German words tend to be longer than other languages (except perhaps Dutch) so translation into German catches problems where text overflows the space allocated for it on the screen, and Japanese catches all the stupid character==byte assumptions that programmers make. I'm not sure why they don't do Arabic early as well to flush out left to right assumptions (also affecting Hebrew) and assumptions that characters have a one to one relationship with glyphs (also affecting Indian and South East Asian scripts).

    37. Re:Shows what competion can do. by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1, Troll

      I'm still not impressed. I don't care how many whizzy-gig features Microsoft adds to their browser. It is still useless to developers until Microsoft installs standards support. And by standards support, we don't just mean fixing the broken setAttribute method. How about supporting a fucking decade old standards?!? Nope, still no mention of it. In fact, the bug on the issue was "closed by design".

      By design? By fucking design?!?! BULLSHIT. Microsoft does not want to be interoperable with other Web Browsers. Period. If Microsoft really wanted to turn around their image in the market, they can start with something as stupidly simple as supporting addEventListener, removeEventListener, and dispatchEvent. I don't even care if the code looks like this:

      Element.prototype.addEventListener = function(name, callback, capture) { attachEvent("on"+name, callback); }

      ^That's fucking WRONG and it would STILL be an improvement!

      Microsoft can take their God damn browser and shove it where the sun don't shine for all I care. They have shown such incredible disdain for their customers, that I have to wonder why their even trying to hide it from the market.

      *DEEP BREATH*

      Microsoft, you are transparent. Your juvenile attempts at lock-in are NOT working and will NOT work. All you're going to do is piss off the people recommending software to grandma, grandpa, mom, dad, sisters, cousins, next door neighbors, school teachers, bosses, subordinates, government agencies, etc. IE will continue to lose market share. It won't be much longer before the alternative browsers reach critical mass. Many websites already show Firefox maintaining parity or even surpassing Internet Explorer. If you actually want to WIN the market, try competing for a change!

      Can I get an AMEN?

    38. Re:Shows what competion can do. by pcolaman · · Score: 5, Informative

      They primarily speak Portuguese, not Spanish.

    39. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be Portugese

    40. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mouse Gestures. Cannot browse without it.

      You must be pretty spasticated then.

    41. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Insanity+Defense · · Score: 2

      dont forget brazil!

      Why not? Brazil's language is Portuguese not Spanish.

    42. Re:Shows what competion can do. by ColdWetDog · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You come off as an angry 14-year-old who hasn't the faintest clue what's going on.

      Maybe he is a 14-year old who hasn't the faintest clue what's going on, you insensitive clod.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    43. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was citing statistics for the EU, not worldwide. (Obviously there are more speakers in the new world, IIRC Mexico alone has a higher population than Spain.)

    44. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, let's just assume that Spanish speakers are as likely to use a computer as German speakers.

      Disclaimer: I speak neither. I just can't imagine computers being too prevalent in South America.

    45. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone who I know who speaks even a small amount of Klingon, uses Firefox.

      [Enable scripts in NoScript] Kuplah!

    46. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Foofoobar · · Score: 1

      No Deutsch was chosen because deutschers rule! Wo ist irhen vater? :)

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
    47. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Yvan256 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't attribute all the credits to Firefox alone. Apple has been pushing Safari a lot lately and Opera aren't just sitting around, Opera is improving a lot too.

    48. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Hyppy · · Score: 2

      Hey dude. If you're going to talk smack about a politician's lack of knowledge, you might try to spell "than" properly. You come off as an angry 14-year-old who hasn't the faintest clue what's going on.

      How about a couple of facts?

      1) GP's author is not a native English speaker.
      2) I don't see "than" or "then" anywhere in the GP.
      3) I have yet to see someone in this thread "talk smack" about any politician.

      If you're going to burn karma, at least make it worth it. Perhaps, try replying to the correct post. Otherwise, you come off as an angry 14-year-old who hasn't the faintest clue what's going on.

    49. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Bashae · · Score: 1

      That's very interesting. Thank you for clearing that up.

    50. Re:Shows what competion can do. by whoisjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I use Firefox, but I only know how to swear in Klingon.

    51. Re:Shows what competion can do. by IRGlover · · Score: 1

      1) Fair point
      2) check the sig
      3) goto 2

      Kind of makes your closing comment a bit ironic doesn't it...

      (on a side note, as soon as I see the use of 'then' in place of 'than' I immediately think of the US as it seems to be fairly common mistake for USians (much like 'axe'/'ax' instead of 'ask'). So my initial thoughts about your first point were a little doubtful.)

    52. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Opera also wasn't free until they were making all their money on mobile device tie-ins. Somehow I think that was more of a deciding factor than browser competition, which had been provided in much greater volume by Microsoft before Firefox ever existed.

    53. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Hyppy · · Score: 2, Informative

      much like 'axe'/'ax' instead of 'ask

      So, in your observation, citizens of the United States speak African American Vernacular English?

    54. Re:Shows what competion can do. by rocketPack · · Score: 4, Funny

      I think my dad is at home right now, why? Or did you mean, "Wer is ihr Vater?"

    55. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can I get an AMEN?

      No, because you're blowing this waaaay out of proportion.

    56. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Microsoft localizes into several languages early in product development. They are usually German, Japanese or Chinese, and Arabic or Hebrew. These languages are chosen because they allow for the broadest coverage of localizability testing without going through the time and expense of localizing every language on early builds of the product.

      German is chosen because it has very long words.
      Japanese or Chinese are chosen to get a glyph-based complex script language.
      Arabic or Hebrew are chosen to get RTL testing.

      You don't find many product bugs when you test in a language like Spanish. You do find quite a few when you localize to German ("text in dialog foo is clipped because all of the words localize to 34783 characters long")

    57. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Chelloveck · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm wondering why the beta is available in german rather than a language with more speakers, such as spanish.

      I have no inside knowledge of IE8, but I've worked on other localized products before. It's quite likely that the German translators were done, but the Spanish translators were still working on it. In other words, it may not have really been a conscious choice by MS to include German but not Spanish, just an artifact of the translators' schedules.

      --
      Chelloveck
      I give up on debugging. From now on, SIGSEGV is a feature.
    58. Re:Shows what competion can do. by KURAAKU+Deibiddo · · Score: 1

      Opera was hardly the first piece of software to have a tabbed document interface, nor even the first browser to have this. But to be honest, how many pieces of software don't borrow ideas from other software? Microsoft is at least as much prone to copying as open source is, and Apple hasn't gotten where it is without using ideas first created by Xerox, etc.

      As long as you're not stealing code (e.g. it's not under a license that permits you using it), I tend to think of taking inspiration from how something else does something more along the lines of paraphrasing, rather than outright plagiarism. Since IE, Firefox, Safari, Opera, etc. all have the same purpose, it's pretty natural to expect that they'll have similarities. Arguing about "stealing" tabs seems a lot like arguing about "stealing" the back button.

      xzvf does have a valid point, though...if not for Firefox stealing market share from IE, do you really believe that Microsoft would be working so hard on IE development? Look at how long IE6 stagnated. Once they'd effectively killed off Netscape, they thought they won the browser war. Sure, competition from closed-source browsers is helping the situation, as well, but I think it's pretty clear that Microsoft sees Mozilla as the biggest threat. I may be wrong about this, but it certainly seems that concerns about letting the monopoly slip away are fueling their attempts to "reach out" to open source, and their attempts to "embrace" standards.

      Still, if IE8 does deliver the standards-compliance by default that's been promised, it'll be a great improvement for web developers, even if it won't get me to encourage anyone to use IE. Having to work around the failings of IE6/7 only creates more work and frustration. I just wish they'd offer it for Windows 2000; Google Analytics continues to show me far too many people using IE6 on it. Most of the domains for which I skimmed Analytics data (7 of them, only one of which had more traffic from IE than Firefox) show Firefox as the most popular browser, but IE6 usage ranges from approximately 3-30% of the traffic, depending on site, and basically all of these visitors are still using Win 2k.

    59. Re:Shows what competion can do. by IRGlover · · Score: 1

      I don't think that is what I stated and, if it was, I actually meant that it is an element of speech that makes me think that the user is from the US. If it can then be used to narrow down to a particularly community, fair enough.

      I was talking in broad strokes, and so an African American vernacular is, by definition, something that relates to the US.

      So, in my conclusion, some citizens of the United States speak African American Vernacular English. I don't think that you can disagree with that ;-)

    60. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      It didn't have to be Firefox; if Opera had actually been more pre-active about getting users, they might have spurred Microsoft into action. Also, I'm guessing Apple's Safari had no small influence in the matter.

      But it all sums to: "competition is good."

    61. Re:Shows what competion can do. by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And Firefox would never have happened without earlier versions of IE.

    62. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Opera had many years to accomplish that, but they didnt. Then firef

    63. Re:Shows what competion can do. by V!NCENT · · Score: 1

      FF has a mouse gestures plugin available.

      High speed, can't live without it. No Opera's performance sucks when it comes to website cluttered with flash (banners, networking sites with youtube stuff) and promotional website (flash banners and 'controls' and Quicktime plugins and whatnot) compared to FF3. It is also full with a shitload of bugs that are less annoying than FF3 ones.

      --
      Here be signatures
    64. Re:Shows what competion can do. by failedlogic · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but you're looking at % of pop. that *speaks* x language. I'd be willing to bet that the literacy rate, http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/socind/literacy.htm , for some of the countries that speak some of these languages is different.

      An illiterate person can probably get away with using the web. And on illiteracy, consider too that if 15% of the world speaks Spanish but only 10% are literate, then it reduces the potential audience let alone those that can afford a computer. Heck, there are families in Canada and the US that cannot afford a computer and they are literate. Sadly enough.

      And lets not forget that even if you are literate and speak a language well, it does not mean you can write it. Nigerian 411's being the prime example of this.

    65. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Foofoobar · · Score: 1

      heh...verdammt spelling! I always get the two mixed up... meinen deutsch ist sehr schlecht.

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
    66. Re:Shows what competion can do. by T-Bone-T · · Score: 2, Insightful

      People don't get Opera because there are free alternatives that don't have ads. Which would most people use: a free, ad-supported browser or the free and ad-free browser that came with their computer? People are stupid but they aren't that stupid.

    67. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      German if often one of the primary languages for localizaion because it tends to be more verbose (lots of long compound words, ect) than other languages so localizing into German catches a lot of issues with string that overflow the intended display area or wrap unexpectedly.

    68. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many of the native Spanish speaking people live in poor countries without easy access to computers, internet or decent sanitation?

      Germans?

    69. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I use internet and my computer every single day of my life. As the matter of fact I'm a Programmer... and I live in Mexico, can we stop using stupid stereotypes?.
      Although I agree that Germany is _very_ IT active (in KDE for example several of the contributors are Germans).

    70. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how many people in Mexico, which is a third-world country, are just waiting to download the newest IE beta so that they can provide feedback on it? Mexico has a hard time paving its streets or finishing construction, you think they're sitting around waiting for IE8? This isn't a bash on Mexico, I enjoy spending time down there, the people and food are great, but if I was a developer I wouldn't target them with a beta version of my software for testing.

    71. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Cabriel · · Score: 1

      Japanese is a right-to-left language.

    72. Re:Shows what competion can do. by pohl · · Score: 1

      AMEN. Don't listen to those who say you're whining or blowing it out of proportion. If we don't demand quality and conformance, it'll never happen.

      --

      The "cue the foo posts in 3, 2, 1..." posts will commence with no subsequent foo posts in 3, 2, 1...

    73. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever tried to localize a software product? German always messes everything up because of the ridiculously long words. I'm guessing this is why the wanted German in the beta.

    74. Re:Shows what competion can do. by KnightNavro · · Score: 1

      So it the GP's. It should be "ist," not "is."

    75. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      Opera hasn't had ads since at least 3 or 4 major versions, if not more.

    76. Re:Shows what competion can do. by fprintf · · Score: 1

      So says Mr. Nicholas Eustanistopolous!

      --
      This post brought to you by your friendly neighborhood MBA.
    77. Re:Shows what competion can do. by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      You find German speakers in Germany, Austria, parts of Switzerland, and not many other places. You find Spanish speakers in Spain and most of Latin America.

    78. Re:Shows what competion can do. by AceofSpades19 · · Score: 1

      Opera was around before FF and it didn't do anything anyways, so why would it all of sudden do it now if FF suddenly disappeared?

    79. Re:Shows what competion can do. by GnomeChompsky · · Score: 1

      Kind of. Writing horizontally, it's a left-to-right language, but writing vertically, it's right-to-left..... ie, the lines start on the left-hand side of the page and then wrap successively rightwards.

      But I don't think that's how it's usually displayed in computerized type......

    80. Re:Shows what competion can do. by thegnu · · Score: 1

      So it the GP's. It should be "ist," not "is."

      And it should be "So IS the GP's" :) /grammarnazism

      --
      Please stop stalking me, bro.
    81. Re:Shows what competion can do. by anaesthetica · · Score: 1

      IE (and Firefox for that matter) would never have happened without earlier versions of Netscape.

      (We can do this reductio ad absurdum all afternoon, if you like.)

    82. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most non-native english speakers get than/then right because they've practised this a lot and have learned the difference between comparative and time.

    83. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who modded this as informative?

      Beside Brazil (who speaks Portuguese), and French Guyana (French), all South American countries (Columbia and Venezuela included) speak Spanish and not Portuguese, like Mexico.

    84. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

      they dropped ads in 8.5, current version is 9.5

    85. Re:Shows what competion can do. by saveonweb · · Score: 1

      I would agree. IE8 follows Firefox and make innovative features available to users that FF fails to reach. Kinda making these features standards and gain popularity for them.

    86. Re:Shows what competion can do. by stormwatcher · · Score: 1

      They primarily speak Portuguese, not Spanish.

      This is not quite correct. The only country with Portuguese as its official language in South America is Brazil. Colombians and Venezuelans DO speak spanish (just like the mexicans). But you are correct when say that these people don't have access to a computer every day like most people above the equator line, but this is another discussion.

    87. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      heh...verdammt spelling! I always get the two mixed up... meinen deutsch ist sehr schlecht.

      GPL raus! Microsoft uber alles.

    88. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Foofoobar · · Score: 1

      Geezo people relax...would you. Language is a mutable thing. As long as we can understand the attempt at a failed joke and the germans rule, that's what is TRULY important. :)

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
    89. Re:Shows what competion can do. by MobyDisk · · Score: 3, Funny

      That's half the language. If you study the Klingon learning tapes, that is the first thing they teach you.

    90. Re:Shows what competion can do. by mrdoogee · · Score: 1

      Stop trying to use reason and logic! If the /. has taught us anything, it is that everything everyone does ever is wrong.
      on a related note, MSIE should be released in Cornish

    91. Re:Shows what competion can do. by number17 · · Score: 1

      And IE would never have happ3ened without earlier versions of Mosaic!

    92. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. Firefox's community is much stronger and that is essentially what makes it a catalyst.

    93. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      Really? I don't recall seeing as for the last few years.

    94. Re:Shows what competion can do. by pcolaman · · Score: 1

      again, I was speaking about Brazil, not the other countries. If you know how to READ, you'd realize I was responding to the guy who said "dont forget brazil!" Geez, I guess reading comprehension isn't required in schools anymore.

    95. Re:Shows what competion can do. by stormwatcher · · Score: 1

      So sorry...anyway i'll get my book on reading comprehension and try to hone my skills on that...

    96. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how many of those spanish speaking people are tech savvy?

    97. Re:Shows what competion can do. by pcolaman · · Score: 2, Funny

      You do that. I want a 10 page report by tomorrow :p

    98. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

      well, 8.5 came out back in Q3 2005, so it has been about 3 years.

    99. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not open source, and frankly much better than both FF and IE IMHO

      Bullshit.

      At work I need to use two browsers, one for my regular work related browsing and other for my personal browsing. I create a SSH tunnel to my home computer which is running apache server as proxy. I use this proxy server for my personal browsing.

      Firefox is my obvious choice for work related browsing. For the second browsers, I was using Flock 1 for few months now, Because of crashes and stuff I was looking for another browser and because of all the buzz on internet I decided to give a try to Opera. It looked fine and have certain features like it automatically pops up a box when a word is selected etc. However couple of different thing just turned me off.

      First really annoying thing was on google finance page. The first time I opened the flash graph by searching a ticker symbol, the graph would show fine. The second time and all the times after that though, the graph would be just blank. No amount of refreshing would do any difference. The only thing worked was to close the tab and open the page in a new tab.

      The second thing was Java plugin (which I use for real time streaming stock quotes). I tried to do all I could to make java play good with Opera, without success. I followed Opera's guide, searched on internet tried countless different things without success.

      Finally I just dumped Opera and installed Flock 2. Its not perfect, but at least it works for all my purposes.

      May be I will give Opera 10 a try.

    100. Re:Shows what competion can do. by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 4, Funny

      A spelling Nazi that actually speaks German? Wow...

    101. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Jorophose · · Score: 1

      Anybody have the numbers on French?

      The GP's numbers are a bit scary. I've always been told that French grows against Germanic languages, and has been growing; but seeing that english and german are more popular than french is not reassuring...

    102. Re:Shows what competion can do. by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > Native Spanish speaking population in the world 330 million

      A web browser is only useful to people with internet access, so the number of people *on the internet* who speak a given language is much more important than the total worldwide population of speakers, when you're deciding which languages to support in a web browser.

      And, actually, this is a _beta_ release, so you're mainly interested in web content developers, which is a relatively small subset of the people on the internet, and even further skewed toward peole who are literate in the more strongly represented languages, especially English. (Many, many web developers who are not *native* speakers of English are literate in English as a secondary or tertiary language.)

      German has always been strongly represented on the internet, not as strongly as English, but disproportionately strongly compared to the relatively small size of its native-speaking population. We could speculate about the reasons why (most of which would probably be socioeconomic factors at the macro level), but it's kind of just always been that way, since the internet was fairly new. A very high percentage of German speakers have internet access, compared to most other languages.

      Spanish and French are more widely spoken in the world than German, but less well represented on the internet. I think the same may also be true of Arabic and Hindi.

      Chinese, like Spanish, is under-represented on the internet compared to the size of the native speaker population, but in the case of Chinese the size of said native speaker population is *so* large that it can be a bit under-represented on the internet and still be one of the major languages.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    103. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Laogeodritt · · Score: 1

      ... Mexico => Portuguese? You've got to be kidding me. Venezuela and Colombia (see "Official languages" of infobox) are both majoritarily Spanish speaking regions, with some indigenous languages; Portuguese is not spoken frequently. In fact, in all of South America, only Brazil has a Portuguese majority.

    104. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Laogeodritt · · Score: 1

      Oh ****, sorry. It looked like you were replying to the grandparent in my email app (RSS feed + loads full page); the parent was hidden. *hangs head in shame*

    105. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Keeper+Of+Keys · · Score: 1

      It will probably be based on "known" languages, as for some reason Microsoft find it difficult to produce language files in unknown languages.

    106. Re:Shows what competion can do. by martinw89 · · Score: 1

      One word: Extensions. I can choose to have mouse gestures or not. Not to mention a plethora of other things.

    107. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Keeper+Of+Keys · · Score: 1

      Expressing pro-Open Source sentiment is not spreading Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt - more like Love, Confidence and Trust.

    108. Re:Shows what competion can do. by pcolaman · · Score: 1

      It's all good. I made the mistake of not having a definite subject. Instead I simply said They, which could be interpreted differently based on what "they" refers to. I forgot that sometimes you can't see the direct parent depending on how you are viewing it. Somewhere, my AP Language and Composition teacher is groaning :p

    109. Re:Shows what competion can do. by jonadab · · Score: 1

      In addition to the things you say, which may well be true, German and Japanese also happen to be the first languages for a large number of internet users, including a fair number of web developers, including the ones for some large multinational corporations who are major customers for Microsoft and, incidentally, are responsible for a number of fairly popular websites. Arabic, being mostly used in third-world countries, just doesn't have the same kind of user/customer base as German and Japanese. You have to go pretty far down the Alexa rankings to find an Arabic website at all, much less one whose developers aren't also literate in English. It's true that a fair number of people speak Arabic, but since most of them aren't developing major high-traffic websites, they may have to wait for the actual final release, possibly even longer.

      Indeed, I wouldn't be entirely surprised if Hebrew has more internet users than Arabic, despite having a lot fewer speakers altogether.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    110. Re:Shows what competion can do. by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Two words: Mouse Gestures. Cannot browse without it.

      I find these sorts of features discouraging, not because they are bad features, but because they're being implemented at the wrong level. Like spell checking, mouse gestures should be implemented at the OS level so all programs can take advantage of them. As far as I know, OS X is the only OS that provides an easy way to implement such functionality and we know Windows won't be getting it anytime soon. Linux might or might not, but I'm not holding my breath. I have hope that Linux on the desktop development will speed up as hardware makers start to preinstall it, but I haven't seen much real difference yet.

      Mouse gestures being implemented in browsers is just another demonstration of how Microsoft and lack of competition has crippled innovation in the desktop OS market.

    111. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Road · · Score: 1

      For global windows XP mouse gestures, use StrokeIt. Not a lame joke, just google it.

    112. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, how many people are you?

    113. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Opera hadn't had an tabbed interface, it had a MDI. And those have always sucked

    114. Re:Shows what competion can do. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Except that Opera hasn't been ad supported for several years now?

    115. Re:Shows what competion can do. by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > That's in the EU. Off the top of my head I would say it's second (possibly first) in North America,

      Extremely distant second, even if you draw the edge of North America clear down to the isthmus, which is not usual. It's kind of like saying Gaelic is the second (possibly first) most widely spoken language in Britain. And among North-American web developers (this is, you'll remember, a *beta* release of a web browser), the second language might actually be French, though it's difficult to be sure.

      > and certainly first in South America.

      Perhaps, but South America is not known for its large number of web developers.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    116. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Opera was hardly the first piece of software to have a tabbed document interface, nor even the first browser to have this." - by KURAAKU Deibiddo (740939) on Thursday August 28, @12:01PM (#24780439) Homepage

      Did I ever say Opera was the first program to have a tabbed interface? NO! However, I did state that it had it before IE &/or FireFox, period... care to debate that?? I didn't think so... don't go putting words into my mouth I never stated, ok??? Can you manage that???? Apparently not.

      APK

    117. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Expressing pro-Open Source sentiment is not spreading Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt - more like Love, Confidence and Trust." - by Keeper Of Keys (928206) on Thursday August 28, @08:38PM (#24787937) Homepage

      Look @ the "P.S." section of my initial post here, ok? I am NOT "putting down Open Source", period. What I am 'knocking', is the fact that the person I replied to tried to make it sound like FireFox (& "OPEN SORES" in general imo) is/are somekind of innovator(s)... &, they're not, just based on evidences I noted, which any of you are free to debate as to my points being fact... & they are.

      I.E.-> I simply pointed out that copying features that Opera had LONG before FireFox (such as tabbed browsing, natively, & also its "SpeedDial" feature (only possible in FF via an .xpi addon afaik, & NOT 'natively in FF' minus addons) is blatant idea stealing)...

      Care to debate these points of mine? Because the writing is on the wall & plain to see + just undisputed facts - BOTH IE & FF copied features (tabbed browsing &/or SpeedDial (FF via .xpi addon)) from Opera, period, and afaik?? First - I'm not aware of Opera's devs doing the same to IE &/or FF though - period.

      APK

      P.S.=> You can "mod me down" as "flaimbait" as was done to my initial post, but it doesn't change the facts... & that fact is, that Opera had tabbed browser interface capabilities LONG before IE &/or FF, plus FF further doing this level of copying (stealing) Opera's SpeedDial native feature, via an .xpi addon - & this? This is "Open Sores" INNOVATION?? Beg to differ - it's plain-jane intellectual property theft to be blunt about it, as far as webbrowsers are concerned imo @ least, & FAR FROM "INNOVATIVE"... copying is NOT "innovation", period! apk

    118. Re:Shows what competion can do. by jonadab · · Score: 1

      There's nothing particularly African American about pronouncing "ask" as "ax". It's just basic sloppiness, that's all. Yeah, they do that stuff in the 'hood, but they also do it in the boondocks where the population is five nines caucasian -- in rural northern Morrow county, for example. For those of you not from Ohio: Northmor is as hick as it gets. 4H is the number one extra-curricular activity, way bigger than sports. School doesn't start up in the fall until after the county fair. They have a drive-your-tractor-to-school day. Flannel plaid is always in style. "Libary" has only one r. And they "axe" each other questions.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    119. Re:Shows what competion can do. by jonadab · · Score: 1

      Almost anything you say in Klingon can sound like swearing to people who don't know the language, especially if you say it with the right tone and vigor.

      My favorite Klingon phrase is "cho- itchu" (probably misspelled badly, but that's roughly how it's pronounced), which loosely translates as "beam me up" or, more literally, "energize". In one of the movies, Kirk picks up this phrase from a Klingon chap (Kahn, IIRC) and then repeats it later for tactical reasons. I like it for its sound, and for the meanings it can imply in other contexts.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    120. Re:Shows what competion can do. by jonadab · · Score: 1

      I rather doubt that. Spanish is a relatively easy language to translate into from English, orders of magnitude easier than Japanese. I think the list of languages for the beta was chosen deliberately, and Japanese and German were chosen at least partly because they're very widely used on the internet. (English, of course, is always included because Microsoft is headquartered in the US, though it probably would be chosen anyway for other reasons.)

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    121. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      I see. In my mind, 3 years ago would have meant something like Opera 5.2 or something. I guess I was wrong about the version.

    122. Re:Shows what competion can do. by duffbeer703 · · Score: 1

      Note that I didn't say "Mexicans are incapable of using computers". I said there were more daily computer users than in several Latin American nations combined.

      For various reasons, per capita incomes are lower in Latin America, and computers are expensive. The per capita GDP in Venezuela is $12,000US.... computers are a luxury item at that category.

      --
      Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
    123. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Mad+Merlin · · Score: 1

      Linux (with KDE) has both system wide mouse gestures and system wide spellchecking. Both have been around for many years now.

    124. Re:Shows what competion can do. by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Linux (with KDE) has both system wide mouse gestures and system wide spellchecking. Both have been around for many years now.

      Sadly, I've never found a Linux desktop to be usable without a combination of Gnome and KDE apps and the spellchecking and mouse gestures only work in KDE apps. Also, as far as both spell checking and gestures are concerned, I've never found a way to use them for applications where the developers did not specifically include them. Assigning a gesture or using spell checking in Konsole, for example, does not seem to be a task doable for a normal user.

      Note, I gave up on Kubuntu years ago because of numerous stability problems, so things might have changed. If so, I'd love to hear about it.

    125. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Depends on who's doing the judging, as to multiple document interface design being chosen as "superior", vs. tabbing (PURELY A "RELATIVE TERM" & matter of personal preference here... though I agree with you here - I also prefer tabbed interface designs vs. those based on MDI, in GUI programs)...

      However/all-in-all/bottom-line: There is no question that Opera had tabbed interface designwork prior to IE &/or FireFox, period.

      APK

    126. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Keeper+Of+Keys · · Score: 1

      Keep on calling it "OPEN SORES" and you'll keep on getting modded Flamebait.

      I'm sure many people here would agree with you that Opera are responsible for a lot of recent browser innovation. Personally I prefer to use Firefox because of its open architecture - ie its massive array of Add-Ons, mostly built by third party devs. I'm not sure whether Opera's extension API is as easy to use, or even if it's open at all, but it sure doesn't get used by anything like that many people. That's one clear benefit of open source. Also you have other browsers, like Flock, derived from the Firefox source code. Impossible to do this with Opera. But still, Opera is a good browser, and a much better choice than IE.

      My original point was, though, that bigging up OS is not spreading FUD. But, just to keep you happy, here's some FUD about Opera:

      What if the company went bust tomorrow, without revealing their source code? No more security patches, so once an existing security flaw is discovered, the browser would be open to attack with no defence possible. Of course it's not very big on the desktop, and there are alternatives, but this would be very serious for mobile devices whose web browsing capabilities are based around Opera.

      Agh, fed the troll enough.

    127. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They primarily speak Portuguese, not Spanish.

      Nope.

      Mexicans, Columbians and Venezuelans speak spanish.

      Portugal, Brazil, Angola and other countries speak portuguese.

    128. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Keep on calling it "OPEN SORES" and you'll keep on getting modded Flamebait." - by Keeper Of Keys (928206) on Sunday August 31, @03:56AM (#24817163) Homepage

      Well, tell myself, heck... tell us all the answer to this:

      Is it easier to find possible security holes in code that is:

      A.) Open sores (fully displayed in the original text it was written in, in the language it was written in (e.g. -> C/C++))

      OR

      B.) Is it easier to find security holes in code that is fully compiled

      (& in the latter (B), where all you have is the executable, & thus, you are 'stuck' either hand-testing it (by 'hacking away' @ it) OR using a disassembler/debugger against it)

      ?

      Newsflash/New NEWS: It's way, WAY easier to get @ code (and thus, to even FIND any vulnerabilities that may be present in it) that is "open sores"!

      Simply because YOU HAVE THE ORIGINAL CODE IT WAS WRITTEN IN!

      This is easier/simpler, by far, to find "holes" in, than it is to use a trace debugger (disassembler) on a compiled program, & then poring thru raw assembly code (to find security vulnerabilities in it...

      The latter (B) is a LOT more work is why, & in a far more difficult language dump (asm) than the original computer programming language (HLL type/higher level language type) it was created in (since those, yes, even C/C++, are FAR more easily read, & understood (especially as to overall logic & flow, moreso than just syntactically alone)).

      APK

    129. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am Brazilian and Brazil is the only country in America to primarily speak Portuguese. The other countries are Portugal, Guinea-Bissau, Goa, Timor, Angola and Macao.

    130. Re:Shows what competion can do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oops, forgot Mozambique and Cape Verde

  2. Oh, I'd like a version by HuguesT · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Can I have a version for Linux, or barring that, for OS/X so I might try it ? Thanks.

    1. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by tomandlu · · Score: 5, Funny

      You want MS to provide a linux version so that you can either state your intent to never install it, or so that you can sh*t on it? I'm sure they'll get right on that...

    2. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      It runs on Linux under Wine or any number of Virtual Machines, for those not too clueless to know about them.

    3. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And OSX and FreeBSD (where I use it).

      Well, I don't use it there, but I opened it once for amusement's sake.

      Then I went back to FireFox (usually native, occasionally under WINE if I have a "need" for flash).

    4. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 3, Informative

      You want MS to provide a linux version so that you can either state your intent to never install it, or so that you can sh*t on it? I'm sure they'll get right on that...

      No need to wait for MS to do that. I'm sure this will be in ies4linux eventually, thanks to Sérgio. Want it sooner? Donate time or money to either ies4linux or to Wine. Or both.

    5. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by tomandlu · · Score: 1

      Curious - the reply has an earlier timestamp than the parent.

    6. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Gavagai80 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Lots of linux users would like to have IE, because we need to test websites in it. I have the wine versions of IE6 and IE7, but they're extremely slow and mostly broken, so a version from Microsoft would be great. And if it turned out to be the better browser, of course, I'd use it regularly.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    7. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      For generously forgiving values of "runs" (wine) or curious definitions of what it means to run on an OS (virtual machines).

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    8. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by amnezick · · Score: 1

      not over here

      maybe you're experiencing some quantum communications side effects

      --
      mov ax,4c00h
      int 21h
    9. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IE 5 and IE 6 work with Wine in Linux, and IE 7 with a bit of a hack. I have tried IE 8 but it fails to install with an "Unable to find a volume for file extraction" error.

      Why would you want to install IE on Linux? Because if you are a web developer you need to test your sites on various browsers to check that they display properly. Ideally, you should be able to just follow the web standards and be confident that there is no problem, but this is far from true and IE is the biggest culprit. Curiously, an advantage of using Linux is that you can test various versions of IE at the same time, which you cannot do in Windows.

    10. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by dotancohen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You want MS to provide a linux version so that you can either state your intent to never install it, or so that you can sh*t on it? I'm sure they'll get right on that...

      That's short sighted.

      I would try IE8 if it ran on my platform of choice, which happens to be Kubuntu. If IE won't run on it, I won't try it. IE8 might be the best browser since Amaya, but if it won't run on my system, I won't try it.

      Not all Linux users hate Microsoft or are FOSS zealots. Most of us just love Linux. We are open to trying MS products, and when MS creates a better product than Linux||Firefox then we will use it. I only wish that MS Office 2007 would run on Linux, I would pay for it and use it in a heartbeat. But I am not about to use MS's bloated, insecure operating system to get it.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    11. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by antimatter15 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Don't Firefox, Mozilla, Epiphany, and Galeon all use the Gecko rendering engine? What's the point if they all render the exact same? I understand that as a web developer, it would be useful to test on Opera, Safari, IE and Firefox, but not on the same rendering engine

    12. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hi,
      I'm a professional frontend webdeveloper, and I can definitely say that I wouldn't install it on my operating system, even if I could. We all remember what happend to IE for Mac. It worked nice, actually even better than windows, and that's the problem. You can't be certain it rendered websites identical.
      wine is nice, as far as IE6 is concerned, but it isn't really an alternative.
      The best enviroment I can test it in seems to be VirtualBox in seemlesly virtualisation mode. I can actually paste text between my desktop and windows.. wow
      I don't mind using a VirtualMachine, bought 4GB of Corsair notebook memory for something less than 100 euros and if you weren't aware, microsoft recommends using a virtual machine for testing multiple versions of IE either way.

    13. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by tyler.lee · · Score: 1

      Once IE8 has an official release, I wouldn't think it would be to long before there is an IE8 tab plug-in.

    14. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that while IE on linux would be able to figure out some of the more obvious stylesheet fuckups, it won't ever match having a dedicated windows box. Fundamental differences in font rendering between Windows and X might mean that something that looks fine on Linux IE would spill over or look squished on its native platform.

      Of course, nobody ever said that you had to have a GOOD windows box. My office uses a 4 year old Dimension 2400 with some sort of 'multiple IE' thingy installed just for testing IE. Everything else in the office is either Linux or Mac.

    15. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Tim+C · · Score: 2, Informative

      I thought that IEtab used the native MSHTML.dll, and thus would still require IE (and presumably Windows)

    16. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Saint+Gerbil · · Score: 1

      While I do see your point you don't represent a sizeable enough market of linux users, probally 1 in 100 ?

    17. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by FishWithAHammer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Most of us just love Linux.

      Like hell. There's a very common saying, and it's pretty damn true: "BSD users use BSD because they love Unix. Linux users use Linux because they hate Windows."

      Go look at Ubuntu Forums or Linux Questions or any of the other community sites; it's a huge whack of Microsoft hate (often leading them to convince themselves that what they're using is better than it actually is, but hey, that's part of the open-source gig these days).

      --
      "You can either have software quality or you can have pointer arithmetic, but you cannot have both at the same time."
    18. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Ctrl-Z · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't that only work if the version for Linux worked exactly the same as the version for Windows? Who is going to certify that?

      --
      www.timcoleman.com is a total waste of your time. Never go there.
    19. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree, I use Linux mostly but do have access to MS Windows. I have just installed it, looks quick on my TWiki compared to Firefox, but fails miserably on the Acid3 test, 21/100 compared to 71/100 on my Liux/Firefox. This is a standards compiance test, which means we can all get involved.

    20. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by coryking · · Score: 1

      Your post has a flaw.

      What's the point if they all render the exact same?

      if they all render the exact same?

      render the exact same

      Rule number one of web development is that no browser renders anything exactly the same. Not even the same version on the same platform.

    21. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by coryking · · Score: 2, Interesting

      BSD users use BSD because they love Unix.

      Which is the best part of BSD. I love unix and I love windows. Nobody cares if I submit new freebsd ports and happen to use a text editor in windows to create the Makefile and Outlook to mail the attachment to the port maintainers :-)

      If you tried that on Linux, you'd probably be flamed to a crisp.

    22. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by trogdor8667 · · Score: 1

      Personally, I'd kill for IE8 to come back to the Mac. My company's payroll/benefits website requires IE6 or IE7 to login. So, right now, I have to fire up VMWare or find a PC to check my pay stub. I'd prefer my company simply fix the site to work with Safari or Firefox or Opera or ANY browser, but I know thats unlikely to happen, and a Mac version is more likely.

    23. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Insanity+Defense · · Score: 1

      They used to provide a Unix version and a Mac version of IE. Why did they stop? If they did it once before why can't they do it again?

    24. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by coryking · · Score: 1

      Because if you are a web developer you need to test your sites on various browsers to check that they display properly.

      And if you are a professional web developer who uses Linux (or Mac) for your platform, you will have purchased the proper tools. In this case, you'd own a copy of VMWare Workstation and run windows inside of it for testing.

      Ideally, you should be able to just follow the web standards and be confident that there is no problem

      Ideally there would be a reference implementation you could use. HTML has no such beast and even if you coded to "teh magic standards", it would look different across each browser. You call this a feature, I call it the biggest flaw in the whole damn web development universe. Despite the heated rhetoric of the semantic web peanut gallery, most web developers want their web applications to look and function the same no matter what the platform. Following the standards might ensure cross platform functionality, but it sure as hell doesn't ensure cross platform "lookability".

      Curiously, an advantage of using Linux is that you can test various versions of IE at the same time, which you cannot do in Windows

      Only if you are too cheap to purchase the right tools. Hell, you don't even need to purchase them... VMWare Server is free!

    25. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      Did you write to your IT department and tell them that?

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    26. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we go that waym one could claim "BSD users use BSD because they hate Linux and/or GPL".

      Lots of people use Linux in business just because it's free, well scaling and protects you from vendor lock-in. They could use BSD or solaris just as well, but at the moment Linux just has more momentum.

      Forums are a different planet, full of steam and bullshit..

    27. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      Like hell. There's a very common saying, and it's pretty damn true: "BSD users use BSD because they love Unix. Linux users use Linux because they hate Windows."

      Go look at Ubuntu Forums or Linux Questions or any of the other community sites; it's a huge whack of Microsoft hate (often leading them to convince themselves that what they're using is better than it actually is, but hey, that's part of the open-source gig these days).

      I will admit that the MS refugees are a large, vocal part of the Linux community. You can usually identify them because they post "Linux suxorz because it doesn't worx like winders". But you will find the informative, knowledgeable posts on the forums you mention outnumber them by far, and those are from people who use Linux because Linux suits their needs best.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    28. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      While I do see your point you don't represent a sizeable enough market of linux users, probally 1 in 100 ?

      Don't exaggerate. No less than 1 in 98, I'm sure.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    29. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Afty0r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You should be testing IE in the environment in which your site visitors will be running it - on Windows.

      Testing Safari on Windows is very different to testing Safari on MacOSX - if your objective is to catch issues before the public would see them, you need to test browser Y on OS Z - not just browser Y on any old OS.

      If Microsoft *did* release IE for Linux, that is ANOTHER browser/OS combination I would have to test for.

    30. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by pizzach · · Score: 1

      I only wish that MS Office 2007 would run on Linux, I would pay for it and use it in a heartbeat. But I am not about to use MS's bloated, insecure operating system to get it.

      Lock in. PWND.

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
    31. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looking at your post history, I wouldn't be surprised if God has your entire life modded as '-1 Flamebait'.

      Seriously, for about a year now I've been seeing your posts around Slashdot; they're always the ones -- accurately -- modded down because you're acting like a spoilt child. Posting some petulant anti-Linux rubbish.

      it's a huge whack of Microsoft hate (often leading them to convince themselves that what they're using is better than it actually is, but hey, that's part of the open-source gig these days).

      This hasn't been my experience. There, I produced as much evidence as you, so my statement is just as correct.

    32. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by trogdor8667 · · Score: 1

      I am in the IT department, but a different area. It's not something the web devs are overly concerned with.

    33. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Nick+Ives · · Score: 1

      Not even the same version on the same platform.

      Wouldn't that be the same programme? So you're saying if you open it up n different times it'll render it n different ways??

      --
      Nick
    34. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      Lock in. PWND.

      MSO2007SP1 supports odf.

      And while I do not dispute the validity of your statement, I would rather be locked into a superior product by file format than be locked into an inferior product by ideology. At least file formats can be reverse engineered.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    35. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      You sure seem concerned. Write to them, or at least talk to them if you are in their department.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    36. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      Despite the heated rhetoric of the semantic web peanut gallery, most web developers want their web applications to look and function the same no matter what the platform.

      They do, naturally, but trying to jam a square peg in a round hole usually takes a little time. The web was not initially designed to be an application platform, or to render like a piece of paper. How do you do italics on a screen reader? What use is a three-column layout on a pda or phone?

      Also, consider how much more advanced a markup-based approach was than something like telnet.

      Some people remember back when the goal was really semantics over strict presentation. Honestly, it was only a few years ago. But this system for platform-independent information sharing is struggling to keep pace with the cries of "I gots to have my flash".

      You're right, things have changed, the web is much more powerful now, and in the end that's what really matters. But I think you're too hard on the academics. It's going to be an uphill battle as HTML and the associated technologies are updated to match what people want to use them for. Honestly, I think the more semantic HTML stays, the better. The code can stay in a script or on the server. The presentation can stay in the style sheet. That way, the information is still there...there's no reason in 2008 for a page to not degrade gracefully.

    37. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      Back in the days when ie mac was around, it probably wouldn't have worked on your payroll website anyway, as it didn't support vbscript or activex (and had better support for html4 than the windows version).

    38. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by FishWithAHammer · · Score: 1

      Seriously, for about a year now I've been seeing your posts around Slashdot; they're always the ones -- accurately -- modded down because you're acting like a spoilt child. Posting some petulant anti-Linux rubbish.

      That's funny, seeing what I do for a living involves writing software for Linux. But go on with being full of shit, it's entertaining.

      --
      "You can either have software quality or you can have pointer arithmetic, but you cannot have both at the same time."
    39. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Weird ... why would you want to use MS Office 2007, the most bloated, inefficient office app I have ever come across, if you won't use the MS's bloated, insecure operating system?

      This is from someone who used to say: I think MS OS is bog standard ... but I love MS office apps.

      Now it's just all shit. The wonderful exceptions prove the rule.

    40. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But go on with being full of shit, it's entertaining.

      Idiots always accuse others of having the same failings as themselves.

    41. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whilst I agree that a number of vocal people at the Ubuntu forums often state anti-Microsoft statements, I am an ubuntu user - primarily because I couldn't get Windows to work properly for my needs. I don't go to the Ubuntu forums because I don't have much to say. The anti-MS statistics of Ubuntu users are likely to be skewed. I'm sure a similar thing at Slashdot applies too... the trollers don't express their opinions - and the trollers are the clear majority of users... It would be fairer to say that such sites attract anti-MS users ;)

      AC
      PS my needs that MS Windows failed to meet were many - but the primary need was a central media box that I could log into remotely, with separate sessions to perform different activities concurrently (eg. movie playing in one account v/s system maintenance in another account).

    42. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      Yep, IEtab has never worked on linux(/mac/solaris/bsd).

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    43. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      Depends on how complex your designs are and how paranoid you are. I've never been unable to see a reported IE issue in wine's IE -- and Konqueror has always been close enough to Safari to work for testing, even though khtml and webkit are different. Certainly never seen any difference between linux and windows firefox or opera either.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    44. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by FishWithAHammer · · Score: 1

      I guess you do, yeah.

      --
      "You can either have software quality or you can have pointer arithmetic, but you cannot have both at the same time."
    45. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by poached · · Score: 1

      They can't either. Their whole anti-trust argument was that the ie browser is somehow interwoven into the operating system somehow and couldn't be separated. If they provided IE for linux it would obviously prove that it was bullshit, which we all know was.

    46. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speak for yourself. I was a programmer for 15 years. I developed products using Microsoft which implied buying all sorts of tools$$$ and books$$$ from my own pocket because my bosses were too cheap.

      After having transitioned to Linux developer tools and found the light of FOSS, I did my best to influence the bosses to use FOSS. To my surprise, many were influenced by under the table deals $$$. For example, one YMCA/United Way-like organization I know of was given computers and was given free Windows OS. I did my best to influence them to use learn Linux and use that instead and it resulted with me losing my job. I'm not a zealot, but when people make bad decisions that are not in the interest of the general public, I tend to speak out. I knew eventually the "Free Windows" they received was eventually going to cost someone. The management didn't care. What disappointed me most was the fact there were Roman Catholic Priests on the board of this organization and they didn't officially support using something like FOSS. FOSS is all about giving more than what you get. Microsoft is certainly not that. Microsoft has one value: profit at all costs.

      I am one to believe that reason we want to use Linux is because it reflects well with our own family/society values: helping others as we would want to be helped, and giving more than we are getting in return.

    47. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Keeper+Of+Keys · · Score: 1

      Relativistic, surely?

    48. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lock in. PWND.

      MSO2007SP1 supports odf.

      ODF 1.0. Out-of-date.
      This is vapourware, BTW.

      And while I do not dispute the validity of your statement, I would rather be locked into a superior product by file format than be locked into an inferior product by ideology. At least file formats can be reverse engineered.

      While I don't doubt your belief in the validity of your expressed preference, I question its sanity. What you don't explain is why you have let yourself become locked-in to the expensive inferior product, and why you are avoiding having soverignity over your own data and control of your own machine through not using the zero cost open superior product.

    49. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      Like you, I prefer (and use) Linux. I would not install an MS operating system at all. However, at the application level I use the best tool for the job.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    50. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      While I don't doubt your belief in the validity of your expressed preference, I question its sanity. What you don't explain is why you have let yourself become locked-in to the expensive inferior product, and why you are avoiding having soverignity over your own data and control of your own machine through not using the zero cost open superior product.

      I perceive it as being locked in to the expensive, superior product. And I reign sovereignty over my machine because I do avoid MS's control-freak operating system. However, I still believe in the best tool for the job, and MSO 2007 is a terrific tool. I still love Open Office, and use it regularly, and I praise the developers of that program. Open Office 2.4 is leaps and bounds beyond MSO = 2003. However, MSO 2007 really is better.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    51. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      I don't find MSO 2007 to be bloated at all from the user's standpoint. Quite the opposite, I find the Ribbon streamline the workflow considerably, while providing more legible icons and most screen real estate for the document. The code may be bloated, but disk space is cheap. I don't know how heavy it is on RAM because I've only ever used it on the university machines, and I don't know what the hardware is.

      MS Vista is bloated beyond all hope. Hell, we considered XP SP2 to be bloated before that pig which is Vista came about.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    52. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      Why? Have to actually tried ?

    53. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      I they provided a version for either O/S I would definitely install it, if only for web design testing. I'm tired of rebooting or running IE in a VM (wasting 100s of MB of memory in the process).

      Microsoft had a version of IE for OS/X and used to have one for Solaris, so it's not impossible.

    54. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      What's up with the flamebait moderation? This is a serious query. I have had enough of virtualising, trying to run Wine or rebooting just to test a web site.

    55. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      Under OS/X at least MS have the expertise to do that. They make Office of OS/X don't you know ?

    56. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by sakasune · · Score: 1

      ...Want it sooner? Donate time or money to either ies4linux or to Wine. Or both.

      Ok I bought a box of wine and got drunk last night. I can haz IE8 for linux now?

      --
      "You're arguing for a universe with fewer waffles in it," I said. "I'm prepared to call that cowardice."
    57. Re:Oh, I'd like a version by Mad+Merlin · · Score: 1

      Not even the same version on the same platform.

      Wouldn't that be the same programme? So you're saying if you open it up n different times it'll render it n different ways??

      Yes, but that's primarily an IE feature.

  3. Standards-complient or not? by tomandlu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I assume yes. Call me naive, but I suspect MS know that they have more to lose by breaking web standards. Basically, they can't get away with that sh*t anymore - at least as far as the web goes. The average user is probably no wiser, but there are enough special interest groups to keep an eye on them in this area.

    1. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

      Web masters do their share too. Imagine how the web would look if all the hacks went away tomorrow.
      It would look great, because MS would have fixed their pile of shit browser already.

    2. Re:Standards-complient or not? by ByOhTek · · Score: 4, Insightful

      languages change over time, word shift meaning. New words come in, old words go out.

      If you want to complain about this, let me ask you, do you ever use the word 'nice'? Check the entomology on it and revert to using in it's original form only please.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    3. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Khuffie · · Score: 5, Informative

      According to Ars Technica, sites with proper HTML information will display in standards mode, and sites without will not. There's a button at the bottom that allows you to switch between the two. I have to say, I like IE8. It won't make me switch from Opera, but it's much speedier to use than IE7, and I'll probably find myself using it instead of Firefox whenever I come across a website that doesn't work in Opera. (Which is rare, and whenever that happens and I launch Firefox, it prompts me if I want to update, which gets annoying).

    4. Re:Standards-complient or not? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Developers, Developers, Developers.

      Developers have moved on. IE is one of those things you test for once you've finished your work in Firefox.

      This private browsing thing, if it wasn't a closed source application from a group that has a history of co-operating with US intelligence gathering organizations, might be vaguely interesting.

      But the circumstances being what they are, it strikes me as a way to help the overstaffed NSA by red flagging your most sensitive items for their attention.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    5. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Metasquares · · Score: 5, Funny

      I was going to ask what the root of the word "nice" had to do with the study of insects, but I guess that proves your point. :)

    6. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HA! IE 8 has no discernible market share at all.

      IE 8 is not IE 7 ... they render differently. IE 7 has lower market share than firefox. Firefox usage is not only ahead of IE 7 but it is increasing at a faster rate.

      IE 6 is different again. IE 6 is in decline.

      If you are a web designer, and you were to pick just one of these (they are all different) to make your web page work with, and you wanted it to work for the largest audience ongoing, then you would target firefox not any version of IE.

    7. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should read a good book from Kleist!

    8. Re:Standards-complient or not? by ByOhTek · · Score: 4, Informative

      DAMNIT

      I didn't mean entomology, I meant etymology...

      But, using both the original and current meaning, that was a nice error...

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    9. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Um, entomology is the study of insects, the word you wanted was etymology

    10. Re:Standards-complient or not? by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      yes.

      Now give me coffee.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    11. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want to complain about this, let me ask you, do you ever use the word 'nice'? Check the entomology on it and revert to using in it's original form only please.

      And at which point in time entomology and etymology got the same meaning?

    12. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For someone so caught up with words you should know it is etymology...no entomology which is the study of insects. Please only use the correct form of words.

    13. Re:Standards-complient or not? by wwahammy · · Score: 3, Informative

      It passes the ACID 2 test on its default settings. I'm using it right now in fact (I like the IE RSS reader) and it actually renders Slashdot correctly. IE7 has been a disaster for the last few months on Slashdot. Not sure what changed but it didn't work at all.

      Is it compliant with every single standard Firefox is? No. CSS Selectors I know is an area that still isn't up the standard. It is a lot closer than IE7 is though.

    14. Re:Standards-complient or not? by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So IE8 is less broken, less CPU/Memory hungry, and more "standards compliant" than IE7 .... but if it is still slow, power hungry, and breaks pages then it's not for me thank you ...

      --
      Puteulanus fenestra mortis
    15. Re:Standards-complient or not? by steelfood · · Score: 1

      For one thing, it's really small. And sometimes it's creepy and sometimes it's cute.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    16. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      Uh, Websters --

      2. manufactured or produced in accordance with a specified body of rules (usu. used in combination): Energy Star-compliant computers.

    17. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Sobrique · · Score: 1
      But if you were a web designer who wanted to make the most people able to access their site, they'd start with IE - firefox has to be installed, IE comes with it. Therefore the least technically literate users out there (e.g. the ones that are less likely to handle crap HTML rendering) will use IE.

      Your average firefox user has at least has to go to a _little_ effort to install it. `

    18. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The history and evolution of words is etymology.

    19. Re:Standards-complient or not? by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 1

      Compliant means "disposed to comply, yielding"...

      Hmm. So, then, using your definition of compliant, standards-compliant means "disposed to comply to standards, yielding to standards". Seems like the term is pretty legitimate to me, and you're just bitching for no damn reason.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    20. Re:Standards-complient or not? by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1

      Does it fix IE7's broke-as-shit handling of links when zoomed in? I hated using IE7 on other computers because I would click on a link and it wouldn't work unless I moved my mouse right until it turned into a finger pointer.

      --
      I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
    21. Re:Standards-complient or not? by FishWithAHammer · · Score: 1

      Developers have moved on. IE is one of those things you test for once you've finished your work in Firefox.

      Nonsense. IE remains the majority browser. Developers who want to actually produce a product that works correctly for the majority of users target IE first (because Firefox usually does the right thing when dealing with IE-isms, and IE-isms are easier to undo to target Firefox than vice versa).

      This private browsing thing, if it wasn't a closed source application from a group that has a history of co-operating with US intelligence gathering organizations, might be vaguely interesting.

      But the circumstances being what they are, it strikes me as a way to help the overstaffed NSA by red flagging your most sensitive items for their attention.

      FUD FUD FUD FUD, FUD FUD FUD FUD, FUD-UD-UD-UD-UD-UDDDDD...FUD!

      --
      "You can either have software quality or you can have pointer arithmetic, but you cannot have both at the same time."
    22. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Check the etymology on it and revert to using in it's original form only please.

      Fixed that for ya!

    23. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try the Acid3 test. 21/100 in normal mode on XP, 15/100 in the weird compatibility mode. Means a lot to developers who do not use MS products.

    24. Re:Standards-complient or not? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 5, Informative

      Nonsense. IE remains the majority browser. Developers who want to actually produce a product that works correctly for the majority of users target IE first (because Firefox usually does the right thing when dealing with IE-isms, and IE-isms are easier to undo to target Firefox than vice versa).

      No, developers use Firefox to do their development. Why? Because of extensions like Web Developer and Firebug and YSlow and Selenium and Firecookie and FirePHP and Venkman. To name a few.

      The fact that Firefox is also highly standards compliant is a bonus.

      After you've used all these tools to get your application working properly, that's when you check it out in IE and see if there are any problems that need further attention.

      As for the whole trustworthiness angle, well, call it FUD if you want. It's easy enough to submit code for independent critical review. When organizations don't choose to do so, the uncertainty and doubt that remains is real and intentionally created. Personally, I don't use MS products any more for anything outside of testing my web apps in IE, and have no intention of ever doing so again. I do not choose to trust them.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    25. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Schnoogs · · Score: 1, Funny

      Is there a mod point for a Tin Foil Hat?

    26. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Developers, Developers, Developers.

      Developers have moved on. IE is one of those things you test for once you've finished your work in Firefox.

      This private browsing thing, if it wasn't a closed source application from a group that has a history of co-operating with US intelligence gathering organizations, might be vaguely interesting.

      But the circumstances being what they are, it strikes me as a way to help the overstaffed NSA by red flagging your most sensitive items for their attention.

      Yeah, I'm going to be using that "Private Browsing" feature because I don't want the government knowing about my union/political activities. Yeah.

      Just so happens that I belong to the IBTA (International Brotherhood of T&A) and my political affiliation is Pornocrat.

    27. Re:Standards-complient or not? by FishWithAHammer · · Score: 1

      Of those extensions, the only one I use is Web Developer; the rest don't provide significant benefits. And IE7 has virtually the same thing.

      There are almost certainly third-party extensions to handle the rest of that functionality (though why you'd want to be using PHP is a valid question; even setting aside ASP.NET, which kicks all manner of ass, there are better open-source tools).

      As for the whole trustworthiness angle, well, call it FUD if you want. It's easy enough to submit code for independent critical review. When organizations don't choose to do so, the uncertainty and doubt that remains is real and intentionally created. Personally, I don't use MS products any more for anything outside of testing my web apps in IE, and have no intention of ever doing so again. I do not choose to trust them.

      Paranoia is unhealthy. Therapy will help.

      --
      "You can either have software quality or you can have pointer arithmetic, but you cannot have both at the same time."
    28. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      But if you were a web designer who wanted to make the most people able to access their site, they'd start with IE - firefox has to be installed, IE comes with it.

      What ? Firefox comes with IE nowadays ? Do distribution packagers remove it or what ? I never get IE with my Firefox !

      I knew I should have stayed with Gentoo, there probably was a "USE ie" somewhere I missed at the time...

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    29. Re:Standards-complient or not? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Of those extensions, the only one I use is Web Developer; the rest don't provide significant benefits. And IE7 has virtually the same thing.

      It's not my fault you don't delve deeply into the subtlties of what you're working with to need these tools.

      even setting aside ASP.NET, which kicks all manner of ass

      Now we know why you don't delve into these tools. I've built world class apps with ASP.NET, and the stuff it spits out, it's enough to make you cringe. It's fast to develop with, if you don't know what you're doing and don't care about doing things right. But if you already know how to do things right, and you're working on a project that's going to see enough traffic that you have to do them right, .NET makes things far more difficult, because you need to undo what it does by default and force it to operate outside of it's core paradigm.

      Paging through recordsets is a great example. Just fetch the entire data set to the middle tier and handle paging there... what a stupid idea. Were they reading the MySQL documentation or something? Doing it properly within the .NET model was harder than it was with Classic ASP.

      I'll stick to PHP, Java and Postgres, thanks...

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    30. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      I've said it before and I'll say it again:

      Standards are a non-issue in web development.

      Saying that Microsoft (or Mozilla, or anybody else) should spend more time getting all the web standards right is like saying that Chrysler should make it their number 1 priority to make life easy for mechanics. Standards are used by web developers only; users don't know, or care, whether a particular site is standards-compliant or not. And web developers need to test their site on all browsers they intend to support regardless of the standards situation.

      The majority of browser development time should be spent on features that benefits ALL users, not just developers.

    31. Re:Standards-complient or not? by kericr · · Score: 1

      In addition, comparing the IE toolbar to Firebug is like comparing the luxury qualities of a Kia Rio to an M3. They're not even in the same league.

    32. Re:Standards-complient or not? by dmn · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. IE remains the majority browser. Developers who want to actually produce a product that works correctly for the majority of users target IE first (because Firefox usually does the right thing when dealing with IE-isms, and IE-isms are easier to undo to target Firefox than vice versa).

      Not true. I and other webdevelopers I know write standards-compliant code first (testing in FF, Safari, or Opera) and when everything works ok in those, they test it in IE. That's the propper order - write correct code first and THEN do the hackery IE requires. Do it otherwise and you sacrifice quality.

      No, developers use Firefox to do their development. Why? Because of extensions like Web Developer and Firebug and YSlow and Selenium and Firecookie and FirePHP and Venkman. To name a few.

      The fact that Firefox is also highly standards compliant is a bonus.

      It's not a bonus. It's a basic prerequisite to make a standards-compliant website.

    33. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Sun.Jedi · · Score: 1

      from the pet-peeve-of-mine dept...

      If all you standardsstandardsstandards people wanted to fix the problem, you'd code to standard, and let MS worry about IEx incompatibilities.

      But instead, people actually test IEx, and fix sites for IEx. Hypocritical, if you ask me. MS just increased your workload because you fix the non-standard for them. What incentive will they ever have to change?

      This post is compliant.

    34. Re:Standards-complient or not? by lahvak · · Score: 1

      I didn't mean entomology, I meant etymology...

      Don't worry!

      Languages change over time, word shift meaning.

      In a few years, who know what will "entomology" mean.

      --
      AccountKiller
    35. Re:Standards-complient or not? by RealGrouchy · · Score: 1

      Aw, what a nice comment.

      - RG>

      --
      Hey pal, this isn't a pleasantforest, so don't waste my time with pleasantries!
    36. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It figures that a comment like this would be modded +5 insightful. You think it is more likely that IE 8 has features that are designed to assist the NSA than features that are designed to assist users and developers? That's completely rediculous. Who do you think is working on IE8, do you think the IE8 team is staffed by people from the NSA, or is it staffed with.. I don't know, developers maybe? I'm just glad that I'm not as cynical as you are and can download and evaluate a new piece of software based on its merits alone. It's a good thing that I didn't immediately discount Firefox based on my experiences with Netscape, but I guess that just comes from having an open mind.

      IE is one of those things you test for once you've finished your work in Firefox.

      Then you should appreciate some of the features in the beta 2. The features that I'm excited about more than anything else are all of the developer tools in beta 2, which are on par with Firebug. If you combine the developer tools with the fact that you can run IE 8 in IE 7 emulation mode, and even switch between quirks, IE7 standards, and IE8 standards, makes IE8 beta 2 the best debugger available for IE7. That alone has me already using it to help develop the applications that I'm working on. Something like debugbar for IE7 doesn't hold a candle to the suite of developer tools that beta 2 has.

      But hey, since a feature that I don't use on a browser that I don't do normal browsing with is obviously a cheap NSA ploy, might as well just discount the developer tools and keep your head in the sand, right?

    37. Re:Standards-complient or not? by brentonboy · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. IE remains the majority browser. Developers who want to actually produce a product that works correctly for the majority of users target IE first (because Firefox usually does the right thing when dealing with IE-isms, and IE-isms are easier to undo to target Firefox than vice versa).

      That is only true of new, inexperienced web developers. Any web developer worth his salt knows that you need to develop in a standards compliant browser, and then fix the IE bugs. Otherwise you are coding for a buggy browser, and you have to un-hack the hacks you inadvertently wrote to make it look good in IE, which is twice as much work to do. Web developer extensions like Firebug and Web Developer toolbar are the bonuses.

    38. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      Precisely.

      We develop in FF for the tools, and because we know that there's about a 99% chance that a good-looking page in FF will also be a good-looking page in Opera, Safari, Konqueror, etc.

      Sure, I could develop in, say, IE7, but there's a good chance I'd then have to fix the site for those other browsers, and I'd still have to fix it for IE6 (screw anything earlier; I know some super-high-traffic sites still need to support IE5, but jesus, that's just too much to worry about)

    39. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      Does "standards mode" comply with standards this time?

      Doesn't in IE7, though I'll admit that it's much better than IE6. I can't wait till the user base for that POS drops low enough that I can stop supporting it.

    40. Re:Standards-complient or not? by ByOhTek · · Score: 2, Funny

      You know what, screw this stuff. I'm just gonna fast forward a few thousand/millon years...

      Ogun tugle morf korblit anizag norple.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    41. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Poingggg · · Score: 1

      Saying that Microsoft (or Mozilla, or anybody else) should spend more time getting all the web standards right is like saying that Chrysler should make it their number 1 priority to make life easy for mechanics.

      Uhh...no. It would be more like saying that Chrysler should use standard metric or imperial screws, bolds and nuts, standard fittings for the lights, standard tires (tyres?) and so on, and not bolds, fittings etc that only fit Chrysler cars and are only sold by Chrysler. What they build out of those is totally their own business.

      --
      What person will donate an airborne act of love?
    42. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's one of the many reasons why I don't care a wit about MS or anything they offer. I'm using Firefox on Linux and when I want privacy I change my hostname and MAC address and then just use the Tor network. When I'm done I "scrub" my history and cache.

    43. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Sandbags · · Score: 1

      Also, "sophisticated" used to mean "corrupted" so a nice, sophisticated man vying for a political office should be a real eye opener! No wonder we're in the shit we're in.

      --
      There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
    44. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DAMNIT

      I didn't mean entomology, I meant etymology...

      But, using both the original and current meaning, that was a nice error...

      Couldn't have happened to a nicer guy.

    45. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Sandbags · · Score: 1

      Ah, give it some time. The guys here at slashdot will soon enough change their code so it renders just a poorly in IE 8 as in 7, to ensure that those not up to speed with the rest of us have at least one more barrier to overcome before being considdered passible company.

      --
      There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
    46. Re:Standards-complient or not? by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Holy shit... it's actually faster than FF3 for Slashdot on my machine. Good scroll speed, good render time, and the AJAX comment posting system - even that period between when you click "Preview" and when it actually is ready to post - is instantaneous.

      Still only gets 21/100 on Acid 3, but that's better than any previous IE version, including the beta 1.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    47. Re:Standards-complient or not? by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      IE8 (or as an add-on to IE7, much like the extensions you mention) includes Developer Tools (look under Tools in the command bar, or press F12). It has a JavaScript debugger, tools for examining the HTML, CSS, and JavaScript source, a profiler, validation tools, and handy stuff like drawing outlines around individual elements or elements of a given class.

      While not providing as much functionality as all the extensions you mention rolled together, it is nonetheless quite nice and excellent for examining pages or dealing with client-side scripts. The fact that it's built in is a nice bonus.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    48. Re:Standards-complient or not? by jaminJay · · Score: 1

      ...whenever... I launch Firefox, it prompts me if I want to update, which gets annoying.

      Funny, the exact same thing happens every time I launch Opera to check my CSS works in it. (Opera has another .000000001 release which is different to yours...). But, I suppose Firefox would, too, if it weren't automatically updated by PackageKit. NoScript is the only thing I know that wants to update every other time you start...

      --
      Leela: "Is all the work done by children?" Alien: "No, not the whipping."
    49. Re:Standards-complient or not? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      No, developers use Firefox to do their development. Why? Because of extensions like Web Developer and Firebug and YSlow and Selenium and Firecookie and FirePHP and Venkman. To name a few.

      FYI, IE7 has a plugin system as well, and it also has some very good developer plugins.

      Also, you have to use IE to debug JavaScript using VS, and VS2008 SP1 JavaScript debugger (and code editor) is the best I've seen so far. Granted, I would imagine that only ASP.NET developers use it, though, and they are only third in terms of numbers after PHP and Java.

    50. Re:Standards-complient or not? by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      Acid3 only made it to 12 on my machine, before it wanted to install an ActiveX plugin (from MS, not webstandards.org).

    51. Re:Standards-complient or not? by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Run, not install (MSXML is already installed on the system, but default settings in IE7 and up don't run most ActiveX without permission). It will actually continue just fine if you don't allow it to run MSXML, though there's a test which occurs at about that time that takes 4 or 5 seconds to get through (on my machine) - which gives the impression that the page has finished. Wait a bit and it should reach 21, with or without the ActiveX control.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
  4. Excellent feature... by HetMes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ..that will definitely be craved by many Slashdot users, and not because of the gift shopping or use of public terminals. Question is how long it will take before Firefox sees its market share diminish because of this feature, and, consequently, how long it will take Firefox to include it in an update.

    1. Re:Excellent feature... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My guess is "very soon", given that that very feature was planned for FF3 but didn't make it. I still expect lots of "omg ff ripped off ie" comments.

    2. Re:Excellent feature... by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Excellent feature that will definitely be craved by many Slashdot users, and not because of the gift shopping or use of public terminals.

      Nah, we have no girlfriends or wives to hide our porn browsing from. We wear our pr0n history like a badge of honor.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    3. Re:Excellent feature... by garett_spencley · · Score: 1

      Nah, we have no girlfriends or wives to hide our porn browsing from. We wear our pr0n history like a badge of honor.

      Yes it's true. Those among us fortunate to have found a wife have also had the foresight to seek an open minded one to whom we can still show off our pr0n history like a badge of honor.

    4. Re:Excellent feature... by pizzach · · Score: 2, Informative

      ..that will definitely be craved by many Slashdot users, and not because of the gift shopping or use of public terminals. Question is how long it will take before Firefox sees its market share diminish because of this feature, and, consequently, how long it will take Firefox to include it in an update.

      Considering that private browsing appears to already be included with 3.1 and the betas were around Sept 9th the last time I checked, I don't think the Moz folks are quaking in their boots yet. The feature is likely to hit both browsers roughtly at the same time.

      http://ostatic.com/168982-blog/are-you-ready-for-firefox-3-1

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
    5. Re:Excellent feature... by Koiu+Lpoi · · Score: 1

      I do, and it's called Stealther.

    6. Re:Excellent feature... by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      As others have said: it's actually a feature that existed in extensions for a while, too. I guess what's new here is the idea that it needs to be included with the browser. But it's kind of useful, and FF3 is snappier on the whole, so I can't complain too much (this time)

    7. Re:Excellent feature... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It won't. All these features have been add-ons for some time now.

    8. Re:Excellent feature... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just use the Firefox "Distrust" extension.

    9. Re:Excellent feature... by pizzach · · Score: 1

      I don't know much about the extension. The feature was originally planned for FF3 so there is a good change they sliced it off as an extension for now, which would explain why it has been around for a bit.

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
    10. Re:Excellent feature... by Yfrwlf · · Score: 1

      What makes you think a single feature can change a competitor's market share from increasing to decreasing? And when that feature is available in the competing software as an extension? Guess we'll see. :)

      --
      Promote true freedom - support standards and interoperability.
  5. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  6. Anon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    But does it function properly?
    I.E. 7 was a step-down in function for Microsoft as
    it fail to connect as quickly to sites as version 6 and despite all its new features, performed quite poorly compared to IE 6 as one's exclusive web experience.

  7. Browser privacy by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I wonder how the browser privacy feature will work regarding external content from sites:

    flash files store preferences outside of explorers' reach.
    java applets get placed outside of the cache.
    movies files play outside of ie.
    pdfs might open outside.
    word documents listed in word recent files list.

    theres many more programs and protocols which would leave tracks.

    people expecting privacy mode to actually keep things private are going to be in for a BIG shock.

    good luck

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
    1. Re:Browser privacy by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 3, Informative

      Use Opera Portable. It obliterates (erases AND overwrites) any and all signs of your activity when you exit. And it's had that feature for several years. Perfect for visiting internet cafes or libraries.

    2. Re:Browser privacy by GeckoAddict · · Score: 5, Interesting
      I wouldn't count on this new feature to do much of anything... an article from FoxNews says the following scary line:

      Although casual users cannot see the previous user's search history, authorities such as the police will be able to access it if necessary.

      Kind of makes it seem like it's still stored somewhere, and while I don't know how the data is stored, I can't imagine it will take too long to figure out how to view the history of others.
      Also interesting is that people at MS apparently nicknamed it 'Porn Mode'.

    3. Re:Browser privacy by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      If the police can reliably access it, then it takes only a slightly non-casual user to access it.

      I much prefer the "guest account" feature of Mac OS X, where data only exists until logout.

    4. Re:Browser privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares? you are just browsing pr0n. Most pr0n sites use just flash and .jpg images.

    5. Re:Browser privacy by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      If police can reliably access it, chances are they're going to do it by subpoenaing the search engine's logs.

      Note that the article specifically talks about search history, not browsing history.

    6. Re:Browser privacy by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Perfect for visiting internet cafes or libraries.

      Only if you're not particularly paranoid. Let's look at this again:

      It obliterates (erases AND overwrites) any and all signs of your activity when you exit.

      That implies both that you actually exit, and that you're actually running an unmodified version of Opera Portable. It also assumes that the host filesystem is actually overwriting the same blocks... and a few other things.

      It also implies that you haven't already been pwned by something as simple as a keylogger.

      So, better than nothing, but you've got to figure that whatever you do on a public terminal is public knowledge. Any attempt to prevent that is playing an arms race that you will lose.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    7. Re:Browser privacy by sootman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Also interesting is that people at MS apparently nicknamed it 'Porn Mode'.

      Those crafty Microsoftians, always innovating! Only 3 years behind this time... I think that's a new record! *rolls eyes*

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    8. Re:Browser privacy by phozz+bare · · Score: 1

      Also interesting is that people at MS apparently nicknamed it 'Porn Mode'.

      No, no, no.

      "Now you can shop for that special gift with confidence knowing your family won't accidentally find out."

      This mode is not intended for porn. Please move along.

    9. Re:Browser privacy by DavidD_CA · · Score: 1

      They're referring to IP address tracking at the ISP and web host level (and perhaps the user's router). Not logs on the browser.

      I don't have a link, but if you find the IE8 blog you'll see about 3 pages on what exactly the "Porn Mode" does. Pretty spiffy.

      --
      -David
    10. Re:Browser privacy by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Forensically cleaning storage (without destroying it) is certainly possible, but requires considerably more effort to do right than simply unlinking some temp files from the master file table. Given enough usage, my guess is that the data will become sufficiently overwritten to be unrecoverable, but that could take quite some time.

      Note that after overwriting the data even once, I believe it takes physical access to the disk (not just the computer, but the actual disk inside of it) to do any recovery. It also require tools your average spouse/parent/burglar/script kiddie is not going to have.

      On the other hand, if you've got something that you want to hide from authorities with serious data retrieval tools, you should be using a fully encrypted volume.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    11. Re:Browser privacy by zuperduperman · · Score: 1

      I had the same question.

      It's hard to figure out exact details, however it looks like the In Private blocking will in fact completely block 3rd party content once it has appeared on too many pages. So - yes, the movies, flash, pdfs, java applets etc etc will be completely blocked once they tick up over a dozen or so appearances as 3rd party content and your concern is addressed. This will stop them using trivial things like single pixel transparent gifs to set cookies etc, and to that extent it will work.

      However what I can't figure out is what makes anybody think the advertising industry won't just work their way around this by randomizing the URLs of the tracking content (trivial with url rewriting for example). Even if they have to allocate a zillion separate domains and correlate the data across them it's going to be pretty simple to circumvent it. Once the circumventions are in place, it will actually be harder for the end user to see if they are being tracked or not than it was before, and the simple things I do today (like block all cookies from some domains) wont' work any more.

    12. Re:Browser privacy by zobier · · Score: 1

      That's so dumb though:

      Honey, what's this "Porn Mode" option in your browser?

      As if you wouldn't call it something boring and geeky like "Advanced Options".

      --
      Me lost me cookie at the disco.
    13. Re:Browser privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      word documents listed in word recent files list.

      theres many more programs and protocols which would leave tracks.

      people expecting privacy mode to actually keep things private are going to be in for a BIG shock.

      I wouldn't expect that browser privacy mode would affect programs other than the browser. I find Microsoft's explanation of the feature to be clear:

      InPrivate Browsing prevents Internet Explorer from storing data about your browsing session. This includes cookies, temporary Internet files, history, and other data.

      Note that this explanation is displayed by IE itself, and not merely in some external documentation like help pages or microsoft.com

  8. Re:Crap... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Betcha a dollar above poster hasn't even tried it.

  9. Extensions are bad? by Cryophallion · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and brings a lot to the table that Firefox requires extensions for

    You say that like it is a bad thing. I prefer the use of extensions for my browser, instead of the bloatware that tends to happen. What if I don't care about privacy? I don't need that installed then. I like that I can choose the features I want, instead of having everything thrown in there.

    Also, extensions have a great benefit with regards to updates. they can be updated at any time, and therefore don't have to wait on a new browser update for tweaking things and adding functionality. They also allow me to leave an extension that I don't want to update as is while still being able to update the browser (and possibly its security).

    This is not to say that Firefox is not getting large, or that microsoft is not trying to assist people who don't have the savvy to look for extensions. I'm just saying extensions have a lot of benefits, and can be a very important tool.

    1. Re:Extensions are bad? by houghi · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What Firefox could do is add the most used extensions in by default. That way tech savy people can still do whatever they like, while people who do not know how to get extentions, still will be able to have the functionality.

      Best of both worlds. And if bandwith download is an issue for you, then perhaps you should not download Firefox in the first place.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    2. Re:Extensions are bad? by mdwh2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's not that extensions are bad, it's just more of a hassle if the functionality is not included as standard.

      It's one reason I can't be bothered to try switching from Opera. Sure, I've downloaded Firefox, but I don't have to time to try to hunt down all the extensions to replicate Opera's standard functionality, and wonder if each extension is the one I want.

      This is even more of an issue if you are trying to persuade a random non-geek user to switch from IE - you can't say "Go to this link", instead you have to say "Go here, then install it, then go here, here and here, and install all those things". For now, Firefox has done well because its standard features are still better than IE (and the extra standard features of Opera do not seem to be known by as many people). But you can't expect an average user to grapple with trying to hunt down extensions, just to replicate what'll be standard behaviour in IE.

      As for bloatware, you need to compare real world filesizes. Last time I checked, Opera was still smaller than Firefox (even without any extensions), though I haven't checked the current sizes.

    3. Re:Extensions are bad? by nmg196 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      > You say that like it is a bad thing.

      It *is* a bad thing. Usually built in features work - extensions in my experience, often don't and can easily be incompatible with each other.

      I've only got a handful of extensions (5) installed and Firefox 3 crashes about 12 times a week according to the logs. According to the same logs, IE has only crashed twice EVER since I built the machine 6 months ago and I use it almost as often (I'm a web developer).

      I think it's the extension-heavy approach which makes Firefox the least stable piece of software I've ever used. I doubt it crashes if you don't install any extensions. More basic features should be built in in my opinion - so you don't need to install an extension to get an extremely rudimentary feature like a close button on each tab.

    4. Re:Extensions are bad? by Cryophallion · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Interesting. Let's take a slightly deeper look, by looking at the most popular add-ons, and see if most non-savvy people would want them:

      1.Ad-block plus - Users might like it, but people running the sites and companies would absolutely hate it. Get ready for a huge backlash on enabling this one in the base package.

      2. DownloadHelper - Again, users may like it, but the people running the video sites would be fuming. As would people who do simple paid-for web tutorials, who would have everyone able to get their stuff extremely easily. Once again, good size backlash. This also has features that may need to be updated more frequently, such as when embedding code changes or something on the popular sites changes.

      3. No-Script - I don't know if this would really help most non-savvy users, as they wouldn't understand why many more popular sites won't work that well, not to mention all the ajax-y things they'd miss.

      4. Download-them-all - May be a good thing to implement (along with Download Status bar, a personal favorite). I'm not sure how many people would use its benefits though, but this one is a serious contender.

      5. Flashgot (See Download Helper)

      6. Firebug - No real use to non-savvy people.

      7. Fast-video Download - See Download Helper

      8. Cooliris - Cool, but no real functionality. Of course, Compiz, Widgets, Apples, etc all live off of cool, but I don't think this should be standard, especially since it is windows only.

      9. IE Tab - Very nice for people who still stubbornly make IE specific sites, but still windows only.

      10. Colorful tabs - cute, but not really functional. Might be a nice option though.

      So, of the top 10, only one could really have a good argument made for it being in the base package. I actually think Mozilla does a pretty good job finding the middle ground of stuff to keep in the base, and stuff to have as extensions, and that helps keep the energy where they think it should be, instead of focusing on little segments.

      I might add that I like extensions also since they can add new functionality before a new version comes out.

      And if bandwith download is an issue for you, then perhaps you should not download Firefox in the first place.

      Isn't Firefox smaller in download size than IE?

    5. Re:Extensions are bad? by Cryophallion · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Out of curiosity, what extensions are you using? I have around 7 or 8 depending on computer, and I've had no crashes. As always, people's problems vary, but I'm curious as to what may be crashing you.

      As for the most popular extensions, such as downloadhelper, firebug, etc, those tend to be pretty darn reliable, which may be due to many bug reports, the open source concept of helping out with fixes, or because people tend to use things that work, but I have had very few problems.

      On the other hand, I've had VERY bad luck with active-X "extensions" in IE, and even when not allowing ActiveX, I crash more with IE.

      On another note, is it the sites you are working on that tend to crash, or basic browsing? Maybe IE is more forgiving of code you are still working on and may have forgotten a curly brace or two?

    6. Re:Extensions are bad? by Cryophallion · · Score: 1

      I agree, it is a balancing act. That's why my last line states that Firefox is getting larger, because it is larger than Opera. I just tend to think Firefox has so far done a pretty good job of figuring out what it needs to focus one, and what can be left to the community.

    7. Re:Extensions are bad? by Rynor · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I also only use a few extensions, but as far as I know they haven't caused a single crash yet.

      Most of the crashes I experience are due to Flash, and even that doesn't come close to crashing 12 times a week.

    8. Re:Extensions are bad? by R2.0 · · Score: 1

      "I think it's the extension-heavy approach which makes Firefox the least stable piece of software I've ever used. I doubt it crashes if you don't install any extensions."

      You are aware that you could simply test it yourself, instead of "I think" and "I doubt"? How do you know it's not one of the extensions that are buggy? Just uninstall the extensions and see if Firefox runs well. If it does, then add them back one at a time until you get instability.

      --
      "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    9. Re:Extensions are bad? by ianare · · Score: 1

      FF 3 has gone some way to addressing the extension finding problem : you can now search for extensions right from the add-ons panel. It also has the most popular extensions showing by default.
      Then, if you install some you can restart FF without losing your tabs. Pretty neat.

    10. Re:Extensions are bad? by Beezlebub33 · · Score: 1

      I don't think that Firefox should do this. I think that some third party should do this. I don't know what the rules currently are for security in terms of downloads / updates, but it would make sense for people to make bundles and provide them. I'd download the 'CryoFox' version, for example, because I'd know that your site provides the bundle that I want and it's less work for me to have to update all those things myself.

      There is also the issue of compatibility / redundancy between extensions. Having a third party do the integration / testing work makes sense.

      --
      The more people I meet, the better I like my dog.
    11. Re:Extensions are bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so you don't need to install an extension to get an extremely rudimentary feature like a close button on each tab.

      You don't.

    12. Re:Extensions are bad? by Cryophallion · · Score: 1

      My point was that the most popular ones really shouldn't be bundled, in response to the houghi comment.

      As for your idea, some problems will exist:

      1. Where is the listing for where you can get each package? How often is this listing updated?

      2. You have to sort through each package to find the one that has the 5 extensions you want.

      3. You have to make sure it is a reliable source.

      Or you can simply go to tools, add-ons, and quickly look for a few extensions that will do what you are looking for, and no more (Maybe the add-on manager should be more obvious to newcomers, like being of the main splash page?). You can also disable each one, which may not work with a packaged version.

      There are also too many different combinations for packages, and it would take forever to find the right one. Even if there was a helper application, that you would choose the extensions, and have it select the meta-manager for you, you'd still have to already know what extensions you wanted. I think they current solution is the most flexible.

      However, I know ubuntu has an add-on for greater inter-op with to OS, so something like that may be a good idea.

    13. Re:Extensions are bad? by Captain+Centropyge · · Score: 1

      You say that like it is a bad thing. I prefer the use of extensions for my browser, instead of the bloatware that tends to happen. What if I don't care about privacy? I don't need that installed then. I like that I can choose the features I want, instead of having everything thrown in there.

      THIS.

      I like not having to download a large installer for Firefox. Has it grown? Sure. But it's not humongous like IE's. I'll add my own functionality when I need it. That's why extensions are great.

      What might be helpful is for Firefox to add a feature to automatically download and install some of the most popular extensions during installation of the browser. That would automate some of the searching for extensions, while still keeping Firefox modular.

      On a side note... anyone else having trouble getting to the beta downloads? I keep getting pages saying that download wasn't found.

      --
      Bite my shiny metal ass!
    14. Re:Extensions are bad? by Cryophallion · · Score: 1

      Off-topic, but what does THIS stand for? I can't find it anywhere

    15. Re:Extensions are bad? by hab136 · · Score: 1

      9. IE Tab - Very nice for people who still stubbornly make IE specific sites, but still windows only.

      I'd love a cross-platform version that could embed Safari on OS X, or Opera on Linux for example. Better yet, user-definable alternate browser. If embedding is not possible, simply launching in an external window would be nice.

    16. Re:Extensions are bad? by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      It's not that extensions are bad, it's just more of a hassle if the functionality is not included as standard.

      So if they include features (eg, an RSS reader), Firefox is bloated. If they eliminate features in lieu of add-ons, it's a hassle.

      They really can't win, can they?

    17. Re:Extensions are bad? by Captain+Centropyge · · Score: 1

      It basically means "What he said." So, when someone posts something, and you want to say the exact same thing, you can reply and say "THIS" to his/her post, indicating you agree with it entirely.

      --
      Bite my shiny metal ass!
    18. Re:Extensions are bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that Opera provides all of these things without the bloat.

    19. Re:Extensions are bad? by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Except that Opera provides all of these things without the bloat.

      And yet, Firefox 3 uses less memory than all the other browsers, including Opera. You were saying?

    20. Re:Extensions are bad? by blueZ3 · · Score: 1

      So, "me too" then, but with one less letter? That'll be useful on /. for sure

      --
      Interested in a Flash-based MAME front end? Visit mame.danzbb.com
    21. Re:Extensions are bad? by Captain+Centropyge · · Score: 1

      I was confused when I first saw it, too. Makes plenty of sense now, though.

      --
      Bite my shiny metal ass!
    22. Re:Extensions are bad? by theaceoffire · · Score: 1

      "But you can't expect an average user to grapple with trying to hunt down extensions, just to replicate what'll be standard behaviour in IE."

      Go to "Tools", "Addons", and "Get Addons". It suggests various extensions, and lets you search/install them from within the browser.

      It is far easier than what it used to be, and if you don't find what you need you have a link that takes you to the right page at the bottom.

      ^_^ Its just like having a mini-repository like Aptitude... and it is a big step forward in my opinion.

      --
      I steal signatures. This one used to be yours.
    23. Re:Extensions are bad? by Beat+The+Odds · · Score: 1

      I've only got a handful of extensions (5) installed and Firefox 3 crashes about 12 times a week according to the logs. According to the same logs, IE has only crashed twice EVER since I built the machine 6 months ago and I use it almost as often (I'm a web developer).

      I'm using ten (10) extensions with Firefox 3 and it has *NEVER* crashed. It's not the concept of the extensions that is the problem, it's most likely that some of the extensions suck.

    24. Re:Extensions are bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand why you would want to switch from Opera to Firefox. I don't like Opera because of it GUI, but if you do, please stay there. At least they support standards.

      This is only for those people who are still using IE. And for which we 'website-developers' have to take twice as much time, just to make it work in every fracking IE version out there.

      I'm afraid IE8, will just become the next 'extra work' when it is widely installed. Because only some upgrade. We will have to support IE6 / 7 / 8 through various hacks (And most clients don't pay extra for all those versions we have to support extra).

      Looking at the css3.info selector-test, IE8 will be the next catastrophe, by not supporting most of the selectors. At the time of release of IE8, all other browsers will support every selector in that test. And it makes webdesign with css a lot more fun. IE8 doesn't...

    25. Re:Extensions are bad? by theaceoffire · · Score: 1

      extensions in my experience, often don't and can easily be incompatible with each other.

      They normally "don't work" only if they are incompatible with each other. If you have 3 programs designed to give you mouse gestures, I would expect issues as well honestly.

      Firefox 3 crashes about 12 times a week according to the logs

      That is not normal. Backup your bookmarks, etc, and remake your profile (Move it to your desktop so Firefox thinks you don't have one). Firefox 3 has never crashed for me with one exception: The Flash plugin (on linux). >.

      install an extension to get close button on each tab.

      That is there by default on every fresh install of Firefox 3.

      Your problems seem to be that you have redundant/old plugins... so lets try an experiment. Go to the following web site, and download firefox 3 portable.
      http://portableapps.com/apps/internet/firefox_portable
      Install it to your desktop (Or thumb drive, or whatever), and then see whether or not it has the functionality you want *before* adding plugins.

      --
      I steal signatures. This one used to be yours.
    26. Re:Extensions are bad? by coryking · · Score: 1

      They normally "don't work" only if they are incompatible with each other. If you have 3 programs designed to give you mouse gestures, I would expect issues as well honestly.

      This suggests that firefox needs to take a less generic approach to addins. They could instead move toward a service provider type system. You'd be able to select from a list of "mouse gesture providers", "bookmark providers" or "auto-form fill providers".

      They already do this in a way... what do you think themes are? Last I checked you could only use a single theme at a time, why can't they make it so you only use one "decorate each webpage with annoying icons and popups (cooliris)" addin?

    27. Re:Extensions are bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah thanks for your authoritative list...
      Move along now.

    28. Re:Extensions are bad? by LiquidFire_HK · · Score: 1

      Maybe you have some odd troublemaking extension, but I haven't had a single crash on this machine since I installed FF3 and about 10 extensions a couple of weeks ago, and I don't remember ever having a crash that I could suspect an extension for. In my experience plug-ins are the biggest cause of crashes (on Win32 and Linux anyway), specifically Java and QuickTime, though Flash likes to do it too once in a while.

    29. Re:Extensions are bad? by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      On this days of invasive, agressive and malicious ads, ad-block is a "must have" extension.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    30. Re:Extensions are bad? by nneonneo · · Score: 1

      Firefox actually did this a while ago for college students, making a version they called "Firefox Campus Edition": http://www.quickonlinetips.com/archives/2007/08/firefox-campus-edition-for-cool-college-students/

      Basically, it was a full Firefox install with three add-ons.

      Anyway, an Idea just hit me: what about making Firefox metapackages? For example, a "privacy/paranoia" metapackage incorporating ABP, NoScript, perhaps Torbutton, etc., a "webdev" metapackage with Firebug, Web Developer, YSlow, ..., and so on.

    31. Re:Extensions are bad? by nneonneo · · Score: 1

      The only problem is the fact that the API for embedding browsers differs wildly; for IE, you include and activate an OLE control, for Safari, you would include a WebKit frame, and I have no idea how you'd do it with Opera. While doable, it would probably require very separate approaches, and that suggests having different extensions for each browser.

    32. Re:Extensions are bad? by nneonneo · · Score: 1

      I have 12 extensions, of which only Firebug has ever crashed on me (1.20 betas tended to cause Firefox's cycle collector to go into a hang, but the final version appears to have fixed that).

      In all honesty, Firefox is a lot more stable than IE and Opera -- I have never *ever* had Firefox 3 crash outright (I've only gotten hangs, and those were due to Firebug); I have managed to cause both IE and Opera to die with "... has encountered a problem and needs to close ..." errors (IE when browsing GMail, Opera when browsing GMail through a proxy).

      Final thought: I visited http://crashie.com/ on IE7 yesterday (OS: XP SP2), and it managed to completely hang my dual-core processor while using only one core (as verified by Process Explorer when it finally got enough CPU time to start). With ~30% idle, and memory usage still at normal levels (i.e. no pagefile thrashing), I am at a loss to explain how my system could nearly be brought down due to IE's crash (Process Explorer was eventually successful in killing it). Maybe someone here has a clue?

    33. Re:Extensions are bad? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      It is how much resources a product *requires*, not uses, that is relevant.

      Opera is winning this race, with a recommended spec similar to that of FF3 (64MB ram for both on P2 era machines) but requiring only 60% of the disk space that FF3 does (30 meg vs 52 meg.)

      Opera is doing this with all the features that FF3 requires extensions for, putting Opera SQUARELY in the lead if you are worried about bloat. The only thing Opera really lacks, as already mentioned, is decent performance on heavily-scripted over-engineered web pages.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    34. Re:Extensions are bad? by RealGrouchy · · Score: 1

      8. Cooliris - Cool, but no real functionality. Of course, Compiz, Widgets, Apples, etc all live off of cool, but I don't think this should be standard, especially since it is windows only.

      I wasn't familiar with this one, so I looked it up.

      Apparently it pops up a preview of a URL when you hover over a link.

      LiveJournal does this (I'm not registered to LJ, but I check out a couple of LJ sites) and I absolutely HATE it.

      What if I'm checking out an LJ page at work (okay, mistake #1) and someone has a link to goatse or worse, kiddie porn? If the page pre-loads the link, or if I'm unlucky enough to pause my mouse over it, that shit (presumably) gets downloaded across the network to my computer.

      Long story short, I agree with parent that this is suitable as an extension (or optional) for those who want it.

      - RG>

      --
      Hey pal, this isn't a pleasantforest, so don't waste my time with pleasantries!
    35. Re:Extensions are bad? by Kjella · · Score: 1

      You are aware that you could simply test it yourself, instead of "I think" and "I doubt"? How do you know it's not one of the extensions that are buggy? Just uninstall the extensions and see if Firefox runs well. If it does, then add them back one at a time until you get instability.

      If it crashes 12 times a week and he's a web developer that probably means he's in a browser 40 hours/week since translates to a crash every 3-4 hours. How long would it take to get any reliable statistics on that? That's days, days with much lower producivity if you're depending on what the extensions do to do your work. For me, the opera plugins are less than stable (I kill all operapluginwrappers on a regular basis with a single command calling a script) so it's not worth my trouble to track it down. I can still bitch about it though, because the culpit is almost certainly flash.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    36. Re:Extensions are bad? by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      Is there some way to script addon installs? Maybe a meta-addon that installs a bunch of others?

      I'd love to be able to make "developer" and "basic" install scripts, so I could just run them on a new machine to get either my development loadout (firebug, webdev toolbar, fireftp, etc.) or my basic extensions that I always install (adblock and the like).

      The extensions auto-update, so it seems like this would be possible.

    37. Re:Extensions are bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm just saying extensions have a lot of benefits, and can be a very important tool.

      Cryo-phall-ion ["chilly willy one" from the Greek] - are you the Nigerian dude spamming my email?

    38. Re:Extensions are bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1.Ad-block plus - Users might like it, but people running the sites and companies would absolutely hate it. Get ready for a huge backlash on enabling this one in the base package.

      Good, let them fume and bitch about it. Maybe they'll figure out that you can't force undesirable content at someone. I've never blocked a text ad in my life, literally, in fact I've read a few text ads when they apply to me. But when I see an ad imitating a dialog box and shaking all over the place, or speaking to me from a page in the background, or flashing neon colors at me, or telling me how close I am to winning 7 ipod nanos if I can only smack that damn monkey, sorry, the blocker is coming out. Pop up advertising died because advertisers abused it. Flash advertising is also going to die because advertisers can't get their heads out of their asses long enough to figure out that people don't want to see that shit and that they actually DO have a choice whether or not they do see it. Static images I can deal with, text ads I can deal with, but if someone is going to make an ad that does everything it can to draw my attention away from what I'm doing, it's probably not going to like the kind of attention I give to it. In other words, if advertising played nicely with other web content there wouldn't be a need for ABP in the first place.

      captcha: solace

    39. Re:Extensions are bad? by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Maybe there should be some kind of option in the install to include these extensions, and some command line switch to specify only the desirable ones. That way, it's easy for people to select and install popular extensions and easy for sys admins to exclude them.

      Oh wait, there's already a page in the install for extensions, they just don't have any of the popular 3rd party ones. Maybe they should make use of it...

      As for file size bloat, perhaps selected extensions can be separately downloaded after being selected.

      Finally, to address the idea of Firefox bloat in general, there's a really good reason I'm not using FF3, and it has nothing to do with extension compatibility. This kind of install might just make turning some of the bloatware in FF3 into extensions more viable.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    40. Re:Extensions are bad? by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      It is how much resources a product *requires*, not uses, that is relevant.

      What?? That's exactly the *opposite* of what actually matters. Why on earth would you care if Firefox uses a paltry 22MB extra disk space if it's runtime performance is superior? Honestly, that's absolutely ridiculous. Grasping at straws much?

      Besides, 22MB? You really care about 22MB in a world of near-terabyte hard disks? Really??

    41. Re:Extensions are bad? by IICV · · Score: 1

      Is one of the extensions you have installed FlashBlock? I was having lots of problems with Firefox 3 behaving badly (pegging my CPU, outright crashing, etc) until I installed that.

      Firefox hasn't crashed since, and as a bonus I don't get random banner ads talking to me without warning.

    42. Re:Extensions are bad? by atamido · · Score: 1

      10. Colorful tabs - cute, but not really functional. Might be a nice option though.

      Excuse me? Colorful tabs is extremely functional. If I have several tabs whose titles are the same, I can quickly find the one I need by it's color. Optionally you can have tabs for a given domain always be the same color. It helps a lot with quick tab recognition.

      Another extension that should be offered by default is Operator. It scrubs pages for microformats and provides quick links to use the information (automatically create a vCard for import into your address book, automatically map a location, etc).

    43. Re:Extensions are bad? by Jorophose · · Score: 1

      Have you checked about:config for the close buttons? I'm pretty sure the "feature" is still available. ("tabs" have always been crappier than real MDI)

    44. Re:Extensions are bad? by lennier · · Score: 1

      Why no Flashblock?

      It's the only Firefox add-in I actually use all the time. Can't stand autorunning Flash ads (or even Youtube videos). Adblock is too aggressive for me, but Flashblock is just perfect. One click and I see an animation, otherwise my sanity is preserved.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    45. Re:Extensions are bad? by TedRiot · · Score: 1

      I for one really don't care about the install size. 22MB is nothing nowadays.

      I have been giving Opera a chance for a while again now, but on my machine newest Opera is considerably slower and eats more memory than FF3.

    46. Re:Extensions are bad? by PhoenixAtlantios · · Score: 1

      Context Search, Extended Status Bar and Distrust are small additions that could make a pretty large difference. Context Search is pretty much the same as the accelerators (allowing you to choose which installed search engine to use when searching the highlighted word) and Distrust is very similar to the privacy mode. I guess Extended Status Bar would be iffy, but the ability to see how long pages take to load could be useful to users (i.e. they could remember it for next time more easily).

      Those ones are popular because they make huge noticeable changes (in most cases), but I'd argue that the best candidates for inclusion are the smaller ones that are more focused in their goals.

    47. Re:Extensions are bad? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Um, helllllllooooo? Is this thing on? Opera works in 64 megs of RAM. FF3 works in 64 megs of RAM. Opera does so with features that FF3 requires extensions, and thus, MORE MEMORY. FF3 does not work in 64 megs of RAM with the same feature set. Period.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    48. Re:Extensions are bad? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Opera *requires* LESS memory for the same feature set, but is happy to *USE* more. There is nothing wrong with using free memory.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    49. Re:Extensions are bad? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      It also doesn't help much that useful third-party extensions are sometimes abandoned, and that extensions usually break for a new major release.

    50. Re:Extensions are bad? by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Ah, I see, you completely ignored the article I posted. So be it. *shrug*

    51. Re:Extensions are bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not a single firefox crash? you're fucking lying.

    52. Re:Extensions are bad? by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      Maybe they should take current features (RSS, spell-check, history, JavaScript compatibility, update, maybe even tabs) and turn those into plugins included with the base install. All enabled by default, of course.

    53. Re:Extensions are bad? by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      Maybe there should be an official set of "Made by Mozilla" extensions.

    54. Re:Extensions are bad? by nmg196 · · Score: 1

      I'm using:
      Adblock Plus
      British English Dictionary
      Check4Change (but is disabled)
      Firebug 1.2.0
      Free Download Manager 1.3.2 (but I've eliminated that from my enquiries!)
      Google Toolbar 3.1.20080605W
      PicLens 1.8
      Tab Mix Plus 0.3.6
      Web Developer 1.1.6

      None of those are particularly unusual plugins apart from Check4Change (disabled ATM).
      They will all have thousands of users each.

      Usually Firefox crashes on exit (suggesting perhaps, the session manager or perhaps a plugin's cleanup code) or when navigating to a new site. It doesn't usually crash on my own sites - mainly on content heavy portal type sites (possibly containing Flash). However I find any Flash blockers quite often cause LOTS of Javascript errors or crashes in their own right, so please don't suggest blocking all Flash.

    55. Re:Extensions are bad? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      I read the article...

      ..it didnt say anything about how much memory each browser *requires* .. nothing at all. It went on and on about how much each browser used in the specific case of a computer with more than enough memory, and quite honestly, it didnt even do a good job of measuring resources since he just yanked a single value from a .net performance monitor, which, ironically, isnt recommended for what he is trying to measure.

      But hey.. you made up your mind before ever reading the article, and certainly made up your mind before reading what I had to say, and completely ignored certain details such as the correct usage of the word 'required', and why the correct usage might be important in the context of comparing software.

      I am happy to let a browser use up 4 gigs of free memory, as long as it still runs when only 64 megs are free. Firefox + all the extensions that bring it up to par with Opera will *NEVER* run in 64 megs of memory.. but Opera does.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
  10. Press the button and protect your privacy .... by Cyberurchin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    > and browser privacy, a feature that didn't make

    Yeah, but the user has to turn it on .... Press the button, enter "InPrivateBrowsing" and your privacy is protected .... Kind of silly. Shouldn't such a feature be activated in the first place? And then, when the application requires the long-term cookies or you want a history, you turn off certain parts of it?

    1. Re:Press the button and protect your privacy .... by Apple+Acolyte · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If private browsing were on by default, then everyone other than /. geeks would think their browsers were dysfunctional for not saving login cookies and whatnot.

      --
      Part of the hardcore faithful who believed in Apple long before it was cool again to do so
    2. Re:Press the button and protect your privacy .... by somersault · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Considering a lot of people will just be wanting to browse at work or whatever and be able to easily find things in the history, I don't see why it should be on by default. Isn't 'browser privacy' basically just a way of hiding your pr0n-browsing history?

      --
      which is totally what she said
    3. Re:Press the button and protect your privacy .... by Cyberurchin · · Score: 1

      So the bottom line is: if the system protects the user's privacy and asks before revealing personal information, then the average user thinks that it's broken?

      I tend to agree but it also shows that there is a fundamental flaw in the design of the system. Or at least something is wrong with the priorities of the designer .... or the users?

    4. Re:Press the button and protect your privacy .... by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 1

      I tend to agree but it also shows that there is a fundamental flaw in the design of the system. Or at least something is wrong with the priorities of the designer .... or the users?

      Depends on if you value privacy or not. I certainly don't, and go to no effort to keep things private. So, even as a tech-savvy user, I would consider the functionality you describe to be "broken". Of course, I'm not super-paranoid like most geeks are.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    5. Re:Press the button and protect your privacy .... by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't even go that far. Caching is useful for speeding up page loads. Cookies are necessary for persistent sessions. It's not like the stuff is the work of the devil. People ask a site to serve them files, and then get pissed off when it actually happens. That's not paranoia, it's not being able to make up your damn mind.

    6. Re:Press the button and protect your privacy .... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Isn't 'browser privacy' basically just a way of hiding your pr0n-browsing history?

      No, no, no! How could you even think such a dirty thing! It's so that you can shop for that special gift with confidence knowing your family won't accidentally find out or use a shared computer without leaving a trace.

  11. What is really worrying is... by Pvt_Ryan · · Score: 5, Informative

    timesonline.co.uk Writes:

    Once the setting is chosen, others using the same computer will not be able to see which sites have been accessed. Other browsers have similar functions, but this one is far more prominent. Although casual users cannot see the previous user's search history, authorities such as the police will be able to access it if necessary.

    So basically the data still exists, just people who nothing will not be able to see it, I knew we were wrong in all those security model that try and keep the experts out. It's really Joe "average" Blogs we should have been protecting against all this time.. DOH!!!

    I'll definitely be surrendering Firefox for IE now..

    1. Re:What is really worrying is... by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I believe they are talking about the logs kept by the ISP rather than anything stored on the machine itself.

      Its currently the same situation for users who delete their own history, its gone from the local machine, but that does not mean it was not logged elsewhere.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    2. Re:What is really worrying is... by Pvt_Ryan · · Score: 1

      I am just going by the way its written, though to be fair it is a journalist writting it so....

      Mind you I wouldn't be supprised if it was just moved to a hidden dir just in case on the slight offchance you (or the police) wanted to find it again.

    3. Re:What is really worrying is... by cerberusss · · Score: 1

      its gone from the local machine, but that does not mean it was not logged elsewhere.

      I'm currently writing a Firefox extension to do just that. I.e. when you click Menu -> Extra -> Clean Up Private Data in Firefox, this extension will add a checkbox to the list:

      "Open Project For Bidding On Elance.com To Let Blackhats Erase Private Data From Remote Machines You Have Visited"

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    4. Re:What is really worrying is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Firefox is for geeks. IE is for Joe Sixpack. You clearly have no clue how the internet works, so it's best that you turn in your geek card and go back to IE.

    5. Re:What is really worrying is... by utnapistim · · Score: 1

      Oh, relax ... if casual users cannot see it you are safe.

      I mean, what could possibly go wrong?

      --
      Tie two birds together: although they have four wings, they cannot fly. (The blind man)
    6. Re:What is really worrying is... by Grim+Leaper · · Score: 1

      I'm currently writing a Firefox extension to do just that. I.e. when you click Menu -> Extra -> Clean Up Private Data in Firefox, this extension will add a checkbox to the list:

      "Open Project For Bidding On Elance.com To Let Blackhats Erase Private Data From Remote Machines You Have Visited"

      Good idea, but don't forget to "Open Project for another Black Hat to Verify That the Remote Machines' Logs Have Been Cleaned".

      Then all you have to do is solve the problem of Eraser Black Hats colluding with the Log-checker Black Hats, taking the money to do nothing...

    7. Re:What is really worrying is... by nerd-persona · · Score: 1

      ISP logs cannot be relied upon unless a correlation can be made to a specific computer. There are too many plausible explanations that could result in certain sites showing up in IP logs tied to a person's IP(wireless router hacked, virus, running a TOR node, etc...). Therefor, in order to ensure that the logs were made by person X the authorities would have to tie the logs to a specific system. This means that it is likely that IE8 will keep the records on the specific system and will only reveal how to access those logs to the authorities.

      Of course this will be broken/discovered soon after IE8 is released, so there's probably not much to worry about.

    8. Re:What is really worrying is... by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Forensic data retrieval tools can pull files off your hard drive that you (thouhgt) you deleted months ago, or possibly longer, depsneding on how often a particular block gets overwritten. Of course, it needs physical disk access and expensive equipment, so Joe Average cerainly is NOT going to be getting to it - and that's all this feature is designed to protect against.

      It keeps your spouse from knowing you bought a special gift for your anniversary. It keeps your dad from seeing the site a friend told you about at school (actually, Vista's parental controls may be able to prevent InPrivate mode). It keeps your female friend who comes over to visit from seeing the most common site you visit whose URL starts with an 'x'. All in all, it seems a smart and well-thought-up product. They should make it a start menu entry rather than just something you start after opening the browser (heck, if it is a command line switch you could make that the default mode), but it still seems pretty good.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
  12. Secure browsing is on a lot of browsers nowadays by Jerry+Smith · · Score: 1

    Safari for OSX nowadays has an option for "private mode": under the File menu it can be selected, and from then on 'recording' has stopped. The older history and cache remains, so it's not as suspicious as a complete history-wipe.

    It's good that this specific userfriendliness is implemented throughout multiple platforms. For let's not forget: SOMEONE has to think of the children :o)

    --
    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die.
  13. indeed. by apodyopsis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's a definite improvement over previous versions, and brings a lot to the table that Firefox requires extensions for.

    That may be true. But given the speed that developments and innovations get put into FF and the general convenience of the plugin system I think I'll stage with the Fox. If there is anything amazingly good and useful you can be sure we'll all have it very soon indeed.

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

      "It's a definite improvement over previous versions, and brings a lot to the table that Firefox requires extensions for."

      Personally I would rather choose to install the extensions for the features I want than have ALL of the features forced down my throat and clutter my browser window and options. I am a minimalistic type browser person and much prefer FireFox's extension method to Microsoft's "let's cram EVERYTHING in" method.

  14. Re:Microsoft Does Not Deserve Another Chance by Bashae · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You don't have to go back if you don't want to, but there are many people still using IE, and it would be easier to write websites if every single bit of JS or CSS didn't have to have a workaround for it. If IE8 brings us one step closer to that dream, then I welcome it with open arms! Even if I'm not ever going to use it.

  15. Does it have viewing options? by netglen · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Does the new IE8 have the option to change the Look-N-Feel to emulate my old Gopher client? Bonus points to emulate my old TVI-950 screen.

    1. Re:Does it have viewing options? by coryking · · Score: 1

      Sadly, no. They decided to create some proprietary "GUI" thing so "lusers" could click and drool with a mouse. But I agree, if Microsoft really wanted to embrace standards, they'd do well to ditch the whole GUI thing and go back to the command line. Once typing "win" at the dos prompt became "legacy", they really jumped the shark, didn't they?

      And for that matter, RMS needs to really hound the firefox guys to support Info documentation, doesn't he? Maybe then he could finally get firefox to run inside emacs where it belongs.

  16. I have to agree with the Post above me by Erie+Ed · · Score: 1

    and brings a lot to the table that Firefox requires extensions for

    You say that like it is a bad thing. I prefer the use of extensions for my browser, instead of the bloatware that tends to happen. What if I don't care about privacy? I don't need that installed then. I like that I can choose the features I want, instead of having everything thrown in there.

    Also, extensions have a great benefit with regards to updates. they can be updated at any time, and therefore don't have to wait on a new browser update for tweaking things and adding functionality. They also allow me to leave an extension that I don't want to update as is while still being able to update the browser (and possibly its security).

    This is not to say that Firefox is not getting large, or that microsoft is not trying to assist people who don't have the savvy to look for extensions. I'm just saying extensions have a lot of benefits, and can be a very important tool.

    This is one of the very many reasons I love using firefox because if i want something i can get it, if i don't then i don't have to worry about it bogging down my system. I love firefox because of this and will continue to use firefox. Now when I'm at work we use IE exclusevly so I'm really hoping that IE8 brings more to the table.

    1. Re:I have to agree with the Post above me by cparker15 · · Score: 1

      You could always use Firefox Portable. Other than the fact that it's portable, I haven't noticed any difference between it and the full install.

      --
      Have you driven a fnord... lately?

      You must wait a little bit before using this resource; please try again later.

  17. Re:Crap... by somersault · · Score: 1

    And the thing is, he doesn't have any incentive to. If good reviews start coming back then maybe he will. But as far as Microsoft products are concerned, better to just leave them to rot and let others do the testing, rather than wasting time on what will still be a buggy product once it is released. Yes, I'm a little bitter. I don't let XP upgrade to IE 7. I don't like the interface and it still 'feels' wrong. Probably because as someone pointed out above, it is even slower than IE 6 (which I liked okay).

    Pointless anecdote: the other day one of my users was having a problem accessing his shared drives, the machine was complaining about a lack of resources. He did have a few applications open, but nothing crazy, and the task manager claimed that he had plenty of free RAM. I scanned the apps that were open and suggested he tried closing IE as I know that IE and explorer probably use the same components. He closed it, and his shared drives were working again. I don't want to install software that is going to affect the underlying OS in such a fundamental way, especially if it's only in beta.

    Besides, the new features are not worth it for me - I get better functionality out of Firefox 3 with a couple of plugins. I agree that we need to keep competition in areas where we want products to improve, but I've given up on MS products for now. I'm not going to help them with their testing until they make a better effort with their internal testing. Handing out wristbands isn't much of an incentive.

    --
    which is totally what she said
  18. Thoughts by Max+Romantschuk · · Score: 2, Interesting

    New versions of IE is a Good Thing... Competition is good with something like browsers.

    For the average Joe having features which normally require extensions just be there is probably a good thing. Perhaps Firefox should have the option to enabling a set of officially sanctioned extensions while installing? Bloating is not the solution, but checking the "enable feature X" checkbox beats searching for the actually good ones...

    Private browsing is a two-sided thing. It's a good feature, but sort of pointless if you actually want to store bookmarks of things like your favorite naughty sites... I run two Firefox profiles personally. Unfortunately it's a bit difficult to set up, but I get the best of both worlds.

    --
    .: Max Romantschuk :: http://max.romantschuk.fi/
    1. Re:Thoughts by Chapter80 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Many will disagree, but I feel the solution to this is to have "distributions", much like the distros of Linux.

      Imagine being able to download from the official Firefox site such distributions as:

      • Firefox Standard
      • Firefox Lite
      • Firefox for developers
      • Firefox with Taco's favorite extensions
      • Firefox for teens
      • etc.
    2. Re:Thoughts by dubz · · Score: 1

      Bloating is not the solution, but checking the "enable feature X" checkbox beats searching for the actually good ones...

      I believe all they need to do for that is to have a list of say the top 10 most popular extensions listed in the Get Add-Ons Tab (Tools > Add-ons), instead of a list of random recommended extensions.

    3. Re:Thoughts by nevurthls · · Score: 1

      firefox lite, aka K-meleon exists, thank you very much

      --
      I am a viral sig. Please copy me and help me spread. Thank you.
    4. Re:Thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      • Firefox Home Basic
      • Firefox Home Premium
      • Firefox Business
      • Firefox Ultimate
    5. Re:Thoughts by smartr · · Score: 1

      One could do this without merging the plugins as part of the core browser. I'd compare Firefox 3 plugin system to Netbeans 6 as being functionally and cosmetically identical. Netbeans 6 does have different distributions, but they're all actually the same Netbeans just with different plugins and bundled software... It certainly would make life nicer for administrators, and I fail to see why people would disagree if it was done correctly...

    6. Re:Thoughts by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      As I posted higher up, some kind of scripted "extension pack" installers would be nice, especially if they were easy to make/customize.

      They already auto-update extensions, so this is probably doable. Even if it were an extension itself, this would be nice; install FF->install extension->browse to site where I've store the script->click link->hit OK

    7. Re:Thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree

    8. Re:Thoughts by Rossjman1 · · Score: 1

      That would be a great way to overwhelm the average user. Even more so than the 6 editions of Vista.

    9. Re:Thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      didnt they do some sort of College specific firefox last year?

  19. Re:I tested it by MyLongNickName · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why? Did you find a gaping security hole?

    --
    See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
  20. Crash recovery... by HappySmileMan · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sounds like a great feature, I can't try IE8 since I'm on Linux, but from the descriptions I've read of it, it seems like they're doing something right this time instead of just jacking up the release number.

    I can't believe I'm actually sitting here hoping that Firefox will copy a feature from IE. Good game, Microsoft.

    1. Re:Crash recovery... by hellwig · · Score: 1

      Implementing a feature Opera has had for years, now that's what I call innovation.

      I'll be pleased with IE crash recovery if IE crashing doesn't bring down Exporer with it. If my window manager still has to restart just because my internet browser crashes, then MS can keep IE8. Does anyone know if IE is getting more and less tied-up into the windows kernel? I would hope with Vista's kernel security IE8 is nearly a stand-alone product now days.

      --
      Eggs
      Milk
      Bread
      Cat Litter
      Soda
      ...
    2. Re:Crash recovery... by Dude+McDude · · Score: 2, Informative

      Implementing a feature Opera has had for years, now that's what I call innovation.

      Opera doesn't recover tabs. If a webpage crashes it takes Opera down with it. IE8's crash handling gracefully closes/reopens the offending tab without having to close the browser.

    3. Re:Crash recovery... by learningtree · · Score: 1

      Firefox already has crash recovery feature, albeit through an addon.

      You can use the "Session Manager" addon in Firefox.
      It save and restores all the browser windows, either when you exit or when the browser crashes.

      Here is the link to it.

    4. Re:Crash recovery... by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      I would hope with Vista's kernel security IE8 is nearly a stand-alone product now days.

      IE7 was a standalone product. Lots of other apps use mshtml.dll (the standard Windows HTML rendering engine, as used by IE) but that does not mean that IE is any less standalone. Since at least IE7 if you type an http:/// URL in the address bar in Windows Explorer, an IE process is spawned to handle it instead of WE handling it itself.

      Besides that, IE was never integrated into the kernel. It was integrated into Explorer, which provides the desktop environment, but that is most certainly not the same thing. I'm all for bashing MS, but let's keep it to things they've actually done.

    5. Re:Crash recovery... by hellwig · · Score: 1

      Can I remove IE8 without reverting to IE7 on Vista or IE6 on XP? If not, than IE is still tied to the OS (not the kernel, sorry), and the problem isn't solved. I just remember upgrading to IE7, and when I uninstalled it, it went back to IE6.

      --
      Eggs
      Milk
      Bread
      Cat Litter
      Soda
      ...
    6. Re:Crash recovery... by LiquidFire_HK · · Score: 1

      You don't need an add-on, Firefox has that feature built-in.

      However, that's not the same as the feature talked about here - which is that if something in a webpage causes the browser to crash, it won't - the tab will simply close and reopen. Which is faster than a complete reload of the browser.

    7. Re:Crash recovery... by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Implementing a feature Opera has had for years, now that's what I call innovation.

      Opera doesn't have that feature; if Flash plug-in kills an Opera tab, the whole browser dies. If Flash kills an IE8 tab, only that tab dies and IE8 will re-create it automatically. Your other tabs are completely unaffected. Apples -> oranges.

      I'll be pleased with IE crash recovery if IE crashing doesn't bring down Exporer with it.

      It doesn't now; maybe you should upgrade off of IE5?

      If my window manager still has to restart just because my internet browser crashes, then MS can keep IE8.

      It doesn't for IE8. It also doesn't for IE7 and IE6. Seriously, could you possible be more out-of-date?

      Does anyone know if IE is getting more and less tied-up into the windows kernel?

      IE was never "tied-up into the Windows kernel", it was "tied-up with Windows Explorer." Not even close to the same thing. In any case, IE7 runs as a normal application, the same as any other. In Vista, it actually runs in a security sandbox as well, so if anything it has a lot less power to screw with your system than the average off-the-shelf program.

      I would hope with Vista's kernel security IE8 is nearly a stand-alone product now days.

      IE7 is, so I don't know why you think IE8 wouldn't be.

      Oh yeah! Because you're a Slashdot shill who's dogging a product you've never even used, or probably even seen. Your last experience was with IE5, so you're just stretching to find random reasons to hate Microsoft. You could save a lot of time and typing by just writing "[Ignorant Anti-Microsoft Rant]" next time.

    8. Re:Crash recovery... by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Well, Microsoft has the same problem as everybody else. If they don't force upgrades, they get dragged over the coals for being insecure. If they do force upgrades, people complain that they can't just uninstall it and go back to the old version. Firefox is going through the exact same problem with the transition from FF2 to FF3.

      My guess is that they'll do the same thing with IE8 that they did with IE7, that is, if you're an early adopter you'll get the chance to downgrade, but sooner or later it'll get marked a mandatory update and then it's either stop doing OS updates or stop using IE (if you really hate it that much.)

      You also have to remember that the HTML renderer DLL is used by thousands of other applications, so there's really no practical way to "uninstall" it. (OS X and presumably Linux is the same way; you can "uninstall" Safari easily, but you can't remove OS X's HTML library because too many other applications rely on it.) Again, you have to be fair in your criticism; these are hard problems that *all* OSes face, not just Microsoft.

    9. Re:Crash recovery... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who gives a shit?
      Anyway, the addon to which you refer causes more problems than it solves.

    10. Re:Crash recovery... by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      Implementing a feature Opera has had for years, now that's what I call innovation.

      It's never worked for me. Whenever Opera has crashed, more than the tab that caused the crash, crashed - the entire browser crashed.

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
    11. Re:Crash recovery... by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Yeah, this was my first really impressive thing I saw with IE8, aside from passing Acid2. First, individual tabs can crash without bringing down the whole browser (something Firefox would do REALLY well to copy). Second, if (or, in the case of beta1, WHEN) the browser did entirely crash, it re-loaded instantly with all tabs. If one of the tabs caused it to crash again immediately (which I found one site that would cause this) it would try one more time, and on the third recovery would not load the offending page with a message stating that the page in that tab was causing the browser to crash and has not been reloaded for that reason. Very well implemented, and the whole process doesn't take very long at all.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    12. Re:Crash recovery... by magus_melchior · · Score: 1

      We might want to trawl through the USPTO pending patent database for that feature. Not that software patents are at all wise, of course, but we don't want to give Microsoft's legal department ammunition.

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
    13. Re:Crash recovery... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Apparently, people are still missing the point. This "recovery" feature in IE8 is not at all like the present Firefox and Opera solutions which restore your session after restart. Instead, IE8 runs every tab in a separate process (downloading, rendering, scripting - all of it), so if something goes wrong in one tab to the point of crash, it will only crash that tab, leaving others working.

  21. Re:Secure browsing is on a lot of browsers nowaday by bestinshow · · Score: 1

    Apparently the IE private mode has that, and in addition tries to intercept cross-site tracking via third parties (the single-pixel trick, amongst others).

    It won't stop things that happen off of the clients computer - ISP logs, server-side-implemented cross-site tracking, etc.

  22. Re:Microsoft Does Not Deserve Another Chance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Finally came out of the closet?

  23. Intruder by Bromskloss · · Score: 1, Funny

    at work (MS)

    AHA! Get him, guys!

    --
    Swedish plasma phys. PhD student; MSc EE; knows maths, programming, electronics; finance interest; seeks opportunities
    1. Re:Intruder by Bromskloss · · Score: 1

      at work (MS)

      AHA! Get him, guys!

      Oh, that goes well with my sig... But there are limits!

      --
      Swedish plasma phys. PhD student; MSc EE; knows maths, programming, electronics; finance interest; seeks opportunities
  24. Reboot by QuietLagoon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do you still have to reboot after installing the IE8 application?

    1. Re:Reboot by Dude+McDude · · Score: 2, Informative

      I was prompted to reboot once it was installed.

    2. Re:Reboot by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1
      I was prompted to reboot once it was installed.
      .

      Then IE8 is still too deeply in bed with the underlying OS, requiring extraordinary security mesaures in order to remain secure.

      There is no reason why a browser application should require a reboot of the OS.

    3. Re:Reboot by wbo · · Score: 1

      I believe the problem is not that IE8 is embedded into the underlying OS, instead the reason for the reboot is probably so the IE common browser controls can be updated. Many applications use these controls because it is easier than developing your own HTML rendering engine from scratch. A reboot ensures that these controls can be updated without crashing any applications that may be currently using them. This also avoids the problem of replacing files that are currently in use under Windows.

    4. Re:Reboot by phayes · · Score: 1

      The IE8 is still to deeply embedded into the base OS. The architecture should be such that the installer would show a list of the running apps that use these "common browser controls", wait for them to be closed, then proceed once no running applications are using them. As GP said, if you need to reboot just to upgrade the browser then there is something wrong with the architecture.

      --
      Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
    5. Re:Reboot by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1
      I believe the problem is not that IE8 is embedded into the underlying OS, instead the reason for the reboot is probably so the IE common browser controls can be updated. Many applications use these controls because it is easier than developing your own HTML rendering engine from scratch.
      .

      OK, so if what you are saying is correct then, when I update the IE application in Windows, that update loads up files that can make other applications fail if those files are buggy. Good thing, then, that Microsoft doesn't write buggy, insecure code.

      What a wonderful architecture Windows is.

  25. Honestly... by Miladinoski · · Score: 1

    It looks good it has really nice features, too bad I can't try it because of my chosen platform 'cause I really want to see all the features it offers (and no it comes in no consideration to install a whole OS just to try a browser).
    I think Microsoft should at least consider offering IE on other platforms than Windows or maybe support IEs4Linux or Wine with devs or by donations (which is hardly to believe to happen). Microsoft will only have good props from doing that by enabling web-devs to test in other browsers without having to install yet another software to install yet another software.

    --
    [insert lame sig here]
  26. The question remains.... by aierwin · · Score: 0

    When will IE6 die?

    (So the life of many webdevelopers get's so much better)

    1. Re:The question remains.... by spoilsportmotors · · Score: 1

      Or for that matter 5.5. The answer - from a webdevs point of view - is practically never, which is really unfortunate.

  27. InPrivate by wilsonthecat · · Score: 1

    They should just rename the InPrivate feature to "ImBrowsingPorn" although that's probably not as marketing friendly.

  28. i disagree. by nimbius · · Score: 1

    when i see "automatic crash recovery" i cant help but think "perpetual browser spawn."

    or worse, automatic crash recovery is another vector for cache clearing and exploit. what happens if i know your browser can be forced to load my page twice?

    I dont mean to sound trollish, but knowing microsoft we're just keeping up with the joneses (namely Firefox 3.) if we really wanted to improve things, we wouldnt make the browser nearly inextricably integrated with the operating system. Its a marketing decision that microsoft will pay the price for over and over.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  29. What to mod? by CommieSmurf · · Score: 0

    I'm not sure if I should post something that gets me modded flamebait or troll. You decide! Considering where this is, I could probably just do both in one and get modded insightful.

  30. Re:Crap... by daveime · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So not like Firefox 2 then, which has upgraded itself no less than 16 times on my PC here ? Firefox pushes out beta stuff too, then try to cover it with automatic patches. But they're OSS, so that makes it okay ...

  31. Took it for a whirl and discovered, 30 seconds... by Assmasher · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...later that the link option "Open in New Window" doesn't appear to function anymore. Well done Microsoft.

    --
    Loading...
  32. but IE7 is doing just fine on privacy by amnezick · · Score: 1

    I'm on vista (game addiction .. but I can quit anytime I want) and I use firefox (minefield actually) but when going "wiiild" and don't want "youporn" to pop up when my IE-fan girlfriend wants to actually type "youtube" I use "Tools"->"Delete browsing history" ... and there you go: browsing history gone.

    --
    mov ax,4c00h
    int 21h
  33. Is Microsoft trying to hurt Google? by startling · · Score: 1

    Is Microsoft going to leverage this new InPorn mode so that Doubleclick and Google's effectiveness is hit?

  34. Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by Jumperalex · · Score: 4, Informative

    What I'm really curious to see, and I can only assume it will be there, is if they also include the ability to LOCK-OUT the InPrivate feature. Many corporate (and especially government) IT/legal departments excplicitly WANT your browsing to be tracked. Sure I can go in and delete stuff manually (except when I am not given permissions to access that folder ... which I'm not) but right now all of our standard desktop configurations prevent you from clicking the "clear private data" button.

    So not only are the advertisers (as I've read elsewhere) possibly not going to like this feature, but many corp/gov types won't install it until/unless they can excplicitly prevent its use.

    --
    If you can't be good, be good at it!
    1. Re:Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by Hanners1979 · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'd fully expect all of that those kind of settings to be available via Group Policy, you've been able to configure most of IE's major settings across your network that way for some time now.

    2. Re:Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by Jellybob · · Score: 3, Informative

      Any IT department that *really* wants your browsing history is going to route any traffic on port 80 through a proxy, so they can get reports on what you've been doing from one central location, instead of having to trawl through every user's history. The InPrivate feature isn't going to stop that being possible, so IT departments are fine.

    3. Re:Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you can block it through parental controls in vista, and im sure through group policy.

    4. Re:Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by hab136 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      many corp/gov types won't install it until/unless they can excplicitly prevent its use.

      They don't have to do anything to the desktop - they can just look at their proxy/firewall/router logs. Your choice of browser does nothing to stop corporate tracking/filtering.

    5. Re:Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by Software · · Score: 1
      If they want to track your browsing, they'll install a proxy server on the network, and force all traffic through that. Any IT department that depends on disabling the Clear Private Data button is asking for trouble. Disabling the button can be done in conjunction with the proxy server, of course.

      Beta download site: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/internet-explorer/beta/worldwide-sites.aspx

    6. Re:Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many corporate (and especially government) IT/legal departments excplicitly WANT your browsing to be tracked.

      Sure, but if they are doing it client side they are dumb. The right approach to accomplish that would be to make the gateway or proxy log these things. That way, you have full control of the machine where the logs go -- if you rely on the client to do your logging there is nothing to stop the user from deleting it.

    7. Re:Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any good IT department wouldn't rely on the on-computer browser to track visited sites - they'd do it as the traffic flowed over the network.

    8. Re:Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which...they can..it's under group policy control

    9. Re:Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      One of the reasons IE is used/required by large companies is because virtually everything in it is configurable via Group Policy. I'd be extremely surprised if this InPrivate feature isn't.

      If Firefox did more integration with Windows, it would be able to garner a lot more users in the corporate market.

    10. Re:Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like several of the other more pervasive features of IE, the InPrivate mode can be controlled by admins via group policy.

    11. Re:Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by waded · · Score: 1

      Regardless of whether disabling InPrivate is the best way to ensure you can track browsing within an organization, yes, InPrivate can be "configured and controlled via Group Policy." (It is confirmed by the IE8 team in the comments on the blog entry announcing the feature http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2008/08/25/ie8-and-privacy.aspx)

    12. Re:Lots of IT/Legal Depts. won't like InPrivate by atraintocry · · Score: 1
  35. Automatic crash recovery sounds interesting by hcdejong · · Score: 2, Interesting

    but does it also prevent tabs from hogging resources (e.g. in Firefox, where an applet loading in one tab can lock the entire application).

    1. Re:Automatic crash recovery sounds interesting by blueZ3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yep, that's my one beef with FF.

      I use FF for basic browsing (without many extensions) and I mostly think it's great. Rarely crashes, renders most sites fine, etc.

      But I really, really don't like the apparently single-threadedness. Each tab should be its own thread, IMO, so that when one tab is busy with some random java applet, the others are still getting enough CPU slices to actually be usable.

      Another time you get this behavior is when you open multiple tabs one right after the other. The tab you are viewing slows to a crawl while content is loaded in the other tabs.

      I'm not saying this is better in Opera/IE/Safari/Lynx, but I'd really like to see this fixed.

      --
      Interested in a Flash-based MAME front end? Visit mame.danzbb.com
    2. Re:Automatic crash recovery sounds interesting by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Actually, that was one of the things that drove me back to IE - it really is better at keeping each tab alive without making the current tab unusable. I'm not sure if it does some funky stuff with thread priorities or whatnot, but I can (and have) run down the Slashdot main page, middle-clickign every link that looks vaguely interesting, and ended up with 14 tabs loading in the background (and with D2, IE7 loads Slashdot articles quite slowly - though it's fast with IE8 beta 2). The main tab remains responsive, and I can watch as up to two tabs at a time (on my dual-core machine) finish loading along the tab bar. If I switch to a not-yet-loaded tab, it will come up as quickly as if I had clicked the link on the main page and opened it in the same tab.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    3. Re:Automatic crash recovery sounds interesting by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      But I really, really don't like the apparently single-threadedness. Each tab should be its own thread, IMO, so that when one tab is busy with some random java applet, the others are still getting enough CPU slices to actually be usable.

      One of the major new features in IE8 (at least as far as MS is concerned) is that every tab is in a separate process (not just thread). The most obvious benefit is what they call "crash recovery" - because a crash in one tab will only crash the process for that tab, and not for the others - but it should also solve the "locking plugin" problem, and, in theory, could add another layer of security (dunno if they actually did that though). Of course, this comes at the cost of higher resource usage - processes are more expensive than threads. But I guess the difference would be hard to spot on any modern PC.

      By the way, while this process-per-tab mode is on by default, it can be disabled if desired.

  36. IE 8 ... brings a lot to the table by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ORLY?

    Does it work at all with any of these test pages?

    http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/WG/wiki/Test_Suite_Overview

    http://www.croczilla.com/~alex/fosdem2003/w3c-conformance-suite/mozillified-suite.html

    Hmmph. I thought not.

  37. Screencast of IE8 (beta1) vs Firefox 3 by ianOz · · Score: 1

    A few days back I recorded a short screencast showing IE8 and FF3 in action: http://showmedo.com/videos/video?name=3150000&fromSeriesID=315

    Topics covered include Firefox's improved security record, tabs and Awesome Bar (note that the screencast is biased to FF), IE's plugins and a friendly plea to users of IE6 to upgrade.

  38. Help! I've been dellusioned for so long by omuls+are+tasty · · Score: 1

    It says

    Download now All Systems and Languages"

    So Ubuntu is not a system! And Serbian is not a language!

    On topic, how is their ACID score coming along?

    1. Re:Help! I've been dellusioned for so long by nneonneo · · Score: 1

      Check http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid3. Between beta1 and beta2, they made a 3 point improvement.

  39. ActiveX per user by robmv · · Score: 1
    MS do a few step forward and later, turn 180 degrees run and jump, now IE8 will allow user installable ActiveX, being a non administrator user will not stop bad code to install on your system. From the CNET review

    ActiveX components will be installed per user, which eliminates the need for everyone to have administrator privileges

    Hopefully they add a way to disable this, like Firefox has the "xpinstall.enabled" preference

  40. I'm scared and I want to get off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So how

  41. Running multiple versions of IE by Jason+Levine · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Now if they would only give us some way of running multiple versions of IE side by side. There are still a lot of people using IE6, so I need to test sites against that. But I can't if I upgrade to IE7. And if I upgrade to IE8, I can't test against IE7 or IE6. We need a standalone version of IE6 for web developers to use for website testing. The time limited VM that they provide is a start, but I don't want to boot up an entire VM of Windows just to test one page.

    --
    My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    1. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by Dude+McDude · · Score: 2, Informative

      And if I upgrade to IE8, I can't test against IE7 or IE6.

      You should be able to test against IE7 using IE8's compatibility mode

    2. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      That still leaves out IE6. My company hasn't pushed out the IE7 upgrade yet (one of our third-party web apps doesn't work with IE7 yet), so most of our internal users are running IE6. Meanwhile, about half of our IE-using external website users have moved to IE7. I can't upgrade my PC to IE7 or I won't be able to test our internal pages with IE6, but I can't continue to run IE6 indefinitely since more and more external users are running IE7.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    3. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      You're looking for IE Tester.
      It does pretty much what you describe, and even goes back to IE5.5.

    4. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://tredosoft.com/Multiple_IE
      and, to add IE7 to that list
      http://tredosoft.com/IE7_standalone

      Hopefully, once IE8 goes gold they'll update the multiple installer to include IE7 as well.

    5. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by coryking · · Score: 1

      VMWare is your friend. Yeah you gotta boot up the image first, but you can get a base image of windows installed and then take snapshot images of IE6, IE7, IE6 + XP SP2, etc. Once you are done for the day, you can roll the image back to the snapshot and in the morning boot into a virgin install of whatever OS/SP/Browser combo you choose.

      And for that matter, I'd consider anybody insane to install a beta version of IE8 on anything *but* a virtual machine.

    6. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by dubz · · Score: 1

      Umm. There are (hacked) stand-alone versions of IE5 and IE6 available. I've been using them for testing. I can't remember where I downloaded them from, but I'm sure Google knows.

      As for IE7, I think Firefox's IE Tab extension can do that. Also, I'm not sure but I heard there's an option in IE8 to render using the IE7 engine?

      I'm sure other posters can help with more (and useful) information.

    7. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by wastedlife · · Score: 1

      Damn, beat me to it. The downside is that IE6's developer toolbar won't work with this. So you may still need a VM for IE 6 if you use that.

      --
      Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    8. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by lawndart · · Score: 3, Interesting

      http://tredosoft.com/Multiple_IE

      Multiple IE works for me, as long as you aren't on Vista. I have all the IE versions back to 5 running.

    9. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IE8 has developer tools that allow you to test sites under IE7's rendering mode and Quirks mode. Also, Microsoft provide a IE6 VPC Config (free) that really doesn't take that long to start first time and can be left in a saved state so you can open straight to IE6 in the time it takes to open VPC. It's much better than sticking with 6 and hoping your sites work in 7 and 8.

    10. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by Afty0r · · Score: 1

      You probably want something like MultipleIE:
      http://tredosoft.com/Multiple_IE

      I'm able to run IE 4.01, 5.01, 5.5, 6.0 and 7 all at the same time...

    11. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use MultipleIEs for this.
      http://tredosoft.com/Multiple_IE

      It occasionally locks up, but is otherwise very helpful.

    12. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by byron036 · · Score: 1

      I was looking for these VHD images this morning and could no longer find them. The hits I get from Microsoft's search results page are 404s. Do you happen to have a link?

    13. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by eddy+the+lip · · Score: 2, Informative

      Everyone's posting this, but you've got the current high-score ;) I've used Multiple IE, and it mostly works, but I've run into a few issues. One is the recent forced-upgrade to Vista, which Multiple IE doesn't run on (yet), so I can't use it on my main dev box. I still have an XP machine around, but I've come across some weird issues there as well. One has either something to do with cookies or forwarding, which makes even logging in to some online apps impossible. Testing against IE6 on a virtual image of XP there's no such problem. Cost me a morning of headaches yesterday, though, before I gave up trying to fix it and re-installed the image from MS (stupid time limited image.) I applaud TredoSoft for the effort, but those edge cases can be a bitch.

      --

      This is the voice of World Control. I bring you Peace.

    14. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by Bogtha · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, using IE8's compatibility mode means you are testing against IE8's compatibility mode. Sure, in theory it will behave identically to IE7, but testing is not a theoretical exercise, you need to know how IE7 actually behaves.

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
    15. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      No, using IE8's compatibility mode means you are testing against IE8's compatibility mode. Sure, in theory it will behave identically to IE7, but testing is not a theoretical exercise, you need to know how IE7 actually behaves.

      So true. In fact, IE7 compat mode in IE8 beta 1 broke SharePoint - it's one of the announced fixes in beta 2.

    16. Re:Running multiple versions of IE by Dude+McDude · · Score: 1

      I can't vouch for the following piece of software (it could be utter s**t), but when I when I read the description it reminded me of your post. http://fileforum.betanews.com/detail/Internet_Explorer_Collection/1217189605/1

  42. Extensions = good, not bad by fireman+sam · · Score: 1

    "and brings a lot to the table that Firefox requires extensions for"

    That is why I like firefox. Because of the use of extensions I can have a browser that does what I want it to do, not what some marketing monkey wants a browser to do.

    --
    it is only after a long journey that you know the strength of the horse.
  43. Re:Took it for a whirl and discovered, 30 seconds. by Ma8thew · · Score: 3, Funny

    I think that's why they call it a beta.

  44. Re:Is Microsoft trying to hurt Google? Yes by walterbyrd · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Msie, apparently, has a firefox like drop-down box of search engines, and wikipedia, etc. But the msie drop-down menu does not include google. Ouuu what a burn! Also, if you highlight a street address, msie will take you to msft maps, not google maps.

    Just one more reason to use firefox instead of msie. BTW: according to the same article, firefox installed base is up 6% to 19% while msie fell 6% to 73% of the installed base, or something like that.

    http://www.forbes.com/technology/2008/08/27/microsoft-google-browsers-cx_vmb_0827ie.html?feed=rss_technology

  45. Okaaaaaaaaayy... by ChrisMP1 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Now you can shop for that special gift with confidence knowing your family won't accidentally find out.

    Yeah, that's what "InPrivate Browsing" is gonna be used for.

    --
    <sig>&nbsp;</sig>
    1. Re:Okaaaaaaaaayy... by wastedlife · · Score: 1

      Perhaps non-techie people really have this as a concern.
      Obviously, this could be used for other purposes.
      Really, though, blocking cookies would make online shopping difficult.
      Not many online stores use sessions instead of cookies for things like a cart.

      --
      Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    2. Re:Okaaaaaaaaayy... by phayes · · Score: 1

      Buying sex toys?

      --
      Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
  46. Because it has to be said... by Digital+End · · Score: 1

    Opera > Firefox > IE

    Though its nice to see a few people saying IE is getting closer.

    My wife uses firefox... and I never quite undershood how any firefox user thinks it's normal that you'd have to get extentions to do so many simple tasks. Maybe I'm thinking of it the wrong way, but I know my browser does everything hers does, and I only have one addon... and that's for stumbleupon.

    I love when firefox gets updated, and she says "Well we just got (x new feature)". And I can reply, "About time, I've been using that for a year now."

    --
    Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart, he dreams himself your master.
  47. Re:Crap... by somersault · · Score: 1

    I didn't say I had a problem with Betas.

    --
    which is totally what she said
  48. Re:Took it for a whirl and discovered, 30 seconds. by Dude+McDude · · Score: 1

    Right-click on link>Open in new window...? Works as intended for me.

  49. Excellent! by g0dsp33d · · Score: 1

    In other news, a team of developers is rushing to co-release a beta version of a distributed computing mail server running on this platform.

    --
    lol: You see no door there!
  50. Loop de loop? by I+cant+believe+its+n · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If one or more of your tabs do crash, your tabs are automatically reloaded and you are returned to whatever page you were on before the crash.

    Sounds like a loop to me, unless the crash happened due to random memory corruption in IE? I could be missing some common error that can happend to browsers so please correct me and I'll learn something.
    ---
    When I made the switch to FF, initially I just prefered the look and feel of the browser. First thing I liked about it, was that the adress field was pre selected when you started it. In IE you had to use the mouse. This was just a small difference, but when you have loads of these little differences, where someone has really taken their time with the details researching what comes natural to the user, at least it was clear to me that FF was the way to go.

    How about you?

    --
    She made the willows dance
    1. Re:Loop de loop? by coryking · · Score: 1

      If one or more of your tabs do crash, your tabs are automatically reloaded and you are returned to whatever page you were on before the crash.

      If they do crash recovery like the Office applications do, before loading up after the crash they'd probably pop up a dialog that says "Dear sir, your tab entitled 'Slashdot Horse Porn' has crashed, do you want me to try loading 'Slashdot Horse Porn' again?

      I'll even take jab at Firefox and mention this is probably easier to do on IE7/8 because they run each tab in a separate thread.

    2. Re:Loop de loop? by I+cant+believe+its+n · · Score: 1

      "Dear sir, your tab entitled 'Slashdot Horse Porn' has crashed, do you want me to try loading 'Slashdot Horse Porn' again?

      I know the answer to that and like I said... A loop :-)

      --
      She made the willows dance
    3. Re:Loop de loop? by nneonneo · · Score: 1

      It crashes again, then you press "no", thus breaking the loop. Most normal people wouldn't keep hitting "yes" if it causes their browser to continually present that dialog. (an xkcd comic involving lightning bolts and buttons comes to mind)

  51. new features not in Firefox .. by rs232 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "New features include .. automatic crash recovery .. and browser privacy, a feature that didn't make Firefox 3"

    What's tools->clear private data .. 'Always clear my private data when I close Firefox'

    and .. why does Firefox prompt me with:

    Firefix - Restore Previous Session

    Your last Firefox session closed unexpectedly. YOu can restore the tabs and windows from your previous sessions, or start a new session if you think the problem was related to a page you were viewing.

    | Restore Session | | Start New Session |

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
    1. Re:new features not in Firefox .. by Churla · · Score: 1

      First when it says "a feature" instead of "features" that means only the last one listed (browser privacy) didn't make it into FF3.

      Browser Privacy is different from "clear private data when Firefox closes" in that apparently it protects you WHILE you are browsing. It also blocks out many tracking pixels (those 1x1 images which many companies use to track use).

      I'm curious as to if that level of "private browsing" will make it into a full FF release as I believe Firefox's largest supporter (Google) wouldn't want it in. Can they use that leverage to stop it? and will they?

      --
      I'm a fiscal conservative, it's a pity we don't have a political party anymore
    2. Re:new features not in Firefox .. by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      If you had followed the link, you would see the following for crash recovery:

      "If a website or add-on causes a tab to crash in Internet Explorer 8, only that tab is affected. The browser itself remains stable and other tabs remain unaffected"

      That's not the same as Firefox's session recovery.

    3. Re:new features not in Firefox .. by et764 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Your last Firefox session closed unexpectedly. YOu can restore the tabs and windows from your previous sessions, or start a new session if you think the problem was related to a page you were viewing.

      Ahh, you haven't actually seen IE8's automatic crash recovery feature then. Each of the tabs are isolated from each other, so if one tab crashes it doesn't take down the whole browser. The tab just goes away and then pops back up with a message saying IE recovered the tab. It's definitely not the same thing as "Restore Previous Session."

    4. Re: new features not in Firefox .. by rs232 · · Score: 1

      'Browser Privacy is different from "clear private data when Firefox closes" in that apparently it protects you WHILE you are browsing'

      Appariently the protection consists of a white/black of selected sites that the browser deems unsafe. Do these subscription feeds require a fee.

      "Depending on your web browsing activity and sites visited, the amount of time it can take before such content is automatically blocked can vary widely. However, at any time, you can customize which third-party content is blocked or allowed though subscribing to InPrivate allow and block feeds"

      privoxy noscript FoxTor ..

      "I'm curious as to if that level of "private browsing" will make it into a full FF release as I believe Firefox's largest supporter (Google) wouldn't want it in. Can they use that leverage to stop it? and will they?"

      I wonder will "private browsing" work with Hotmail, or will their be exceptions burried within the app. Besides, it's irrelevent as I have full control over my computer, not Mozilla or Google .. or Microsoft :)

      --
      davecb5620@gmail.com
    5. Re:new features not in Firefox .. by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Welcome uninformed poster! You may want to spend a few minutes using IE8 before making claims about it, otherwise you'll look like a total tool when all your points are proven wrong!

      What's tools->clear private data .. 'Always clear my private data when I close Firefox'

      InPrivate can be turned on and off during a session; while it's on, your history/"private data" isn't logged, but in addition IE will also block tracking pixels. The IE8 feature is more equivalent to the "private browsing" feature in Safari, which can also be turned on/off at will, but Safari won't block tracking pixels.

      The Firefox feature you mention is really nothing like it. And in any case, IE7 already has "always clear private data". (Although it's kind of a pain to use, hidden away in the "privacy" tab.)

      and .. why does Firefox prompt me with:

      Firefix - Restore Previous Session

      Your last Firefox session closed unexpectedly. YOu can restore the tabs and windows from your previous sessions, or start a new session if you think the problem was related to a page you were viewing.

      Because IE can do it PER-TAB. If Flash (for example) crashes an IE tab, IE can restart browsing on that tab without affecting the other tabs of your browser. Firefox can't do this.

      I'm not saying that IE8 is going to be the best thing ever and angels will descend from the heavens to crown it in gold, I'm just saying that before you start criticizing the article, you might want to spend a few minutes determining whether you're full of crap or not.

    6. Re:new features not in Firefox .. by anaesthetica · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think this is one of the most exciting features, on a purely geeky level. I can't profess to know how Microsoft engineered this, but it reminds me of the move that operating systems made to protected memory. We used to have to deal with situations in which one application's crash would take down the entire operating system and all other applications with it (Mac OS 9, I'm looking at you).

      Now that the web browser metaphor has changed from "windows reading static documents" to "tabbed window with multiple web applications," the similarity to an operating system has become much clearer. A crash in one tab (application) can take down the entire browser (operating system). IE8 seems to be moving toward a protected memory model, which is a major step forward in rethinking how the browser's handling of web pages (i.e. web applications) is engineered.

      I'm a Mac user and Firefox user, but I have to give credit where credit is due and say that, on the technical side of things, Microsoft is the one pushing the envelope on this score and getting the geeky things right.

    7. Re:new features not in Firefox .. by et764 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I can't profess to know how Microsoft engineered this

      Here's a blog post from the IE team that describes how the feature works, if you're interested in more. Basically, it creates a couple different processes, which are all separate from the main UI frame. This means one process can crash, bringing down all the tabs in that process, but the rest are unaffected.

      I agree, I think it's a pretty exciting feature. It almost makes crashing your browser an enjoyable experience. (I managed to crash a tab when I installed the Adobe SVG plugin to see if I could get another point or two on the Acid3 test).

      One negative side effect of this is that there is some overhead in creating new processes. This will probably lead to Slashdot complaining about how much memory IE uses and how bloated it is, but personally, I find the reliability gains worth it. Another positive side effect though is that it isolates the Javascript interpreters from each other, which keeps one misbehaving page from locking up the whole browser.

    8. Re: new features not in Firefox .. by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      No, they are simple RSS regex subscriptions. I think some people are getting confused by the word "subscription". It's like the programming version of subscription, not the magazine-purchasing version.

    9. Re:new features not in Firefox .. by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      First, does the "always clear my private data" feature allow it to, for example, NOT clear my Slashdot cookie? IE8's InPrivate clears THAT SESSION'S data, not just every temporary file the browser has.

      Second, does it allow you to open multiple browser windows, one that is private and will be erased, and another that is normal? I typically have a browser session open for days if not weeks, and given that Firefox doesn't actually *end* until the very last Firefox window is closed, I rather doubt you'd be able to "privatize" one session without being forced to close the other as well.

      As for the session restore, IE8 reloads automatically and instantly if it crashes (there's a separate process running that detects if the browser process dies), and if there's a specific page in the browser that is making it crash, it will attempt a few times to reload, and on the third try will stop attempting to load the offending tab (with a message explaining the problem).

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    10. Re:new features not in Firefox .. by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      It also blocks out many tracking pixels (those 1x1 images which many companies use to track use).

      I could be wrong, but doesn't FF's "Block third party cookies" option do just this?

  52. Re:Took it for a whirl and discovered, 30 seconds. by Digero · · Score: 1

    Congratulations, you found a bug in beta software.

  53. I soooo want to try this out... by edmicman · · Score: 1

    ...but a newly inherited website (thank you, mergers!) *barely* works on IE7.....they recommend IE6 for everything (oh, and it uses client-side vbscript so its navigation doesn't work in anything but IE). Maybe I'll try a virtual machine or something.

  54. Re: your wifes browser .. :) by rs232 · · Score: 2, Informative

    "I never quite undershood how any firefox user thinks it's normal that you'd have to get extentions to do so many simple tasks .."

    Yea, selecting 'Tools->add-ons->Get Extensions' is so much more complicated .. :)

    'I love when firefox gets updated, and she says "Well we just got (x new feature)". And I can reply, "About time, I've been using that for a year now."'

    What 'features' are you refering to that have been around now for a year, apart from 'automatic crash recovery' and 'browser privacy' ?

    Personally, I never needed to discuss browser 'features' across the breakfast table . .:)

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  55. So what? by Viol8 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The number of hindi speakers is probably 4 times that.

    They don't release to the largest markets but the most useful ones for testing.

    Besides , lets be honest - the spanish speaking world isn't exactly renowned for its cutting edge expanding IT industry.

    1. Re:So what? by MagusSlurpy · · Score: 1, Funny

      Que?

      --
      My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
    2. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The number of hindi speakers is probably 4 times that.

      They don't release to the largest markets but the most useful ones for testing.

      Besides , lets be honest - the spanish speaking world isn't exactly renowned for its cutting edge expanding IT industry.

      "Probably"? Check your stats, brother.

    3. Re:So what? by jrumney · · Score: 3, Informative

      The number of hindi speakers is probably 4 times that.

      It's about 1.1 times that actually, there's almost the same gap between Hindi and Spanish as there is between native Spanish and English speakers. Mandarin on the other hand has almost as many speakers as those three combined.

    4. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Don't mind parent post, he's from Barcelona.

    5. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the spanish speaking world isn't exactly renowned for its cutting edge expanding IT industry.

      Cause: they are resting after a night of 'in-the-field' hubcap and radio security ....um .... testing. ;)

    6. Re:So what? by dordoka · · Score: 1

      Spaniard here... your latest statement doesnt add a lot to your reasoning, I agree with the second one though.

      --
      dordoka
    7. Re:So what? by Viol8 · · Score: 1

      Given the population of India is over a billion and Hindi is the national language you're well out. Almost all indians speak it as a 2nd language.

    8. Re:So what? by trdrstv · · Score: 1

      Given the population of India is over a billion and Hindi is the national language you're well out. Almost all indians speak it as a 2nd language.

      Hindi is one of 2 National languages. English is the other.

    9. Re:So what? by jrumney · · Score: 3, Informative

      Hindi is not the national language, it is a national language, one of several including English. And considering that around a third of India's population is illiterate, second languages are not as widely spoken as you would think.

    10. Re:So what? by Taxman415a · · Score: 1

      It depends on how you count them of course. If mutual intelligibility were the only criteria Hindi's numbers would be much higher, up to about twice the number of native English and Spanish speakers. Numbers are hard to come by but you'd include lots of speakers of what are considered separate languages like Panjabi but where mutual intelligability is very high. They are considered separate languages for historical and literature related reasons. Chinese languages are the opposite. In many areas they are considered the same language for cultural homogineity reasons but they are mutually unintelligible.

    11. Re:So what? by trdrstv · · Score: 1

      India is home to two major linguistic families: Indo-Aryan (spoken by about 74% of the population) and Dravidian (spoken by about 24%). Other languages spoken in India come from the Austro-Asiatic and Tibeto-Burman linguistic families. Hindi, with the largest number of speakers,[100] is the official language of the union.[101] English, which is extensively used in business and administration, has the status of a 'subsidiary official language.'[6] The constitution also recognises in particular 21 other languages that are either abundantly spoken or have classical status. The number of dialects in India is as high as 1,652.[102]

      India Demographics

    12. Re:So what? by Warll · · Score: 1

      From my first link: `India does not have the concept of a single "national language".

    13. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The number of hindi speakers is probably 4 times that.

      Mandarin on the other hand has almost as many speakers as those three combined.

      Except that neither Mandarin (nor Cantonese) even enter into this debate, since they are spoken languages only, not written languages.

      And I'm sure that you'll find the population of Simplified- and Traditional-Chinese literate people in this world is way below the number of Mandarin and/or Cantonese speakers.

    14. Re:So what? by Viol8 · · Score: 1

      Umm , literacy is reading. Whats that got to do with speaking?

    15. Re:So what? by jrumney · · Score: 1

      Someone who is illiterate is likely to be uneducated in general. Only 10 of India's 23 states use Hindi as an official language, even fewer use it for everyday communication, so there is little opportunity for the uneducated to pick it up.

    16. Re:So what? by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > Given the population of India is over a billion and Hindi is the national language

      It's one of a dozen or so national languages. (India is a complicated place, both linguistically and politically.)

      > Almost all indians speak it as a 2nd language.

      It would be more accurate to say that almost everyone who speaks Hindi speaks it as a second or third language. India is linguistically like rural sub-Saharan Africa, in that nearly everyone's first language is an obscure local dialect, so then many of them have to learn a "major language" (such as Hindi or Tamil or one of the others) in order to be able to talk to people from a few miles away.

      Hindi is probably the single most widely spoken language in India (the only other possible contender being English), but more than a fifth of the population (mostly in the southern part) speaks Dravidian languages, and Hindi is only one of several Sanskrit-derived languages (spoken in the northern part of the country), and not everyone speaks a major language at all -- there are many people who just speak the local dialects.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    17. Re:So what? by Viol8 · · Score: 1

      Bollywood mate.

    18. Re:So what? by jrumney · · Score: 1

      Kollywood mate.

  56. Re: applet crashes Firefox .. by rs232 · · Score: 1

    "in Firefox, where an applet loading in one tab can lock the entire application"

    Interesting, is this reported on the Bugzilla site ?

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  57. Just guessing, but... by AnomaliesAndrew · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A large portion of Spanish speakers (e.g. Latin America) live in extreme poverty, so I doubt they'll all be downloading IE8 Beta anytime soon.

    What should be compared is how many German speakers with internet access and their own PC vs. how many Spanish speakers with internet access and their own PC.

    --
    Move all sig!
    1. Re:Just guessing, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      A large portion of Spanish speakers (e.g. Latin America) live in extreme poverty, so I doubt they'll all be downloading IE8 Beta anytime soon.

      But, it's free!

    2. Re:Just guessing, but... by mcrbids · · Score: 1

      A large portion of Spanish speakers (e.g. Latin America) live in extreme poverty, so I doubt they'll all be downloading IE8 Beta anytime soon.

      Of course they will! IT'S FREE.

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  58. Love it. by BlueBoxSW.com · · Score: 1

    Hit the nail on the head.

  59. Opera's standard functionality .. by rs232 · · Score: 1

    "I don't have to time to try to hunt down all the extensions to replicate Opera's standard functionality"

    What functionality would that be, and why don't you just click on Tools->Add-ons->Get Extensions ?

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
    1. Re:Opera's standard functionality .. by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      What functionality would that be

      It used to be the case that Firefox lost all its tabs everytime you restarted the browser, unless you installed an extension to fix it - I don't know if that's in there as standard now (it should be, in my opinion, as this behaviour is the whole point of having tabs; without it, it's just a browser with several windows).

      and why don't you just click on Tools->Add-ons->Get Extensions ?

      I covered this in my post. It's not just "click on this", it's search and find all the extensions that you hope replicate the functionality that's standard in other browsers. And explain that to your random non-geek friend, when it'd be much easier to say "Install this".

  60. I'll Stick With Firefox 3 by nickwaits · · Score: 1

    Upgrading from IE7 to IE8 is going to be like polishing a turd. I run Firefox 3 with two plugins: Noscript IE Tab Oh yeah and Woot Watcher.

    1. Re:I'll Stick With Firefox 3 by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      I run Firefox 3 with two plugins

      Those are not plugins.

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  61. Firefox vs IE by ilovesymbian · · Score: 1

    Since Firefox came out, I've never gone back. I recently tried IE7 and it was crappy. IE8 beta is also not that great or fast compared to Firefox. I'm sticking with Firefox.

    MS wouldn't have gone all this way without pressure from open-source. Its upto you to make a choice.

    1. Re:Firefox vs IE by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      Its upto you to make a choice.

      Dumb blonde verses rich and powerful guy.

      I choose the guy.

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  62. Have they closed down ActiveX? by argent · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The only thing worth asking is this: is the plugin model still based on ActiveX and "security zones".

    If so, IE is still not acceptable for use with any site that is not completely trusted.

  63. Dear Mods: It's spelled "Funny" :) by Penguinisto · · Score: 2, Informative

    The Stealther extension for Firefox already does the privacy thing, and has done so for longer than IE 8.

    (Speakin' of which, I wonder if the old Anonym.OS live cd is still useable...)

    /P
     

    --
    Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    1. Re:Dear Mods: It's spelled "Funny" :) by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The point of Firefox, from the beginning, was to split this kind of functionality off into extensions, so that users can pick and choose what features they need, without being forced to accept bloat.

      (Yes, ironically Firefox was an attempt to make a browser-only, bloat-free version of Mozilla. People sometimes talk, now, of doing the same to Firefox...)

      Given that, I would call this:

      brings a lot to the table that Firefox requires extensions for.

      That's Firefox's strength, not a weakness.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    2. Re:Dear Mods: It's spelled "Funny" :) by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      Amen, brother. Every time some "great" new feature makes its way in, I do some quiet mumbling about how I'd rather have this in an extension, so I don't have to install it. It's inevitable that as FF gains marketshare they're going to expand the feature-set. Doesn't mean we can't gripe about it though.

      Nice thing about standards compliance, even from Microsoft (maybe especially from Microsoft) is that it lowers the barrier to entry...I could at some point shift to a leaner browser and be confident that the rendering will be close.

    3. Re:Dear Mods: It's spelled "Funny" :) by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1
      IE7+ also has a plugin ("add-on") system for extensibility.

      Thing is though, most casual users don't know about plugins, and they don't care. They want stuff to "just work", with as little research and configuration done on their side as possible. MS has apparently decided that "private surfing" is something basic enough to be provided out of the box. I actually agree with this - having it as a prominent button in the UI helps convince people that privacy is imporant. I bet a similar integrated feature will appear in Firefox and Opera very soon now.

    4. Re:Dear Mods: It's spelled "Funny" :) by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Thing is though, most casual users don't know about plugins, and they don't care.

      That's unlikely.

      Most users who install Firefox inevitably learn about Adblock Plus, which is trivial to install. But it would be insane to suggest that Adblock Plus (with all the filtersets) should be included with Firefox.

      I actually agree with this - having it as a prominent button in the UI helps convince people that privacy is imporant.

      Well, at a price -- people use cookies for convenience, too.

      I bet a similar integrated feature will appear in Firefox and Opera very soon now.

      I hope not. I would almost certainly never use it. If I need privacy that badly, I'll use a livecd.

      So please don't bloat my already-bloated "lightweight" browser with yet another feature I didn't ask for, and won't use.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  64. FYI, about the update thing by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

    Which is rare, and whenever that happens and I launch Firefox, it prompts me if I want to update, which gets annoying

    I'm not trying to convince you to use Firefox or anything (frankly, I couldn't care less what browser you use), but just FYI, you can turn update checking off (or, at least, Firefox claims you can)... Tools->Options->Advanced->Update, uncheck whatever you like (probably all of them).

  65. Compatibilty Mode by Saint+Gerbil · · Score: 1

    Oddly doesnt work on MS websites.

  66. Where's the Beef? by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

    Like a little old lady once said starring at a travesty of a hamburger. I know we're talking Beta, but lets put IE8 up against FF, Opera, and Safari, on windows and Linux using a "Benjamin Franklin List". Does IE8 work with WINE? Will I see the Microsoft Marketing Department dancing around this camp fire? I guess next week I'll find out, when I test it myself. Lets consider standards, does IE8 use SVG 1.1? HTML 5.0? CSS 2.0? XML 2.0? XSLT 2.0? I don't want to hear an excuse; just Yes or No. As a software developer, turning features on and off is part of the software testing process; for IE8 features, can I test my software accordingly? And I am not referring to Bill Gates' definition of a "Feature". So far, the advertised new stuff from IE8 are NOT show stoppers; eh. If IE8 could say "Yes" to the above standards, then I will sit up an start listening to the Hype.

  67. Now according to fox its the browser of Perverts by h2okies · · Score: 1

    "Microsoft Internet Explorer 8 to Include 'Porn Mode'" lovely...

    --
    Beware the Lollipop of Mediocrity, Lick it once and you suck forever.
  68. Do Work by Fynd · · Score: 1

    I'm primarily a Firefox user, and I've been using IE8 at work (MS) for the past few weeks.

    I'll give the editor 5 bucks if they change that to "M$".

  69. Hopefully by Holi · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Hopefully they fixed FTP handling, which the broke horribly in IE 7.
    I pretty much have to log in twice to get ftp to work in windows explorer.

    --
    Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    1. Re:Hopefully by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      FTP always sucked big time in IE (and all other Web browsers, for that matter). A dedicated FTP client is still the way to go.

  70. Dang by LWATCDR · · Score: 2, Informative

    When I first went to the download page it looked terrible. I thought they had written an IE only page! Then I fired up Opera and it looked fine.
    Did a refresh on Firefox and it was fine!
    I hate it when Microsoft doesn't give me a reason to crab about them!
    Wait I just went to grab silverlight! Cool they don't support FF3 those bastards!!!!
    Anyway it is worth trying out just to see how well it works.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  71. Still not 100% complient with CSS2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    It doesn't get CSS generated content images right. That's four years old and all other modern browsers can do it. Bah.

    1. Re:Still not 100% complient with CSS2 by Bogtha · · Score: 1

      Actually, generated content is over a decade old.

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
    2. Re:Still not 100% complient with CSS2 by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1
      Actually, IE8 can do generated content. It can't handle this particular page you've linked to because it uses double-colon in CSS, i.e. "blockquote::before" and "blockquote::after". I'm actually not sure what it is supposed to mean, but if you save it and replace it with single colon, "blockquote:before" and "blockquote:after", then IE8 will render it fine (so long as it's in "compliant" mode - so you need a proper DOCTYPE declaration).

      Can someone explain what is the difference between ":before" and "::before"?

  72. Private browsing = covering pornography traces by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    I guess IE8 is going to be the masturbator's choice for web browsing ... yes, I am posting this anonymously ... >.>

  73. common tasks? by msu320 · · Score: 2, Funny

    New features include accelerators, which provide instant context menu access for a number of common tasks; automatic crash recovery

    its good to know what the common tasks are...

    --
    New slashdot layout sucks.
  74. Hmmm - clicking favorites crashes IE8.. by GuyverDH · · Score: 3, Informative

    Installed it.

    Kept google as search engine.
    declined accelerators
    declined web screening

    turned off view of favorites, menu bar.

    click favorite button that appears next to tabs, crash...

    repeat the experiment...

    uninstalled IE8 3 minutes after installing...

    --
    Who is general failure, and why is he reading my hard drive?
    1. Re:Hmmm - clicking favorites crashes IE8.. by Harold+Halloway · · Score: 1

      Yep, mine too. Just got all kind of API errors resulting in a trip to the Task Manager to get rid of it all. I know this is a beta but isn't it supposed to work a little bit?

    2. Re:Hmmm - clicking favorites crashes IE8.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I had that problem too. Went into the Add-Ins manager and removed all three of the Google Toolbar addins -- that seemed to fix the problem.

    3. Re:Hmmm - clicking favorites crashes IE8.. by GuyverDH · · Score: 1

      I never install any toolbar add-ins... so at least in my case, that's not the issue...

      --
      Who is general failure, and why is he reading my hard drive?
    4. Re:Hmmm - clicking favorites crashes IE8.. by pbhj · · Score: 1

      It uninstalls? ... I thought MS usually tried to break uninstall to help you avoid the mistake of going back to older stuff that works better.

      [/bitchy]

      Seriously though I didn't look hard but I couldn't find the info in the install notes, etc., about whether it uninstalled, nor did it warn at any point that it would overwrite IE7. I was assuming that the current beta would be a standalone install that I could add to my multiple-IEs virtualbox machine.

    5. Re:Hmmm - clicking favorites crashes IE8.. by GuyverDH · · Score: 1

      it writes over IE7, then when uninstalled, restores it.

      --
      Who is general failure, and why is he reading my hard drive?
    6. Re:Hmmm - clicking favorites crashes IE8.. by icsx · · Score: 1

      Wait, they call them add-ins instead of add-ons? Talk about hilarity. "We cant use the add-on word! Mozilla created it!"

    7. Re:Hmmm - clicking favorites crashes IE8.. by GuyverDH · · Score: 1

      GAH!!!!

      You caught me repeating what the poster used instead of using the correct term...

      Where's the edit post feature (with onion skin ability to read what was edited)???

      --
      Who is general failure, and why is he reading my hard drive?
  75. Firefox3 on Windows is a piece of crap by Frankie70 · · Score: 0

    I dont mean to sound trollish, but knowing microsoft we're just keeping up with the joneses (namely Firefox 3.)

    I am a long time firefox user on Windows - I have been using it from the time it was called Firebird.
    Firefox 1 was possibly the high point in the Firefox time frame.
    After that, the memory issues started.
    I downloaded Firefox3 when it was released. The memory stuff seems to be fixed.
    But Firefox3 crashes atleast 3 times a day for me. Sometimes it crashes with the
    standard crash dialog box. Some it crashes silently - it dissapears. On restarting,
    if I chose restore session - it crashes again (because the same page which caused
    the crash earlier is reopened.

    sick of it - I have been using FF3 & IE7 side by side for a couple of weeks & I am
    more or less decided that I will be uninstalling FF3 very soon. And I don't run a
    single extension on FF.

    Quite frankly, if Microsoft had released something like FF3, slashdot would have
    featured multiple articles per day about it.

    FF3 is barely alpha quality, in my opinion. I am amazed how it was released
    with such inadequate QA.

    1. Re:Firefox3 on Windows is a piece of crap by nneonneo · · Score: 1

      I have used Firefox since it was called Phoenix and had a 0.x version number. Phoenix and Firebird were really great browsers, but they lacked support for a number of websites (can't blame them, it was beta). Firefox 1.5 was perhaps the best release prior to FF3, but GMail basically killed FF1.5 for me (it's funny, but GMail seems to be the app that is best at exposing JS implementation bugs!). FF2 was a train-wreck in terms of performance; it wasn't a bad browser, but it wasn't great, either. Safari and Opera thoroughly trounced FF2 for performance and stability. However, Mozilla got very serious about performance for FF3, and, for me, stability is 100% (I have had weeks of uptime with Firefox 3, with continual usage). I didn't even clear my profile for FF3; the profile I'm using was actually copied off my old computer and upgraded from 0.8 gradually up to version 3. I have to say that I am very pleased with what Mozilla has done, but again, Your Mileage May Vary.

    2. Re:Firefox3 on Windows is a piece of crap by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 1

      So, Firefox 3 on your system runs badly. Obviously a lack of QA. Perhaps the devs should have used your computer for testing?

      Maybe, just maybe, you are in a small minority group that is experiencing these issues. Maybe--just a hypothetical, here--this issue is related to some other piece of software on your computer. I'm sure that you can think of some way to test that.

      Also, you should read the Restore Session dialog box more carefully. "Your last Firefox session closed unexpectedly. You can restore the tabs and windows from your previous session, or start a new session if you think the problem was related to a page you were viewing."

      Seriously, how can you look at all of this problematic behavior and think that it is the application's fault? You just get to do whatever you want, and blame anyone but yourself? It couldn't be anything you're doing. Okay, well, let's apply Ockham's Razor to this situation. Which requires the fewest assumptions?

      A) The problems with Firefox are widespread. People continue to download and use Firefox despite these bugs, which the developers make no effort to fix. There are also no Slashdot articles about how buggy Firefox is because Slashdot is so friendly to open source software and such stories are--what? Actively suppressed by the editors, no doubt.

      B) You are the only one having these problems, and they are your fault. There are no news stories about Firefox crashing because they don't exist.

      I know which one was shorter to write.

      Solution: take some responsibility, and fix your own goddamn problems.

      --
      Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
    3. Re:Firefox3 on Windows is a piece of crap by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      I saw the betas and early RCs crash a couple of times. But running the 3.0 release on my MBP, I have not seen it crash once. I will typically leave it open for days, sometimes putting the computer to sleep, sometimes not. I have extensions, I have plugins, I open large numbers of tabs.

      For whatever reason, I *have* seen FF3 crash on Windows. I don't know what's different there but I'm not willing to lay the blame entirely on the FF team since it runs fine on my Mac.

    4. Re:Firefox3 on Windows is a piece of crap by Frankie70 · · Score: 1

      Solution: take some responsibility, and fix your own goddamn problems.

      My solution was easier. Download IE7 & use it.

  76. Re:Crap... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't let XP upgrade to IE 7. I don't like the interface and it still 'feels' wrong. Probably because as someone pointed out above, it is even slower than IE 6 (which I liked okay).

    Which makes you part of the problem -- part of the reason I, as a web developer, have to ensure our website works on IE6.

    IE7 is a lot of things -- among them, it's more standards-compliant.

    I get better functionality out of Firefox 3 with a couple of plugins.

    So do I -- which is why, on XP, I do upgrade IE, and then barely use it outside of a Firefox IETab.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  77. Wahhh... Wah!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Somebody call the wah-mbulance!

  78. Ouch by coryking · · Score: 1

    Buddy, I stopped caring about IE5.5 years ago and wish IE6 would finally die. If IE5.5 is still a target for whatever you are doing... I feel your pain and I'll buy you a shot of good iWhiskey.

  79. the f word by vajorie · · Score: 1

    Give it a spin, submit feedback, and help keep all browser makers on their toes by facing each other's competition.

    markets don't work like that

  80. Re:Crap... by somersault · · Score: 1

    I'm not part of your problem, because I've used Firefox for all my web browsing since before the IE7 beta was available ;) I now only use Windows in a virtual machine so that I can run Outlook and Delphi.

    As I mentioned in the GP post, I've actually seen IE7 cause issues with the rest of Windows, which is yet another reason for me not to upgrade it. I sincerely hope Microsoft improve upon things with IE8, but I still haven't seen any good (in my opinion of course) Microsoft products outside of Windows Server, the Exchange/Outlook/DirectPUSH to Windows Mobile combo (though Windows Mobile itself is appalingly slow and glitchy looking), and Visual Studio.

    --
    which is totally what she said
  81. Re:Took it for a whirl and discovered, 30 seconds. by tyrax · · Score: 1

    I just replied to your comment by opening the link in a new window. So, your wrong

  82. Missing the Point by nickswitzer · · Score: 1

    I think everyone is missing a big thing here. Regardless of who is coming up with what features first (such as no one cares that FF had tabs first, just that now they both have it) but the fact that FF will probably figure out what features would be good to implement out of IE8, and most likely implement it faster being open source (or at least have an add-on). The fact that Microsoft takes forever, and that they do not have independent developers and freelance people able to tweak their code b/c they are not open source, they are always going to be behind. Unless they have features that are not released to the public in order to get a jump on Mozilla.

  83. Download doesn't work by voltheir · · Score: 1

    How opportune. No matter which version of IE8 beta I try to download, I get a 404. (Or more accurately, a search page with no results). What gives?

    1. Re:Download doesn't work by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      What is your ISP, out of curiosity?

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  84. Should be tagged "Itsatrap" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since this is a story about M$ Internet Exploder for Windoze, the tag "Itsatrap" should be used in this case.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  85. We've always been at war with Eastasia by blueZ3 · · Score: 1

    Linux does not exist. Serbian does not exist.

    Or perhaps

    Many sink down to the underworld, but few return to the sunlit lands?

    --
    Interested in a Flash-based MAME front end? Visit mame.danzbb.com
  86. I'll Wait by DeanFox · · Score: 1


    Thank you but I'll wait for FireFox's implementation of privacy browsing that won't store my history for the authorities to retrieve. If I'm not doing anything wrong they have no reason to watch me. If I am, I'm under no obligation to make it easier for them.

  87. Part of WGA, don't trust it. by HermMunster · · Score: 0, Troll

    Though you may be able to install it on computers that do not pass the WGA test it will likely set up some mechanism to monitor your computer. There's no trust in Microsoft whatsoever that we should partake in. We are best advised to use Firefox or some other browser. Even if the WGA aspect doesn't prove true, which I'm sure it will, we don't need another version of their browser that is just as insecure as the one prior.

    Friends don't help friends lock themselves into Microsoft products/platforms.

    --
    You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
  88. Subject by Legion303 · · Score: 1

    "that Firefox requires extensions for."

    Firefox was designed as a lightweight browser that blah blah, fuck this, I'm not feeding the troll. Mark this down as redundant.

  89. Question by PPH · · Score: 1

    Is the CDC aware of this?

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  90. Hmm... by KingAlanI · · Score: 1

    ...The crash recovery feature in FF is one of the things I've loved about FF. Sure, M$ is behind the curve, but glad to see it in at all. It was mentioned that some of this stuff in FF requires extensions; that may be a good thing: It keeps the browser less bloated for those people who don't need the feature. Granted, for technophobes, or people in security-freak offices, etc., it's good to have the stuff built in

    --
    I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
  91. UI question by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

    Did they move the menus - File, Edit, etc. - back to a sane location? Or perhaps they show up in the middle of the rendered page now?

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  92. Restart after install? by leprkhn · · Score: 1

    why on earth should i have to restart my computer after installing a goddamn web browser? isn't that a bit much? i mean... how tied into my system IS this thing?

    1. Re:Restart after install? by phozz+bare · · Score: 1

      Far more than you can possibly imagine, my son.

  93. Beta Release? by failedlogic · · Score: 1

    Beta Release ..... Final Version, what's the difference? This is Microsoft afterall! I have been a proud (but unregistered) Beta Tester for Microsoft for many, many, many years!

  94. Not always true by Nick+Ives · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'd gladly pay MS £30 for a set of working Direct X libraries for Linux. That's about how much a Windows OEM license is; I just hate having to reboot for modern games!

    I moved to Linux about 11yrs ago because I really hated Windows. I've been using Debian for 8yrs and now that I've spent (read:wasted :P) all that time getting it working exactly how I want it with all the apps I love I just can't bear to use Windows anymore. It's a pain!

    Now that I've been using GNU/Linux for so long I've turned into a total True Believer so I'd never use MS (or Apple for that matter) apps / tools but I don't care about games being proprietary. I'd view it as akin to paying money for a console and I own several of those.

    --
    Nick
  95. Re:Crap... by phayes · · Score: 1
    So, because I use applications that are not compatible with Microsoft's current non-standards compliant flavor of the week, I am part of the problem?

    You have a seriously warped world view there SanityInAnarchy. The problem is that MS's deeply buggy IE6 was out there unmodified for so long that many applications came to depend on it's bugs to function, then when they finally update it, they do so in an incompatible once again non-compliant manner.

    --
    Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
  96. Not the same. by pavon · · Score: 1

    This is not the same. First it allows you to configure settings for normal browsing and private browsing and switch between them easily. In Firefox there are about 7 different settings and two plugins that I change when I'm trying to cover my tracks, and it gets very cumbersome to do so manually. So much so that I usually just have two browsers installed - one configured for private browsing and one configured for normal browsing.

    Secondly, the privacy features go beyond what Firefox(+plugins) and Safari can do. It doesn't depend on blacklists/whitelists but instead looks at the behavior of third-party content. If it notices that it is tracking you over more than a handful of sites it starts blocking that content.

    And as other folks have pointed out, the crash recovery is per-tab.

    My two biggest feature requests with Firefox have been the ability to thwart tracking without blocking all advertisements, and to not have the entire browser lockup when one tab is loading (FF3 seems better at this but it still happens). IE8 addresses both of those, and if I ran windows I would definitely be downloading the Beta right now to check it out.

  97. Re:You forgot one by Cryophallion · · Score: 1

    The poster I was replying to said that Mozilla should think about bundling some of the more popular extensions.

    I thought I'd look and see which of the top 10 most popular (according to the extension site) had an argument for addition.

    My list was not meant to be exhaustive, just a test of whether the top ones had cases, hence the reason I did not list pencil. I was just testing the hypothesis, since it was an interesting concept.

  98. It's beta 2 by defiant74205 · · Score: 1

    I feel I should point out there was a publicly available beta 1 for IE8...

  99. "Awesome bar" by motang · · Score: 1

    Wow...even IE has incorporated the "awesome bar!" That is by far one of the most beloved features in FF 3.0 for me.

  100. Those who can't speak by poticlin · · Score: 1

    My co-worker is trying to resurect her PC. After installing IE8, WinXP froze. It's the first time I hear that person curse on MS. Thank you IE...

    1. Re:Those who can't speak by J_Doh! · · Score: 1

      It's a beta version. Production machines beware.

      --
      To secure peace is to prepare for war ...
  101. Hmmm might be a problem here by Onyma · · Score: 1

    Crash recovery

    If one or more of your tabs do crash, your tabs are automatically reloaded and you are returned to whatever page you were on before the crash.

    So if you come across a page that crashes IE8 every time, when you reload IE it will reload that page and crash it again leaving the typical user unable to restart IE :)

    --
    Play me online? Well you know that I'll beat you. If I ever meet you I'll "/sbin/shutdown -h now" you. -Weird Al, kinda.
  102. local privacy by BBird · · Score: 1

    this privacy feature (as exists in safari) maybe misleading. afaik it only stops local logging + cookies. Your IP and ISP+others logging will continue.

  103. Re:Shows what competion can do. Mod above down by puto · · Score: 1

    Well having been to all Mexico, Venezuela, and even lived in Colombia for 5 years(dual citizen with US where I was born) I did not run across too many peopke who spoke Portuguese. i can name a couple off hand, but only because I worked in a language department at a local uni.

    Not all latin americans have everyday access, although it is getting more common. They do have a large amount of internet cafes. But many run Linux. And the ones that do not will not upgrade. If it ain't broke do not fix it.

    Portgues es epanol mal hablado.

    Puto

    --
    The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
  104. "Compatibility Mode" eh? by Panaqqa · · Score: 1

    It looks like Google's search results will only display properly in this "compatibility mode". Funny, that.

  105. Re:Shows what competion can do. Mod above down by pcolaman · · Score: 1

    I wasn't talking about Mexico, Venezuela, or Columbia. I was talking about Brazil. And in Brazil, they primarily speak Portuguese, not Spanish.

  106. IE8's awesome bar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was sure this article was going to mention the number of features IE copied from Firefox.
    Given how many people here complain about the "awesome bar" in Firefox, now that IE8 has copied that awesome bar, it's not something to complain about?

  107. Re:Is Microsoft trying to hurt Google? Yes by atraintocry · · Score: 1

    The raw installed base numbers (honestly, I don't know how they'd even get those besides a phone survey or something) don't tell the whole story. My site gets just about half IE and half FF, and it's not a site for a tech crowd. I see most people saying the same thing, which leads me to believe that, even though the installed base is probably lower, the Firefox users are browsing more heavily.

    Also, how would the installed base of IE go down? I doubt that there's enough people manually removing 6 to make a dent in those numbers.

  108. Privacy Feature by eiskalteschatten · · Score: 1

    I have no idea why everyone is so obsessed with the new "privacy feature" in IE8. It's been around in Safari for years and extensions for Firefox have provided that functionality....

  109. Re:Shows what competion can do. Mod above down by Chutulu · · Score: 1

    em Portugal diz-se que para falar Espanhol basta pôr batatas quentes na boca e começar a falar....

    in Portugal we say that in order to speak Spanish you just have to put hot potatoes in your mouth and start speaking...

  110. Re:Took it for a whirl and discovered, 30 seconds. by atamido · · Score: 1

    So, your wrong

    No, you're wrong.

  111. What's this "MS"? by spitzak · · Score: 1

    For the first time the letter pair "MS" has appeared in a story summary. That is not readable, for me it either reads "Miss" or "Multiple Sclerosis". It also is the postal abbreviation for Mississippi, means "manuscript", and even as a company name it is the stock symbol for Morgan Stanley, who also own "MS.com".

    I know that a lot of people hate the abbreviation "M$", but the solution is NOT to put "MS" in, but to put in the spelled-out "Microsoft".

    Let's stop this nonsense now. Writing "MS" is not some kind of stand against "M$". I'm sorry that "M$" hurts your feelings and makes you cry, but you lose. If you want to fight it, write out "Microsoft".

  112. Missed the point by glitch23 · · Score: 1

    automatic crash recovery, which prevents a single page's failures from taking down your entire browser;

    You'd think they would make the browser capable of not being corrupt to the point of crashing due to malformed source code for a webpage. How about being proactive and not allow it to crash in the first place instead of implementing crash recovery (a la Office crash recovery) which can be imperfect as well? They have a long history of this though: safe mode for Windows anyone?

    --
    this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
  113. Back patting not required? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This product would never have happened without Firefox.

    Yes, because we know Microsoft never released another version of IE before they had to compete with Firefox.

    Oh, wait...

  114. Re:Shows what competion can do. Mod above down by jesterzog · · Score: 1

    They do have a large amount of internet cafes. But many run Linux.

    I find this very interesting because when we went further south through Chile, Peru and Bolivia last year we saw lots of Internet Cafe's, and they were nearly all running Windows. (For perspective though, we didn't leave the main tourist trails except in Chile.) Many of them didn't look like terribly secure installations, and there was about a 50/50 split of users between tourists and locals. The locals were nearly all school-aged children who seemed to be there 100% for gaming. The only non-Windows platform we found for 2 months was a Backpackers' accomodation in Puerto Varas (southern'ish Chile) which was run by a German guy, and he'd set up a Linux box which I think was running Suse.

  115. Re:Crap... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    So, because I use applications that are not compatible with Microsoft's current non-standards compliant flavor of the week, I am part of the problem?

    If said applications are compatible with Microsoft's former non-standards-compliant flavor-of-the-week, yes.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  116. Someone enlighten me, please by omz · · Score: 1

    WTF is Internet Explorer? It is like Firefox? does it run on Linux ( Eee PC 4G Surf)? Thank you very much

  117. GPFs when pasting web address, and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    not only GPFs with that -something I do many times- it didn't even show me the slashdot

      threshold [][] change

    bar. Nothing there. Back to ie6. Don't like ie7 at all - many dialogs boxes don't work/view properly at 120 dpi, at least in ie8 these can be widened (Hello 1992!). I STILL hate the search box taking up the space - I do NOT need to see the G-word anymore than I have to, thank you very much! If I want to search, I'll will do it the same way as always (doesn't matter if your disable it, the damn space is still taken up). Idiots. Not to mention, but will, the zoom is stuck at 125% UNLESS you tell it to NOT default zoom to 100%. Makes no sense. But IE is like that. I don't like FF, either. Don't like Opera (not bad, but too many things bother me with it). So, I'm back to ie6. No complaints. Not a one.

    BTW, it's funny watching IE8 GPF each and every time I pasted into the address bar. Didn't matter if I was on a trusted site or not. Maybe it was a setting I changed. BTW2, IE8 does NOT honor all your previous settings, especially WRT .net components, I noticed -- it enables a few. It changes your two basic font settings, too, just off the top...

  118. and crash recovery is not what it's made out to be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It STILL crashes the browser. The difference is when you restart it it asks if you want to restore your last session or whatever. I saw that a dozen time in 10 minutes, after each paste of into the address bar.

  119. Re:You forgot one by zobier · · Score: 1

    I believe that Pencil (2D drawing and animation) and the Pencil Firefox add-on (GUI prototyping tool) are different applications. Both seem pretty cool though.

    --
    Me lost me cookie at the disco.
  120. Privacy browsing for FF is here ALREADY by tandr · · Score: 1

    oh, forcristsake, people... Firefox cannot copy IE8 just because it has this feature as an add-on for long time already.

    You can download Stealther from
    https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/1306

    have fun

  121. Search for Microsoft in the suggested sites menu by p.gogarty · · Score: 1

    I'm supprised noone else spotted this

    Open the new Suggested Sites menu.
    The default search is for Microsoft Corporation
    Number 5 in the list of returned sites is Apple

    Screenshot

    --
    Paul Gogarty
  122. Re:Took it for a whirl and discovered, 30 seconds. by icsx · · Score: 1

    As in, broken?

  123. Re:Crap... by phayes · · Score: 1
    Instead of slavishly following MS's lead as you suggest, we would all be better off ignoring all MS's new incompatible web implementations. It's too late for IE6, but IE7's particular flavor will die a quick death as soon as IE8 is added to windows update, then IE8 will be replaced with IE9 relatively quickly, etc. This will go on as long as MS keeps coming out with non-standard compliant browsers. You are part of the problem. By counseling people to support a gratuitously non-standard browser you are fragmenting the web.

    You're either a MS troll or you're missing an "In" prefix on your /. tag.

    --
    Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
  124. Re: your wifes browser .. :) by Digital+End · · Score: 1

    What 'features' are you refering to that have been around now for a year

    Tab browsing (1994)
    Page zoom (1994)
    Saving sessions (1996)
    Browser based pop up blocking (2000)
    Deleting private data (2000)
    Mouse gestures (2000)
    Bit torrent support (2005)
    Speed Dial (2007)

    That's the first ones I could come up with, but it should still be enough to get the point across :)

    In all fairness, they are getting faster at copying features, so a year isn't exactly accurate now days... and the people who make add ons are even faster at copying new features. So as long as you remember to check for new addons every day, and the people who make them aren't trying to install malware/spyware with your addons, you can keep up with opera just fine.

    And Firefox now has the same benifit that IE had going for it... since it became 'cool' to have firefox it's kind of become a 'standard' and pages are designed for it. It's a nice middle ground between IE and Opera. Personally though, I use opera, and on pages that are securely designed to only work on IE/Firefox (one bank I know and a secure log in on my college site which won't work in firefox either), I just open up IE on my second monitor and get thru it.

    --
    Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart, he dreams himself your master.
  125. Re:Took it for a whirl and discovered, 30 seconds. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Works for me for all of a dozen random links on /. that I've just tried.

  126. Re:Is Microsoft trying to hurt Google? Yes by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Msie, apparently, has a firefox like drop-down box of search engines, and wikipedia, etc. But the msie drop-down menu does not include google. Ouuu what a burn! Also, if you highlight a street address, msie will take you to msft maps, not google maps.

    Out of the box, it will indeed only give links to services Microsoft provides - Live Search, Maps, Encarta etc. However, in that very context menu, there is an item called "Find More Accelerators". If you click on it, you'll find it all - Google, Wikipedia, etc - and of course you can remove all the MS stuff. My accelerator menu now consists of "Search with Google", "Define with Wikipedia", and "Send with GMail". Also, I had Google as my default search provider in IE7, and IE8 picked that on installation and kept it.

  127. Re:Crap... by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

    ...which has upgraded itself no less than 16 times on my PC here ?

    Tools>>Options>>Advanced>>Update.
    Uncheck all that apply.

  128. Re:Crap... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Instead of slavishly following MS's lead as you suggest, we would all be better off ignoring all MS's new incompatible web implementations.

    So we're better off using their old ones?

    By counseling people to support a gratuitously non-standard browser

    Where have I done so?

    No, I counsel people that, if they must have IE installed at all, or if they must use it at all, it would be better to have a more recent version. Given the choice between IE6 and IE7, are you actually encouraging people to choose IE6?

    I also counsel people to download Firefox, Safari, Opera, or anything but IE, given the choice. But there isn't always that choice -- it's still the sanest way to get Windows Updates on XP, if you want to pick and choose, for example.

    You're either a MS troll

    Because if I was an MS troll, I would totally use "non-standards-compliant flavor-of-the-week" to refer to their browser (even if it was your term). Instead of, maybe, defending said browser.

    I'm writing this in Konqueror, on Ubuntu, from work, where I write Ruby on Rails. Doesn't that just scream "MS troll" to you?

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  129. Re:Crap... by phayes · · Score: 1

    So we're better off using their old ones?

    Old one, singular, yes. It is better to keep/support just one non-standard that already has widespread de facto support & move all new development to standards compliancy than it is to keep adding variants every time MS comes out with yet another half baked browser which complicates the code, adds to the dev cost & diminishes the resources available to move to standards compliant HTML.

    Where have I done so?

    Here. You called someone who refuses to update to IE7 part of the problem. NO. It's the smart move.

    When given the choice, use a standards compliant browser. When forced to, because the web site only works with IE, use IE6 because it is by far the most widely supported. You do know that IE7 breaks many sites that were coded for IE6, right?

    ...or anything but IE, given the choice. But there isn't always that choice

    When would this be, pray tell? Even on completely locked down corporate PCs, Portable Firefox makes avoiding IE possible. Yes, Firefox is not acid2 compliant. I haven't been forced to code around Firefox's incompatibilities. I have been forced to code around IE6's & a few nitwits who upgraded to IE7 wanted to me to adapt to it's different yet still non-compatible idiosyncrasies.

    Because if I was an MS troll

    There was another choice...

    --
    Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
  130. Re:Crap... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Assume for a moment that Microsoft is actually trying to move in the direction of standards-compliance.

    By not adopting it, you send Microsoft the message that no one cares -- or worse, that they can't possibly get it right, and may as well not try.

    yet another half baked browser which complicates the code, adds to the dev cost & diminishes the resources available to move to standards compliant HTML.

    I'm not sure a browser exists that doesn't have bugs in its adherence to that standard.

    I'm not suggesting we expend tremendous resources to support IE7, either. What I'm suggesting is that if, as a developer, I choose to ignore IE6 and support IE7, it's going to take far less effort, given that I'm already going to be supporting browsers that mostly get it right, like Firefox, Safari, Opera, etc.

    Given that, why would I want anyone to make my job harder?

    You called someone who refuses to update to IE7 part of the problem.

    And in what way is that counseling them to "support" it? Certainly not moreso than they already "support" IE6.

    You do know that IE7 breaks many sites that were coded for IE6, right?

    None of the ones I need, fortunately. But by deliberately using a browser that doesn't work with those sites, I'm hopefully helping to encourage the admins to move towards standards compliance.

    When would this be, pray tell? Even on completely locked down corporate PCs, Portable Firefox makes avoiding IE possible.

    Well, you said it yourself. The choice isn't that you can't install Firefox, it's that some websites won't actually work on Firefox.

    Another example would be places that embed the IE engine via ActiveX -- Steam, for instance, or many EA games.

    The most common example, for me, is a simple Windows Update on XP. I can do that from an IETab, but that's the same problem -- it'll be using the IE rendering engine.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  131. Re:Crap... by phayes · · Score: 1

    Assume for a moment that Microsoft is actually trying to move in the direction of standards-compliance.

    No. By displaying a broken page icon when showing a standards compliant page, Microsoft once again shows that it wants to push people into continuing to use non-standard, broken HTML. I would be quite happy with MS discontinuing development of IE since they cannot stop pushing broken HTML. Notice the thundering absence of complaints since they abandoned IE on the Mac. Old code could continue to use the broken MS software. In time, everything new would adapt to mozilla or a common interface that Mozilla/Opera/Apple/??? would devise.

    IE7 is a abortion that is breaks both IE6 code & standards compliant code. Being "closer" to compliant just means that devs have to goo through all their code to insert special cases yet again, so you lie when you say that you do not want to expend "tremendous ressources" to support IE7. No. Do it once & abandon MS"s crap in the latrine where it lies.

    Websites that do not work with firefox ALL work with IE6. IE7 brings nothing to the table.

    Because you do not have to maintain a website that is broken by IE7, you choose to ignore the massive cost of maintaining a third incompatible browser. Given how obtuse you are, you're either an idiot, or, as I surmised earlier, an troll. Either way, you clearly have nothing of value to contribute. Plonk!

    --
    Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
  132. Re:Crap... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Notice the thundering absence of complaints since they abandoned IE on the Mac.

    Notice that nothing actually depended on IE for the Mac -- and that new Macs actually ship with an alternative. (This has barely begun to happen on PCs.)

    Being "closer" to compliant just means that devs have to goo through all their code to insert special cases yet again

    Unless, y'know, it just works this time, or close enough that you slap a "Get Firefox" banner on the site and call it a day.

    Whereas with IE6, your page would actually become completely unusable.

    Because you do not have to maintain a website that is broken by IE7, you choose to ignore the massive cost of maintaining a third incompatible browser.

    Give me something I can sink my teeth into, then. What, specifically, is causing you more grief in IE7 than it does in IE6?

    Regarding your link, apparently Intranet sites are incompatible by default. Do you run an intranet? Do you know of anyone who both runs an intranet and is incapable of overriding that default, site-wide?

    Given how obtuse you are, you're either an idiot, or, as I surmised earlier, an troll.

    There's a similar problem with politics today -- the assumption that everyone who disagrees with you is wrong, and that they are therefore either ignorant or evil. I like Obama, and he's probably got my vote, but in his speech at the DNC, he said something very like this: "I don't think John McCain doesn't care. I think he doesn't know."

    I trust I've already made a significant case that I'm not an astroturfer, and you haven't pursued that further. And if I may be so bold, I'm too well spoken to be a complete idiot, or a troll. (I could have rickrolled you three posts ago and been done with it, and it's unlikely anyone but you is reading this -- a troll would've quit, don't you think?)

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  133. Re:Took it for a whirl and discovered, 30 seconds. by Assmasher · · Score: 1

    No, I'm not wrong. It does not work on 4 machines in my office which have Vista Ultimate 32-bit on them and previously had IE7. It also does not work on a machine at home running the same version of Vista and previously containing IE7 as well. So, perhaps, instead of ASSuming that I'm wrong you might - perhaps - realize that there are probably differences between our configurations. Maybe, of course, if you'd take the time to be less than a sanctimonious twat.

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  134. Re:Took it for a whirl and discovered, 30 seconds. by Assmasher · · Score: 1

    What OS and what version of IE did you have previously installed? (Nothing happens on my Vista 32-bit Ultimate machines that had IE7 on them before I installed this.) Luckily it uninstalls nicely.

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  135. Re:Took it for a whirl and discovered, 30 seconds. by Assmasher · · Score: 1

    That makes a lot of sense. The second beta of the eighth version version of a product doesn't have one of its most basic features enabled, arguably one of the simplest features to account for. LOL...

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  136. Re:Took it for a whirl and discovered, 30 seconds. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Win2003 Enterprise (my developer desktop at work) and Vista Ultimate (home desktop), both having IE7. Neither ever had IE8 b1 installed on them before, if that helps.