I personally own a 2001 Saturn SC-2, 5-speed manual, and get around 35mpg, depending on my driving style, and driving location. The freeway obviously has better mileage than around town. It's definitely not an Echo or Metro, either. More than powerful enough for quick highway acceleration, or quick "off the line" acceleration.
For those of you that wish to have mouse gestures in every application, you can download StrokeIt . It's free, ~100k download with an equally sized memory footprint, plugin extensible, translatable, pretty much everything. So now you can get your Opera gestures in Mozilla if you want. Or IE. Or MS Word, or Solitaire, or anything else you run.
As this problem has been plaguing a client of mine, I've recently been in search of an E-Mail that looks like Outlook, but doesn't BEHAVE like it. The reason for needing to look like Outlook is that the client isn't what one would call the most computer literate. So, a client that looks like outlook, works like outlook, runs under Win32, and is free or relatively cheap, is needed. Does anybody have any suggestions?
Re:I prefer Mozillas interface thank you
on
Mozilla 0.9.5
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· Score: 1
"why would anyone choose that over MOzillas customizeable interface?"
because it's less obtrusive, and isn't as intensive as skinning. It is, of course, a matter of personal taste. But you can't argue the fact that the mozilla skin takes up more screen real estate than IE/Kmeleon's non-skinned interface. It just takes up more room. And yes, I know you can get different skins.
K-Meleon kicks ass over Mozilla. Based on the embeded version of the Gecko engine, it's got the same rendering speed, accuracy, and standards support as mozilla. The interface isn't nearly as clunky, very closely resembling that of IE's. It supports netscape plugins, so you can get your java and flash if you desire. It has it's OWN plugin interface, so you can extend it to suit your own needs. It weighs in at a whole four meg, and it's WAY faster than opera. Opera has a nice splash screen so you can read that it's the fastest. K-Meleon doesn't leave time for one of those. It's just there as soon as you click it. Current version is 0.5 which is based on mozilla 0.9.4. Watch http://kmeleon.sf.net for a newer build based on 0.9.5
Once more, that's http://kmeleon.sf.net for ALL your browsing needs.
I personally own a 2001 Saturn SC-2, 5-speed manual, and get around 35mpg, depending on my driving style, and driving location. The freeway obviously has better mileage than around town. It's definitely not an Echo or Metro, either. More than powerful enough for quick highway acceleration, or quick "off the line" acceleration.
;-)
Not to mention, chicks dig the bright yellow.
For those of you that wish to have mouse gestures in every application, you can download StrokeIt . It's free, ~100k download with an equally sized memory footprint, plugin extensible, translatable, pretty much everything. So now you can get your Opera gestures in Mozilla if you want. Or IE. Or MS Word, or Solitaire, or anything else you run.
-Del
Again, the leader of the field amazes us all. This will be INCREDIBLE...if they ever make a game with the engine. ;-)
-Del
As this problem has been plaguing a client of mine, I've recently been in search of an E-Mail that looks like Outlook, but doesn't BEHAVE like it. The reason for needing to look like Outlook is that the client isn't what one would call the most computer literate. So, a client that looks like outlook, works like outlook, runs under Win32, and is free or relatively cheap, is needed. Does anybody have any suggestions?
"why would anyone choose that over MOzillas customizeable interface?"
because it's less obtrusive, and isn't as intensive as skinning. It is, of course, a matter of personal taste. But you can't argue the fact that the mozilla skin takes up more screen real estate than IE/Kmeleon's non-skinned interface. It just takes up more room. And yes, I know you can get different skins.
-Del
K-Meleon kicks ass over Mozilla. Based on the embeded version of the Gecko engine, it's got the same rendering speed, accuracy, and standards support as mozilla. The interface isn't nearly as clunky, very closely resembling that of IE's. It supports netscape plugins, so you can get your java and flash if you desire. It has it's OWN plugin interface, so you can extend it to suit your own needs. It weighs in at a whole four meg, and it's WAY faster than opera. Opera has a nice splash screen so you can read that it's the fastest. K-Meleon doesn't leave time for one of those. It's just there as soon as you click it. Current version is 0.5 which is based on mozilla 0.9.4. Watch http://kmeleon.sf.net for a newer build based on 0.9.5
Once more, that's http://kmeleon.sf.net for ALL your browsing needs.
-Del the Kmeleon Evangelist
pc load letter? what the fuck does THAT mean?