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Why Mozilla Needs To Go Into Survival Mode

Crazzaper writes "I have been using Firefox for many years, and the war of the browsers has been around for longer than that. It just so happens that now we have a lot of options out there: IE, FF, Chrome, Opera, Safari, and others. People are always talking about how one browser is going to take down another, but maybe that's not the issue at all. It seems very possible that one browser, like Firefox, can be taken down by multiple browsers at once, whether or not there was any intention to compete specifically with Firefox. I hadn't seen it this way, but I do now."

464 comments

  1. Firefox lite. by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What they need to do is remember why the project started and get back to that.

    Themes in 3.6? WTF were they thinking?

    Chrome and Safari both have excellent built in Web dev/javascript tools, I don't even miss Web Developer Toolbar.

    1. Re:Firefox lite. by Jaysyn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not themes, personas. Themes have been around for a long long time, but I think the personas as silly & superfluous.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    2. Re:Firefox lite. by EvilBudMan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What about Ad Block Plus? That keeps me on Firefox and of course the MASA theme. (Monkeys In Aftermarket Space Administration)

    3. Re:Firefox lite. by maxume · · Score: 2, Interesting

      They started the project to develop a browser that was driven by user requirements (as opposed to the Mozilla suite, which was a behemoth driven by whatever developers were working on, all of the developers with check-in privileges).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    4. Re:Firefox lite. by vipz · · Score: 1, Insightful
    5. Re:Firefox lite. by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

      I only use Firefox because of their wonderful addons like Ad Block+

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    6. Re:Firefox lite. by doti · · Score: 3, Informative

      IIRC, the project started to give people choice.
      Their goal was to save the web from a standards-hurting monopoly, not necessarily be the #1 in user base.

      Thanks to Mozilla, we have that now.
      Firefox can die in peace, the web was saved.

      --
      factor 966971: 966971
    7. Re:Firefox lite. by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 1

      What they need to do is remember why the project started and get back to that.

      I know. You'd be surprised how many people would love an internet browser that does nothing but display a web page as fast as possible.

    8. Re:Firefox lite. by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      The benefit I found from the new themes thing is that I was able to pick a theme that shaved about 5 pixels off the top by eliminating some of the horizontal lines between the menu bar, address bar, and bookmarks toolbar.

    9. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Apparently, the adblockers for chrome still download the ads, they just prevent the ad from displaying

    10. Re:Firefox lite. by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Glimmer blocker.

      It works as a 'proxy' so it works with all browsers.
      I can inject javascript into any page (just like GreaseMonkey). Runs in the background. I haven't noticed much RAM or CPU usage.

      Only downside is it doesn't do https sites, because the browser decodes those.

    11. Re:Firefox lite. by somersault · · Score: 1

      You can drag the address bar up next to the menu bar, that's what I used to do when I used FF.. makes sense on a widescreen monitor. The bookmarks toolbar is also pretty pointless when you have the bookmarks menu.. and at the very least there's probably a keyboard combination to toggle the bookmarks bar (ctrl-b on Chrome, probably the same for FF).

      --
      which is totally what she said
    12. Re:Firefox lite. by RanCossack · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I know. You'd be surprised how many people would love an internet browser that does nothing but display a web page as fast as possible.

      Better way of phrasing that starts with 'You'd be surprised how few people..."

      Let's face it -- Aurora, Midori, and other browsers that do that have been around for years. People don't use them because they want more their browser to do more.

    13. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Chrome and Safari both have excellent built in Web dev/javascript tool

      and how does chrome handle viewing source from POST? Last time I checked it was uselessly resending the request sans arguments. Is there a plug-in for proper developers?

      How about the crap design that doesn't prevent real adblocker functionality? Pulling in all the shit and then hiding it is useless. You still get stuck on page loading when one stupid file from some unrelated site fails to send it. Chrome feels nice, but real world usage and developer usage leaves a lot to be desired.

      Safari crashes way too frequently to be taken seriously, maybe that's OS X's fault?

    14. Re:Firefox lite. by AttillaTheNun · · Score: 1

      You'd be surprised how many people would love an internet that consists of nothing but (X)HTML web pages to be displayed as fast as possible. The internet has grown to be much more complex and the browsers have followed.

    15. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymusing · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "You'd be surprised how many people would love an internet browser that does nothing but display a web page as fast as possible."

      Those are probably the same idiots who want a cell phone that reliably makes phone calls.

      --
      Liberal? Conservative? Compare perspectives at Left-Right
    16. Re:Firefox lite. by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      People don't use them because they don't know about them. You think Firefox would have taken off if every Geek didn't install it on their mothers computer?

    17. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you ever use Firebug? Web Developer hasn't been really actively developed in a while.

    18. Re:Firefox lite. by JWSmythe · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is an ABP extension for Chrome too. :)

          Actually, the question was silly. Why do you "need" Mozilla to survive? As long as they have something that someone wants, then someone will use it. When they have something that no one wants, then they're just entertaining themselves.

          But, the question of if Mozilla is going to die is just academic at this point. They only brought in $78.6 million dollars in 2008. Ya, only ... well ...

          $78,600,000 (Mozilla)
        -$ 30,000 (Me)
        ------------
          $78,570,000 .. a whole lot more than I did, and I think I overestimated my income for last year. Damn, it's been a shitty year.

          But, if Mozilla went away, I'd use a different browser browser. If whoever stops making the OS I like, I'll find another one. If the Internet goes away, I'll find a different job. If the whole world goes away, well, I guess it won't matter much. ;)

         

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    19. Re:Firefox lite. by Shagg · · Score: 1

      You'd also be surprised at how many people claim to want that, but as soon as they get it begin asking... now what about all of the features it's missing. :)

      --
      Unix is user friendly, it's just selective about who its friends are.
    20. Re:Firefox lite. by uberjack · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I love Firefox because of its plugins (Firebug alone is the bee's knees), but it's an absolute memory hog. On both my Windows and Linux machines, I have to restart the application every few days - it's not shy about eating up 4-5 GB of RAM easily. In many cases (and if I leave the system running long enough, as I often do) it consumes all of the available memory until the system slows to a crawl. It especially annoys me that it's been this way for the last 2-3 years, and still nothing is being done.

    21. Re:Firefox lite. by BitZtream · · Score: 2

      What programmers start talking about making an app 'skinable' or 'themeable' its a good sign you need to run as they've stopped working on the goal and instead are fucking around with code for fun.

      Mozilla is slightly different in this respect as it needs some 'skin'ability since it is recreating the widget set for the OS it runs on. However, when you jump to the point that users should be able to reskin your application ... and you invest a bunch of effort into 'making it easier' to skin the application ... you've clearly left your stated mission and again wondered off into that area that is full of OSS programmers who have no focus thanks to the lack of paycheck ... or in this case, because they work for mozilla.

      When an app starts adding skinning support, its time to find an alternative. This was true of Mozilla eons ago, this is just a reminder.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    22. Re:Firefox lite. by wmbetts · · Score: 2, Informative

      I really don't see how I'm an idiot for wanting a phone that does 1 thing well and that's make a phone call. I don't care about all the other crap that most phones have. I will agree though that I'm in the minority.

      --
      "Ubuntu" -- an African word, meaning "Slackware is too hard for me". - stolen from Dan C alt.os.linux.slackware
    23. Re:Firefox lite. by alphax45 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Some of us just REALLY hate ads and don't want to see them at all. Personally I find that because many ads are now flash based (no - I do not want to punch the monkey and give you my cell phone number for a free iPod) they distract me from viewing the content I went to the site for. I’m also the guy that will go online during the commercials on TV to avoid watching them. I might just be the odd one (or it might be ADD), but I don’t surf the web without Ad Block turned on. (Except at work where I have to use MSIE and not allowed to install other software – but the web is locked down pretty good too so it’s mostly tech news sites.)

      --
      K Man
    24. Re:Firefox lite. by will.perdikakis · · Score: 0

      If you think about it, Google Chrome with AdThwart is the one of the greatest contradictions in computing. Only topped by the fact that MS Office is one of the best selling software titles for Mac.

      --
      -Will P.
    25. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use the addon "Compact Menu 2" get's rid of the menu bar entirely and replaces it with an Icon on the tool bar.

      You also get a 'Compact Bookmarks' icon for easier access to the Bookmarks menu, which can be added to the toolbar / bookmarks bar via the toolbar customistation dialogue.

    26. Re:Firefox lite. by apoc.famine · · Score: 3, Informative

      On my little netbook, with the short-but-wide screen, I did as somersault did and put the address bar next to the menu, but also went a step further:

      Tree Style Tab

      That takes your tabs, puts them on another side, (left, right, top or bottom, actually) and orders them as a tree, with the page you spawned tabs from as the main branch. Since I have widescreen monitors on everything, I set mine to be on the left. That gives me the maximum vertical space, and to be frank, I like the tree style, now that I've gotten used to it. I find it far more sensible than the default of putting them on top next to each other.

      That and NoScript keep me stuck on Firefox. I won't choose another browser until I can get something as powerful and easy to use as NoScript for it. Every time I use a computer without it, it kills me. Life is so much better when you control what your browser does.

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    27. Re:Firefox lite. by Tim+C · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You'd be surprised at the number of people who think that's what they want, but if they got it would then complain that Facebook didn't work properly, or Google mail or maps, etc.

    28. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      addon tinymenu allows you to combine the program menu with the address bar-makes it approx the same vertical footprint as chrome (because chrome puts tabs in the titlebar)

    29. Re:Firefox lite. by poetmatt · · Score: 3, Interesting

      which is why we still use firefox, as the chrome version = security risk.

      Meanwhile, firefox's "survival requirement" is nonexistent. They're doing just fine. They need to work on bloat and keep improving firefox, but they're not about to run out of relevance.

      The money loss from the google deal ending may or may not be a big deal. It depends on if they keep up the deal again. They most certainly might do so, as google might see it as a smart investment to guarantee competition, basically.

    30. Re:Firefox lite. by RajivSLK · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Agreed, a spell check engine could easily be seen as bloat but I wouldn't use a browser without one.. same goes for tabs, an easily accessible search box, plug ins, full screen mode, auto complete, java-script debugger, and I'm sure the list is different for everybody.

    31. Re:Firefox lite. by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      --Damn, it's been a shitty year.--

      This one is looking worse or shittier.

    32. Re:Firefox lite. by H0p313ss · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      *WHOOSH*

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
    33. Re:Firefox lite. by z4ns4stu · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Really, it makes sense with the way it is used as Google wins twice:
      1. The add gets downloaded, so the hit counts for revenue generation
      2. The add isn't displayed, so the user gets the experience they wanted

      Remember, Google is an advertising company at its heart.

      --
      The whole moon and the entire sky are reflected in one dewdrop on the grass. - Dogen
    34. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AdBlock and Firebug are the two reasons I stick with Firefox. I would love to switch to Chrome, but I rely too heavily on Firebug.

    35. Re:Firefox lite. by EvilBudMan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually I presently have all four browsers no five counting Opera. (Opera, Chrome, Safari, IE8, Firefox)

      I still use FireFox most of the time. Not sure why? Oh, yeah it solved many spyware problems before IE had tabs and such at work. It IS getting bloated though now and I still have to have IE for some financial stuff that only works with IE for some stupid reason.

      I don't use No Script. I also have to go to MSN sometimes. That's just how it is. FireFox is better for viewing Microsoft sites. We'll not really but for most of what I need it is.

    36. Re:Firefox lite. by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 0

      So get a custom hosts file that blocks all the ads. It's what we did before adblock existed...

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    37. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Hello? Have you seen the 'Net lately? *Every* site has blinking crap on the sides fighting for your attention!

      Another use for ABP is to remove the insane background decorations of quite a few sites. Right-click on background, "Block Image" and the internet just got a whole lot better.

      Point is, some people tolerate moving neon-colored crap in their peripheral vision. I don't. I yearn for another Internet, one where content is king, not al the gimmicky attention begging money scheming. Lucky for me that is somewhat doable with ABP.

    38. Re:Firefox lite. by z4ns4stu · · Score: 1

      I second NoScript. I hate having to browse without it when I'm using someone else's computer. Usually, I just convince them to let me install it (not that hard when you're a network security professional).

      --
      The whole moon and the entire sky are reflected in one dewdrop on the grass. - Dogen
    39. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seeing some ads momentarily as the page loads? Extensions can only remove resources after they are loaded, not stop Chrome from fetching them. The Chrome developers are working on remedying this.

      from the AdThwart site

    40. Re:Firefox lite. by z4ns4stu · · Score: 1

      I saw something about a fix to a long-standing and extremely difficult memory leak being finalized by Mozilla devs recently. I think it was acutally here.

      --
      The whole moon and the entire sky are reflected in one dewdrop on the grass. - Dogen
    41. Re:Firefox lite. by eggnoglatte · · Score: 1

      I hadn't noticed this, but I guess it makes sense. Google only cares that you download the ad, so they can bill their advertisers. They don't care if you actually look at the ad.

      Maybe they are being a bit too smart for their own good, tough - that could easily lead to a law suit from advertisers...

    42. Re:Firefox lite. by ChronoReverse · · Score: 5, Informative

      Have you ever considered using a new profile and examining which plugins you use? Because a clean install of FF3.6 certainly won't do that.

    43. Re:Firefox lite. by Cougar+Town · · Score: 1

      The two-page spread ad in the NY Times might've helped expose the idea to quite a large number of people too.

    44. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Adblock I don't much care one way or the other -- I rarely even block ads unless they're really really obnoxious and/or seizure-inducing. NoScript is really essential for my experience and peace of mind. I know Chrome has a nice sandbox, but there's still bound to be plenty of exploits not stopped by it, plus there's all the stuff like those godawful mouseover text links.

      I still like javascript and I allow it liberally with noscript, so I don't like disabling it entirely or using a cumbersome manually edited whitelist, so I have Noscript. There is something like noscript for Chrome, but boy is it clunky and suckworthy.

    45. Re:Firefox lite. by cygnusx · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've noticed more "loading then removing" of content with Chrome/AdThwart than I remember from Firefox/AdblockPlus

      That's because Chrome's extension API doesn't allow extensions to stop loading resources, it only allows resources to be removed after they are loaded.

    46. Re:Firefox lite. by Trepidity · · Score: 4, Informative

      In particular, it's a latency problem for how fast pages render, even if you're not worried about the bandwidth. Slow 3rd-party advertisement and analytics servers still hold up the whole parade with Chrome adblockers: the adblock will run after you've sat around waiting on all that junk to resolve and load. With FF AdBlock's approach, if you block those 3rd-party domains, they get chopped out before the browser even bothers to resolve their DNS.

    47. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just wait until FF 4.0 supports multiple-personas!

    48. Re:Firefox lite. by darjen · · Score: 1

      I started using a host file with chrome and haven't looked back. honestly it works almost as well, and catches most everything.

    49. Re:Firefox lite. by Dorkmaster+Flek · · Score: 1

      But the downside of this is that the ads never get viewed so the site misses out. At least with Chrome's approach, you're not actually taking ad revenue away from the site. That seems like a reasonable middle ground to me. Then again, if you disagree with that, then you can just use FF.

      --
      I like to think of online DRM as something akin to a college -- you pay for lessons until you learn something.
    50. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what if it still downloads the ad. I don't want to see them.

    51. Re:Firefox lite. by poetmatt · · Score: 2, Interesting

      plenty of people know how to install firefox and adblock but don't know how to make a custom hosts file. I know how, but there's a reason we rely on adblock, and it's called pure laziness.

    52. Re:Firefox lite. by trapnest · · Score: 1

      I've never had Safari crash on me...

    53. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spot on. AdBlock is an absolute must for me. It's a great feeling being able to go a whole five minutes without someone trying to peddle their wares on you. It's truly refreshing.

    54. Re:Firefox lite. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Sometimes, you can't always choose what websites you use on a day to day
      basis. Sometimes, these websites either end up getting you infected with
      something (colleague) or end up just being plain annoying (personal exp).

      So being able to bring the web to heel is a nontrivial sort of thing.

      Any browser that is better at giving the most control to the end user,
      will always have a following among users that don't particularly feel
      like being abused because they are at the mercy of others.

      Ad blocking is just one aspect of this.

      Not everyone cares for the Apple approach to technology.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    55. Re:Firefox lite. by Trepidity · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Does it actually make a difference long-term? I suppose ad metrics might be bad enough that it does, but it seems that in principle it shouldn't. If a site gets 2x as many ad loads, but half of those are fake, non-displayed ad loads, shouldn't the advertisers see that the conversion rate takes a 50% nosedive, and then drop by 50% the CPM they're willing to pay? So the site ends up in the same place; twice the ad views for half the revenue per ad view.

      (It's of course possible that rates are too sticky for that to actually happen, and/or advertisers don't have good enough info to notice those changes.)

    56. Re:Firefox lite. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      "silly and superfluous" sells to the average customer. And if you're concerned about bloat, maybe try Mozilla's seaMonkey? It looks like the old 90s-era Netscape, but with the same engine as Firefox.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    57. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      A custom hosts file works well when at home. But when you are using a proxy server (at work) a hosts file doesn't block anything. You need adblock for that.

    58. Re:Firefox lite. by Capt.DrumkenBum · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Buddy, if you only made $30,000 last year it is well past time to start looking for a new job.
      I only made a little over twice that and I am looking.

      --
      If I were God, wouldn't I protect my churches from acts of me?
    59. Re:Firefox lite. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      I enable just enough of "the crap" in order for sites like that to work. Sometimes,
      I even have to enable stuff on a frame by frame basis because someone has changed
      one of their games and now it it does something that gives NoScript hissy fits
      (that it didn't before).

      The web can be the all singing all dancing crap of the world and still not need
      cross site scripting and 20 sources of scripts to be loaded for a single page.

      People are sloppy and lazy and prone to do things that make for a thieve's field day.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    60. Re:Firefox lite. by theqmann · · Score: 1

      Privoxy is another nice proxy/ad blocker that works well for Windows (and has support for BSD and Linux to boot). The default settings block most ads, and with a few additions to the well documented config file, can be made to block any other sites or images.

    61. Re:Firefox lite. by blackraven14250 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, it's called "Ease of Use". Not everyone even knows what an IP address is, and expecting every single person on the planet to understand the concept is ludicrous.

    62. Re:Firefox lite. by TerranFury · · Score: 1

      My phone is 7.5 years old now, and it will make me very sad when (If?! Hope springs...) it dies.

    63. Re:Firefox lite. by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      They're not just any ad company. They're the ad company serving the highest portion of those ads.

    64. Re:Firefox lite. by hansamurai · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow, how sad and pathetic.

      But there's always a battle to fight, the current one is proprietary codecs for the video tag in HTML 5.

    65. Re:Firefox lite. by commodore64_love · · Score: 2, Funny

      (cranky old man mode)

      I been using my computer to view porn since the days of 4000 colors. That's all I want. I don't need those other ____ty features mucking it up. As long as my browser can resolve GIFs, JPGs, and videos that's all's I want.

      (pounds sign into lawn that reads, "Get off.")

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    66. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Midora and aurora don't have the marketing of chrome or firefox behind them.

    67. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Like cygnusx said above, Chrome loads the DOM tree before the extension can manipulate it. No adblock extension can perform any better with the current model. That said, the loading of the ads and then removing them actually helps the functionality of some web pages.

    68. Re:Firefox lite. by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There is also the issue of downloading huge amounts of ad data -- which all go against your 5gb (matters here) or 250gb (not so big here) per month limit.
      The advertisers are using *MY* download quota without paying me for it.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    69. Re:Firefox lite. by commodore64_love · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm surprised no one's mentioned Opera. (Maybe the European users went home or to bed?) Where Firefox and Chrome have to use addons, Opera has adblock builtin. That's more efficient (i.e. smaller when running).

      I still prefer Firefox as my main browser, but Opera is quickly closing that gap, at least for me.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    70. Re:Firefox lite. by init100 · · Score: 1

      Slow 3rd-party advertisement and analytics servers still hold up the whole parade

      That's exactly the reason why I first installed AdBlock. Since that time, AdBlock and later AdBlock Plus has always been the first extension I install on a new system.

    71. Re:Firefox lite. by Dorkmaster+Flek · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm in the minority, but I don't even pay attention to the ads on the sites I visit, let alone click them. At least with me personally, the only thing the advertisers would see is me loading the ad image or not. If they're measuring click-throughs, it wouldn't affect me in the first place. I don't know if they could possibly tell that people are loading the ads but not looking at them.

      --
      I like to think of online DRM as something akin to a college -- you pay for lessons until you learn something.
    72. Re:Firefox lite. by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      That's why I always keep Lynx handy. It's really, really fast.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    73. Re:Firefox lite. by l0b0 · · Score: 1

      Who are these people? Seriously. No, I mean it. I've been using Firefox since 0.6, with occasional frays into Konqueror, w3, Lynx, Opera, IE and Chrome, and I don't think it's ever used more that a gig of RAM, even in the good ole' Delicious/Digg/Reddit days when everything was new and interesting. The last few years it's been running with at least the AdBlock Plus, Delicious Bookmarks, Flashblock and Web Developer extensions, on Windows 2000/XP, FreeBSD and Ubuntu, on at least five different machines that I can think of off the top of my head. Are these guys some sort of browser company/community minions/fanboys? I've also never heard of anyone having memory trouble with Firefox; it's always "I read/heard it somewhere."

      Chrome is good for fast JS, Opera for W3C compliance, w3/Lynx for testing, IE for viruses, Konqueror for FTP, and Firefox for extensions. Now STFU and use your favorite.

    74. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You think we're irrational fanatics who shouldn't be taken seriously; we think you're a dumb fucking sheep who wastes money on useless products and votes for idiots. I guess we're even in the end.

    75. Re:Firefox lite. by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Not at all. I *love* Firefox & don't really think it's bloated. Even if it was I'd still use it because I really hate browsing the web without all my lovely extensions.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    76. Re:Firefox lite. by MBGMorden · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And if you're concerned about bloat, maybe try Mozilla's seaMonkey? It looks like the old 90s-era Netscape, but with the same engine as Firefox.

      Maybe my sarcasm detector is just failing, but you do realize that Firefox originated as a branch off of Seamonkey because it was thought that Seamonkey had become too bloated?

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    77. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Woosh

    78. Re:Firefox lite. by smcn · · Score: 1

      But will you be able to fuse them?

    79. Re:Firefox lite. by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          FU. It's the economy. Until a couple years ago, I was making a very healthy 6 figures. And ya, *I* did pay that much in taxes. I knew someone who worked for the federal government, and their income lined up with what I paid in income taxes. I always joked that they were my personal federal employee. I declared (as if it mattered) that my income tax went directly to their payroll, and not to any other wasted expenses. Hey, between us it was funny. Silly me, I never called in any favors back then.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    80. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like them

    81. Re:Firefox lite. by Michael+Kristopeit · · Score: 1

      is it ludicrous to expect every person on the internet to understand the concept of an IP address?

    82. Re:Firefox lite. by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          Trust me, I'm looking.

          IT? Not happening. Around here, it's either college kids willing to work for $7.25/hr and failing miserably, or people so desperate that they'll take paycuts to under $10/hr just to keep their jobs. For lower positions I won't be considered unless I junk most of my resume (which I've been considering). There are no higher positions to be had. Head hunters send me the occasional lead from around the country, but they're all 2-4 month contracts at like $15/hr, and they even state in the requirements that they're looking for local candidates. I had a lead on a good one, that was only 1.5 hrs from me. I have friends out there, so I made arrangements to stay with them temporarily contingent on getting the position. Nope, didn't happen. I've even talked to people who are working for *UNDER* the federal minimum wage, just so they'll make at least something.

          I've been thinking I would have better luck taking what little I have, and going out to the Crater of Diamonds State Park. Hey, you never know what you'll find. :) At least that's legal. Bank robbery was another option, but it's likely to get me shot, which "dead" is not a career path or a lifestyle I plan for anytime soon.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    83. Re:Firefox lite. by Michael+Kristopeit · · Score: 1
      they can if you let them... there was a recent story about a webcam app that could detect when you were looking at a headline and popup relevant information.

      the problem for the advertisers is i'm never going to let them. why would i? i tried that back in the day with alladvantage.com... they screwed me out of $1,000s. advertisers lie.

    84. Re:Firefox lite. by icebraining · · Score: 1

      I'm European and I don't use Opera, nor do I know anyone running it (and I'm in a CS course, so no one uses IE either).

    85. Re:Firefox lite. by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      also, you can edit about:config and enable the tab autohide - when only one page is open in the window (ie, no tabs) it hides the tab bar.

      This also saves significant space.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    86. Re:Firefox lite. by init100 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There just aren't THAT many ads on websites to justify the irrational fear of not having Ad Block Plus that seems to abound in so many firefox users.

      The number of ads are probably less relevant than the slowness of many advertising servers. At least that's why I started blocking ads a couple of years ago. On many pages, it took ages for the underpowered ad servers to respond, and until it did, the page wouldn't render. That problem went away completely with AdBlock Plus, and I haven't experienced it since. And those few times that I browse at some place without an ad blocker, I find that underpowered ad servers are still a major problem as it was back then, so blocking ads is obviously still a necessity.

      And for those whining about lost revenues: If the advertising networks had done things right, I would never had had a reason to start blocking them. Now they are paying the price for their stupidity.

    87. Re:Firefox lite. by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Why, do you think advertisers will be willing to pay the same if almost no one sees (and hence clicks!) the ads?

    88. Re:Firefox lite. by init100 · · Score: 1

      Personally I find that because many ads are now flash based

      I have also found that many flash ads are not blocked by AdBlock Plus. With a dozen tabs open, the CPU usage would hover at some 50% even when doing nothing, despite AdBlock Plus being enabled. Since I suspected Flash as the culprit, I finally got around to installing Flashblock, which reduced my idle CPU usage to near 0%.

    89. Re:Firefox lite. by icebraining · · Score: 1

      pretty shitty fucking browser

      IYO.

      I use Firefox without AdBlock installed.

    90. Re:Firefox lite. by TheNinjaroach · · Score: 3, Informative

      I think so. When you combine it with other necessary concepts like NAT, proxies and IPv4 vs IPv6 it can get confusing pretty quickly.

      "Hey dude, my IP address is 192.168.0.100 -- what's yours?"
      "Well that's funny, I have the same one!"

      --
      I went to eat some animal crackers and the box said, "Do not eat if seal is broken." I opened the box and sure enough..
    91. Re:Firefox lite. by .tekrox · · Score: 1

      Netscape Communicator then Mozilla Suite then SeaMonkey is/was/always has been 'too big'

      Phoenix was started as a lightweight Gecko browser to remove the 'bloat' of the Full Mozilla Suite.

      Time went on - Phoenix became Firebird then Firefox - and has picked up all sorts of baggage along the way.
      I used to love FF; But then I started using Chrome on OSX - worked a charm, fast, light - used normal controls (Unlike Safari - which kept me away from it)

      The Final straw was 3.6 - Installed it; Killed my Profile entirely; I'm sticking with Chrome now.

    92. Re:Firefox lite. by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but those geeks don't use Midori or Aurora either. Midori, for example, is installed in less than 1% of the Debian PCs that provide stats through popcon. Iceweasel is installed in 51%.

    93. Re:Firefox lite. by AvitarX · · Score: 2, Informative

      Google ads are CPC not CPI, so they do care.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    94. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use adthwart, and absolutely love my Android skin.

    95. Re:Firefox lite. by Michael+Kristopeit · · Score: 1

      may they don't want an efficient browser as much as they want a modular one.

    96. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NO.

      The Advertisements that are being downloaded are PAYING for your access to the associated website.
      Without them, said website would likely NOT EXIST.

      Along with a majority of the Internet.

    97. Re:Firefox lite. by mdf356 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I click on the ads that have hot chicks in tight geek-themed t-shirts.

      --
      Terrorist, bomb, al Qaeda, nuclear, yellowcake, kill, assassinate. Carnivore is dead... long live Echelon.
    98. Re:Firefox lite. by Michael+Kristopeit · · Score: 1
      we already know the difference between "the garage" and "123 fake st."... one is relative to the object at 123 fake st. and the other is the pointer to the object relative to the city which is a member of cities and states with standardized addressing formats.

      people are expected to understand their mailing address in kindergarten... i don't see how IP addressing is any more complicated or less applicable to daily life.

    99. Re:Firefox lite. by Aranykai · · Score: 1

      "Hyatt, Hewitt and Ross's browser was created to combat the perceived software bloat of the Mozilla Suite (codenamed, internally referred to, and continued by the community as SeaMonkey), which integrated features such as IRC, mail and news, and WYSIWYG HTML editing into one software suite."

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Mozilla_Firefox

      --
      If sharing a song makes you a pirate, what do I have to share to be a ninja?
    100. Re:Firefox lite. by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Firefox is sitting here at 136MB of resident (physical) memory used, 20+ tabs open, 10 enabled extensions.

      Not that it could possibly use 4GB, as my PC only has 2GB of Ram, but since I have 1300MB free, it's not starving for memory either.

    101. Re:Firefox lite. by icebraining · · Score: 1

      I'm curious to know what browser do you use, since both Opera and Chrome support skins out of the box.

      And their programmers definitively have the incentive of paychecks, so I don't get that OSS objection.

    102. Re:Firefox lite. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      It's true, I am an idiot like that, an absolute moron of that, if you will :)

    103. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is wrong with the people on this site? Seriously? You equate knowledge of the OSI model with knowing a street address?

      Fucking ridiculous. Get a life.

      Mod this flamebait. Mod parent INSIGHTFUL!

    104. Re:Firefox lite. by reidconti · · Score: 2, Informative

      yes. actually it's ludicrous to expect every person on the internet to know any one piece of information. especially something that's intentionally hidden from the user.

    105. Re:Firefox lite. by Roberticus · · Score: 1

      In fact, the way Google Adwords works, some of those advertisers might think that bidding higher to move up in the list would help their dwindling click-through rates.

      They might pay *more*.

    106. Re:Firefox lite. by reidconti · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Um, I think you've got it backwards. The advertisers are paying the bill for the content you're viewing.

      Not that I have a moral issue with ad-blocking; quite the opposite. I just think it's silly that you're expecting to be reimbursed for your ad downloads. The CONTENT is the reimbursement.

    107. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mustn't have the Flash plugin installed.

    108. Re:Firefox lite. by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      The IP address is intentionally hidden. It's like saying that the address 123 fake street corresponds to zone 6134 according to the zoning board.

    109. Re:Firefox lite. by reidconti · · Score: 1

      Tabbed applications are a crutch for those who use broken window managers. This task should not be handled (inevitably in functionally and cosmetically different ways) by applications.

    110. Re:Firefox lite. by ultranova · · Score: 1

      No, it's called "Ease of Use". Not everyone even knows what an IP address is, and expecting every single person on the planet to understand the concept is ludicrous.

      It's ludicrous to expect people to understand the concept of address? Because IP address is simply your address in the Internet. And domain name is simply a kind of phonebook that makes looking them up easier. And, since you can automate a lot of things with a computer, we automated the address lookup thing so you don't have to do it manually, the browser or whatever does it for you.

      I pity the fool who tries to use the Internet but is too stupid to understand the above.

      Anyway, the reason we use Adblock instead of a custom hosts file is because it's much more convenient to be able to right-click on something and choose to block it from a menu than find the source address and add it to the hosts file by hand.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    111. Re:Firefox lite. by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Not everyone even knows what an IP address is, and expecting every single person on the planet to understand the concept is ludicrous.

      How so? People everywhere seem to be easily able to understand the concept of a phone number and how to use it. I just comment that the equivalent thing for the Internet is called an "IP address", and it works exactly the same. Then I add that one advantage the Internet has over the phone system is that the Internet comes with a builtin "phone book" called the DNS system, so you don't actually have to have your own Internet "phone book". But you can use IP addresses instead of names if you like, just like you can dial phone numbers by hand. And you can build your own IP phone book; you just have to know that it's called a "host file" Everyone except Microsoft uses the file /etc/hosts, and if you look at it, you won't even need a manual, because its format is obvious once you recognize it as a name number list. You can edit it with any editor you like. You can block access to any site you like by giving it a number like 0.0.0.0.

      This seems to be understood by even the most computer-intimidated, no matter how much they've accepted the idea that it's all beyond their understanding.

      Of course, you could obfuscate it, and make it difficult to understand. But if you use a simple description, I'd really doubt that you'd have much trouble getting the idea across to anyone who can use a phone.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    112. Re:Firefox lite. by aix+tom · · Score: 3, Interesting

      But it has to do with them thar "Com-Puh-Tars"

      There must be some funny effect with them. People who are perfectly able to do something when you tell them (quite complicated) "Do $STUFF" completely lock up mentally when you tell them "Do $STUFF on the computer"

      Funny enough, the patent office seems to share this. Patents to "Do $STUFF in $WAY" that are completely obvious, and would be rejected immediately by any sane person get granted when they add two words. "Do $STUFF in $WAY on computer"

    113. Re:Firefox lite. by ultranova · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The advertisers are using *MY* download quota without paying me for it.

      Isn't the whole point of capitalism externalizing the costs and internalizing the profits? Why do you hate freedom so much, you commie?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    114. Re:Firefox lite. by Yakasha · · Score: 1

      I love Firefox because of its plugins [snip] but it's an absolute memory hog.

      Try turning off a few of your plugins.

    115. Re:Firefox lite. by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      I wonder if it would be worthwhile to have an os-based browser launcher that would look at a page and decide what browser would display it best. That way, if I click on a link going to a bunch of usenet posts it'd bring up lynx, if I wanted to watch something on youtube it'd start Opera, and if some idiot wanted to get on Farmville it'd launch a virtual machine, start Internet Explorer, and pre-emptively download a bunch of viruses.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    116. Re:Firefox lite. by kaiidth · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Looks like it. Even Stephen Timms, noted dumbass and so-called Minister for Digital Britain, doesn't know what it is.

      According to him, IP address stands for Intellectual Property address.

    117. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IIRC, the project started to give people choice.
      Their goal was to save the web from a standards-hurting monopoly, not necessarily be the #1 in user base.

      Thanks to Mozilla, we have that now.
      Firefox can die in peace, the web was saved.

      Not that it needs saying but, if it were to "die in peace" because there is no longer a single browser, then surely you're just taking otherwise excellent competitors out of the "market" as it were, meaning there are less competitors there?

    118. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Enough with the whoosh replies unless it's really funny.

    119. Re:Firefox lite. by gknoy · · Score: 1

      A better way to do it would be to offload the requesting and downloading of ad content to a separate thread, and render the web page without them first. That way, you both are requesting ads, and not having to see them.

    120. Re:Firefox lite. by tumnasgt · · Score: 1

      What 'normal controls' doesn't Safari have? I hate it not having a reopen the last tab function, but other than that, it is all really standard. The main reason I don't use Firefox or Chrome on Mac is that I really hate having the tab close button on the right side, it should be on the left, to match all the other Mac OS software. IMO non-standard close buttons are far more non standard than any of the Safari quirks.

    121. Re:Firefox lite. by Capt.DrumkenBum · · Score: 1

      Keep the faith. While times like this are tough all over they do work to drive the IT wankers out of the field. So the true geeks can take over and make IT into the paradise it should be.

      --
      If I were God, wouldn't I protect my churches from acts of me?
    122. Re:Firefox lite. by Omestes · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, it's called "Ease of Use". Not everyone even knows what an IP address is, and expecting every single person on the planet to understand the concept is ludicrous.

      And some of us who know what an IP address is don't want to waste time mucking with system files when there is a far more elegant solution.

      Some of us are not 14 anymore, and don't think that taking the hard route makes one "hardcore".

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    123. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I pity the fool who tries to use the Internet but is too stupid to understand the above.

      If you're gonna talk like Mr. T, at least do us the courtesy of slowly dying from cancer.

    124. Re:Firefox lite. by kangsterizer · · Score: 1

      firefox simply implemented an extension that has been around for a while inside the browser. they did not need to code it.

      The reason they added those personas, is that chrome has very similar theming system (so, you're going to have to stop using chrome too!) and many users like it. you know, the ones not reading slashdot mainly. It's not useful but anyway, chrome's the reason really. (and personally i don't really mind.. i actually have set a persona somehow)

    125. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not true - it's more due to browsing habits.
      I have the same problem with no plugins installed.

    126. Re:Firefox lite. by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      It's a pity they don't use the system spell check. OS X has a really good spell checker, but Firefox insists on using its own, which isn't very good and doesn't make use of my customisations in the system dictionary. I'm still using Firefox for now, but it won't take much for me to switch to Safari, or Chrome.

    127. Re:Firefox lite. by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

      What I don't get is all the bitching about it being intrusive and hard to use. About once a day or so, I go to some non-everyday page, and run into issues with having to selectively enable things until it gives me content. Sometimes it never does before I stop trusting all the scripts it wants to run and close the tab.

      From my standpoint, I'm more than happy to whitelist the pages I trust, and more than happy to give untrusted pages a couple of selected "temporarily allow"s. But beyond that, if it's too much work to get a page to load, I don't bother loading it. Because by and large, it's probably not worth me looking at, for the permissions it requires.

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    128. Re:Firefox lite. by inflex · · Score: 1

      Actually, google adverts can be either CPC or CPI (usually per 1000 impressions). As the advertiser you get to choose which method you want.

    129. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personas my ass, they resurected "Hotbar" (http://www.coolbuddy.com/hotbar/default.htm) Is this the 90s again?

      I would log in except i get "Meditation Guru"

    130. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dropped Firefox for Opera a few years ago because it was bloated and hoarding tons of memory, even without extensions installed. I soon came to realize that I didn't even need any of those extensions because Opera had everything already built in. With the release of 10.50, Opera also became the fastest browser on the market, even faster than Chrome.

      The point is, if you use a browser for any reason other than technical merit, then you are using it for bad reasons.

    131. Re:Firefox lite. by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Then might I suggest changing your sig to what you do instead of a snarky political jab?

      You never know when a Slashdotter might have a position they're having a hard time filling.

    132. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed.

      The iPad is nothing but a slightly bigger iPhone, and it doesn't even make phone calls.

    133. Re:Firefox lite. by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      I don't expect them to reimburse me, I expect them to die.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    134. Re:Firefox lite. by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Just like content wouldn't exist without copyright.

      oh... it does. people create all the time. humans create- perhaps higher quality or lower quality- but they always make things and they always enjoy people sharing them and enjoying them.

      They may not get it that last 10% perfect without money, but they still create.

      There is a huge glut of content being created. When I was growing up, you could keep up with everything.

      Today, if you didn't work and consumed content 18 hours a day - you still would only fall further behind every day of your life.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    135. Re:Firefox lite. by daem0n1x · · Score: 2, Funny

      Sure. I have nothing better to do than maintaining my hosts file to block every single domain that serves ads. And you should see my mom hacking away with her computer's hosts file.

      I don't even know why people use silly tools like browsers. I telnet to every site and write all the HTTP requests by hand, header by header. I don't get any ads this way because I don't type the requests to download the ads. See? Easy!

    136. Re:Firefox lite. by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      Well, call me selfish but I hate publicity. If the website makes a profit or not is not my problem. I just don't want to look at any ads on webpages.

      Not that I can think of a better system, though. But I'm not the Mother Teresa of websites.

    137. Re:Firefox lite. by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      AdBlock and later AdBlock Plus has always been the first extension I install on a new system.

      Dude, I wish I had mod points. You took the words from my fingers. And NoScript is the second one.

    138. Re:Firefox lite. by Smauler · · Score: 1

      I understand the concept of an IP address, probably more than most people on this site. Firefox and adblock is easier than maintaining my own custom hosts file. I don't live to browse, I browse to live.

    139. Re:Firefox lite. by RebelWebmaster · · Score: 1

      They used to use the system spell checker. It was disabled due to dictionary issues. More information in bug 422760 if you're interested.

    140. Re:Firefox lite. by .tekrox · · Score: 1

      Middle Mouse does not close Tabs.

      That really is Enough to stop me using it; I'm incredibly used to it being there.

    141. Re:Firefox lite. by ooshna · · Score: 1

      I got to wonder why people are so greedy. You can get a nice house in a good neighborhood and a decent car and have a wife and few kids just on 40,000 a year. If you go with just saving and buying a used car and shopping at walmart hell you could make buy on 25000 with cash to spare.

    142. Re:Firefox lite. by FrankieBaby1986 · · Score: 1

      Have you investigated your browsing habits? Because, In my experience, opening 20+ pages with 5-10 images each (art, I swear!) ends up eating a lot a memory. Memory usage depends on your browsing habits as well.

      --
      ERROR: SIG NOT FOUND (A)bort, (R)etry, (F)ail?:
    143. Re:Firefox lite. by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      Everyone except Microsoft uses the file /etc/hosts,

      And even Microsoft uses:

      c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\host

      (the first part may vary, and there are probably drive-independent ways of specifying it)

    144. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They started the project to develop a browser that was driven by user requirements

      Apparently, that doesn't include corporate user requirements. We need Mozilla provided MSI packages for easy rollout and administration. None of this 3rd party nonsense.

    145. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really like personas.

      I use them to identify the various Firefox profiles I have set up for private browsing / web testing / connections through VPN proxy etc. The themes always changed too much of the browser, such as icon themes, and changing just the background color was difficult.

    146. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol... nice try

      it does it, every time, regardless of new profile or old!
      It's not possible to use Firefox more than maybe one week, at least then it is that slow that even the mouse gestures stop working.

    147. Re:Firefox lite. by tumnasgt · · Score: 1

      Touché. I hated that, but my mouse broke shortly after getting my MBP, so I ended up only having a touchpad for a while, and now I either click on the X or use Cmd+W.
      I still use middle click on Windows, it has just ended up as one of the things I do differently on Mac OS without really noticing (like switching Cmd and Ctrl).

    148. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if some idiot wanted to get on Farmville it'd launch a virtual machine, start Internet Explorer, and pre-emptively download a bunch of viruses.

      Why do you say that? Any instances of Farmville installing viruses? Or Farmville players deserve viruses? Honest question, I don't get the context for this statement.

      Posting AC because I moderated here.

    149. Re:Firefox lite. by moonbender · · Score: 1

      Most people will be able to understand the principle, though many of my relative would have stopped listening when you started going off about the hosts file and "editors". I think many people will also promptly forget what you explained to them after a few hours or days, because it's just not relevant or relatable information to them.

      The concept of phone numbers has been driven home repeatedly for a long time: it's what you dial when you want to reach someone. Even these days, you usually have to enter the number once in the address book. IP addresses? Not so much.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    150. Re:Firefox lite. by moonbender · · Score: 1

      I've also been using tree style tabs on the left, but on a 24" wide display with plenty of vertical spare space. It's nice because the tab titles don't get overly abbreviated even with many tabs, because the tree illustrates the relationship (and enables you to close a whole bunch of tabs at once) and because more vertical space is always good, even at 1920x1200. It also combines well with tab scrolling, ie. using mouse wheel + RMB to switch between tabs, something I've been addicted to since Opera 5 or so.

      That said, I wouldn't use it on a netbook because they use up a lot more screen area than normal tabs, even if it's "less valuable" area on the left side. Maybe with auto-hide, but that's just annoying. I'm also not sure if it'd make for a sane default, because many people use just a few tabs, which would mean a lot of wasted gray space with tree style tabs. OTOH, come to think of it, with less than 5 or 6 tabs (depending on the resolution) you could actually display a thumbnail of the page in the left hand area. It's a gimmick, but less so than the current feature of many browsers to display a thumbnail on hovering the tab.

      Also, I wish there was some way to drop/dock tabs to the bottom in the tree style tabs area. That'd let you organise your tabs, e.g. constantly open tabs like webmail (or /. ...) and the more regular browsing tabs.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    151. Re:Firefox lite. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      The *new* Firefox is not bloated, but the old Firefox 2 and 2.5 had a memory leak. On my PC it would start at ~100,000 megabytes and gradually grow to 500,000 which slowed-down my machine dramatically. I hated it.

      The Firefox 3 is better behaved, but still uses about twice as much RAM as Opera does.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    152. Re:Firefox lite. by commodore64_love · · Score: 2, Interesting

      >>>>>And if you're concerned about bloat, maybe try Mozilla's seaMonkey?
      >>
      >>Maybe my sarcasm detector is just failing, but you do realize that Firefox originated as a branch off of Seamonkey because it was thought that Seamonkey had become too bloated?

      Yes.

      Funny how the wheel turns, does it not? On my machine seaMonkey uses less memory. It's also why it's the default install on Puppy Linux, which was designed to run on machines with just 32-64 megabytes of RAM.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    153. Re:Firefox lite. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Well if you really want modular (addons), Opera has those too. - And the reason I mentioned Europe is due to the difference in market. Just as the Sega Master System and Commodore Amiga had more popularity in Europe versus America, so too does Opera have more popularity. The EU and Russia are Opera's main markets.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    154. Re:Firefox lite. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Well as someone who is using Internet Explorer 6 (no tabs)* it's annoying to have 10 open tasks across the bottom of my Windows bar.

      BUT I don't see how using Mac OS or Ubuntu Linux would make that any better? You'd still have the same flaw with multiple tasks. True you could "pile" the ten windows on top of one another, but I don't like that functionality either. I prefer a tabbed browser.

      *
      * Yeah I know. But IE6 is all my employer will let us use. Else I'd have upgraded.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    155. Re:Firefox lite. by Bauguss · · Score: 1

      I think this makes for an interesting discussion. Here is what top reports on my iMac. I can't remember when I last restarted Firefox. Had to of been a couple of days ago.

      PID COMMAND %CPU TIME RPRVT RSHRD RSIZE VPRVT VSIZE FAULTS
      439- firefox-bin 4.6 09:24:11 339M 52M 523M 477M 1920M 209400752+

      I run firebug, web dev, yslow, colorzilla, and adblock plus

      I've seen Firefox climb to the 1gb mark. That is normally when I notice and restart it.

    156. Re:Firefox lite. by Jaysyn · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I just installed Opera & Chrome to do a little "taste test". I opened all three browsers & pointed them to Slashdot. One tab open for each one. According to Process Explorer, here is the memory footprint for each program.

      Firefox = 214,832 K
      Chrome = 111,820 K & 105,376 K
      Opera = 218,212 K

      I'm not seeing a big difference here.

      This is on a Athlon Phenom II X4 955 w/ 4 GB of DDR3 running WinXP SP3.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    157. Re:Firefox lite. by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      In the long term, you take the margin while the system slowly equalizes. Taking the margin while prices chase equilibrium is what some businesses do exclusively.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    158. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      I am running Opera 10.51 and have 8 tabs open, some with rather "heavy" content (ie. lots of images/CSS and 2 for Slashdot). It has been running for approximately 2 days straight with varying numbers of tabs opened and closed along the way. This is also with the Opera mail client enabled, Opera link enabled and a fancy all Aero glass skin. Opera memory usage currently shows as 193,944 K.

      So yeah, you're a fucking liar.

    159. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's safer to just assume that an AC just doesn't know that they are doing.

    160. Re:Firefox lite. by Wannabe+Code+Monkey · · Score: 1

      I love Firefox because of its plugins (Firebug alone is the bee's knees)

      You realize that Chrome has builtin features that basically duplicate everything Firebug does. It even uses the "Inspect Element" wording in the right-click menu.

      --
      We always knew Comcast was corrupt, here's the proof: http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1909890&cid=34545432
    161. Re:Firefox lite. by websitebroke · · Score: 1

      I can't tell if you're using hyperbole, made a mistake, or just don't know what a megabyte is. I seriously doubt you have 100 gigabytes of RAM on your system.

    162. Re:Firefox lite. by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I'm going to go with the AC here. I don't have any experience with Chrome, but neither Firefox or Opera take anywhere near that amount of memory if they have just been launched and have just one tab open.

    163. Re:Firefox lite. by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      It wasn't really a political jab, it was more of a personal one. :)

          For those who have personally known me, they know I don't hold back very much. So, I may be offensive, or cause other psychological harm. That's why I do IT work. I do what needs to be done, and don't really spare anyone's hurt feelings. If you screw up, I'll tell you so. "You fucked up. Don't do that again." Which is better? To sugar coat the world, or let people know the truth. I'm not without somewhat politically and socially correct filters though. If the company is about to tank, and I already know it, but if we need to get the project done to stay in business, that's a good time to be strong and supportive of the staff. "I talked to accounting. The bank messed up. Your payroll will come through this week. Lets get the project done to make the bosses happy."

          I did take liberties with the standard California warning. Hell, they put it everywhere. That's the only place I've ever been where buildings have had warning signs (see California Proposition 65). The fun part was, I'd ask building security which parts were dangerous, and they couldn't tell me. I opted to assume it means don't eat the paint nor chew on electrical wiring. :) The entire Prop 65 list (PDF) is a pretty impressive list of just about every chemical used. :)

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    164. Re:Firefox lite. by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      It also ensures that the ad is loaded, and thus counts as a view; important for a company that makes money selling advertising.

      I don't expect Chrome's model to ever change in this respect.

    165. Re:Firefox lite. by Michael+Kristopeit · · Score: 1

      but 123 fake st is as detailed as it gets, but still addressable from anywhere. NAT is as simple to explain as forwarded mail. the zoning board data only maters if you work for the post office or franchise tax board.

    166. Re:Firefox lite. by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

      http://someonewhocares.org/hosts/

      Requires no hackings.

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    167. Re:Firefox lite. by Michael+Kristopeit · · Score: 1
      so it's ludicrous to expect every person on the internet to know how to get on the internet?

      IP addresses are not always hidden from the people, even with DHCP... you still have to set it up. web sites that use domains are not using it to hide IP information, they are using it to allow the IP information to change without having to inform the people relying on the domain for addressing.

      so keep expecting people to delve deeper into ignorance of the underlying systems they rely on. if you want to talk to me about a computer issue, i have every right to expect you to understand IP addresses, and i will.

    168. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've always hated this standpoint. I mean personally I don't know that much about how a car engine works, I can change a tire and oil and that's about it as far as car maintenance goes, but I'm ignorant of the "underlying system I rely on". I also don't know much about how an elevator works other than there's a wire that pulls it up. How does the keyhole know my key is the right one? I also am not sure how streetlights work (are they timed individually or does a central computer have control over all of them to control traffic flow, etc..) How does the gas pump count how much, what if it's lying to me? Magnetic stripes on my cards, I know that they're magnetized and hold data in something called "tracks" but that's it. Zip codes, sure I know my zip code, but why is it sometimes extended when usually it's optional (xxxxx-yyyy y's are almost always optional). Infact how does telephone routing work, landlines and cell phones must intercommunicate and it probably isn't a simple switching station that converts between them. Or my cable company, how does it communicate to know what channels I've paid for and making sure I'm not actually my neighbor. Or my wristwatch, how exactly do the gears figure out how to turn the hands accurately. And a microwave too, what exactly is so mystical about microwaves that heats up stuff, yet cellphone microwaves do nothing to us. How does my advil cure my headache? How does my toilet flush, infact how does the sewer system work+scale? and speakers, how exactly do they produce sound?

      Now I actually know alot of the answers to these questions (not all) but it's crazy to expect someone to know a lot about the underlying systems we rely on, that's the beauty of modern life, I could care less about the waterflow capacity of my city's sewer system, or what would happen if you plop a skyscraper ontop a sewer system designed for residential areas(do -you- know?), but I can still use my toilet without a problem.

    169. Re:Firefox lite. by Michael+Kristopeit · · Score: 1

      an IP address is not an engine. it is not an elevator. it is the lowest common denominator... the simplest of tools that make the internet work. if you don't know how to start a car, you shouldn't receive a drivers license.

    170. Re:Firefox lite. by RoFLKOPTr · · Score: 1

      an IP address is not an engine. it is not an elevator. it is the lowest common denominator... the simplest of tools that make the internet work. if you don't know how to start a car, you shouldn't receive a drivers license.

      Starting car: turn key until engine starts. Starting internet: double-click the blue e.

      IP Addresses are a fairly complex subject. No, they are not the lowest common denominator. No, they are not something that everybody needs to know about. They are a basic part of the internet, but they are not a basic part of USING the internet. Now, show me somebody who administers computer systems and doesn't know anything about IP addresses and I might just accidentally kick him in the nuts, but the end-users need know nothing about it.

    171. Re:Firefox lite. by Michael+Kristopeit · · Score: 1

      IP addresses are as simple as that... THEY ARE ADDRESSES. they are no more complex a subject than the address everyone's home utilizes. Yes, they are something that everybody using the internet could be expected to know about.

    172. Re:Firefox lite. by knarf · · Score: 2, Interesting

      you do realize that Firefox originated as a branch off of Seamonkey because it was thought that Seamonkey had become too bloated?

      That might have been true when Firefox branched off but if you add up the resources used by Firefox and Thunderbird you'll find that Seamonkey is lighter. Since it is based on the same version of Gecko (the renderer) it is more or less in the same league speed-wise. Many Firefox-extensions work - or can be made to work - in Seamonkey as well.

      I have used most current browsers in Linux - Firefox, Seamonkey, Opera, Arora, Midori, Epiphany, Chromium, Konqueror and some others - and have concluded that Seamonkey fits my needs best. It is fast enough, works well with 20+ tabs per window and includes a well-integrated email client while keeping resource consumption within acceptable limits for my main systems (8 year old IBM Thinkpad T23's). It has enough features all by itself but even so it is flexible enough to add even more by using extensions (including everyone's favorite Adblock+).

      So you see there is no need for a sarcasm detector. Things change. Firefox has suffered from the second system effect in version 2.x where resource consumption went up while reliability went down. The 3.x branch has undone most of the damage but it still takes more to run both Firefox as well as Thunderbird than it does to run Seamonkey.

      --
      --frank[at]unternet.org
    173. Re:Firefox lite. by RoFLKOPTr · · Score: 1

      You're probably trolling, but I'm bored so I'll play along and see where this goes. Why the hell would an IP address matter to the average user? The address of a house is necessary because you need to tell people where to find you and where to send letters to you, and that's more akin to an email address. Please name one valid, logical, realistic reason why my technologically-inept father would ever need to know his IP address.

    174. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jitterbug phones. Live it, love it. Although the advertising is rather stupid.

    175. Re:Firefox lite. by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      you have a blatant misunderstanding and plenty of ignorance to go with it. You're also tying knowing how to type www.google.com to a hosts file. They are absolutely not on the same level. a 3 year old can type google.com . Do you think they know what sites to filer in a hosts file?

      IP addresses aren't hidden. However, people don't open the hosts file every day, or fiddle with DHCP, do they. On any modern OS DHCP is auto-assign from the getgo. Meanwhile, asking people to edit the hosts file is strictly fucking retarded. It's like asking joe schmoe the computer users to start programming in perl. Really, he should do that because everyone else does? Get a grip on reality.

      Go ahead and expect people to understand IP addresses, but by doing so you just cut out about 95% of the average computer users. There are people who know how to bitorrent + peerblock but don't know how to manually set an IP address.

      I really hope you're not in IT. If you are, you need to get a new career.

    176. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      my career is not in teaching people what IP address are or how they are used... but if they expect to have a conversation with me about the internet, i will expect them to understand it. if any employer wants to pay me more than i currently earn to explain it to them, i will explain it to them.

      people are free to do or learn whatever they want. i am also free to dismiss them on my own terms.

    177. Re:Firefox lite. by tepples · · Score: 1

      The Advertisements that are being downloaded are PAYING for your access to the associated website.

      Then how do I tell sites that I want to look at their ads as long as they're text or still image ads that take up less of a 5 GB per month download quota?

    178. Re:Firefox lite. by alexo · · Score: 1

      Have you investigated your browsing habits? Because, In my experience, opening 20+ pages with 5-10 images each (art, I swear!) ends up eating a lot a memory. Memory usage depends on your browsing habits as well.

      Seems to me that the memory taken by the images is not getting returned to the system.

    179. Re:Firefox lite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, I think you've got it backwards. The advertisers are paying the bill to make you buy their stuff.

    180. Re:Firefox lite. by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

      Have you ever used Dillo? ;-)

      --
      Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
    181. Re:Firefox lite. by wondafucka · · Score: 1

      What they need to do is remember why the project started and get back to that.

      Themes in 3.6? WTF were they thinking?

      Chrome and Safari both have excellent built in Web dev/javascript tools, I don't even miss Web Developer Toolbar.

      The reason that Themes is a "good" feature: before the themes, a handful of people used Firefox at my workplace. The week after the feature came out we had 90% adoption. Why? People looked over the shoulder and said, "How do you have Homer Simpson on your "Internet Explorer"".

      Never underestimate the draw of features that a professional IT person would consider useless and bloated.

  2. Go get your guns? by EvilBudMan · · Score: 4, Funny

    So does this mean they have to stock up on rice and firearms and survival gear?

    1. Re:Go get your guns? by DieNadel · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This was marked as funny, but I actually would like to know what kind of strategies FF should follow.

      What does "survival mode" means in this case? Race in new features?

      --
      Utinam logica falsa tuam philosophiam totam suffodiant!
    2. Re:Go get your guns? by just_another_sean · · Score: 3, Funny

      Not necessarily but keep your gcc handy just in case!

      --
      Creationist Textbook Stickers Declared Unconstitutional by CowboyNeal
    3. Re:Go get your guns? by westlake · · Score: 5, Informative

      What does "survival mode" means in this case? Race in new features?

      Find new money. Before Google pulls the plug.

    4. Re:Go get your guns? by Burz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It means stop adding new features and bear down on the core mission:
      Make it more reliable, secure and faster.

    5. Re:Go get your guns? by bennebw · · Score: 1

      Focus on making it feel less like hauling a boat anchor out of the mud when it's starting up would a good beginning. By the time FF chugs to life, I've fired up Chrome and am half way through the article. I do use FF for web development almost exclusively. Chrome's Inspect Element doesn't compare to FireBug...yet.

    6. Re:Go get your guns? by suomynonAyletamitlU · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As in "Do whatever it takes to survive." That means:

      * Find out why old users leave
      * Find out why new users don't come
      * Fix those problems
      * Make sure fixing those problems doesn't lead to new problems

      I know I don't run FF anymore -- I switched to Chrome mostly because I was having PC troubles and often jumping from computer to computer or reformatting, and needed the seamless bookmarks sync (which turned out to be a major time saver). My original reason, however, was that when I was using my old computer, I had a 15-20 second wait to get Firefox loaded, which left me handshy of ever closing the damn thing in the first place, and that ramped up the memory usage from leaks or whatever. On that same computer, Chrome loaded in under about 3 seconds, so I could close it without feeling like a damned idiot the next time I needed to open it again for a quick link. Since I've gotten used to it, I'm not terribly interested in trying to go back to using FF merely because I'm happy with the current setup.

      That said, FF did serve me very well for years, and I don't think it's dead, dying, or that it SHOULD die.

    7. Re:Go get your guns? by Big+Boss · · Score: 1

      If you think bookmark sync in Chrome is nice, you should try Weave. That and NoScript are the biggest reasons I run FF still. Get a decent SSD while you're at it. FF loads in about the same time as Chrome on my machine once I put an SSD in there.

      And with a little NoScript and AdBlock+, FF is damn fast. It's also doing less work, so comparing the results to Chrome really isn't fair. FF sucks at JavaScript compared to Chrome and Opera, but 90% of JavaScript is worthless ad serving and tracking crap I don't want running anyway. Not to mention cross-site scripting exploits.

    8. Re:Go get your guns? by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      I use chrome for one thing...

      MS Sharepoint doesn't like my FIPS crypto in firefox, and thinks I'm sending malformed packets. I have to use chrome (and DOWNGRADE my SSL ciphers) to use it.

      This is the _only_ reason I use chrome. I don't have any problems with Firefox and startup is almost instantanious.

      That said, I have 3 extensions: adblock, firebug, and noscript. I have 4 plugins: flashplayer, mplayer, mozilla-default, and java. I also don't tend to use more than 10-20 tabs at once, and they don't open until I specifically open them.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    9. Re:Go get your guns? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      * Find out why old users leave
      * Find out why new users don't come

      But it looks like Firefox's market share has been constant, meaning that while one of those situations may be occurring, they cannot both be occurring. So...they're supposed to find a reason for something that isn't happening?

    10. Re:Go get your guns? by icebraining · · Score: 1

      What old users leaving? What new users that don't come? You know, Firefox and Chrome are the two browsers that have been growing more, and their growth rate is not dropping: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mozilla_Firefox#Market_adoption

      Firefox has raised almost 10% in two years (2008->2010).

    11. Re:Go get your guns? by suomynonAyletamitlU · · Score: 1

      I did use Weave for a while, but since I was literally not sure whether I would still be using the same computer in a week or two, not having to install an extension to get to my bookmarks was a major plus.

      I used Adblock+ on FF for a long time, but I never got around to trying to use NoScript because it made me nervous; I never know what possible legitimate uses of scripts would be blocked nor how I'd know. I suppose it's rather naive, but I just don't want to have to mess with it.

    12. Re:Go get your guns? by suomynonAyletamitlU · · Score: 1

      Hey man, talk to the people who wrote/submitted the article, not me. I don't claim to have facts, I just interpret what people probably mean by the claims to facts they seem to have according to the summary.

    13. Re:Go get your guns? by Muerte2 · · Score: 1

      If I were Mozilla I wouldn't worry about Google pulling the plug on their deal. Google has more to lose than Mozilla does if the default searches go to another provider. I'm sure Microsoft would LOVE to throw some dollars at Mozilla if it meant billions of searches coming their way.

      Mozilla's revenue isn't from Google it's from internet searches. There are other players that just Google doing searching now.

    14. Re:Go get your guns? by hedwards · · Score: 1

      I don't think that Google can do that for a couple reasons. Firstly there's no reason why money coming in from Chrome is any better for Google than money coming in from Firefox. Secondly antitrust, if Google were to try that it's almost certain that they'd get smacked for antitrust violations. Now that they're the dominant game in town for adverts, they have to be really careful about doing things which unfairly damage competing companies.

      Google's interest in Chrome is primarily to pressure things in a way that's useful for their ends, not to destroy the competition. Think things like HTML5 and having adverts load quickly enough that they don't bother most people.

    15. Re:Go get your guns? by WiseWeasel · · Score: 1

      License h.264 for a really awesome native HTML5 playback somehow.

      --
      "I like systems, their application excepted", George Sand (French)
    16. Re:Go get your guns? by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      What old users leaving?

      Well, there's me.

      I left FF a while ago (3.3?) because it was just taking too long to load. Switched to Chrome.

      I hear they made it faster in 3.6...but I have no reason to switch back.

    17. Re:Go get your guns? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Firstly there's no reason why money coming in from Chrome is any better for Google than money coming in from Firefox.

      Except they don't have to split the revenue with Mozilla, meaning that they get all the ad revenue for themselves?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    18. Re:Go get your guns? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Please provide evidence that Firefox's user base is shrinking.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  3. Extensions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Unless, the extensions I use are ported to another browser, I couldn't change from Firefox.

    1. Re:Extensions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Roger, that, Captain Kirk

  4. No extensions, no FF killer by d3ac0n · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I'm sorry, but unless and until every browser has the "extensions" feature that FF has (Specifically including Adblock Plus and No Script) then NO browser will EVER be a true "Firefox Killer".

    Chrome is OK, but without extensions it's nothing more than a runner-up. The same for Opera and IE#. Safari is nothing more than a side-show.

    --
    Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    1. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by abigor · · Score: 5, Informative

      This will certainly interest you then: https://chrome.google.com/extensions

    2. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by courteaudotbiz · · Score: 2, Informative
    3. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by ScottySniper · · Score: 0

      https://chrome.google.com/extensions/ would like a word with you.

    4. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by rm999 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You are looking at it from your perspective, but do the masses really care about these things? Firefox's position is actually pretty tenuous - it comes largely from geeks telling their friends to use it, but if the geeks get annoyed at Firefox (something that has already started) there could be a mass exodus. Also, Firefox depends largely on Google for its revenue; while Google has not indicated they will stop supporting firefox, they could end their relationship if Firefox becomes weak enough.

      BTW, Chrome's adblocking is about as good as firefox's at this point.

    5. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are extensions enabled in release versions yet, or are they still only enabled in developer builds?

    6. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I'm sorry, but unless and until every browser has the "extensions" feature that FF has (Specifically including Adblock Plus and No Script) then NO browser will EVER be a true "Firefox Killer".

      Chrome is OK, but without extensions it's nothing more than a runner-up. The same for Opera and IE#. Safari is nothing more than a side-show.

      You are aware that extensions the way they are implemented in Firefox is a major activex type security issue? And Mozilla is thinking of ditching them?

    7. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by ircmaxell · · Score: 1

      I use extensions heavily both on Windows (Chrome 4) and Linux (Chrome 5)... My favorite (and I wish there was a decent version for FF) is chromeTouch. It enables PDF/iPhone style scrolling (just click anywhere on the page, and move the mouse)... There are a few for FF that do it, but they all have problems with selecting text (I've yet to have that issue with chromeTouch)...

      --
      If a man isn't willing to take some risk for his opinions, either his opinions are no good or he's no good
    8. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by courteaudotbiz · · Score: 1

      yes, enabled in release version.

    9. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Support for extensions is not a killer feature. No one sensible is going to use a browser because it supports extensions, they are going to switch because extensions give them a feature that they need. If another neither browser supports a feature that you want natively, but one has it as an extension, then that's an advantage. If one supports it natively, and the other requires an extension, that's not an advantage.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    10. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      I think you're seriously overestimating how many people care about extensions at all.

    11. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by d3ac0n · · Score: 1

      Interesting.

      Both you and abigor point me to two competing chrome extensions pages. Which one is the official one? (Although I'm guessing it's abigor's link)

      I was not aware that Chrome had extensions. (I gave up in frustration back in Chrome version 1.5)

      Oh, and does it have a proper grownup "Favorites" menu yet, or is it still reliant on that retarded kiddy "bar" concept? (I fucking HATE fav/bookmark bars. I always disable FF's IMMEDIATELY after a fresh install.)

      If Chrome has become more grownup I might just give it another try. If it's still using that stupid "blue plastic" style interface with the dumbed-down optionless unconfigurable UI then no thanks, I'll pass.

      --
      Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    12. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      They have Chrome for Linux? I'll have to check ports to see if it's on FreeBSD yet.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    13. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by ircmaxell · · Score: 1

      I find it works far better than FF for Linux... It's in Beta, but so far I haven't found any issues with it (Well, except for Flash, but that's not Chrome's fault)...

      --
      If a man isn't willing to take some risk for his opinions, either his opinions are no good or he's no good
    14. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by sznupi · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but you just don't know what other browsers offer.

      Since you mentioned Opera with which I'm familiar and few extensions "specifically":
      http://www.fanboy.co.nz/adblock/opera/ + built in GUI element blocker + js black & whitelisting are all there for a long time

      Similarly with...no, not all by a long shot, but...many lists of functionalities people list as "must have" and obviously available only in FF...

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    15. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by thsths · · Score: 1

      > I'm sorry, but unless and until every browser has the "extensions" feature that FF has (Specifically including Adblock Plus and No Script) then NO browser will EVER be a true "Firefox Killer".

      I agree that the extensions are great. I use ABP, NoScript and FlashBlock myself. However, I think it is worth noting that they do not always play along nicely, especially ABP and NoScript, and sometimes they also overlap functionality in the same area. That is of course the basic problem with extensions: you can never guarantee that all combinations will work. Sometimes fewer extensions and more built in features would be a benefit. NoScript and FlashBlock could very well be intergrated in Firefox, although ABP is probably too big and too changing.

      And that only adds to the list of problems with Firefox: it is slow, memory hungry, single threaded, quite primitive out of the box, and not 100% standard compatible. Plugins are still a mess (although that may get better soon). Otherwise it is an excellent browser, but it is not flawless.

      Chrome on the other hand is more stable, a lot faster, looks better, and brings more features out of the box. In fact it is pretty much perfect, if not for the lack of a few plugins: ABP, NoScript, and GreaseMonkey/Stylish.

    16. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      IE has had extensions for ages. Longer than Firefox. They're just called Toolbars... I've never been able to get a satisfactory explanation of why Firefox extensions are better, except that there happens to be more of them.

    17. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by gadget+junkie · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but unless and until every browser has the "extensions" feature that FF has (Specifically including Adblock Plus and No Script) then NO browser will EVER be a true "Firefox Killer".

      Chrome is OK, but without extensions it's nothing more than a runner-up. The same for Opera and IE#. Safari is nothing more than a side-show.

      How very true. Firefox has a big thingy going for it; It's been there long enough to appear on the corporate world screens.....If you are the CTO equivalent in any mid sized company, and you lack the resources to assist people using IE, you want something that is a) known, b) it does not crash the operating system with it when it crashes, c) customizable in some way or other.
      I have been using Firefox for a longish time now, and while all the non-IE browsers share the most important quality (i.e, they're not in the merciless hands of people who would entagle some rich new feature with some freakish new operating system you would not give free to Osama Bin Laden), only firefox has a sufficiently large installed base to make it a target for some development. More users = more extensions = more users......why go further? it's Apple's App store without Some Apple restricting access. So no, if anything I think Firefox will snowball out of control...
      BTW, Here in Italy there's a new ad campaign by Microsoft touting how safe IE8 is......that means MS is already gone in survival mode.

      --
      "If a boss demands loyalty, give him integrity. But if he demands integrity, give him loyalty." (John Boyd, 1927-1997)
    18. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by BitZtream · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Interestingly enough both Chrome and IE can and do support the extensions you speak of. IE has for ages, and of course chrome much more recently added support for extensions.

      Firefox is hardly unique in its 'extensions' ability. What do you think an IE 'toolbar' is? Other than requiring C (or any langauge capable of sourcing a COM object) creating extensions for IE is rather easy.

      What I still find amazing is that so many people can't browse the web with any thing other than ad block+ and noscript in firefox.

      I do a lot of web browsing and I can find very few places I visit where I would notice a change. Either you guys tend to visit a lot of shady sites or you're REALLY over blowing the need for adb+ and noscript.

      I'm going to assume its not the former.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    19. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, Safari is only the default browser on every Mac, and the only browser on every iPhone and iPad sold. What a joke!

    20. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by wjousts · · Score: 2

      Urgh. Can they not at least categorize their add-ons? Like, maybe, this?

    21. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by mujadaddy · · Score: 2, Informative

      Earlier today, I'd been surfing $otherTechSite in Chrome. The header loaded, but the content of the site wouldn't. Chrome indicated it was waiting on ad.doubleclick.net ...back to Firefox!

      Perhaps you're so inured to the garish, Blade Runner-esque adspace that you don't need NoScript, but I enjoy not letting javascript execute as a matter of course.

      --
      Populus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur...
      "Force shits upon Reason's back." - Poor Richard's Almanac
    22. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by BRSQUIRRL · · Score: 1

      Chrome added extensions a couple of releases ago. Now granted, in the Chromiverse, a major release seemingly drops every month, but still. :)

    23. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by RebelWebmaster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Google has the same search revenue agreement with Opera. What makes you think that perceived weakness would have anything to do with Google's continued support? If they're still getting hits and by extension ad revenue from Firefox users, why wouldn't they continue the agreement?

    24. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Sure. Opera or Chrome could get good enough that those browsers are what we the geeks rip out IE in favor of.

      Competition is good.

      Having Firefox "beat up on a drunk" all the time isn't the best in the long run.

      Worthy competitors are a good thing. They won't necessarily "kill" Firefox.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    25. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When people gush about Firefox extensions they gush about PARTICULAR extensions. They just don't mindlessly drone on about the feature in general. They tend to specifically cite what it is that they personally get out of the extensions that are available and what needs to be on competing browser.

      All you've told me is that IE has some similar extension feature.

      I have no clue whether or not any of those extensions are someone I would actually want to use.

      Although IE just has a long history of being a malware magnet. Even if you compare pristine versions of browsers, IE sucks.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    26. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but unless and until every browser has the "extensions" feature that FF has (Specifically including Adblock Plus and No Script) then NO browser will EVER be a true "Firefox Killer".

      Opera has had NoScipt functionality since JavaScript was invented. AdBlock functionality (whitelists/blacklists) in some form has been included since at least 1995. All out of the box.

      NoScript
      Tools - Quick Preferences (F12) > Uncheck Enable Javascript
      XSS-protection and similar stuff is built in.

      AdBlock
      Right-click on an empty spot on the page and choose Block content. Then click the banners which you want to block.

      And of course, you can create buttons or custom keyboard shortcuts for those actions too.

      I don't know any Firefox-extension functionality I like that isn't allready implemented in Opera. Unfortunatly I have to use Firefox on some websites that don't support Opera (banks, government services et.c., I have to use Firefox or IE or they blame anything going wrong on me and don't give me any telephone- or person2person-support, no choice), so as I'm kind of lazy I ususally use Firefox on all sites. But Opera is better and would be my choice if it wasn't discriminated agains: it is more secure, stable as a rock, has better session-management, better zoom-functionality, is faster where it counts (meaning you can read a page long before it is fully loaded, while Firefox or Chrome is playing HTML-element-tetris for ages), more secure, has more logic choice of default keyboard shortcuts (unfortunatly Opera has become more like IE or Firefox when it comes to keyboard shortcuts, they used to be super-logic and super-simple to learn). did I mention stable...

    27. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are a lot of extensions that people use, but obviously not everyone uses every extension. Therefore, to make your argument work, a web browser seeking to have maximum advantage would implement all functionality of those extensions natively. The problem is that the browser would be severely bloated (even worse than they already are!). In such a case, a browser that was lightweight and fast and allowed only the desired features to be loaded through, say, optional extensions would have the advantage in being faster and more responsive than a bloated behemoth. My thought is directly counter to yours: The ideal browser would do nothing more than display a web page and uphold some basic security standards when doing so. Anything else, from display features to toolbar functions, would be optional, modular, and user-customizable. THAT would be the Firefox killer. I haven't looked at Chrome since before they enabled extensions; not being able to customize my experience was what kept me from leaving Firefox.

    28. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 0, Troll

      Even if you compare pristine versions of browsers, IE sucks.

      Sucked, past-tense. IE8 has all of the same security feature as the other browsers, and more than some. (For example, process separation-- IE8 has it, Firefox does not.) If it's "more insecure" that's because it's attacked more, because more people use it.

      The real problem is that people got so used to IE6, they're still going on and on about the same old IE6 griping without updating the rhetoric to fit the current version of IE. You might not personally *like* IE8, but to claim it has worse security than, say, Firefox I believe is nothing but FUD.

    29. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Especially on an Eee shitbox. Way faster.

    30. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by Big+Boss · · Score: 1

      I really hate how Chrome does the "waiting on" stuff. Put that crap in another thread and let me at least view the parts of the page that HAVE downloaded! Adding NoScript to FF (and disabling the Slashdot AJAX stuff, god that sucks CPU!) has made FF quite pleasant to use on my Netbook.

    31. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by init100 · · Score: 1

      There are a few for FF that do it, but they all have problems with selecting text

      You don't need an extension for that. Try enabling autoscrolling in the Firefox preferences, then press the middle mouse button (or wheel) on a page and drag the mouse.

    32. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      Firefox extensions are javascript/xml/etc - not arbitrary binary code.

      I trust extensions MORE THAN "toolbars" (note this doesn't mean I implicitly trust them).

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    33. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by init100 · · Score: 1

      Google has the same search revenue agreement with Opera.

      A relevant question is how much they pay Opera. Since Opera is so much smaller than Firefox, it seems reasonable that they are paid a much smaller amount of money than the 75 million that Mozilla gets. If (which I hope not) Firefox significantly dips in usage, Google could keep an agreement, but lower the amount paid proportionally.

    34. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by RebelWebmaster · · Score: 1

      Yeah, definitely an interesting question. Which is also why Mozilla hasn't blown the bank with the money they've brought in so far (though some commenters seem to think they should based on all the "Mozilla makes $X each year so they should do Y"). They're smartly putting a large chunk away as a more long-term endowment, which makes a lot of sense from a sustainability standpoint.

    35. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by abigor · · Score: 1

      By Favorites, do you mean bookmarks? Chrome has bookmarking which includes both a bookmark bar (like Firefox's) and bookmark folders.

      The ui is still very minimalistic - basically a window frame with detachable tabs. It suits me, but I guess it's not for everyone.

      I like Chrome because the thing never dies, thanks to separate processes per tab. FF can have one tab go nuts and it takes down everything, which happens all too often.

      Plus the guts of FF are brutal. Gecko is really scary and its api shows its age. I know it has nothing to do with usability etc., but I guess it's just sort of an aesthetic thing for me.

    36. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by pjt33 · · Score: 1

      I've had doubleclick.net in my hosts file since before Firefox was launched. It's pretty simple to do and works cross-browser.

    37. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by reidconti · · Score: 1

      Safari + ClickToFlash = done.

    38. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by d3ac0n · · Score: 1

      By Favorites, do you mean bookmarks?

      What, are you one of the seven people on the planet that doesn't use the terms pretty much interchangeably, or are you just being pedantic?

      As I noted, I haven't used Chrome since around 1.5 (or thereabouts) I found it ugly, frustrating to use, clunky and generally more of a PITA than it was worth.

      Now, I should also note that this was around the time that FF went to version 3.0 and implemented the dreck that is/was the "awesome" bar. So I stayed on FF 2.0.20 for a VERY long time, until 3.5 came out and I was FINALLY able to update as I could simply disable all the shitty "awesome" bar "features" from within the UI.

      There are certain conventions that browsers have followed, whether old NN , any version of IE, older Opera, and FF pre-3.0 that FF 3.0, Opera 10+ and Chrome simply BREAK for no other reason than somebody arbitrarily decided that they should. It is stupid, and shouldn't happen with smart design, all the api whiz-bang aside.

      Frankly, I don't care if Chrome is the fastest browser in the multi-verse and brings me buttery-nipple flavored ho-ho's on a golden platter. If it violates long established browser UI and function conventions without some dead-simple-obvious way of reverting to standard, then it's off of my PC and out the window. It's a fucking BROWSER for Cripe's sake. I should NEVER be forced to put effort into using it!

      Don't get me wrong. Everything needs to advance, technology moves on, blah blah blah. But software designers need to understand that it is inappropriate to just change core features and not expect people to get upset and not adopt. If you want to be avant-garde, that's great. Just don't expect much more than the 10% early adopters to take you up on it.

      Now, get off my lawn you darn kids! /crankyoldman

      --
      Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    39. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by Magic5Ball · · Score: 1

      You've provided a reasonable explanation of the how some (most?) users perceive the features of the product, and yet, it was marked 'Troll' because the perspective apparently disagrees with the Firefox groupthink. That's interesting, and possibly ultimately fatally wounding, if Firefox doesn't start to understand how the market has shifted since its glory days.

      History has shown that visionaries rarely lead beyond the first revolution in any field, so it will be interesting to see for how long Mozilla drags on in ignorance or defiance of dissenting market signals such as those you've provided.

      --
      There are 1.1... kinds of people.
    40. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      The real point I want to get across is that most Firefox users who diss IE are really dissing IE6. If they'd bother to use newer versions, 7 or 8, they might find that most of their concerns have already been addressed-- from the advance press about IE9, it looks like whatever remaining gripes they have will be addressed there, as well.

      Our company had a job interview about a year ago, we rejected a candidate after he told us, seriously, that he didn't use IE because it didn't have tabs. I politely informed him that IE has had tabs since 2006, and showed him the door... we can't afford to hire people that out-of-touch with reality.

      From reading any Slashdot thread about Firefox, I think most Firefox users are exactly like our job applicant: entirely out-of-touch with the rest of the browser market.

      Of course, those Firefox users also get mod points, so -1 Troll. C'est la vie.

    41. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by d3ac0n · · Score: 1

      Just a quick addendum to my post above;

      Not wanting to possibly let a good browsing option pass me by (hey, maybe they made improvements and fixed some of the dumb stuff since the old version!) and wanting to at least "keep up" and not be ignorant, I just checked out the latest version of Chrome.

      UGH! Same ass-ugly faux "minimal" blue-plastic interface, same obnoxiously unhelpful menus, same pointless breaking of UI and function conventions and STILL no Favs/Bookmarks menu! Why the hell anyone would want to subject themselves to such an obtuse browsing experience is beyond me. Might as well go use Konqueror. Bleah.

      --
      Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    42. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      That would partly explain why I couldn't find it in ports. I'll stick with FF for now. (:

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    43. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      I for one welcome our new FireFox "-1: Troll" modding overlords.

      Everyone stick their heads in the sand on the count of 3... 2... 1... GO!

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    44. Re:No extensions, no FF killer by mujadaddy · · Score: 1

      Heh, I did that as well. However, that only works (for every browser) when you're not going through a proxy.

      --
      Populus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur...
      "Force shits upon Reason's back." - Poor Richard's Almanac
  5. Name recognition? by headkase · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One browser can be taken down by others? I thought they should have been competing on technical excellence instead of name recognition. Nobody was complaining when it was IE being taken down by Firefox! Falling into the trap that I like it so everyone should is just weakening yourself in the long-term. If something better than Firefox appears then the logical choice is bu-bye Firefox! But people are rarely logical and tend to just do what others are doing.

    --
    Shh.
    1. Re:Name recognition? by Razalhague · · Score: 1

      But people are rarely logical and tend to just do what others are doing.

      That, or they keep doing what they've always been doing.

    2. Re:Name recognition? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In a situation where someone lacks the necessary technical knowledge to evaluate browsers and the time to acquire said knowledge, "just doing what others are doing" may well be the logical choice.

    3. Re:Name recognition? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh? Is diversity worthless? Would you really like to see all Gecko based web browsers die out because a Webkit one was somewhat superior for a period of time?

  6. What they need... by B5_geek · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They really just need to go on a diet.
    Hey guys; remember how it was supposed to be a fast browser?

    --
    "The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men." ~Plato (427-347 BC)
    1. Re:What they need... by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

      They really just need to go on a diet.
      Hey guys; remember how it was supposed to be a fast browser?

      Firefox stresses my machine more than the games I play on it. I know browsers aren't simple pieces of code anymore but goddamn do they eat a ton of resources (said me with twenty tabs open.) Yeah, we're asking them to do a lot but they still fall on their faces quite a bit with memory leaks. Firefox is awful about that, hands down. The next release should be less about doing new things and doing the old things better.

      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    2. Re:What they need... by maxume · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Firefox is really only a memory pig (and they are actually improving there).

      I currently have about 30 tabs open and it is only sipping at 1 core (on a Core Duo at 1.66 Ghz). Flash tends to chew up a lot of cycles (so I run flashblock...).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    3. Re:What they need... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hey guys; remember how it was supposed to be a fast browser?

      I remember how it was supposed to be, but I don't remember that it ever was. I switched from the Mozilla Suite to Thunderbird and Phoenix, and found that the total RAM footprint went up. Firefox used less memory than the entire suite, but the combination of the two apps used more because they didn't share the core libs (they each came with their own install of all of the XUL/XPCOM stuff). Since then, it got progressively bigger.

      I actually have FireFox 3.6 installed at the moment, and it seems quite lightweight in comparison to everything prior to the 3.x series (I didn't try any of them between 2.something and 3.6).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    4. Re:What they need... by BlindRobin · · Score: 2, Informative

      Fast !?? FF is plenty fast enough and not perceptibly different (over the average connection) from any other except for those that measure for measurements sake. When you start using this as the most relevant criterion of suitability then you are quite missing the point. The features that make FF a superior choice are the add-ons, settings access and control that they afford. Unfortunately for the unwashed masses which know nothing other than "that with which they are provided by default" these things mean nothing as even in this day most users are unaware that any browser other than IE exists.

    5. Re:What they need... by mcrbids · · Score: 4, Informative

      Hey guys; remember how it was supposed to be a fast browser?

      While FF has certainly gained features, it hasn't slowed down while doing so. In fact, it's seen fairly dramatic performance INCREASES. FF hasn't gotten any slower; expectations have sharply risen.

      We now expect to be able to program a 3D FPS in Javascript and CSS. The very idea was considered laughable just a few years ago. I've spent the last year building a statistical computation software that's entirely web-based, and entirely written in javascript. This, too, would have been a laughable goal if not for the dramatic performance improvements in FF and Chrome. (We don't currently support IE8 because it's just too slow; hopefully IE9 will be worthy of supporting)

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    6. Re:What they need... by RebelWebmaster · · Score: 1

      It'll be interesting to see what happens in that regard when Firefox is running plugins out of the main process with next month's 3.6.4 release.

    7. Re:What they need... by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      Plugins != Extensions.

      Plugins are things like flash. (.so files on Linux)

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    8. Re:What they need... by RebelWebmaster · · Score: 1

      And? The point is that with plugins running in the main process, bloated plugins can lead to runaway memory usage in the browser. With plugins running out of process, that's avoided.

    9. Re:What they need... by Hatta · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I've spent the last year building a statistical computation software that's entirely web-based, and entirely written in javascript.

      Dear god! Why?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    10. Re:What they need... by markdavis · · Score: 1

      Aside from Addons, the most important thing about Firefox is that it is OPEN SOURCE & MULTIPLATFORM. IE never will be either. Safari is MacOS and maybe MS-Windows only and is closed. Chrome/Chromium is trying on both fronts, but they had been dropping the ball with Linux- seems to be improving. Only Opera can really claim to also be truly multiplatform (feature/release parity on all platforms), like Firefox/Mozilla, but they are closed source.

    11. Re:What they need... by ImprovOmega · · Score: 3, Funny

      I've spent the last year building a statistical computation software that's entirely web-based, and entirely written in javascript.

      Dear god! Why?

      Some people believe that in order to grow closer to their spiritual nature they must torture their physical form to the utmost.

      Corporeal Mortification - not just for overzealous Catholics anymore.

    12. Re:What they need... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He must be a consultant.

    13. Re:What they need... by Ant+P. · · Score: 1

      Because the alternative is Java

    14. Re:What they need... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Link to this?

    15. Re:What they need... by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "Hey guys; remember how it was supposed to be a fast browser?"

      Yes, when it was called Phoenix, eons ago...

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    16. Re:What they need... by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      So has Firefox actually become slower?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    17. Re:What they need... by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      The only thing I can think of is to off-load the number-crunching to the client machines, thus negating the need for a (farm of) hugely powerful server(s). For any one given process it'll be slower client-side in JS like this, but once the number of concurrent users increases it could quickly become prohibitively expensive to increase the number of servers enough to keep performance acceptable.

      Of course that all depends on the nature of the computations, the expected size of the user base, potential to charge fees, hardware costs, etc; he may just be a masochist ;)

  7. Serious inquiry re: Adblock by mujadaddy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What does Adblock give you that NoScript doesn't? "filter subscriptions"? Why should I have to worry about a blacklist when NoScript allows me to decide if my "web experience" is less than it should be and THEN unblock something?

    --
    Populus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur...
    "Force shits upon Reason's back." - Poor Richard's Almanac
    1. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by d3ac0n · · Score: 4, Informative

      Adblock blocks ads that NoScript doesn't. I may want Java script to generally run on a specific website. So i would whitelist that site in NoScript. Without Adblock I would then get ads while on that site. With both I can allow scripts while still enjoying an ad-free browsing experience.

      --
      Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    2. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      You should learn to use NoScript. It's a white list script blocker. It only allows ads that you've approved. Most javascripts that serve ads come from a third party. Don't just allow every domain listed for a site, only allow the domain you are browsing on.

      Clean out your allow list, stop being such a user, and start over ;-)

    3. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why to you whitelist the whole page? Why not just scripts from that exact page? Most ads run off other scripts you can keep blocked.
      Of course, Adblock also blocks simple ad banners and various other stuff Noscript doesn't.

    4. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      agree that no other browser can make the web tolerable at the moment, and it's not just FF extensions. image.animation_mode=none or browser.blink_allowed=false are sorely needed on those other browsers.

    5. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by mujadaddy · · Score: 1

      Mmmm, not quite, as many AC's have chimed in. For instance, I have Slashdot on my whitelist, but I've never seen an ad here: the scripts that tell which ad to run aren't on the slashdot.org domain.

      Any other takers?

      --
      Populus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur...
      "Force shits upon Reason's back." - Poor Richard's Almanac
    6. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      How does NoScript block inline images? A huge proportion of ads are served as part of the page (or in iframes), not by JS.

    7. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by mujadaddy · · Score: 1

      Adblock also blocks simple ad banners and various other stuff Noscript doesn't.

      In my experience, the set of non-javascript-generated off-site content that is also supremely obnoxious enough to notice approaches null. Can you elaborate on 'various other stuff'?

      --
      Populus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur...
      "Force shits upon Reason's back." - Poor Richard's Almanac
    8. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

      What does Adblock give you that NoScript doesn't? "filter subscriptions"? Why should I have to worry about a blacklist when NoScript allows me to decide if my "web experience" is less than it should be and THEN unblock something?

      -1 clueless

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
    9. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      try using the privoxy proxy (www.privoxy.org). Has the additional advantage that *any* browser you use, as long as it goes through the proxy, does not see any ads.

    10. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by mujadaddy · · Score: 1

      Wow, you're a dick. I'm asking for some information, cuddlebunny.

      --
      Populus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur...
      "Force shits upon Reason's back." - Poor Richard's Almanac
    11. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      Noscript blocks scripts.

      It doesn't block arbitrary element IDs, URL segments etc.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    12. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by init100 · · Score: 1

      You should learn to use NoScript. It's a white list script blocker. It only allows ads that you've approved.

      No, it only allows scripts that you have approved. Many ads are supplied as inline images from a third-party content provider. NoScript does nothing about those. NoScript is excellent, I use it myself on every Firefox installation, but it doesn't do everything. So I always combine it with AdBlock Plus.

    13. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by init100 · · Score: 1

      image.animation_mode=none

      Except that is the browser equivalent of shooting mosquitoes with a cannon. What if you want certain animations to run but not others? I wouldn't want to turn off Wikipedia's often excellent animations that visualize various processes, but I sure can't stand all these animated Flash ads that also chew up all your CPU power (or at least a significant part of it). The solution to that particular problem is spelled FlashBlock. You can whitelist sites that should be able to run Flash, such as YouTube, and require explicit approval for the rest. Of course that doesn't solve the "animated GIFs" problem, but in my experience, almost every animating ad is Flash-based these days.

    14. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by icebraining · · Score: 1

      I don't see ads even though I have both slashdot.org and fsdn.org enabled.

    15. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by mujadaddy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, a few hours after that comment I had occasion to note that I had both of those enabled, as well.

      --
      Populus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur...
      "Force shits upon Reason's back." - Poor Richard's Almanac
    16. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ad (pun intended) one more extension to that list: Ghostery. Adblock does a great job with the things that it blocks, but Ghostery recognizes those stupid little javascriptlets that companies like to use to keep track of web usage and Ghostery does a great job of recognizing and enabling me to block by ad provider. Adblock + Noscript + Ghostery is the ad-blocking trifecta. I haven't seen an ad on my computer in so long that using someone else's computer or even an alternate browser is downright painful at times. Truth be told, every new profile I create gets 5 extensions actually: Adblock, Flashblock, Ghostery, Noscript, and QuickJava. For profiles I care about, Greasemonkey comes next. There's no reason I should be forced to suffer through ads. If the content is worth viewing, I have no problem showing my appreciation, but for 99% of the webpages I view, generally while I'm in the process of distilling information from the crap, there is such a low signal to noise ratio that I'd rather not even waste the bandwidth and the few CPU cycles it would take to render the ad, not to mention all the added latency. If I'm going to be spending the CPU cycles anyway, I'd rather they went towards streamlining, not crapifying, the web.

    17. Re:Serious inquiry re: Adblock by quantumphaze · · Score: 1

      It wont block img tags but everything else that isn't reliant on JavaScript like Flash and IFRAMEs are blocked in a similar fashion as the FlashBlock addon (if they even appear at all). If you want to see one just click the box that replaces it.

  8. man'kind' almost too late for survival mode? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we wouldn't know what to do anyway.

    fortunately, our creators went into crisis mode over our plight since it began.

    showing their hearts are someplace, they invoked their wwwildly popular newclear powered (kode is bug free, way user friendly & available without any reservations/conditions) planet/population rescue initiative/mandate, which makes possible a better time of it here (no matter what happens), & the possibility of being allowed to participate in the inevitable eternity mode. see you there?

  9. Firefaux by T+Murphy · · Score: 5, Funny

    They should develop another browser, Firefaux, and make it appear to be the biggest threat in the browser wars. Firefox can then team up with Chrome and Opera to take down Firefaux, all the while distracting everyone from the need to take down Firefox instead. Just re-animate Firefaux as needed to keep up the distraction. No one will ever catch on to the connection between Firefox and Firefaux, and world domination will only be inevitable.

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

      ah... the Fox (faux) News diversion tactic... brilliant!

    2. Re:Firefaux by Krishnoid · · Score: 1

      We now expect to be able to program a 3D FPS in Javascript and CSS.

      So you're saying they've identified a platform for Duke Nukem Forever?

    3. Re:Firefaux by kangsterizer · · Score: 1

      its rated as funny but its actually correct.
      if you re-released firefox 3.6+ today with another name and brand and market it as a chrome/ie8/opera killer many, many people would get it and claim how its sending chrome or whatever else to the grave.
      Don't forget to boost version numbers artificially every 2-4 months and put a download link on the web's most visited search engine with basically zero other links except the search (google.com)

  10. No, what needs to happen is: by abolitiontheory · · Score: 3, Funny

    Survivor 10: Internet Edition. Web-browsers battle it our in the toughest of surfing environments: hundreds of tabs, incompatible add-ons, swamps of malware, installs on wristwatches! (Spoiler: In the finale, FireFox and IE team up (gasp!) in a last ditch effort to defeat young upstarts Safari and Chrome!)

    1. Re:No, what needs to happen is: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will continue to use Firefox because I really don't like the reasons Microsoft pushed IE. I also don't like the motives of Apple. I used to cheer for Google, but I am becoming cold to them due to their need to gain control. If they really stood by the "Do no Evil" they would put more into Firefox and help push open standards. The only reason I can see Google pushing their own browser is to lock people into their web apps. The software industry has long forgotten what it is to innovate, and instead look to "capture" markets by making it impossible for competitors to move in. This is what Microsoft tried (and almost got away with), what Apple is trying to do and what Google is looking to do. There are very few choices out there for someone who wants to stay out of the corporate bullseye. What we need is a new form of revenue for Firefox once Google kicks it to the curb.
          I often suggest to clients that they make a $2-5 donation for a program that they like. While this may not seem like much, get several million end users to donate and you can sustain the program. I think we, as the IT spokespersons, need to make it clear to end users that money still makes the world go round, but that they are in control here, as opposed to the hefty price tags commercial programs cost. $2-5 per program, is nothing. Make a charitable organization to collect the money and the cost you put into software now becomes a right off.

  11. Web Developer Toolbar? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Who the hell even uses that? Everyone who does any serious web work is using Firebug.

    1. Re:Web Developer Toolbar? by SebaSOFT · · Score: 2, Informative

      Both Plug-ins are useful, Firebug can be quite cumbersome to load, even GMail detects it and give you a warning.

    2. Re:Web Developer Toolbar? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agree 100% with this. Chrome's tools are getting better, but they aren't there yet. Anyone who claims they are (oohhhh but Chrome has a DOM inspector and console!) doesn't do enough development to appreciate *all* of what Firebug really gives you. I actually use Chrome for normal browsing, but always Firefox for my web app development.

    3. Re:Web Developer Toolbar? by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      I've never had this happen.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    4. Re:Web Developer Toolbar? by redJag · · Score: 1

      Gmail detecting Firebug? I don't actually use Gmail regularly but it detected it for me just now. Big red block of text at the top of the window: "Firebug is known to make Gmail slow unless it is configured correctly. Fix this." Firebug slows things down a lot when there is DOM manipulation going on. I accept that as the price of such an awesome web dev tool, however.

  12. just stick to the mission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    make a great CORE web-browsing experience.

    then do what you can to encourage the community of add-ons to keep giving people the freedom to add on/in what they want....OR not.

    you actually CAN please everyone at once that way.....if you don't kill the community of add-on developers.

  13. Another browser? by dens · · Score: 1

    You mean I can stop using Mosaic now?

    1. Re:Another browser? by David+Gerard · · Score: 2, Funny

      Personally I telnet to port 80. By whistling down my phone line really precisely. Using only zeroes, no ones.

      --
      http://rocknerd.co.uk
    2. Re:Another browser? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hah!

      I just stand next to a telephone line and sense the changes in magnetic field leaking from the twisted pairs.

      then I demodulate the DSL signal in my head and listen for the information I'm interested in going past on the line.

    3. Re:Another browser? by David+Gerard · · Score: 1

      M-x demodulate, amirite?

      --
      http://rocknerd.co.uk
    4. Re:Another browser? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has not been funny since 2003.

  14. Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it used by rolfwind · · Score: 5, Insightful

    to be.

    Back in the early 1990s, it was seen as a threat by Microsoft to usurp the OS paradigm. They thought whoever controlled the browser market controlls the internet and what it can do -- the tail wagging the dog and it seemed like the future of computing was at stake. And for a while, it succeeded when IE took over and had ridiculously large marketshare.

    But now that the ecosystem is more varied, the browser simply does not have this power. Until a browser become so dominant again that they can embrace, extend, extinguish standards, it really doesn't matter that much anymore. Now, the best browser is almost as impotent to change computing as the best picture viewing software (except for maybe data gathering and ad revenue) -- if everything is correctly specced JPGs, PNGs, etcetera -- the picture viewer doesn't matter that much and can be readily interchange with regards to personal preference.

    Mobile phones is one exception but also because you can't swap out browsers/rendering engines.

  15. Switched to Chrome by mighty7sd · · Score: 1

    I was a die hard Firefox fan for so long putting it on the computers of everyone I know. I just got bogged down with its sluggishness. I miss some extensions like Read It Later, but new extensions in Chrome like Google Voice blow me away.

  16. Should stay simple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go back to the basic pre 3.0 style themes and just focus on getting all the standards supports right. Then just add a stable add on api and only release security updates until something like HTML6 comes along.

  17. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  18. Not buying it by Mr.+Spontaneous · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yes, Firefox has some issues. Yes, the Mozilla team needs to fix them. However, I think this article is being overly sensationalistic (surprise, surprise). In a wonderful bout of irony, the same forces that made long-standing IE users jump to FF are keeping them using FF. Some are averse to learning a new UI/control scheme, others needs certain extensions to remain productive. Then there are a few, like me, who don't see the performance/crashing issues that others report. I'm not saying that they don't exist, just that I haven't experienced them.

    Additionally, FF has been approved for use in many businesses, as well as the DoD/DHS to run on their networks. Chrome, AFAIK, hasn't.

    With these forces slowing down non-Firefox adoption, the Mozilla team has bought themselves some crucial time in the quest to right some of their browser's weaknesses. Hopefully they'll be able to meet that challenge, and, from reading the various blogs published to Planet Mozilla, I'm fairly confident that they will.

    --
    Its all fun and games until someone loses an eye... then its just fun.
    1. Re:Not buying it by shallot · · Score: 5, Insightful

      However, I think this article is being overly sensationalistic (surprise, surprise).

      It's not actually so much sensationalist as much as it's pointless. It's a huge laundry list of statistics that don't actually add up to any really worthwhile conclusions on their own merit. And I always hate it when people blow up the graph of a 1-6% change (in this instance Chrome) to the same absolute size as the other graphs where data is tenfold, but the slope is steeper so it looks fantastic. That's just plain silly. A less generic graph would have been one showing changes relative to IE6's graph (decline), or something like that, something that actually paints a picture of what is going on, beyond the obvious. But that would take some real effort...

    2. Re:Not buying it by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo · · Score: 1

      I'm wondering how badly the statistics are influenced by jerks like me, I use FF and Chrome simultaneously. Chrome for a quick browsing experience with a suite of sites that I already trust. Firefox for going to new sites or browsing the news with it's relentless onslaught of ads and scripts. Both have their place, but downloading and surfing with Chrome does not negate the fact that I still use FF for 80% of my browsing.

      --
      "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
  19. l4d style by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Survival Mode gold if you are not incapacitated for atleast 10 mins!!!

  20. #1 firefox issue by grasshoppa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can't manage it in a corporate/enterprise environment. Push out updates? Not as a limited user. Push out configuration? Not simply. Push out plugins, or plugin updates? Not simple.

    That, more than anything else, will keep firefox out of the enterprise/corporate markets. If that even matters to them, seeing how this is still an issue.

    --
    Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    1. Re:#1 firefox issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the context of an operating system that uses the package approach, this is a non-issue. Maybe the mozilla devs could start supporting msi?

    2. Re:#1 firefox issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to get a patch management system for non-Microsoft applications. Not Firefox's fault.

    3. Re:#1 firefox issue by eggnoglatte · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Out of curiosity: why does it matter whether you can do this as a limited user or whether you need admin privileges? I would have thought that anybody who is tasked with doing this kind of maintenance for a company would get admin rights?

    4. Re:#1 firefox issue by jpcarter · · Score: 3, Informative

      Someone's even created ADM templates for you.

      Though it's still not as easy as IE is with WSUS, it's not any worse than trying to keep Java, Flash & Acrobat up to date & properly configured.

    5. Re:#1 firefox issue by RebelWebmaster · · Score: 1

      It's interesting to see that Firefox MSI support has been getting more attention lately. With any luck, group policy support will follow.

    6. Re:#1 firefox issue by Spad · · Score: 1

      Because you don't want to have anyone tasked with doing it, you want it to be automatic so that you can simply point all your Firefox installs to a central location (á la WSUS) and approve updates that are automatically installed.

      You could even do it with WSUS if Mozilla would do official MSI packages, because I'll be buggered if I'm going to try and publish .exe files through it.

    7. Re:#1 firefox issue by Luke+has+no+name · · Score: 1

      I can't manage it in a corporate/enterprise environment. Push out updates? Not as a limited user. Push out configuration? Not simply. Push out plugins, or plugin updates? Not simple.

      That, more than anything else, will keep firefox out of the enterprise/corporate markets. If that even matters to them, seeing how this is still an issue.

      Mr. Spontaneous: http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1613364&cid=31793650

      Additionally, FF has been approved for use in many businesses, as well as the DoD/DHS to run on their networks. .

      Roffle. Perhaps if Parent were using an operating system that pushed updates through its own package manager, rather than having to go through the application?

      Also, why would you want to be able to push out updates as a limited user? Seems very insecure to me. I do understand the desire for simple enterprise deployment, and i can't honestly state whether Firefox is good for that or not. I still use it instead of Chromium because I like it, it integrates with Ubuntu better, and I'm skeptical of letting Google too far in my life (I know Chromium is not the Google version, but I'm paranoid).

    8. Re:#1 firefox issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean kind of like the Windows Installer, which has come with Windows for the past... uh, DECADE?

      The install system that Firefox should have been using from the start, rather than the custom roll-their-own solution that at one point managed to accidentally delete the entire hard drive if you tried to uninstall it?

      Yeah, if only there were already open source tools, released by Microsoft themselves, to make such a thing easier...

      If only...

    9. Re:#1 firefox issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hear/see this alot ... but its such bullshit.

      [...]

      Really, this argument just indicates your a shitty admin, nothing more.

      This post just indicates you're a shitty writer.

    10. Re:#1 firefox issue by grasshoppa · · Score: 1

      Yes, thank you, I know about those methods. Are they as simple as IE updates? Not anywhere close to being as simple. Given the number of users I maintain, it's simply not practical to have to hand-hold some random application when a better alternative exists.

      And yes, I just called IE better than firefox. It is, in this setting. It's easier to install updates, it's easier to configure. And when we're talking about a large number of workstations, easy translates into less time necessary to achieve the same function.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    11. Re:#1 firefox issue by chickenarise · · Score: 1

      You know about those methods, but you don't consider them simple? His point is, if you have a clue you would be able to create your own batch update system in an hour. If you were really on the ball it could take 15 minutes. Honestly it seems like a trivial problem for a sys admin to be complaining about.

      --
      One convenient locations...in Africa.
    12. Re:#1 firefox issue by grasshoppa · · Score: 1

      I can go in to WSUS and update IE with a couple clicks. I can go into GPMC and push out new settings with a few clicks. I can do both in about a minute.

      Given your best case scenario of 15 minutes, that's quite a bit of extra time. For what?

      And let's not forget that more moving parts == more errors.

      So tell me, how might I justify such a choice to management? Why would I?

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    13. Re:#1 firefox issue by bziman · · Score: 1

      Wow, those are all of the things that keep me on Firefox/Linux and away from IE/Windows. I don't WANT anyone else screwing with my computer. I don't care how smart you think you are. If I have to work on my computer, I want it to do what *I* want it to do.

    14. Re:#1 firefox issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you're shitty at understanding and addressing expressed user needs in the product, but who needs to care about users?

    15. Re:#1 firefox issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As another windows admin that manages a network of computers running firefox, I can answer that. Windows Server has a wonderful ability to automatically install applications on bootup and force configuration changes through active directory group policy. This makes it possible for one person to update several thousand computers. The caveat is that the program must be an msi (or you use clever scripting that is a pain to maintain) and must get its configuration from the registry. There are active bug reports to fix both issues in firefox, namely create msi installers and make firefox respect registry settings. Hopefully they will be done in time for Firefox 4.0.

    16. Re:#1 firefox issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Out of curiosity: why does it matter whether you can do this as a limited user or whether you need admin privileges? I would have thought that anybody who is tasked with doing this kind of maintenance for a company would get admin rights?

      This is a HUGE problem because the FF updater runs at whatever level the user that launched it runs. There is not currently the ability to have one admin update FF on 100 computers without going around to each and every computer and personally updating it. Contrast this with IE where the updates are rolled in with OS updates and can be easily be scheduled to run by the admin without a case by case access.

    17. Re:#1 firefox issue by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      This is a HUGE problem because the FF updater runs at whatever level the user that launched it runs. There is not currently the ability to have one admin update FF on 100 computers without going around to each and every computer and personally updating it. Contrast this with IE where the updates are rolled in with OS updates and can be easily be scheduled to run by the admin without a case by case access.

      Well, I've kludged together a batch file sent through psexec that copies the .mar file from an open SMB share, and does the updates manually like this: https://wiki.mozilla.org/Software_Update:Manually_Installing_a_MAR_file#Steps_for_Windows

      But it's a kludge, and I'm kludge averse these days.

    18. Re:#1 firefox issue by grasshoppa · · Score: 1

      Yet that's not how it works in a corporate environment UNLESS you are fairly high up in the food chain. High enough to dictate bad policy and get away with it at any rate. The simple fact of the matter is that the average user can not be trusted to keep their personal computer clean and free of virus and warez. They'll bring in software from home to install, putting the entire company at risk of an audit. Only by locking the workstations down can liability be minimized. Had I my way, IT wouldn't even be admins, and the admin account would be audited for abuse.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    19. Re:#1 firefox issue by grasshoppa · · Score: 1

      Actually, I would recommend against utilizing the built in windows functionality for software deployments. It's severely limited in what it can do, and as you mentioned, it's limited only to msis.

      Instead, I highly recommend WPKG.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
  21. It would be nice to be able to use only one by CodeDragonDM · · Score: 1

    I know my girlfriend only uses Firefox, but on my desktop running Ubunto 8.10 I can't use Firefox for my flash, and Opera doesn't keep the visit history the way I like it. I bounce back between Chrome, Opera, and Firefox on my Eee, too, and that runs Windows XP.

    If one of these browsers worked well enough, I'd be happy to only use the one at a time.

    1. Re:It would be nice to be able to use only one by sudden.zero · · Score: 1

      on my desktop running Ubunto 8.10 I can't use Firefox for my flash

      Why can't you use Firefox for flash? I have Ubunto 8.10 on one of my desktops and it uses Firefox and Flash just fine!

    2. Re:It would be nice to be able to use only one by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I know my girlfriend only uses Firefox, but on my desktop running Ubunto 8.10 I can't use Firefox for my flash, and Opera doesn't keep the visit history the way I like it.

      Out of curiosity, what's wrong with Opera's history window? Did you by chance missed the "View" button there that lets you switch between a plain log sorted by date, and the default view which is aggregated by day (which I also find extremely annoying)?

  22. FF can be taken down by multiple browsers at once? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You say it as if it was a bad thing..

  23. Google can kill FF; won't beat IE in big orgs. by Bearhouse · · Score: 1

    FTA: "It is believed that Google’s royalties account for about 80-90% of Mozilla’s entire revenues. The royalty contract will end in 2011."

    So they can kill FF soon. Although they're already doing a pretty good job feature-wise.

    This has been discussed on /. before. Will "don't be evil" be enough to stop them killing a strategic competitor?
    Anyways, as shown by the article, for the moment IE, (in all its versions) remains the one to catch.
    How many corporations, (some still stuck with ActiveX shitware and IE6, remember), would accept Google's 'forced upgrade' policy for Chrome?

    1. Re:Google can kill FF; won't beat IE in big orgs. by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 1

      This has been discussed on /. before. Will "don't be evil" be enough to stop them killing a strategic competitor?

      Killing a strategic competitor isn't evil - it's business. In the same way nature requires a rather brutal Darwinian process to ensure healthy species, capitalism requires failing business to go under. It's only evil if you kill a competitor through methods outside of legal competition (essentially, squelching fair competition in the marketplace).

      That being said, I don't think Mozilla is really a strategic competitor. Remember, Google's primary feature is search, but their primary product and revenue stream is advertisement. Mozilla's browser doesn't hinder this revenue stream at all.

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    2. Re:Google can kill FF; won't beat IE in big orgs. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yahoo has shown willingness to compete in this arrangement. Something tells me they're going to push Google into renewing the contract with Firefox.

    3. Re:Google can kill FF; won't beat IE in big orgs. by RebelWebmaster · · Score: 1

      Google has already extended the contract once since the release of Chrome. Google also has a similar search arrangement with Opera. Google isn't doing it out of charity. They're doing it because they're getting search hits (and by extension, ad revenue) out of it. If Firefox is still generating ad revenue for them, why in the world would they want to end that relationship? Has there been any evidence of Google acting in bad faith with respect to this?

  24. Whats the point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After reading about three paragraphs explaining variations in estimates of market share, I gave up on this article's original thesis. WTF exactly is the condition FF should be watching out for?

  25. Yes, but ... by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

    All observations made by the submitter notwithstanding, I really think there is no reason to drag concepts like "survival mode" in here. What Mozilla needs to do for Firefox to survive is to make it compelling. Compelling enough that people will want to use it in preference to other browsers. I don't think there is much more to it than that.

    --
    Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
  26. Mind controlled firefox by Veramocor · · Score: 4, Funny

    They are actually working on a mind controlled version of Firefox. Unfortunately it only works if you think in Russian.

    --
    Veramocor
    1. Re:Mind controlled firefox by MiniMike · · Score: 1

      Hey, a joke that I understand AND swooshes over my head (followed by the prototype)...

    2. Re:Mind controlled firefox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think in Russian. Where is my mind control Firefox?

    3. Re:Mind controlled firefox by tsotha · · Score: 1

      You're showing your age with that joke.

      And I'm showing mine by getting it.

    4. Re:Mind controlled firefox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HA-HA!

      I wonder, tho, if getting the (movie) reference just means I'm *that* old ...

    5. Re:Mind controlled firefox by penguinchris · · Score: 1

      I'm a young guy and I got it; youth doesn't necessarily mean not seeing older movies ;)

    6. Re:Mind controlled firefox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AHAHAHAHAHA.

      Thank you Clint.

  27. HTML5, Web 3.0 by Dan+East · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The thing that concerns me the most is the issue with HTML5 video codecs. Microsoft, Google and Apple all want Flash to die. Apple's latest licensing change with iPhone OS 4.0 is a full-out declaration of war against Adobe.

    HTML5, SVG, hyper-optimized Javascript and the embedded video tag will make Flash redundant. If Firefox cannot stay on the bleeding edge of these advancements then it does not stand a chance.

    So I suggest less bells and whistles (skinning / themes, for example), and more concentration on HTML5 - especially the video codec licensing / patent issue.

    --
    Better known as 318230.
    1. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mozilla can certainly afford the $5m cap on H.264 licensing fees given that they get over ten times that annually from Google alone.

      Theora cannot compete at any level with H.264; not in compression ratio, availability of hardware support, market share or industry support. The longer Mozilla decries H.264 as evil and patent-encumbered technology while at the same time offering almost automated installs for Flash, the more users will migrate to browsers that do support H.264 as websites are already starting to migrate for the iPad.

      Does it seem a bit odd to anyone else that Apple of all companies is more-or-less leading the charge against Flash?

    2. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by se7en11 · · Score: 1

      BTW: Latest build of Chrome ships with Flash.

    3. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1

      They're making it use the underlying OS for codec support to get around the licensing issues. OSX ships with a mpeg4 codec, as does Window 7 (I think). It's trivial to add to Linux or older Windows, also.

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    4. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by pslam · · Score: 1

      Mozilla can certainly afford the $5m cap on H.264 licensing fees given that they get over ten times that annually from Google alone.

      A pointless figure to give, because Mozilla cannot pay the fee without going against everything they stand for. It's supposed to be a free-as-in-freedom browser, which none of the other major competitors can claim. Even Chrome is only free-as-in-beer.

      Theora cannot compete at any level with H.264; not in compression ratio, availability of hardware support, market share or industry support. The longer Mozilla decries H.264 as evil and patent-encumbered technology while at the same time offering almost automated installs for Flash, the more users will migrate to browsers that do support H.264 as websites are already starting to migrate for the iPad.

      Why do people regurgitate this cruft? Theora is only slightly worse than H.264. The lack of hardware support is a red herring: for anything up to 480p you don't need hardware decode. Even smart phones can manage 480p software-only in real time (I have tried this), without too big a hit on power consumption. Not being able to decode 720p does not make it useless. It gives you a nice baseline codec you can use on any platform, and quite frankly I don't think you'll mind (much) that you're streaming YouTube videos to your phone in only 480p.

      Mozilla offers automated installs of Flash because it's pretty much the first thing anyone does, and because Flash is a huge security hole if it's not installed right (i.e the latest version). Everyone wishes this wasn't necessary.

      Does it seem a bit odd to anyone else that Apple of all companies is more-or-less leading the charge against Flash?

      No.

    5. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft, Google and Apple all want Flash to die.

      Google bundles Flash with Chrome: http://blog.chromium.org/2010/03/bringing-improved-support-for-adobe.html.

    6. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Does it seem a bit odd to anyone else that Apple of all companies is more-or-less leading the charge against Flash?

      Not really. It isn't QuickTime, therefore it must be killed. They have their own H.264 codec in QT anyway.

    7. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by rsborg · · Score: 1

      Microsoft, Google and Apple all want Flash to die.

      Given the way Apple and Microsoft are heading, I sense a partnership between Google and Adobe brewing. They definitely both compete directly against Microsoft and Apple, but not against each other.

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    8. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      ...or else people will keep using FireFox, because they want to keep using Flash.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    9. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by Randle_Revar · · Score: 2, Informative

      The solution is simple, and now probably inevitable: use the platforms native media framework (QT, DS, GST) (or perhaps use gst on all platforms). Momentum continues to increase for h.264, and it seems less and less likely that Mozilla, Opera, and Wikimedia can force Theora into widespread use. Mozilla will certainly continue the good fight against h.264 for some time, but soon enough there will be little choice, aside from becoming a bit player. Using the media framework as a backend shouldn't actually be all that hard, and I don't think that they need to be in any hurry to do this (some work has been done already on a gst backend).

      As for concentrating more on HTML5 in general, they are doing quite a lot, and currently implement about as much as the other browsers.

    10. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by kangsterizer · · Score: 1

      you know the funniest part?
      most people use VLC cause its been touted as that good, to decode their videos. Yep their H264 videos. Oh, especially those Mac OS X people who do not use Perian.

      They don't even know, that VLC does not actually support hardware acceleration and the videos are completely CPU decoded.

    11. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Firefox does not need to get on no bleeding edge. How many HTML5 sites are out there? As far as I am concerned they need to get back to the mindset with which they started, a fast, user friendly browser built with care. They need to forget the competition and focus on what they do well. Innovation and design thats well thought out. I began using Firefox because of the tabbing, the excellent plugin architecture and, builtin pop up blocker.

      Firefox quality has gone downhill and I think is because of the drive to "cutting edge" instead of quality. The only thing that keeps me on FF these days is a single plugin and its not Firebug, IE 8's built in debugger is miles ahead.

    12. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by Dan+East · · Score: 1

      Mozilla will certainly continue the good fight against h.264 for some time

      I think this is part of what the original story is talking about. Survival mode isn't making a noble stand for an idealistic cause. You practically said it is a losing battle (and I agree), so the most important thing is for Mozilla to not lose any market share just to put up a "good fight". It's more important for Firefox to stay a viable product, even at the risk of compromising here and there, so it can influence other aspects of the future browser market and standards.

      --
      Better known as 318230.
    13. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by Pecisk · · Score: 1

      Chrome supports Theora too, by the way.

      --
      user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
    14. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Why do people regurgitate this cruft? Theora is only slightly worse than H.263.

      There. Fixed that for you. You have been seeing what you want to see, without actually reading what is there on that comparison page. The comparison page begins with H.264 but ends with H.263. It is well crafted to confuse those with the expectation that Theora competes.

      It gives you a nice baseline codec you can use on any platform, and quite frankly I don't think you'll mind (much) that you're streaming YouTube videos to your phone in only 480p.

      Why exactly do I want Mozilla and Opera to encourage a 480p baseline, when all the hardware I have right now already supports 720p and/or 1080p?

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    15. Re:HTML5, Web 3.0 by pslam · · Score: 1

      Which comparison page? I don't recall mentioning one.

      Why do you want 720p playback on a mobile device? Ok, if your screen is at least 720p, but they're the vast minority, and the bandwidth required is still fairly severe for all but the best 3G+ links. 480p is a perfectly reasonable baseline that the vast majority of people would prefer rather than having nothing at all.

  28. Re:Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Mobile phones is one exception but also because you can't swap out browsers/rendering engines."

    I have IE, Opera Mobile, and Fennec all on one phone. You need a better phone.

  29. Not big on Chrome and IE9 won't do it for me, but- by fortapocalypse · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Mozilla/FF should focus on making it the best place to develop plugins and making the browser fast and stable. I don't care about anything else really.

  30. I agree with the summary. by QJimbo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Me and my colleague were using the spreadsheet app on google docs last night whilst on the phone. I made a remark that we should probably be using chrome instead of firefox due to the faster javascript. He decides to go with it then suddenly says to me "In the time it takes firefox to load, I've installed chrome, launched it and I'm back on google docs."

    Firefox needs to get it's act together to keep up basically.

    1. Re:I agree with the summary. by xtracto · · Score: 1

      I love Firerox and use it with a bunch of plugins that have no replacement in any other browser (adblock plus, noscript, treetab, scrapbook, downthemall, greasemonkey, etc), however I installed Chrome in my eeePC to be able to stay logged in to google mail while my wife was logged in using Firefox.

      I find that google chromes *files* compared to firefox, I am using an adblocker and even though it "just hides" the ads I really could care less, as it is faster than loading the same page in Firefox.

      Firefox used to be GREAT when all you had was IE6, or Opera with a banner. Right now their only advantage are the collection of extensions

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    2. Re:I agree with the summary. by Beelzebud · · Score: 4, Insightful

      FF loads in about 1-2 seconds on my machine. I'm calling bullshit on your friend downloading, installing, and getting right back to work in that amount of time. If it's true, your friend has other problems besides Firefox.

    3. Re:I agree with the summary. by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1

      BS. Even if he already had Chrome downloaded, it would take at a minimum 10 seconds to install, and 10 seconds to go to the site and log in. If Firefox takes 20 seconds to start up, that's not Firefox's fault. Cut some of the extensions or use a new profile.

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    4. Re:I agree with the summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hum... I'd suggest your friend to install Archlinux 64bits.

      Firefox takes 1,3 s to load in my machine: Intel Core2 1,8GHz , Intel X3100 GMA SHA, 2 GB RAM, HD SATA 7200 RPM.

      And I bet you he's not able to install and launch Chrome and visit a web page in that time...

    5. Re:I agree with the summary. by BeforeCoffee · · Score: 1

      I don't like this negative talk about Mozilla. No, their tech is not the best. (But their JavaScript performance and HTML 5 feature implementations are very good!) Yes, there are patent issues on web video they face that commercial entities do not. Things will work themselves out, have a little faith.

      In my eyes, there is no better choice for browser vendor. Mozilla isn't lily-white-pure-as-the-driven-snow, they've been funded by Google and have been a means in the past for Goog to strike at Msft. But, they're still the best independent choice, and they've got the long view of this web thing. Oh, and they seem to care a lot about security.

      Go Mozilla and Go Firefox! You are my #1 choice for development, working with your browser is a joy and it just keeps getting better. All the other browsers get support from me only begrudgingly, but you're my true love. And of course, whenever I'm asked to play tech support and help people set up their new computers, yours is the browser I download and get them all using ("because you will avoid all the viruses by running this...") :)

      Dave

    6. Re:I agree with the summary. by jlebrech · · Score: 1

      so in the time it took to load firefox, he loaded firefox went to google.com/chrome downloaded chrome then installed chrome.

      Wow chrome IS fast.

    7. Re:I agree with the summary. by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

      >In the time it takes firefox to load, I've installed chrome, launched it and I'm back on google docs

      Something in his FF is very broken, Chrome does indeed launch faster, but FF should take only a second or two to launch.

    8. Re:I agree with the summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...Whatever. I get the same ten-second loading problem myself. Could be Adblock doing it, though.

    9. Re:I agree with the summary. by kangsterizer · · Score: 1

      i'm actually using google docs on firefox without any speed issue. i have chrome also, don't feel any difference.

    10. Re:I agree with the summary. by Trifthen · · Score: 1

      Try that with a netbook, sometime. I just used 'time' to time a firefox load, and it took over ten seconds. Just to start. With a blank homepage. Chrome? 2.5 seconds. Opera? Somewhere in-between, but around six.

      That's just to load. So far as content is concerned, page rendering is glacial with firefox compared to the other two. My God, Slashdot obliterates my CPU. If Google could have tabs on the right, I'd be using that instead of Opera. But firefox? In your dreams, buddy. Apparently the devs think everyone owns the newest quad core chip or something.

      --
      Read: Rabbit Rue - Free serial nove
    11. Re:I agree with the summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slow down, triggerhappy. Like most of us, he's talking in practical terms about opening Firefox and waiting for all 57 tabs to load. While you'd like to think bandwidth is the great equalizer, the truth is the same URLs open much faster in Chrome/Safari.

  31. Re:Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use by Old97 · · Score: 1
    Sorta, but not completely true. Browsers don't all implement the same standards in the same way. You still need to do quite a bit of testing if you want to support multiple browsers on a non-trivial site. Cross-browser compatibility support built into many libraries typically only support a few (2, 3 maybe 4) of the most popular browsers. So since companies cannot afford to or don't want to support all the browsers out there, the ones with the greatest market share get first priority. Right now Firefox is very well supported because it is available on every major platform - except mobile. Mobile browsers and the dominance of a few mobile devices may end up impacting the entire browser market.

    What I find interesting is that Chrome is built on Webkit as is Safari and Google promised full Safari compatibility. Since Safari (iPhone) accounts for 64% of mobile web traffic it is in a great position. Android is probably its most viable competitor at the moment and it runs Chrome. Together they (webkit-based browsers) may achieve market shares equal to IE's in its heyday. Is there a place for Firefox? What about the fact that the PC market is relatively stagnant growth wise relative to the new mobile device markets?

    If all the standards were fully supported in the same way be everyone, then maybe this wouldn't be an issue, but that's not happening yet.

    --
    Very often, people confuse simple with simplistic. The nuance is lost on most. - Clement Mok
  32. theora = suicide by DrXym · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I hope Mozilla gets a clue about their video tag implementation while they still have a chance. It is quite obvious that sites want HTML5 but they also want to stream h264. If Mozilla doesn't provide a way to do this, the browser is going to get sidelined.

    1. Re:theora = suicide by Nerdfest · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It sucks that you're right. Theora is the 'right' choice, but it's looking like it's too late.

    2. Re:theora = suicide by pslam · · Score: 1

      I hope Mozilla gets a clue about their video tag implementation while they still have a chance. It is quite obvious that sites want HTML5 but they also want to stream h264. If Mozilla doesn't provide a way to do this, the browser is going to get sidelined.

      You're asking an organization setup to promote free-as-in-freedom software, a charity, to simply get over themselves, turn it into a free-as-in-beer project, and break with their ethics.

      Google knew what they were doing when they went with H.264 (I even shouted very strongly about this while I worked there). The combination of Chrome existing whatsoever, and moving to a patent encumbered format, is hurting a free software organization, and it's not something they should be proud of achieving.

    3. Re:theora = suicide by DrXym · · Score: 1
      You're asking an organization setup to promote free-as-in-freedom software, a charity, to simply get over themselves, turn it into a free-as-in-beer project, and break with their ethics.

      Sure why not? Firefox allows me to install proprietary plugins so what's the deal about me installing proprietary plugins that just so happen to play a video format?

    4. Re:theora = suicide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One idea would be for them to turn their attention to enabling, encouraging, and protecting civil disobedience against the software patents that make h.264 bad in the first place. Give us the software, focus on making it available offshore where it can't be censored and litigated against, and help us achieve a "critical mass" of users who are accustomed to high-quality video and will fight against big corporations who seek monopoly protection from racketeer governments.

      Win/win/win.

    5. Re:theora = suicide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its a crossroad, because supporting the patended h264 is betraying theora adoption in html5 video tag (witch was the first proposal), witch is betraying open source, whitch is the essense of firefox. And also opera supports ogg/theora in html5. On the other hand theora's main problem is not performance, is that it allows direct content downloading, witch will be never accepted by most companies like youtube. I guess its time for google to proove the not evil moto, because if youtube will support theora the case is closed, and it will be a victory for open standarts.

    6. Re:theora = suicide by tepples · · Score: 1

      On the other hand theora's main problem is not performance

      True, Theora is noticeably better than H.263 and roughly on par with MPEG-4 Part 2, but H.264 needs half the bits of a Theora encode to show the same picture quality on live-action video.

      is that it allows direct content downloading

      That's not a codec issue. HTML5 using H.264 and HTML5 using Theora both expose a URL from which the user can download the video.

  33. My Firefox needs to go on suicide watch by rayzat · · Score: 1

    For browsing general webpages Firefox seems to work quite well, however a lot of the webpages I browse for work, low volume behind corporate firewall type pages FF dies a horrible death constantly. IE seems to be the only browser that works reliably on some companies private pages probably because they were initially designed with and for the IE hegemony. Because of this I tend to switch between IE and FF fairly frequently and I really have to say while FF does tend to be faster, IE is by far more stable. Also what happen to FF not being a memory resource hog. My FF browser, just viewing slashdot consume near 300MB of memory while IE consume about 30MB, I know memory consumption numbers from task manager need to be taken with a grain of salt, especially when MSFT is involved but it's a big diff. I have pretty much the same plugins on each, nothing special. It almost seems that from some standpoints IE and FF have flopped.

    1. Re:My Firefox needs to go on suicide watch by Spad · · Score: 1
    2. Re:My Firefox needs to go on suicide watch by kangsterizer · · Score: 1

      IE8 cannot be using 30meg, so you're reading it wrong which is easy (no browser uses so little, even with no page loaded, except lynx, w3m, dillo and other such ones). 300 megs is approx average for all browsers with a few dozen big sites open, and actually firefox is generally the one consuming the least memory, especially with multiple tabs open (chrome uses a lot of memory due to the multiple processes)

      atm, i have slashdot and some random webpage open in firefox, 87megs. been browsing for 1 or 2h i guess.

    3. Re:My Firefox needs to go on suicide watch by rayzat · · Score: 1

      You make the assumption when I say IE I mean IE8, so your assumption is wrong.

    4. Re:My Firefox needs to go on suicide watch by kangsterizer · · Score: 1

      well theres no instance from IE using that little memory while browsing, unless my assumption that you mean Microsoft (R) Internet Explorer (R) is also wrong uh.

  34. Chrome is the future by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Chrome is the future because what could go wrong with giving one company complete domination of the Internet?
    I don't have anything against Google, but the thought of them having the browser market share that IE currently has scares me. It is not unreasonable to think that it might happen. Google is already the overwhelmingly dominant search engine. They have been fairly successful at most of the things they have worked at.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    1. Re:Chrome is the future by tuppe666 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Chrome is the future because what could go wrong with giving one company complete domination of the Internet? I don't have anything against Google, but the thought of them having the browser market share that IE currently has scares me. It is not unreasonable to think that it might happen. Google is already the overwhelmingly dominant search engine. They have been fairly successful at most of the things they have worked at.

      I never mind these comments it just surprises me. That a company that NOW has the market share of IE, that has the DNA of your computer for "piracy reasons", and has a EULA that sends stuff automatically to this company is never mentioned etc etc. Monopoly Bundling mumble mumble.

      For me I'd rather go with the company that has to keep its customers sweet.

    2. Re:Chrome is the future by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      I don't go with either. I use firefox. I used Netscape for as long as it was feasible and switched to firefox when it became reasonable. I have always taken the philosophy that wherever there is a reasonable competitor I use something other than MS products.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    3. Re:Chrome is the future by fishexe · · Score: 1

      Chrome is the future because what could go wrong with giving one company complete domination of the Internet?...but the thought of them having the browser market share that IE currently has scares me...

      What could go wrong with giving one company complete domination of our computers?
      Apparently, the thought of a company having 95% desktop OS share and 90% browser share and a stated vision of taking over the world is less scary than a company having majority search engine share and majority browser share but who's motto is "do no evil"...

      --
      "I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
    4. Re:Chrome is the future by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Chrome is the future because what could go wrong with giving one company complete domination of the Internet?...but the thought of them having the browser market share that IE currently has scares me...

      What could go wrong with giving one company complete domination of our computers? Apparently, the thought of a company having 95% desktop OS share and 90% browser share and a stated vision of taking over the world is less scary than a company having majority search engine share and majority browser share but who's motto is "do no evil"...

      I am confused, how does me being afraid of the idea of Google having the share of the browser market that IE currently has indicate that I don't have very major problems with MS being as dominant as it was at its peak (or even now)?
      You know MS gaining dominance in the PC market was such a great thing that we should welcome Google becoming similarly dominant.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    5. Re:Chrome is the future by fishexe · · Score: 1

      Chrome is the future because what could go wrong with giving one company complete domination of the Internet?...but the thought of them having the browser market share that IE currently has scares me...

      What could go wrong with giving one company complete domination of our computers? Apparently, the thought of a company having 95% desktop OS share and 90% browser share and a stated vision of taking over the world is less scary than a company having majority search engine share and majority browser share but who's motto is "do no evil"...

      I am confused, how does me being afraid of the idea of Google having the share of the browser market that IE currently has indicate that I don't have very major problems with MS being as dominant as it was at its peak (or even now)? You know MS gaining dominance in the PC market was such a great thing that we should welcome Google becoming similarly dominant.

      Well you said "the browser market share that IE currently has" as though the status quo were perfectly unscary. I, for one, would MUCH rather have Google enjoy MS's market share...it may be scary but it's far less scary than the market we already have, at this moment.

      --
      "I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
  35. Re:Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

    In other words, it's far better for users than it used to be.

    So long as there's a significant portion of the browser market not using the most dominant browser, web developers have to follow the actual standards, rather than the pseudo-standards of the dominant browser. This is an improvement, because it means that there's a relatively low barrier to entry for new browsers.

    End result: browsers compete by offering speed improvements, new features, and better user experience than their competitors. Since the going rate for a web browser license if $0, users win. Since browsers are all standards-compliant, web developers win, because they don't need to write their pages for 15 different browsers. About the only party that doesn't win is one that would like to maintain a dominant browser position without having a better browser.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  36. firefox stronger than ever by pizzap · · Score: 1

    How do you get these ideas? Firefox has never been as popular as it is now. And except chrome all the alternatives you named have been around for ages. And besides Chrome is just another webkit browser like Safari.

    1. Re:firefox stronger than ever by acidrainx · · Score: 1

      Actually no, Firefox lost marketshare last month. So technically it's not as popular as it was before. Pedantic, I know.

    2. Re:firefox stronger than ever by kangsterizer · · Score: 1

      chrome has a big marketing engine behind, that's the real difference

  37. NoScript for Chrome by metamatic · · Score: 1

    Funny you should mention NoScript. The daily builds for Chrome just got regexp support in the per-site preferences for JavaScript, cookie and pop-up permissions.

    In other words: You can now run with scripting and cookies off, and turn them on for all servers at the specific domains you trust. So CookieSafe and NoScript are built in to Chrome, or will be next time the code from the daily builds makes it into a full release. All it needs is for someone to write the friendly front-end to stick it in a button on the UI now, instead of your having to go to the options.

    As someone else already pointed out, AdBlock equivalents are available too.

    I suggested to the Firefox devs that this core functionality was needed in Firefox, but they weren't interested. Too busy implementing useless crap like address books. Same story with calling the OS for video rendering; that would have allowed me to play MPEG-4/h.264 video like every other browser. Far too sensible, so they refused to implement it and shoved Ogg Theora into the browser instead.

    In addition, I was tired of the bloat, tired of the daily crashes, tired of the refusal to build basic browser functionality into the browser. So I'm one of the people who just ditched Firefox. (I'm really enjoying the Chrome developer tools, which work much better than Firebug ever did.)

    --
    GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
  38. Flaming by fulldecent · · Score: 2, Funny

    Please dont describe obscure brands like Firefox without providing an introduction.

    For those of you that haven't heard, please see more at http://en.wikipedia.com/wiki/Firefox

    --

    -- I was raised on the command line, bitch

  39. More is better.... by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

    I have multiple browsers on my systems always. When FF (my favorite) fails, I use Opera or Chrome as backups. Opera is particularly robust, working in conditions where the others don't.

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  40. Please, no "survival mode" by Stan+Vassilev · · Score: 1

    Survival mode is how good software dies. In survival mode companies often forget what good software really is, and people on stop start throwing around big words on differentiating from the competition and longer and longer bullet point feature lists.

    This is how we got the much dreaded "personas" (copied from Chrome Themes) and why Firefox'es 4.0 UI drafts looks like an exercise of how the offspring of Chrome and Internet Explorer 8 would look like.

    Mozilla has been in survival mode ever since Google announced Chrome. Or didn't you notice they *solely* depend on the handouts from a company that now has their own browser (and a good browser!).

    That's a tough spot to be on, if Firefox loses market share, they'll fade into oblivion, and if they aggressively compete, even if they gain 99% market share, Google could easily pull their plug on a whim. Oh, there's Bind and Yahoo you say, they'll pay to be in the search bar! Because... of course the savvy techies who helped the cousin install Firefox won't restore Google as the search engine, when said cousin calls them and asks for it. Right.

  41. Good by duffbeer703 · · Score: 1

    Mozilla is dumb. I can have Hawaiian flower patterns, but I cannot control when patches are released in my enterprise.

    --
    Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
  42. Display a web page? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only retro-maniacs want to display a web page. Most people want to execute them.

  43. it's all about one's favorite add-ons by Tumbleweed · · Score: 1

    Most people are crazy for ad block, flashblock, etc. For me, Chrome's biggest lack is no Tab Mix Plus-like add-on. Once I have that, Chrome will be much more usable. Without something like Tab Mix Plus, tab handling is ridiculously crude. At least there is a light version of Web Developer Toolbar for Chrome now. Once that's full-featured, and I have Tab Mix Plus, Chrome will almost certainly be my browser of choice.

    Still, FF plugins are about to be run in a separate process with an upcoming version, so that'll help a lot of problems, I bet.

  44. Re:Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo · · Score: 1

    Mobile phones is one exception but also because you can't swap out browsers/rendering engines.

    Maybe you can't, but my Android device would beg to differ.

    --
    "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
  45. Re:Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use by beakerMeep · · Score: 1

    Well said. I think this is even true with speed too (to some extent). Sometimes I wonder how much people really care about a 20% speed increase here and there when browsers can load and render lots of sites in 1-2 seconds. Obviously this doesnt include mobile platforms.

    --
    meep
  46. Re:Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use by Luke+has+no+name · · Score: 1

    Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it used to be.

    You say this as if that's a bad thing.... I think.

    Browsers should be competing on user satisfaction and Internet freedom, not on attempting to be as intrusive in the user experience as possible, simply for the sake of being able to do so and get away with it.

  47. I fear for the fox by stewski · · Score: 1

    Much as other browsers may eat into FF at the moment, my main fear is more that the patent issues around h.264 and supporting the codec in HTML5 are more likely to have an impact. I like and use both chrome and FF for different reasons but have faith that while the startup times and javascript engine of FF are playing catchup they are likely to, you know - catch up. Also I'd agree with the earlier poster who said that Mozilla really need to sort out corporate rollout and user lockdown as soon as possible.

    I think a great deal of the community of FireFox and Mozilla, In many ways the growth reminds me of how google slipped into mainstream usage/consciousness from the highly technically literate down to the casual user but in many ways more admirable. However when push comes to shove, whilst I'll support FireFox and ogg the many people I've turned onto FireFox are likely to turn to chrome for an open source/standards savvy browser that just works, as big content providers push h.264 onto the web.

  48. Not that this matters to most... by kainewynd2 · · Score: 1

    Okay, fine. I'll rewrite the subject... ahem.

    Not that this matters to most users, but Firefox is incredibly annoying to manage in an enterprise environment when compared to other browsers. This single factor turned me off to Firefox entirely over the past few years (i.e. as other competitive browsers became available).

    --
    I just don't get... eh, ugh... never mind. This post wasn't worth the research I put into it.
  49. Re:Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use by noidentity · · Score: 1

    If Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use[d], then what did it use? Did it use the Convention of the Browsers? Trial of the Browsers? Your subject just isn't making sense.

  50. Browser Market Share by blind+biker · · Score: 1

    Fireforx' marketshare has been stagnating since summer of 2009, while Chrome has been increasing it - albeit by a very little bit - every month, monotonically.

    --
    "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
  51. Firefox is still better. by guidryp · · Score: 1

    Speed delta between chrome/FF have shrunk to irrelevant.

    Firefox is rock solid for me on Windows 7.

    Those seem to be the two main Chrome "advantages" I see touted as the reason why people should switch to chrome.

    In reality those reason are hugely exaggerated.

    OTOH Firefox has a huge advantage in available extensions and the effectiveness of those extensions. Flashblock on Chrome doesn't work on all flash, only some. Naturally the flash it doesn't work on are annoying flash adverts.

    Google also runs annoying call home process even when Chrome isn't running (that alone was enough to ditch chrome for Iron).

    Overall I think the reports of Firefox death are greatly exaggerated.

  52. Personas are OK by Kenshin · · Score: 1

    Personas are silly and superfluous, yes, but they do add some enjoyable colour to my screen. (As long as the theme itself is tasteful, which 95% are not.) I'm not one of those guys who has "Windows Classic" set as their desktop environment.

    If this is just a minor addition to the browser, one that didn't absorb a huge amount of development resources from the overall project, I see no problem with adding it.

    --

    Does it make you happy you're so strange?

    1. Re:Personas are OK by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      I just don't understand the point in having both personas & themes is all.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    2. Re:Personas are OK by Kenshin · · Score: 1

      The point is, since you're going to be looking at it for a while, replacing the big, grey slab of a UI with something more appealing to your eye. (Mind you, most people's eyes have horrid taste.)

      --

      Does it make you happy you're so strange?

  53. Re:Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use by RebelWebmaster · · Score: 1

    There seems to be a lot of momentum heading in that general direction nowadays, though. IE has released a massive CSS test suite, Google and Apple both have published JS test suites, etc. etc. Especially with the general push towards HTML5 compliance in all the major browsers. Maybe just maybe interoperability is closer to reality than we think.

  54. What I care about most: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I care most about security, compatibility to existing webpages, comfort / good user interface, no annoying bugs like memory leaks etc. and maybe also political things, because I don't want to support a company in controlling the browser market.

    I don't care so much about the speed of a browser currently, since I usually don't experience problems with it.
    I usually wonder what all the speed talk is about, when it comes to browsers, because the only speed problem I notice sometimes is my limited network bandwith, which doesn't play a role with normal webpages though.
    Besides that I currently have like 2 game clients running minimized (eve-online) and am browsing the net and don't think the browser is 'slow'. Feels normal and no different to when there are no games running at all in parallel, so I'm wondering, how the speed of a browser speed is so important.
    In my eyes the browser has always been an app that uses almost no performance, except when it's bugged and suffers from memory leaks and stuff.

  55. HTML5 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To solve the HTML5 codec issue Mozilla could create a plug-in/addon that gives Firefox h264 support and make it a recommended update. I however still think Ogg Theora is the way to go.

  56. Maybe Not by b4upoo · · Score: 1

    Normally the reasoning may apply. If we compare it to the auto industry where having way too many brands available makes it too difficult for auto makers to survive it would be a false comparison. We pay for cars directly. But most browsers are either free or come with a distro where no cost is obvious. It may be possible for numerous browsers to survive with only a small user base. We are in an new area in which conventional economics may have less meaning.

  57. Re:Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use by Aranykai · · Score: 1

    Thats news to me. I have three browsers installed on my phone.

    --
    If sharing a song makes you a pirate, what do I have to share to be a ninja?
  58. Browser platforms? by IsoRashi · · Score: 1

    Maybe I overlooked it or I'm just slow, but I didn't really see anything talking about what platform the browsers were on. With more and more people using smart-phones, it seems like that might be an important piece of info, especially if ff is not a cinch to install.

    --
    This is not the greatest sig in the world, no. This is just a tribute.
  59. When I use Firefox... by GWBasic · · Score: 1
    Normally, I use Chrome, but I "go back" to FireFox for the following features:
    • The "Error Console," which is a fast way to debug misbehaving Javascript. Chrome's way of identifying misbehaving Javascript just isn't as good.
    • Prism, the plugin that turns web sites into applications. Specifically, I have two prism apps for different GMail accounts, and a prism app for Bitbucket. I find web applications easier with Prism; especially on Mac.

    However, it's worth noting why I switched to Chrome:

    • I can drag tabs into different windows.
    • The multi-process system means that a misbehaving page or plugin no longer closes every window I have open.

    Now, I know that Firefox added the ability to drag tabs into new Windows; but the multi-process system is what got me to switch to Chrome the day it was released openly for Mac. I like the fact that if a Flash plugin starts gobbling my CPU, I can kill the Flash process and keep all my pages open. Firefox just doesn't do this; but if it did, I'd consider switching back.

    1. Re:When I use Firefox... by kangsterizer · · Score: 1

      firefox is going to do that, for flash and other plugins, in the very near future (it already works in ff 3.7a)
      however i don't know how it is on mac osx. when i used osx, firefox always felt sluggish etc compared to windows or linux. that was a in the 3.0 days tho.

  60. It's not an issue with plugins. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not an issue with plugins.

    I've currently got a clean Firefox 3.6.3 installation running at the moment on Linux. I haven't installed any plugins or extensions. Not even Flash.

    It has only been running since this morning (about 6 hours ago), but top shows that it has 5644 MB resident. This is after some moderate browsing of some news sites, Slashdot, and then letting it sit until a few minutes ago.

    Firefox 3.6 has some pretty serious memory leaks. I've never seen other software leak memory this badly. Instead of playing the "blame the extensions" or "blame the plugins" game, maybe the Firefox devs should just use the browser for a bit, and watch in realtime as the memory usage shoots through the roof.

    1. Re:It's not an issue with plugins. by maeka · · Score: 1

      It's not an issue with plugins.

      I've currently got a clean Firefox 3.6.3 installation running at the moment on Linux. I haven't installed any plugins or extensions. Not even Flash.

      It has only been running since this morning (about 6 hours ago), but top shows that it has 5644 MB resident. This is after some moderate browsing of some news sites, Slashdot, and then letting it sit until a few minutes ago.

      FF 3.6.something has been running for 3 weeks here.

      22 tabs open, 210 megs consumed.

      Despite your claim either it is a pluggin issue, you're a liar, or you have some strange browsing habits.

      email me the bookmark for all your current tabs (which cause 5664 MB of consumption) to SlashdotChallenge@cleansoap.org

  61. Re:Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

    Now, the best browser is almost as impotent

    You calling my Firefox flaccid?

    --
    Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
  62. Bullshit. by Narcocide · · Score: 1

    Mozilla DOM Inspector wins over Firebug.

  63. It's not a bug, it's a feature... by sd.fhasldff · · Score: 0

    It has only been running since this morning (about 6 hours ago), but top shows that it has 5644 MB resident. This is after some moderate browsing of some news sites, Slashdot, and then letting it sit until a few minutes ago.

    Generally, you WANT Firefox to use all the memory you have. After all, the reason you paid for all that fancy memory in the first place was for programs to use it. The issue is solely whether Firefox releases it again, if another application needs the memory. If it does, then there's no bug, but a very good feature.

    1. Re:It's not a bug, it's a feature... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Generally, you WANT Firefox to use all the memory you have. After all, the reason you paid for all that fancy memory in the first place was for programs to use it. The issue is solely whether Firefox releases it again, if another application needs the memory. If it does, then there's no bug, but a very good feature.

      The problem with this logic is that only one application can behave this way. If two or more apps are set to gobble memory because 'it's there' rather than because it's needed, then you have a conflict. For example, if you have firefox and photoshop running at the same time, what happens? Both can use as much ram as you can give them; sharing will only work if each app only asks for what it needs.

  64. Re:Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use by reidconti · · Score: 1

    "Early 1990s," huh? IE wasn't even *released* until 1995.

    Browser wars were more 97 on.

    "The Road Ahead" (November 1995) was Bill Gates figuring out that this whole Internet thing might catch on.

  65. No 64-bit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Their arrogance for not releasing 64-bit will kill them.

  66. Consider the impact of forks like IceCat by kfsone · · Score: 1

    IceCat (www.gnu.org/software/gnuzilla) exists because "they distribute and recommend non-free software as plug-ins and addons".

    Actually, I like to think of IceCat as the software version of Locutus. Oh, it's the least GNU-piece of GNU software so far, it still looks, smells and tastes like Firefox /for now/... But how long before the GNU nano-bloats^H^H^H^H^Hots activate and begin replacing the Javascript engine with an Emacs API?

    --
    -- A change is as good as a reboot.
  67. 64 bit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone have a link to a 64 bit version of firefox for linux? Nope? Then no firefox for me. Or millions of others.

    Ditto that for anyone else who can't keep up w/ the OS.

  68. Re:Battle of the Browsers simply isn't what it use by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have IE

    BWAHAHAHAHAhaha

    WinMo just lost something like 30 percent of its market share and is being killed by its developer. You need a better OS.

  69. That's not a feature. It's a fucking memory leak. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    What the fuck are you talking about? I've only got 4 GB of physical RAM. Yeah, that's right, Firefox is currently using all of my physical RAM, and then some of my swap.

    MEMORY LEAKS ARE NOT FEATURES, you fucking idiot.

  70. Firefox on Linux Netbook soo slow by Deviant · · Score: 1

    I recently installed Fedora 12 onto my Dell Mini 10v replacing the 7 starter that was preloaded. While the OS generally feels snappier than 7 did, the default Firefox was just soo slow to launch - it literally took ~10 seconds. Per a friend's suggestion, I got Chrome and it launches instantly and just feels faster once it is open. I havn't used Firefox since.

    I don't know what has happened with Firefox but the difference between it and Chrome on a netbook is night and day...

  71. The single most compelling feature of FireFox by evanspw · · Score: 1

    that no other browser has, that I know of - you can over ride the fonts a page specifies. Which is fantastic, as I don't ever want to look at a serif font on my screen. I like chrome and safari, but until I can do this I will never use them as my main browser.

    Here's a screenshot of the config setting: http://imgur.com/RvBBO.jpg

    --
    Interstitial spaces are filled with cream.
  72. Re:Not big on Chrome and IE9 won't do it for me, b by 0ld_d0g · · Score: 1

    Its fairly fast & stable IMO. The primary reason I switched to Chrome was because of the isolated-tab architecture of Chrome. For whatever reason FF always locked up for a few seconds when I loaded a slashdot page with > 500 comments. I've tried IE8 but on more than one occasino a crashing tab has taken down the entire browser, something which hasn't yet happened on Chrome.

  73. No longer user-focussed. by AaronLawrence · · Score: 1

    I left Firefox for Chrome because they are no longer user-focussed. Despite their millions of Google dollars, they choose to fritter time and money away on playing with things that don't really matter while leaving their most important products (Firefox, Thunderbird) largely unattended.

    To me, those millions should go to funding developers to fix all the nasty problems and design issues that free contributors don't want to work on, NOT to playing with cool new tech that free contributors would love to play with and will do anyway.

    Specifically, they are still much slower to startup, the awesome bar is still slow and clunky, there are still basic bugs that aren't fixed (not crashing ones, but things like printing fixed position pages). Chrome also uses screen space more efficiently, which matters to me on a netbook.

    --
    For every expert, there is an equal and opposite expert. - Arthur C. Clarke
  74. I tried Chrome... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... for a while on Ubuntu since firefox available was slowing down a bit (3.5.x series IIRC) and used it a bit under Windows as well(beta builds with extension support ATTM). However, the adblocking and scripting blocking and other plugins under Chrome were such crap that once ff 3.6 came out and felt faster again, I went straight back w/o reconsidering.

    Also used Safari OSX for a number of years, never really cared for it and always ended up bopping between ff & Safari or that other NeXT derived browser that switched to webkit when Safari hit and whose name I've completely forgotten.

    Started up Intarnetz Exploder a few times, but never ever really used it(really), always ended back up with whatever I had been using posthaste as the UI experience is ghastly although hw accel MAY be interesting enough to let it last a bit when 9 hits.

    Anyways, here, the bottom line is I'm hooked with my choice of ff extensions & plugins which NONE of the other options can match and IS a dealbreaker for me. With 3.6 series ff is back to loading and feeling as fast as Chrome ever did so I've got absolutely no reason to browser waffle ATM. Actually since I HAVE tried Chrome(and others) it'd now take a helluva slowdown in ff to get me to even re-considering another browser again...

  75. Reliability by multicsfan · · Score: 1

    The biggest problem I've been having with firefox is each of the last few releases seems to have become less stable then the one before it as well as taking a big performance hit. I think this may be the biggest challenge to firefox.

    I think they need to take a break on adding/developing new features and take some time to do some serious bug stomping.

    I'm starting to think about trying opera and/or chrome due to the crashing problems and sometimes erratic performance issues.

  76. Re:That's not a feature. It's a fucking memory lea by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Technically, it's not a memory leak until the application no longer knows that it's holding on to the memory. So long as it's still holding the pointer that points to the memory, it's just bloat.

    --

    You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  77. Bloat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've stopped using FF as my main browser on my mac as it seamed like every time I fired it up I had to wait for another update, then the plugins wanted to update etc. Safari just starts quickly and tenders eveything very well, do FF is mow only used when I specifically want one of it's plugins. I do note however it was foxmarks that made this possible with bookmark syncing accross all platforms, so when I bookmark something in FF in windows or Linux it just syncs to Safari and FF on mac too.

  78. HOSTS files are a better OVERALL solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "What about Ad Block Plus? That keeps me on Firefox" - by EvilBudMan (588716) on Friday April 09, @03:24PM (#31793466)

    Adblocks' NOT bad (especially considering that adbanners have been shown MORE THAN JUST A FEW TIMES NOW TO HOUSE MALSCRIPTED CONTENT IN THEM, see list below (only PARTIAL too, mind you)):

    HOSTS FILES ARE ADBLOCK'S SUPERIOR ON SEVERAL GROUNDS (& in combination/together? Pretty much the best "browser level" security, in "layered security fashion" you can do currently)!

    ----

    1.) HOSTS files eat A LOT LESS CPU cycles than browser addons do no less (since browser addons have to parse each HTML page & tag content in them)!

    2.) HOSTS files are also NOT severely LIMITED TO 1 BROWSER FAMILY ONLY... browser addons, are. HOSTS files cover & protect (for security) and speed up (all apps that are webbound) any app you have that goes to the internet (specifically the web).

    3.) HOSTS files allow you to bypass DNS Server requests logs (via hardcoding your favorite sites into them to avoid not only the TIME taken roundtrip to an external DNS server, but also for avoiding those logs OR a DNS server that has been compromised (see Dan Kaminsky online, on that note)).

    4.) HOSTS files will allow you to get to sites you like, via hardcoding your favs into a HOSTS file, FAR faster than DNS servers can by FAR (by saving the roundtrip inquiry time to a DNS server & back to you).

    5.) HOSTS files also allow you to not worry about a DNS server being compromised, or downed (if either occurs, you STILL get to sites you hardcode in a HOSTS file anyhow in EITHER case).

    6.) HOSTS files are EASILY user controlled, obtained (for reliable ones -> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hosts_file [wikipedia.org] ) & edited too, via texteditors like Windows notepad.exe or Linux nano (etc.)

    7.) HOSTS files aren't as vulnerable to "bugs" either like programs/libs/extensions of that nature are, OR even DNS servers, as they are NOT code, & because of what's next too

    8.) HOSTS files are also EASILY secured well, via write-protection "read-only" attributes set on them, or more radically, via ACL's even.

    9.) HOSTS files are a solution which also globally extends to EVERY WEBBOUND APP YOU HAVE - NOt just a single webbrowser type (e.g. FireFox/Mozilla & its addons exemplify this, such as ADBLOCK)

    10.) AND, LASTLY? SINCE MALWARE GENERALLY HAS TO OPERATE ON WHAT YOU YOURSELF CAN DO (running as limited class/least privlege user, hopefully, OR even as ADMIN/ROOT/SUPERUSER)? HOSTS "LOCK IN" malware too, vs. communicating "back to mama" for orders (provided they have name servers + C&C botnet servers listed in them, blocked off in your HOSTS that is) - you might think they use a hardcoded IP, which IS possible, but generally they do not & RECYCLE domain/host names they own, & this? This stops that cold, too! Bonus...

    Still, it's a GOOD idea to layer in the usage of BOTH browser addons for security like adblock, &/or NoScript (especially this latter one, & in FireFox (because Opera for example, allows a site by site setting on scripting @ least, where FF natively by itself, doesn't) as NoScript covers FF in what HOSTS files can't, in javascript, which is the main deliverer of MOST attacks online & SECUNIA.COM can verify this for anyone really by looking @ the past few years of attacks nowadays), for the concept of "layered security")

    ----

    To keep "ontop of the latest known malicious sites" online? See these sites (1 I mentioned here already, this is the rest of the list I use, & others too):

    START OF WEBSITES & SOURCES + TOOLS I USED TO POPULATE THIS LIST + MY ORIGINAL LIST OF BLOCKED ADBANNERS SERVERS

    http://ddanchev.blogspot.com/
    http://www.malwareurl.com/listing-urls.php

  79. Opera's FASTEST OVERALL, & secure too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "They really just need to go on a diet. Hey guys; remember how it was supposed to be a fast browser? - y B5_geek (638928) on Friday April 09, @03:24PM (#31793472)

    Agreed, & they've ALL (even Opera) gotten a bit "FAT" in RAM, but... keeping up off disk, vs. paging (i.e. - NOT being diskbound), helps speed!

    (Even when paging back to the backing .exe file, which IS what apps do with say, resources that aren't visible in tabs & what not that's NOT being displayed currently + their in-memory caches - happens under GDI + user32 in Windows, but not under AERO though I have noticed)...

    So, since your topic's about SPEED here?

    Well, Opera's KING IN SPEED (especially on the MOST USED PLATFORM THERE IS IN COMPUTING, in Windows)... &, security too (less security bugs in current builds) read on:

    NOW, as far as "SPEED & SECURITY" online, & Opera vs. FireFox vs. IE?? Ok:

    ====

    A.) For SPEED (& Opera led there for the LONGEST TIME, yes, even in javascript for the LONGEST time, until FF's new engines took its place (until Opera 10.50 @ least, because that's gotten a decent "boost" in that area -> http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/12/22/1911216 (not that it matters though, speeding up javascript is like asking to get infected by malscripted sites &/or adbanners faster imo @ least - that of a "POV" of PC security, mostly)):

    http://www.howtocreate.co.uk/browserSpeed.html

    and

    http://crave.cnet.co.uk/cnetuk/crave/software/0,39029471,49302491,00.htm

    AND

    http://nontroppo.org/timer/kestrel_tests/

    (Opera "rocked the planet" in those cases... bigtime (& ESPECIALLY ON THE MOST USED PLATFORM THERE IS, BAR-NONE, FOR PC-COMPUTING: Windows!))

    ----

    AND, for SECURITY also (less vulnerabilities present over time than IE or FF, per SECUNIA.COM stats):

    INTERNET EXPLORER 8.x VULNERABILITIES STATS:(04/10/2010)

    http://secunia.com/advisories/product/21625/?task=advisories

    (UNPATCHED = 4-8 / 50% (though 1 of them, the "Critical 'Out-of-Band' Cumulative Update IS patched, as of about 1 hr. ago (go get it those of you that use MS OS' that is...)))

    ---

    FIREFOX 3.x VULNERABILITIES STATS:(04/10/2010)

    http://secunia.com/advisories/product/25800/?task=statistics

    (UNPATCHED = 0-8 / 0% (on this note, as you can see? FF's current build's had MORE advisories, over time as I noted, vs. Opera's current build) but...

    FF's team HAS done a GREAT JOB in stopping that much faster than usual the past year or two now (now, the same has to be said for their browser addons too, but that too, improves over time as well usually))...

    However, the last bug in 3.6 a week or two back?

    FF Turned up another one shortly after, forcing 3.6.2 to issue!

    Which again, turned up another security bug, forcing 3.6.3 to issue... s

    Shows the "holes" but, it also (in FF's defense) showing the FF team's doing their job diligently too... & I've helped the FF team spot bugs before, years ago, when it was the build before FireFOX (FireBird iirc? Not sure anymore!).

    Most Critical Unpatched

    There are no unpatched Secunia advisories affecting this product, when all vendor patches are applied..

    ----

    OPERA 10.x VULNERABILITIES STATS:(04/10/2010)

    http://secunia.com/advisories/product/26745/?task=statistics

    (UNPATCHED = 0-5 / 0% )

    Most Critical Unpatched

    The

  80. FF's not as fast or over time as secure as Opera by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, Opera's KING IN SPEED in BOTH HTML related parsing work PLUS JAVASCRIPT SPEED (especially on the MOST USED PLATFORM THERE IS IN COMPUTING, in Windows)... &, security too (less security bugs in current builds) read on:

    NOW, as far as "SPEED & SECURITY" online, & Opera vs. FireFox vs. IE?? Ok:

    ====

    A.) For SPEED (& Opera led there for the LONGEST TIME, yes, even in javascript for the LONGEST time, until FF's new engines took its place (until Opera 10.50 @ least, because that's gotten a decent "boost" in that area -> http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/12/22/1911216 (not that it matters though, speeding up javascript is like asking to get infected by malscripted sites &/or adbanners faster imo @ least - that of a "POV" of PC security, mostly)):

    http://www.howtocreate.co.uk/browserSpeed.html

    and

    http://crave.cnet.co.uk/cnetuk/crave/software/0,39029471,49302491,00.htm

    AND

    http://nontroppo.org/timer/kestrel_tests/

    (Opera "rocked the planet" in those cases... bigtime (& ESPECIALLY ON THE MOST USED PLATFORM THERE IS, BAR-NONE, FOR PC-COMPUTING: Windows!))

    ----

    AND, for SECURITY also (less vulnerabilities present over time than IE or FF, per SECUNIA.COM stats):

    INTERNET EXPLORER 8.x VULNERABILITIES STATS:(04/10/2010)

    http://secunia.com/advisories/product/21625/?task=advisories

    (UNPATCHED = 4-8 / 50% (though 1 of them, the "Critical 'Out-of-Band' Cumulative Update IS patched, as of about 1 hr. ago (go get it those of you that use MS OS' that is...)))

    ---

    FIREFOX 3.x VULNERABILITIES STATS:(04/10/2010)

    http://secunia.com/advisories/product/25800/?task=statistics

    (UNPATCHED = 0-8 / 0% (on this note, as you can see? FF's current build's had MORE advisories, over time as I noted, vs. Opera's current build) but...

    FF's team HAS done a GREAT JOB in stopping that much faster than usual the past year or two now (now, the same has to be said for their browser addons too, but that too, improves over time as well usually))...

    However, the last bug in 3.6 a week or two back?

    FF Turned up another one shortly after, forcing 3.6.2 to issue!

    Which again, turned up another security bug, forcing 3.6.3 to issue... Which, shows the "holes" but, it also (in FF's defense) showing the FF team's doing their job diligently too... & I've helped the FF team spot bugs before, years ago, when it was the build before FireFOX (FireBird iirc? Not sure anymore!).

    Most Critical Unpatched

    There are no unpatched Secunia advisories affecting this product, when all vendor patches are applied..

    ----

    OPERA 10.x VULNERABILITIES STATS:(04/10/2010)

    http://secunia.com/advisories/product/26745/?task=statistics

    (UNPATCHED = 0-5 / 0% ) - 5 Opera has a BIG "share-of-market" on MOBILE DEVICES as well, & is big in EUROPE (though stats don't tend to show it, because like many others, I tend to "IDENTIFY AS IE" in Opera, so I get somewhat better "IE based" page renderings on SOME sites (this happens, too bad) & that's something others seem to overlook QUITE A BIT too)...

    Once more, imo @ least? Well - Opera's great!

    I.E.-> It took me away from being a FireFox user primarily in fact, because of it (& FF + IE have copied Opera's features RAMPANTLY over time (e.g.-> Tabbed Browsing anyone? As far as ADDONS also?? Heh, a LOT of what FF has in browser addons, Opera already has natively (

  81. Opera's FASTER & overall more secure currently by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "FF loads in about 1-2 seconds on my machine. I'm calling bullshit - by Beelzebud (1361137) on Friday April 09, @04:26PM (#31794344)

    Well, Opera's KING IN SPEED in BOTH HTML related parsing work PLUS JAVASCRIPT SPEED (especially on the MOST USED PLATFORM THERE IS IN COMPUTING, in Windows)... &, security too (less security bugs in current builds) read on:

    (Not sure what sort of "b.s." you're calling there Beezel, but I'd like to show you a few current stats, tests of speed (BOTH old & new/current no less) on the subject's of both SPEED and SECURITY in webbrowsers in the "BIG 3" @ least, as a sort of "FYI" for you, & others, reading...!)

    NOW, as far as "SPEED & SECURITY" online, & Opera vs. FireFox vs. IE?? Ok:

    ====

    A.) For SPEED (& Opera led there for the LONGEST TIME, yes, even in javascript for the LONGEST time, until FF's new engines took its place (until Opera 10.50 @ least, because that's gotten a decent "boost" in that area -> http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/12/22/1911216 (not that it matters though, speeding up javascript is like asking to get infected by malscripted sites &/or adbanners faster imo @ least - that of a "POV" of PC security, mostly)):

    http://www.howtocreate.co.uk/browserSpeed.html

    and

    http://crave.cnet.co.uk/cnetuk/crave/software/0,39029471,49302491,00.htm

    AND

    http://nontroppo.org/timer/kestrel_tests/

    (Opera "rocked the planet" in those cases... bigtime (& ESPECIALLY ON THE MOST USED PLATFORM THERE IS, BAR-NONE, FOR PC-COMPUTING: Windows!))

    ----

    AND, for SECURITY also (less vulnerabilities present over time than IE or FF, per SECUNIA.COM stats):

    INTERNET EXPLORER 8.x VULNERABILITIES STATS:(04/10/2010)

    http://secunia.com/advisories/product/21625/?task=advisories

    (UNPATCHED = 4-8 / 50% (though 1 of them, the "Critical 'Out-of-Band' Cumulative Update IS patched, as of about 1 hr. ago (go get it those of you that use MS OS' that is...)))

    ---

    FIREFOX 3.x VULNERABILITIES STATS:(04/10/2010)

    http://secunia.com/advisories/product/25800/?task=statistics

    (UNPATCHED = 0-8 / 0% (on this note, as you can see? FF's current build's had MORE advisories, over time as I noted, vs. Opera's current build) but...

    FF's team HAS done a GREAT JOB in stopping that much faster than usual the past year or two now (now, the same has to be said for their browser addons too, but that too, improves over time as well usually))...

    However, the last bug in 3.6 a week or two back?

    FF Turned up another one shortly after, forcing 3.6.2 to issue!

    Which again, turned up another security bug, forcing 3.6.3 to issue... Which, shows the "holes" but, it also (in FF's defense) showing the FF team's doing their job diligently too... & I've helped the FF team spot bugs before, years ago, when it was the build before FireFOX (FireBird iirc? Not sure anymore!).

    Most Critical Unpatched

    There are no unpatched Secunia advisories affecting this product, when all vendor patches are applied..

    ----

    OPERA 10.x VULNERABILITIES STATS:(04/10/2010)

    http://secunia.com/advisories/product/26745/?task=statistics

    (UNPATCHED = 0-5 / 0% ) - 5 Opera has a BIG "share-of-market" on MOBILE DEVICES as well, & is big in EUROPE (though stats don't tend to show it, because like many others, I tend to "IDENTIFY AS IE" in Opera, so I get somewhat better

  82. OPERA TECHNICAL EXCELLENCE in speed & security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "One browser can be taken down by others? I thought they should have been competing on technical excellence instead of name recognition" - by headkase (533448) on Friday April 09, @03:22PM (#31793430)

    Agreed headcase, & here is WHY (w/ backing evidences).

    Well, Opera's KING IN SPEED in BOTH HTML related parsing work PLUS JAVASCRIPT SPEED (especially on the MOST USED PLATFORM THERE IS IN COMPUTING, in Windows)... &, security too (less security bugs in current builds) read on:

    NOW, as far as "SPEED & SECURITY" online, & Opera vs. FireFox vs. IE?? Ok:

    ====

    A.) For SPEED (& Opera led there for the LONGEST TIME, yes, even in javascript for the LONGEST time, until FF's new engines took its place (until Opera 10.50 @ least, because that's gotten a decent "boost" in that area -> http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/12/22/1911216 (not that it matters though, speeding up javascript is like asking to get infected by malscripted sites &/or adbanners faster imo @ least - that of a "POV" of PC security, mostly)):

    http://www.howtocreate.co.uk/browserSpeed.html

    and

    http://crave.cnet.co.uk/cnetuk/crave/software/0,39029471,49302491,00.htm

    AND

    http://nontroppo.org/timer/kestrel_tests/

    (Opera "rocked the planet" in those cases... bigtime (& ESPECIALLY ON THE MOST USED PLATFORM THERE IS, BAR-NONE, FOR PC-COMPUTING: Windows!))

    ----

    AND, for SECURITY also (less vulnerabilities present over time than IE or FF, per SECUNIA.COM stats):

    INTERNET EXPLORER 8.x VULNERABILITIES STATS:(04/10/2010)

    http://secunia.com/advisories/product/21625/?task=advisories

    (UNPATCHED = 4-8 / 50% (though 1 of them, the "Critical 'Out-of-Band' Cumulative Update IS patched, as of about 1 hr. ago (go get it those of you that use MS OS' that is...)))

    ---

    FIREFOX 3.x VULNERABILITIES STATS:(04/10/2010)

    http://secunia.com/advisories/product/25800/?task=statistics

    (UNPATCHED = 0-8 / 0% (on this note, as you can see? FF's current build's had MORE advisories, over time as I noted, vs. Opera's current build) but...

    FF's team HAS done a GREAT JOB in stopping that much faster than usual the past year or two now (now, the same has to be said for their browser addons too, but that too, improves over time as well usually))...

    However, the last bug in 3.6 a week or two back?

    FF Turned up another one shortly after, forcing 3.6.2 to issue!

    Which again, turned up another security bug, forcing 3.6.3 to issue... Which, shows the "holes" but, it also (in FF's defense) showing the FF team's doing their job diligently too... & I've helped the FF team spot bugs before, years ago, when it was the build before FireFOX (FireBird iirc? Not sure anymore!).

    Most Critical Unpatched

    There are no unpatched Secunia advisories affecting this product, when all vendor patches are applied..

    ----

    OPERA 10.x VULNERABILITIES STATS:(04/10/2010)

    http://secunia.com/advisories/product/26745/?task=statistics

    (UNPATCHED = 0-5 / 0% ) - 5 Opera has a BIG "share-of-market" on MOBILE DEVICES as well, & is big in EUROPE (though stats don't tend to show it, because like many others, I tend to "IDENTIFY AS IE" in Opera, so I get somewhat better "IE based" page renderings on SOME sites (this happens, too bad) & that's something others seem to overlook QUITE A BIT too)...

    Once more, imo @ least? Well

  83. SMALL "tech correction" edit... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (Even when paging back to the backing .exe file, which IS what apps do with say, resources that aren't visible in tabs & what not that's NOT being displayed currently + their in-memory caches - happens under GDI + user32 in Windows (insert my quoted portion edit below, here), but not under AERO though I have noticed)...

    - by Anonymous Coward on Saturday April 10, @05:13PM (#31801632)

    "When you minimize a window" needed to be added between the BOLDED TERMS above... catching it, myself, before a "nitpicker" here does is all!

    APK

  84. This article needs to be deleted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're wasting my time.
    This is tl;dr and is an obvious flame.
    I'll switch from Firefox to Lynx.

      graphics are entirely lame.

  85. Inducing infringement by tepples · · Score: 1

    One idea would be for them to turn their attention to enabling, encouraging, and protecting civil disobedience against the software patents that make h.264 bad in the first place.

    I believe that's called "inducing infringement" in the case law of Mozilla's home country: MPAA v. Grokster.

    Give us the software, focus on making it available offshore where it can't be censored and litigated against

    Do you understand how much it would cost to move Mozilla's entire operation outside the United States?