Mozilla Firefox 3.6 Released
Shining Celebi writes "Mozilla has released Firefox 3.6 today, which adds support for Personas, lightweight themes that can be installed without restarting the browser, and adds further performance improvements to the new Tracemonkey Javascript engine. One of the major goals of the release was to improve startup time and general UI responsiveness, especially the Awesomebar. You can read the full set of release notes here."
If you have the Switch Proxy Tool, I strongly suggest you disable it. Caused all sort of issues when upgrading. If you've already upgraded, right click on the shortcut and run in safe mode, there you can disable it. YMMV.
=================
Unix is very user friendly, it's just picky about who its friends are.
Call me when you get in the ballpark of Opera & Chrome.
I call it 'The Aristocrats'
Tried on Windows, performance improvements are immediately noticeable. Wastes less screen space by default. For those who are used to the old look-and-feel can feel a little awkward at first.
Set extensions.checkCompatibility to false and you're good to go.
TechSutra
Microsoft's patch vs. Mozilla's release. I can't wait. The Excitement is almost too much.
Did I miss something? No? Good. zzzzz
to download Firefox 3.6. I regularly use both. Just happened to be using Chrome when I came across this story and decided to upgrade Firefox. I used to use Opera a lot. Not sure why I stopped and why I can't stick with one browser. I guess Chrome took Opera's place as the lighter, faster browser for me while I keep using FF for the extensions.
...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
Proof that Firefox is heading for doom. Stop wasting time on making the browser look different than the fucking OS you idiots.
Posting AC so I don't get called a noob.
One of the goals mentioned in the article was to improve garbage collection performance to make pauses shorter and animations smoother. Why not just use the video card to accelerate the graphical operations (plus any other GPGPU operations)? Flash and PDF readers have already done it. For that matter, Windows Vista or later UIs have already do the same. This will give performance edges over contemporary browsers.
Not sure what you're doing. My firefox has been up (and used regularly) for two days and is sitting at 550MB.
The firewall at work graciously has blocked all Mozilla downloads (and most other popular DL sites). Does anybody have a link to an obscure site hosting the Windows version that will likely not be blocked? thanks.... Go figure while work blocks my download the workstations are open to install sw....
Seethis for details.
Best Slashdot Co
Maybe he is using some badly written extensions or visits some flash-heavy sites?
Somebody wake me up when I can have the Awesomebar function like the FF2 location bar. I know there's extensions that make the appearance similar, but the ordering algorithm is inferior (for me), and there's no way to have it ignore www prefixes when having it search by first term.
It seems the mouse wheel scrolling has been changed in 3.6. It's moving a much larger distance with each "click" of the wheel than before and if you scroll continuously it seems to accelerate even faster. My first impression is that I don't like it at all. It feels a lot more like Chrome, which isn't a good thing in my opinion, the annoying jumpy scrolling is one of the primary reasons I prefer not to use Chrome.
Cheburator-2 has a point. Does Firefox leak even when you use Flashblock, NoScript, or another extension that implements a whitelist for a popular but leaky plug-in?
Even if your web browser reaches 1 GB, does it cause your computer to thrash swap? If not, there's no problem. It's supposed to be that big; a lot of the memory is used for cached pages from history (press Alt+Left), recently closed tabs (press Ctrl+Shift+T), and recently closed windows (press Ctrl+Shift+N).
well this can happen on a machine with no plugins and just left sitting at the gmail page.... gets worse with visits to youtube and such. Now I have 3 PCs, two with XP one with Windows 7, it happens on one XP and the Windows 7 box, one XP machine is just fine. And yes I do run add-ons and such, the same on each machine, but ive tested on clean re-installs and it does it. A bit of googling you find other with the same problem.... its not everyone out there.....but its still not enough to drive me away from Firefox, its not much of a pain to restart every few hours.
Let me Google that for you: install firefox 3.6 in ubuntu karmic.
get the Ghostery plugin for firefox. That stops some poorly written javascript from running in the first place.
The new tab now appears to the right of the current tab when you right click on a link and select "Open Link in New Tab."
I just discovered that after about 5 seconds of "Hey, where'd my new tab go??"
I can see the fnords!
Personas are not light-weight themes. In fact, they're not themes at all. They're more like little gadgets that you hook up to your web browser to customise one part of its UI. It doesn't even compare to a theme.
But what's worse is that Mozilla is looking to depreciate themes in favour of Personas. From the Add-ons Manager, click "Get Themes". You won't see a page listing themes, but a page listing Personas. There isn't even a link there to the actual themes listing.
SwitchProxy stopped working for me on one of the other FF upgrades, so I gave it up for QuickProxy, which also requires less babysitting and is easier for me to use.
I always wanted the tabs to work that way, to keep them grouped
Mozilla has released Firefox 3.6 today, which adds support for Personas, lightweight themes that can be installed without restarting the browser
I think someone just jumped the shark.
I can't explain to myself how adding a theme engine on top of another theme engine was somehow near the top of their todo list.
You must be lucky. My instance is using 1.5GB, after about a week of runtime.
Oh well, Chrome does top it at over 2 gigs.
Next time close your failbook tab. They have memory leaks in their javascript.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
What - does this mean I have to get rid of my linux version of Internet Exploder? Dang.
YankDownUnder Veni, Vidi, volo in domum redire
Does anybody know why it always pesters you to update the Yahoo toolbar--when you don't have the toolbar installed?
Nice. Noticeably snappier. I like the idea of a path to themes I can apply without having to restart the browser. Browsing for the perfect theme will take a whole lot less time. The browser still takes up a bit of memory, but it's about what I expected. Just wish I could properly compare it to IE8 in Win7 without feeling like Microsoft is artificially deflating its memory usage numbers by offloading work into "operating system" processes.
The portable version of Firefox 3.6 from PortableApps.com was just released in 15 languages, too:
http://portableapps.com/news/2010-01-21_-_firefox_portable_3.6
Portable versions of Firefox, GIMP, LibreOffice, etc
The GUI that pops up when you want to bookmark something - case study in bad design
How about a real editor for bookmarks, with some minimal feature like export this folder (when you need to send someone a bunch of stuff)
How about mozilla not being a jerk about extensions, and getting rid of the spam that makes it hard to see anything but the top 5 extensions big brother mozilla thinks you should have
How about a stable platform for extension developers
How about letting the world know how awesome FF+noscript+adblock is when you go to a site like YAHOO
I hadn't been to YAHOO wihtout my little protectors, noscript/adblock/flashblock for some time and was astonished at how much ads have taken over the front page - how can people stand it
how about giving the users some control over privacy, so we have the wipe things clean on exit menu again
how about giving some users an idea of how much info the SOBs of the web, like google, are collecting
Folks like being able to customize their browser. Chrome had been using this as one of its selling points in their online ads. Personas are simpler than themes and can be easily switched in and out. They don't require a reboot to apply. And you can try them out right on the site. So, we're likely to see more work going into personas than themes. You can see that there are about 400 Firefox themes available. And 35,000 personas. So, that's where the work is going.
Portable versions of Firefox, GIMP, LibreOffice, etc
I've installed FF on a LOT of machines over the years, and not once have I ever seen it suck up anywhere close to a GB of ram. In fact, I don't even understand why people leave their browser up for 3 days anymore...it's not like you're downloading DVDs through your browser on a slow ISDN connection...I hope. In fact, with several tabs open, I'm hitting about 90 megs right now on Win7.
If you're searching for other people having the same problem, have you noticed there is a fix for it?
Fails for me. I kept on trying to use gesture to close tab.
Please tell me I can deal with cookie prompts asynchronously now, instead getting a modal dialog for ever single image on a page.
It would be nice if Firefox could be controlled/locked down using Windows Group Policies. That would make Firefox more corporate-friendly.
The main reason that my employers' IT dept doesn't allow Firefox is the fact that they cannon force all traffic through a filtering proxy (bluecoat).
Unused memory is wasted memory.
Yet ANOTHER update that has to install when I start FireFox. Like we don't have enough already.
The intro is forgetting the best updates of all, support for CSS gradients and multiple backgrounds in CSS.
"During My Service In The United States Congress, I Took The Initiative In Creating The Internet." -Al Gore
Does Firefox 3.6 implement better handling of icc v4 color profiles than 3.5 or will I still need to run FF3.0 to keep images from looking like crap on a calibrated screen with a profile?
Firefox 3.0 handled them well, but they completely broke them when they replaced the color management system in 3.5.
The chromium code Google wrote is BSD.
However, Chrome depends on Webkit, and parts of Webkit are LGPL-only. Much more restrictive than Chromium or Gecko...
It's a shame they didn't support the tab preview options on the Windows 7 task bar. I know many Windows 7 users that switched back to IE just for that reason.
the best part of the Firefox 3.6 update is that it's offered to existing 3.5.x users. Not one of those weird 'major updates' like 3.5 was - which is why there are still 3.0.x users out there running old browsers.
Personas could work AND WAS ALREADY WORKING as a lightweight theming replacement without being tied to the browser code as an addon.
REPEAT: It already works as an addon.
This is essentially an unremovable addon like that MS .NET addon that MS shoved down our throats.
Look, I have for the most time defended Firefox ever increasing features as progress. I already don't think they managed their "awesomebar" well at all, I like it but many loyal users didn't and instead of making it an option or an extension they gave it a hip name to add insult to injury.
But now they are taking an already working addon into the browser.
The thing I liked about FF was it's modularity, it's what caused the browser to split form the mozilla suit in the first place. This is a step into the wrong direction, into a more monolithic application.
Why do FF developers hate their own extension framework dammit!?
But... the future refused to change.
"One of the major goals of the release was to improve startup time and general UI responsiveness, especially the Awesomebar. You can read the full set of release notes here."
Ironic, then, that the "awesomebar" and the UI both became exponentially more-unusable, really-laggy on my PC, forcing me to revert to 3.5.7.
someone said that they are the first step in making themes a bit more lightweight and extensible, that a theme is a collection of 'personas' which are individual UI modifications.
So today, we have a background modification, tomorrow a font or tab or scrollbar or whatever.
Maybe its a good idea, maybe bad, but that's the way it is with FF - you pays your money and you get changes. Its why you're using FF in the first place. I think we should stop giving them such a hard time over it sometimes - if they didn't try anything we wouldn't get the good stuff they come up with, even though we have to pay the price of having to accept the not-so-good. (and no, I use the awesomebar, I think its great now I've gotten used to it)
I appear to be able to check for updates as a non-admin now. Anyone else finally able to do so?
Actually, I don't use Firefox. I use SeaMonkey. No biscuit! :P
This constant drive to (often needlessly) reinvent the wheel, and forcing it on the users without the option to get the old back is one of the big reasons why I'll never use Firefox, and stay with SeaMonkey.
The only reason I'm following this at all is because Firefox controls Gecko, which the other Mozilla applications are also built on. Removing themes from the back-end will adversely impact all the others.
Just installed - it has crashed twice already, and sucks up a couple 100 MB of memory. Of course, I am running on Vista.
Disappointed
Ahhh....I know I shouldn't slap the fanboy, but I'm bored people, and therefor can't help it. Opera sucks dude. How does Opera suck, let me count the ways...NO NoScript...And NO Mr. Fanboy, that lame ass completely useless disable the entire site and then whitelist don't work. What if I want to allow ONLY one script on a page? Lame.
Opera extensions suck. Sorry, but they do. What makes FF the "must have" is I can have the web MY way, NOT your way, or the way the Opera devs deem worthy, but MY way. For me that is FEBE(must have) Downloadhelper/downloadstatusbar, ABP (and NO the lame ass hack you Opera guys use ain't squat compared to the ease of ABP) Noscript, iMacros (must have, great for scripting) ForecastFox,Nightly Tester Tools, Distrust, Image Zoom (must have, great for resizing images on the fly). Most of those there are either NO Opera equivalent, or there are bad hacks like the download "extension" where you have to feed it the entire video URL with a copypasta just to grab a video. If it is flash based Downloadhelper will grab it AND convert it to the format of my choosing. So extension support in Opera? Lame.
So yeah, Presto is a fast engine. But if my browsing experience sucks frankly I don't care if it sucks really fast or really slow, the word sucks is still in there. Mobile? Yeah Opera is good there. The desktop OTOH...yuck. If all I wanted is raw speed with very little features I could run QTWeb or Kmeleon. There is a REASON why Opera scores so low in the USA even though it is free. It is because we do NOT like it! Sure it might be #1 in Russia, where I'm sure the machines are as slow as Xmas (Opera is good on power starved systems) but here in America we like our PCs like we like our cars, big and bad.
So I'm afraid you can spam those links all you want Mr. Fanboy, Opera ain't gonna gain squat here in the USA. It was a niche when it was for pay, it was a niche when it was ad supported, it is a niche now and I don't see it getting any bigger. FF works just fine, the extensions let us have the web OUR way, it works on Windows, Linux, and OSX, is easy to customize, in other words for us it "just works". And if it ain't broke...
ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
get the Ghostery plugin for firefox. That stops some poorly written javascript from running in the first place.
Does that mean Slashdot will stop rendering though?
Couldn't help myself.
got it, thanks, but I'm having a retardo brane phart here, maybe you can help one more time, and TIA if you can. I've gone all through that involved menu, and cannot get the new linked tab to show up exactly to the right of the original tab where the link came from. That's really all I want, nothing else. I have checked and unchecked what looks like that option, and nothing changes, both ways a new tab being opened shows up at the far end of the set of tabs that are already there.
That fix never worked for me. Nor did a lot of other hocus-pocus fixes. I mean, trim_on_minimize has a pretty clear behaviour and it does influence the memory usage if you like to minimize things, but it wasn't a solution to this problem.
It's been a while since I stopped being a regular firefox user; so the memory leaks / fragmentation / whatever may actually be gone. But between Firefox 1.5 and the early betas for 3.1 (which turned into 3.5), I quite frequently got the gigabyte Firefox of death. I tried getting rid of extensions, which slowed but did not halt the rate of memory usage. And I find (or at least, at the time, found) vanilla Firefox nearly unusable compared with their competition.
A.k.a. "Minefield." Despite the name, it's been completely stable for me. In fact, I'm using it right now. Works fine. I sometimes miss the History function, though it remembers the sites I've visited. So I have no complaints. The speed gain over 3.5 is phenomenal. Between Mac OS X 10.6 and Minefield, I'm a happy camper.
-- haaz.
Per my subject-line above, & my first post parent to this one, where the "puny undereducated & unaccomplished wannabe PC gurus of /." did their usual "mod down" w/ out justifications?
See this "brainiac's" reply, lmao:
http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1519698&threshold=-1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&pid=30854896#30855952
The technically unjustified, no proof whatsoever "effete 'mod-down'" IS TRULY THE ONLY WEAPON THE UNSKILLED TROLLS HAVE, vs. the 'avalanche' of VERIFIABLE FACTS I provided in my posting...
("too, Too, TOO EASY"++, as usual)
APK
P.S.=> I also just MUST add the "why" of WHY I posted that URL above... lol, it's indicative of the "general intelligence level" of these trolls around here, like HAIRYFEET (hair-brained is more like it, lol) above... apk
"Firefox needs to have these features!
Firefox rocks because it has these features (addons)!
Firefox should fix this!
Firefox should inform us about J Random Privacy Threat That Everybody Already Knows About!"
I'm trying to tell where this is going...
1) Firefox does let you export bookmarks. Granted, it exports all of them, but how hard can it be to crack open the HTML file and strip out the ones you don't want to send?
2) "Not being a jerk about extensions"? In what way? Just go to the web page and look around, it's not like the add-ons window is the only place you can get them.
3) "Letting the world know"? Am I being wooshed? You're saying they should beat their own chests? Maybe run some cocky TV commercials that says FF is cool and provide no actual info to back it up?
4) "give users control to wipe things clean": it's still there. Or just tap Ctrl+Shift+Del before you exit.
5) "SOB web collectors": who isn't these days? Personally, I'm tired of being warned that every food I can possibly eat is decreasing my life expectancy in some way.
Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
"How about you let us know when Opera and Chrome catch up to Midori? In my experience, Midori beats them all, for speed." - by Runaway1956 (1322357) on Thursday January 21, @10:07PM (#30855816) Homepage
That's merely "in your experience" but... do you have actual PROOFS to that statement? I put up a TRUCKLOAD of that, & much more in favor of Opera (vs. FF & IE @ least so far) here in this very exchange:
http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1519698&threshold=-1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&pid=30850216#30852784
AND, TO THAT VERY EFFECT (I.E.-> ala documented proofs, in legitimate testings done...)
ALSO:
Does this "MIDORI" have the SAME native featureset that Opera does?
Additionally, did "MIDORI" have them ALL, & first also??
LASTLY HERE: Does MIDORI have the same SECURITY TRACKRECORD OPERA DOES???
(Which IS the overall BEST of them all afaik @ least & per evidences I posted in that URL above which have held true for YEARS now in favor of Opera no less, & not just in speed mind you)
If not... well, then there's the "old adage"/proverb to the rescue here: "IMITATION IS THE SINCEREST FORM OF FLATTERY"... period.
----
"Oh yeah - Midori has been passing the Acid tests for quite a long time. It was the first, as far as I know." - by Runaway1956 (1322357) on Thursday January 21, @10:07PM (#30855816) Homepage
Well... on that account?
Opera's done the SAME, since version 6.x mind you &, on the ACID2 test of browser std.'s/webpage std.'s compliance (which makes sense: Opera's MAIN DEVELOPER, Hakom Lie, is a member of that standards board no less & iirc)...
Also, & iirc:
Opera was ONLY beaten on ACID2 (as to being "first" or "second") by a web development engine (webkit iirc? Not sure)!
HOWEVER... I could be "off" on the accuracy of that much here!
(AND, admittedly on my part also, per the URL above... As I noted in my 1st reply here in this very exchange (again/once more - URL of that much, is above, & LOADED with facts that favor Opera (especially on SPEED, and SECURITY (as well as native featuresets vs. all other comers in "the big 3"))).
----
"And, my primary browser is still Firefox. Customizations are worth the loss in speed, IMHO" - by Runaway1956 (1322357) on Thursday January 21, @10:07PM (#30855816) Homepage
I use it myself, the MINEFIELD 3.7 builds actually... & sometimes, you have to use other browsers (like on IE specific pages etc. et al, they happen unfortunately), OR "pull tricks" to get a better rendering like by making Opera IDENTIFY as IE (easy to do in Opera)...
See, unlike MOST "fanboys"? I am fair:
I say that, because I've also helped the FF team outta some bugs @ NTCompatible.com a few years ago. They were great about it, I will DEFINITELY give them that much though... I wrote they, w/ specifics & details, & they wrote me back THAT DAY, & next day?? Their teams showed up on that forums, & spoke to us DIRECTLY + fixed it that day no less (iirc, it was close to that @ the very least).
I was impressed on that much by the FF team on that account!
Especially by their abilities in securing the past couple builds of FF too!
I say this, & I can prove it... mainly because for YEARS they were behind Opera not only in JAVASCRIPT speeds (see my post URL above, though, on THAT account @ least), but also in terms of features (many copied from OPERA's native, faster, & MORE EFFICIENT featureset that isn't as security vulnerability ridden as FF's are or as much of CPU hogs either) AND IN OPERA's SECURITY TRACKRECORD online too!
FF's still not the "Superior Warrior", sad to
Ahhhh...I just love to fart in the general direction of lame anon cowards...And the BEST you can come up with is a fricking HOSTS file? HOSTS? BWA HA HA HA HA HA HA...Damn, that's funny. But I do thank you for pointing out your own big can o' fail. What were my words? what did I say about Opera? Lame hacks I do believe? So your el smello browser has to have a fricking HACK HOSTS file just to do what FF does, and on top of that? Lame as hell! can decide you which sites can come and go with a simple right click? can you decide that if a site has ads you do NOT want, along with content you do, to simply filter with a simple click? No? How sad...
And your big selling point is "faster Jscript"? Remember what I said about fast sucking? Well suck at the speed of light baby, yeah! And who in the fuck cares about fast jscript anyway? It already loads as fast as I can click, is there a "faster than you can think to cl;ick" option in Opera? No? Then WTF should anybody care anyway?
And Good Jebus Christ, you had to go for the "My ePeen is bigger than yours" BS. Damn that's funny. You DO know what they say about compensation, right? Lacking a little something downstairs are we? But as if it matters my baby is an AMD 925 Quad, 8Gb RAM, and 1Tb of HDD running 2 500Gb SATA. Not that it matters since we are talking web browsers and it is pretty much common knowledge that Opera runs on less resources, because it don't have diddly dick for extensions or addons or...well anything else worth having, hence popular in places like imbrokeistan. Since even the "slow" computers here are 3Ghz+ with a gig or better of RAM Opera running well on old shit don't really make a damn.
How's video downloading working for you? Have to use that lame ass "add on" where you have to copypasta the entire video URL and hope to Jebus it actually works? Is that fun for you? Maybe you think that is a fun game! Hey, does it automatically convert the videos for you into the format of your choice and place it into a nice separate folder just for videos? No? Well maybe you can label its lack of features as a "feature"!
Sorry Mr Lame Ass Anon Coward, but you can click your heels together three times and say "there's no place like home" and wish upon a star and dress as the Big O for Halloween, it still ain't gonna change the fact that your browser of choice is DEAD LAST. As in bottom of the heap, teeny tiny itsy bitsy nobody would notice if it blew away tomorrow, little bitty niche? Want some proof? Notice how your "super browser" barely, and I mean just barely, beats "other"? Meanwhile FF, Chrome, and Safari all have much bigger chunks, and getting bigger every day. And you know what they say, if you ain't busy growing you're busy dying. And since I don't see Opera growing...well I guess that means they are the other, huh? don't worry after mommy EU adds the browser ballot to Windows 7 maybe...just maybe...you might actually get up to 3%! Yay! Maybe one day, if Opera works very very hard and eats its vegetables, it will be 1/6th the size of Chrome, a barely two year old browser! How long as Opera been out again?
ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
You would shake you head at me. I always have firefox up, and right now I have 100+ tabs.
As for memory usage system monitor is reporting firefox as 406MB so 3.5.7 doesn't have any memory leakage on this system.
Star Trek, there maybe hope.
Thanks a lot man! Wanted that for *years* now.
Does this one supports threads per tab like chrome or opera or even ie8
The ones that really matter are AdBlock and NoScript - if they're not ready I'm not switching.
I also use a few others, like Ghostery, and I'm assuming the restore-most-recently-deleted-tab button will still work, but it's the basic safety ones that matter.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
This constant drive to (often needlessly) reinvent the wheel,
That's a problem with modern computing in general, I blame MS for always making different APIs and frameworks and never quite making their mind up about how to do something (DB access is a great example there). As a result, everyone, everywhere is always trying to do the same damn thing in a different way, using a different set of tools. Maybe one day computing will mature to be a more stable industry, focussed more on the final product than the toys used to build it, but we're still a far way off that.
If you're seeing similar memory consumption for both FF and Chrome, perhaps you should consider that this isn't the fault of any memory leak, but rather the result of your surfing habits.
Every time there's a firefox story on slashdot, I see posts complaining about memory leaks in firefox. I have yet to actually see a post that makes an even remotely convincing argument that what they're seeing is the result of a memory leak.
*sigh* back to work...
Oh, it is definitively my surfing habits.
But, that has no connection with the fact that leaving FF with open tabs alone for a week nearly doubles its memory footprint.
That also has no connection with the fact that on my 3GB RAM + 3GB swap Windoze XP machine Chrome constantly thrashes, and my memory usage without open browsers is less than 1 gig total.
Now, I do realise than my habit of running multiple browsers with around 50 tabs open is not a socially accepted behaviour, but constantly adding features without addressing old issues seems futile. FF 3.0 did show a big improvement in memory management, and even bigger in stability. Yet, I am still seeing issues from years ago with plugins and memory.
Considering my browsing habits, I still haven't found a bookmark / tab tool that saves context - history and opened child tabs, let alone the content of the tab as it was when saved. With something like that, I probably would have no need for 50 tabs, and would stop complaining. One can dream...
http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1512306&cid=30785704
Utterly hilarious!
(See BitzTream run in the URL above, after he being caught skimming like the typical troll does).
http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1519698&cid=30856394
http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1519698&cid=30856658
Folks, we'd like to introduce you to "Professor Hairyfeet" graduate of "Bottom of the barrell university" @ ITT! That's where they teach you to troll others as well as how to lose very, very badly on technical topics, as he demonstrates above. So, when "the POWER of... 'ITT Training'" fails you, as it has the professor above? Well, there is always, "bottom-of-the-barrell U" for you too, as it's where ALL of the proudest loser trolls like the professor above graduated from (including getting their fake sheepskin from a gumball machine, lol). Professor Hairyfeet, You say you want to teach PC tech stuff in your profile here, but you sure got "schooled" above in both urls above there hairyfeet, lmao. Yes, folks - That's the KIND OF EXCELLENT RESULTS you'll be guaranteed to get, when you go to "Bottom-of-the-Barrell U" @ ITT. Guaranteed, or your money back (all 5 cents of it, lmao).
http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1519698&cid=30856394
http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1519698&cid=30856658
Folks, we'd like to introduce you to "Professor Hairyfeet" graduate of "Bottom of the barrell university" @ ITT! That's where they teach you to troll others as well as how to lose very, very badly on technical topics, as he demonstrates above. So, when "the POWER of... 'ITT Training'" fails you, as it has the professor above? Well, there is always, "bottom-of-the-barrell U" for you too, as it's where ALL of the proudest loser trolls like the professor above graduated from (including getting their fake sheepskin from a gumball machine, lol). Professor Hairyfeet, You say you want to teach PC tech stuff in your profile here, but you sure got "schooled" above in both urls above there hairyfeet, lmao. Yes, folks - That's the KIND OF EXCELLENT RESULTS you'll be guaranteed to get, when you go to "Bottom-of-the-Barrell U" @ ITT. Guaranteed, or your money back (all 5 cents of it, lmao).
One of the major goals of the release was to improve startup time and general UI responsiveness, especially the Awesomebar.
What would really improve responsiveness of the Awesomebar is to get rid of it, or at least let me turn it off. I find it utterly and completely useless, and detrimental more often than not. I just want the old, sane behavior of checking the first few letters I'm typing and matching against sites I've been to recently where the URLs begin with those letters. I don't want it to search for "do those letters appear anywhere in the URL string, anywhere in the title, anywhere in the bloody bookmarks". Really, there is zero percent chance, whatsoever, that my typing "g" into the address bar means I want to go to a bookmark I stashed away years ago which has "Complete Listing" in the title because, hey, "listing" has a "g". What kind of brain-damaged behavior is that?
Sure, it claims to learn over time, but it doesn't seem to actually do this, and in any event, clearing out your history complete ruins that. Plus, since its suggestions are wrong so often, I end up going to the wrong site, which it of course counts as a hit on that and adds to whatever asinine "learning" routine it's using.
None of the about:config tricks or plugins actually work to remove this abomination either. For the love of god, let me and the millions of others who hate the Awesomebar turn that garbage off.
mirrorshades radio -- darkwave, industrial, futurepop, ebm.
Best new feature: title text (the tooltip that appears when you hover over an image) no longer disappears after a few seconds. Now I can read xkcd without the fear that comes from knowing I'll soon have to wiggle the mouse around to get the tooltip back.