In SeaMonkey and Firefox you can change the behavior of the backspace key with the pref browser.backspace_action (in the pref editor under the URL about:config). The value 0 means (Shift+)backspace goes Back/Forward, 1 means act like PgUp/PgDown and 2 and other values make the backspace key do nothing.
As long as they they include all fixes the Mozilla Foundation does, why not? The 1.0.3 and 1.0.4 were also only Security releases, i don't think many non security-fixes went into it (but one can check if he wants).
Yes, the subway in Nuernberg will have no double doors, it would be too complicated they said (getting the train stopped exactly where the doors are, some stations also have a rounded form, which is another problem). Rather a system will (or should;) detect when something is on the tracks, but it should not get confused by newspapers, etc.
What do the metro stations look like? Are they open (towards the rail) or are there extra doors towards the rail (which are closed when no train is in the station)?
I would say more skilled people look at Firefox and Mozilla actually. With IE everyone knows "ah, it's rather easy to find a security hole in it", but with Firefox and Mozilla it might be rather more a challenge to find one.
There was/is http://lxr.mozilla.org/seamonkey/source/widget/src/gtk/mozicon50.xpm?raw=1 and http://lxr.mozilla.org/seamonkey/source/widget/src/gtk/mozicon16.xpm?raw=1
But i dont know if you can convert it in a decent format for usage under Windows...
Hi,
maybe you want to report that to http://server.lynggaard.org/l10nWiki/Wiki.jsp?page =SmokeTest
The about thing is already known it seems, the Downloads title not yet.
Firefox until 1.0 (after that version it will change) is based on a spinoff of the 1.7 branch. In this branch (called aviary branch) they ported in some fixes from the trunk and also some from 1.7 branch.
> XUL is cool, but so far I haven't seen MANY great applications done with it.
There are some great apps IMO, but mostly those are used in intranets, so you don't see them (trust me, i've seen screenshots and partly the apps itself).
I don't think there will be bittorrents, because the past has shown that few people use it, too few to set up a tracker or something like that. The Mozilla FTP is a round-robin of seven servers with high-speed access to the internet, so i think the load can be handled quite good.
No:), but people who are more experienced/skilled get more rights in Bugzilla. With those extended rights you can fill a bug as NEW (which doesn't necessarily mean your bug gets more attention).
Forget it, Netscape is dead. IMO they won't release a new update, i think they only released Netscape 7.2 because so many people wanted it. But i dont think they'll spend more money on it.
There apparently was something planed, but yes, i also got never any notification. Someone told me, this might be some stuff Netscape/AOL wanted. You can find this (useless?) features in preferences under Advanced-Software Installation-Update Notifications
Yes, because this bug-fix caused another problem with Mozilla 1.7.x and Firefox. If you download 1.8a2 (or 1.8a3 not sure), you will see that the bug has been fixed. If the code reviewers are fast enough, this bug-fix should/will go into Firefox 1.0
In SeaMonkey and Firefox you can change the behavior of the backspace key with the pref browser.backspace_action (in the pref editor under the URL about:config). The value 0 means (Shift+)backspace goes Back/Forward, 1 means act like PgUp/PgDown and 2 and other values make the backspace key do nothing.
As long as they they include all fixes the Mozilla Foundation does, why not? The 1.0.3 and 1.0.4 were also only Security releases, i don't think many non security-fixes went into it (but one can check if he wants).
Did your User-Agent get updated? The ubuntu people also need to do that (when giving out patches).
Ah didn't know that port yet. But what if virii/worm programers also start using these ports? These ports just seem a workaround for me.
Yes, the subway in Nuernberg will have no double doors, it would be too complicated they said (getting the train stopped exactly where the doors are, some stations also have a rounded form, which is another problem). Rather a system will (or should ;) detect when something is on the tracks, but it should not get confused by newspapers, etc.
What do the metro stations look like? Are they open (towards the rail) or are there extra doors towards the rail (which are closed when no train is in the station)?
Yeah, RoboGames seems to be a mixture of autonomous robots and R/C controlled. See the rules on this page.
Hi, looks like https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=25781 8, this should be fixed in Firefox 1.1 (or in any current nightly).
Why does the link to his blog redirect to Wikipedia?
I would say more skilled people look at Firefox and Mozilla actually. With IE everyone knows "ah, it's rather easy to find a security hole in it", but with Firefox and Mozilla it might be rather more a challenge to find one.
There was/is http://lxr.mozilla.org/seamonkey/source/widget/src /gtk/mozicon50.xpm?raw=1 and http://lxr.mozilla.org/seamonkey/source/widget/src /gtk/mozicon16.xpm?raw=1
But i dont know if you can convert it in a decent format for usage under Windows...
Hi, maybe you want to report that to http://server.lynggaard.org/l10nWiki/Wiki.jsp?page =SmokeTest
The about thing is already known it seems, the Downloads title not yet.
Some bugs have been fixed, some not yet. See https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=26494 4 for more info.
Firefox until 1.0 (after that version it will change) is based on a spinoff of the 1.7 branch. In this branch (called aviary branch) they ported in some fixes from the trunk and also some from 1.7 branch.
> XUL is cool, but so far I haven't seen MANY great applications done with it. There are some great apps IMO, but mostly those are used in intranets, so you don't see them (trust me, i've seen screenshots and partly the apps itself).
I don't think there will be bittorrents, because the past has shown that few people use it, too few to set up a tracker or something like that. The Mozilla FTP is a round-robin of seven servers with high-speed access to the internet, so i think the load can be handled quite good.
Looked it up again, it was
<HTML><INPUT AAAAAAAAAA>
crashes here Mozilla every time.
There's mozilla.org, the main page. spreadfirefox.com is just for advertising Firefox and stuff.
No :), but people who are more experienced/skilled get more rights in Bugzilla. With those extended rights you can fill a bug as NEW (which doesn't necessarily mean your bug gets more attention).
Forget it, Netscape is dead. IMO they won't release a new update, i think they only released Netscape 7.2 because so many people wanted it. But i dont think they'll spend more money on it.
There apparently was something planed, but yes, i also got never any notification. Someone told me, this might be some stuff Netscape/AOL wanted. You can find this (useless?) features in preferences under Advanced-Software Installation-Update Notifications
Normally those bugs get public when a new release for every important product at mozilla.org has been made (here Mozilla, Firefox, Thunderbird).
The bitmap decoder bug only affects Windows XP, the other bugs all platforms.
Huh, does this happen so often or is this just a redunant story *g*? I've seen a similar (or even the same?) story some posts before yours.
Yes, because this bug-fix caused another problem with Mozilla 1.7.x and Firefox. If you download 1.8a2 (or 1.8a3 not sure), you will see that the bug has been fixed. If the code reviewers are fast enough, this bug-fix should/will go into Firefox 1.0