Netscape 6, PR 3 Released 217
A slew of people wrote in about the release of Netscape 6, PR 3
this morning -- Windows version, Linux 2.2, and Mac, assuming you speak English or Japanese. The word from Netscape is that French and German will be "soon." 'Course, I still think that apt-getting a certain Mozilla is all ya need, but hey.
Re:Very nice. (Score:1)
1. Can't say "use this proxy for all protocols". The is so annoying to have to type the proxy name into three or four fields, especially if you have multiple proxies.
2. Tab key doesn't move through fields when editing (proxy dialog). On the third press of the TAB key, the focus on the current field disappears and no other is focused. What's going on?
3. Left or right arrow won't move the cursor when editing text in a field (proxy dialog).
4. Enter key does not activate default button on HTML forms e.g. logging in to Slashdot. This is just crap.
These errors are so simple, it shocks me. If they can't even get these things right, then what hope is there?
Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been... (Score:3)
However, Mozilla has gotten better and better, I have been using it as my primary browser for nearly 4 months now, and Linux, Mac, Windows, and on OpenBSD.
IMHO, Konqueror has nothing on Mozilla (I was never fond of the particular style of most KDE applications anyway, so I may be biased). If you want to compare something to something, compare the latest nightly to it.
The most recent nightlys have been rock stable, they render fast, the UI problems have been cleaned up (Classic being the default theme, with Modern/2 availible and a lot better than Modern.)
Mozilla has infinite potential, and has been slowly realizing it.
Re:Same damn thing here! Dump cores every time! (Score:1)
I did manage to get it running however. I discovered that I had to run the binary ([install_dir]/netscape) as root the first time. After that it seems to run fine though it keeps popping up this annoying registration screen. With no 'opt-out' option I might add.
I've also found that after awhile it just locks up on me. Hard. I have to kill it off by hand.
I'm going to stick with the nightly builds myself. Granted they don't have the handy ^R features but at least the alpha level nightly's are more stable than a preview release from Netscape.
Re:Is it a good alternative to IE5? (Score:3)
I am forced to use IE at work but I use Netscape at home. Yes, Netscape has the slower load time but that's unfair to judge since MS makes IE load at startup.
I like features of Netscape over IE:
1) bookmarks are stored in one file instead of shortcuts so I only have 1 file to transfer back and from work to access all my bookmarks.
2) for web design I like Netscape because of you can right click and view images easier. You can only save the image in IE.
The only thing I like in IE over NS is the easier method to manage bookmarks. You can right clock on the bookmark menu at delete one or move it around. In NS you have to "edit bookmarks".
Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been... (Score:1)
Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been... (Score:1)
Mozilla's DOM implementation is incompatible with both NS4's proprietary model and also with some popular IE extentions to the W3C DOM (like document.all which is almost universal in IE scripting).
So, this is a feature, not a bug.
(Is Konqueror trying to implement a full DOM implementation, or are they just aiming for the NS3-style form Javascripts?)
WOW & release date? (Score:2)
Re:Mozilla (Score:2)
Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been... (Score:1)
It also doesn't understands well Javascripts on some pages I tried.
Note that some of those Javascript problems come from broken scripts that just happens to work with the implementation in NS4.x, IE or both, but not in Mozilla. As far as I know, the implementation in Mozilla/NS6 should be more like the standards than in NS4.x:s. But of course there are still real bugs in Javascript implementation itself, so this doesn't explain everything. I just wanted to note that some troubles aren't really faults of browser, but the scripts itself.
sweetness (Score:2)
I don't want a lot, I just want it all!
Flame away, I have a hose!
Re:Gone are the days... (Score:1)
Browser revisionism lives!
Re:Very nice. (Score:2)
Re the memory requirements: all betas tend to do that. Memory requirements are trimmed down for the final release. If it's 30+ MB in the final, THEN I'll take issue.
Re the "Modern" skin: big thumbs up. I just wish Mozilla had at least a couple more skins ready for download when this came out. Re the speed of displayed pages: it does seem faster than IE5.5, although I haven't tested it side-by-side yet this morning. It's disturbingly slower when I click the "back" arrow to reload a page, though. Rather odd.
Big bug still present: when I modify several preferences at once, it won't "ok" the changes. I have to change just one panel at a time, then "ok" it and go back. But it doesn't crash anymore, at least.
One thing I really want to see with this Mozilla browser, though, is for Yahoo! to pick it up and customize it. Right now this browser is heavily customized for AOL/Netcenter users, and I'm not one of those. If Yahoo! can take Netscape 6 and tweak it their own way, I'll be ecstatic to use it.
Re:It's still not as fast as IE. (Score:2)
Re:Getting it to run! (Score:1)
Re:Is it a good alternative to IE5? (Score:3)
I have about 400 bookmarks saved in Netscape 4.75. This file takes up 167k of diskspace. On IE, the same bookmarks, as Internet Shortcuts consumes anywhere between 4k and 32k per shortcut depending on partition sizes. That means the same links eat up anywhere between 1.6 and 12.5 megabytes of disk space!
Not only that, IE has a severely retarded shortcut ordering scheme that frequently goes wrong after renaming or deleting an item, shortcut names can't contain certain characters such as ampersands & slashes, and IE has no equivalent of aliases or separators.
All in all, IE shortcuts are piss-poor substitute for a single bookmarks.html.
Mozilla != Netscape 6 (Score:1)
Mozilla is way faster than Netscape 4.7x, renders fonts a lot better, and doesn't crash a couple times a day like Netscape 4 does (and Netscape 6PR2 did.) It has trouble loading some Java applets and it was a bitch to get SSL working, but I'm looking forward to a nicely packaged 1.0. But I downloaded this one because the Nautilus "preview" wanted it, and I'm glad I did.
Even more so, I'm looking forward to someone writing a browser that uses Gecko and supports Java/JS/SSL, but doesn't do all that lame non-standard XML user interface garbage that looks nothing like my other windows. I'd be running Galeon right now if it even did JS and SSL.
I haven't tried Konqueror yet because I can't get KDE2 to install on my Mandrake 7.0 box - too old a kernel version and I haven't had time to download the 7.2 beta ISO's. One of these weekends.
Re:Netscape releases a new reason to crash. (Score:1)
Site that only works with MSIE and proud of it (Score:1)
Re:*shudder*, it's useful! (Score:1)
Re:Skipstone (Score:1)
I totaly understand the allure of a clean UI, hell i use black box [alug.org] ;) Yet, NS6 UI hasnt angered me yet, to the point of using something like Skipstone. im sure the day will come, sooner, rather than later ... and the theme is kinda cool.
Until that day comes, I do relish in the fact that NS6 UI's is driven by xml ... so one can hack away at it ... till one is content. I just dl'd this release, and messed with it a bit. Removed those anoying links on the bottom. Now the NS logo links to nowhere ... yea these are simple hacks, that really dont do much for speed... but remove some anoying things (in my oponion).
Next on my list is to possibly replace the logo with a slashdot one ... and link it to slashdot ;) ... that and hack out the sidebar. If I want a sidebar, id use IE ... i use NS because it isnt IE, and I really dont like the whole "Oh MS has some new GUI idea lets copy it mentatlity" ( No offence here ... just a little steam)(I also realize that this idea prolly really came from Opera to begin with...) .
My only question is, how long be for Apple and its stupid lawerys try to pass the theme off as being an Aqua rip-off and sue?
Gone are the days... (Score:3)
AOL buying Netscape was the beginning of the end of Netscape. Now, it seems that AOL is trying to slowly creep into our PC's, and personally I don't want anything to do with it. The tech-world is caught up in other things right now, but all these things are layered on top of the WWW. After the general novelty wears off (3-4 more years?) I think we'll have a dozen or more good browsers to choose from. If we all _need_ to access the WWW, then eventually we'll see more programmers dedicate time to writing a stable, efficient browser.
Re:Is it a good alternative to IE5? (Score:1)
Did you even actually -look- at how big the link files are? My biggest IE Favorite link is 298 bytes. I have just over 100 favorites, and they total 18 kb.
People need to stop spouting hollow theories and do some good old research before opening their gob.
Re:Is it a good alternative to IE5? (Score:1)
I tried submitting bug reports...I followed their FAQ to the letter...but people on bugzilla seemed to scoff at any reports from anyone outside of @netscape.net.
For me, IE5 in Windows, Konqueror in Linux. Both are very speedy, and neither one has crashed yet for me...
Just my $0.02...
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Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been... (Score:2)
treke
Re:It doesn't work--it works!--no, wait ... (Score:1)
??? (Score:1)
I love Netscape but it seems to be the reason I have to reboot 90% of the time...due to my own crazy multitasking of course, but still...
Re:Mozilla/Netscape policy branch? (Score:2)
I have been using Konqueror as my main browser for a month now, and going by the CVS of two days ago, the only site I value that has serious problems is www.cex.co.uk, where a JavaScript menuing system doesn't work. Other than that, it just works! I haven't looked at Mozilla for a month or so, but I would hope that it has even better compatibility than Konqueror - I only stopped using it because I didn't like the slowness of its UI.
not weird at all -- completely logical (Score:3)
Actually, it's completely logical, considering that English, Japanese, and German are, in that order, the three most common languages found on Web pages [about.com] and among Net users [blueearth.net]. French, Chinese (Mandarin), and Spanish are in positions four through six, though their specific order depends on which of these numbers you use.
I don't particularly want to cast myself in the role of a Netscape defender, but it's rather knee-jerk conspiracy-theorist to imply this is evil money-grubbing corporate pandering when there is a simple, logical explanation that fits the facts equally well. Namely, that Netscape is devoting its resources to serving the largest markets (as defined by user base) first. Let's save the gratuitous Netscape-bashing for their truly dumb and craven decisions.
No Http authentication? (Score:2)
Authentication failed or is missing
What does that mean??Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been... (Score:3)
The most recent nightly of moz I have (29/9/2000)is still slow, not anywhere near as slow as it once was - it is actually very usable, but it is still noticably slower than other browsers, especially in the UI. Click on a menu or any other XPCOM widget and you can feel the thing thinking about it before something happens. Those of you with fast machines may not notice this, but it's very noticable on my old PII. Page rendering is decently fast, but not anywhere near best-of-the-best.
There are still rendering bugs - there's a small but annoying one here on
Perhaps most worrying is the bloat. On launch, mozilla is already quite greedy, taking up around 18MB on my machine. However, an hour's solid web-surfing - in just one browser window - has this up to about 40MB, which is just insane. On my 64MB machine, this causes no end of swapping and thrash. I pity those poor souls trying to get mozilla working on machines with anything less.
Now, before you flame me to death (or, of course, mod me down into oblivion) for attacking mozilla, remember that (with the exception of bloat, which appears to be getting worse
However, there is a new kid on the block if you want a fast, solid, modern, compatible browser for *nix, and that's Konqueror. As it stands now, for pretty much every aspect of web-browsing I can think of, it's significantly better than moz is. It's blazingly fast (neck and neck with Opera IMHO), solidly standards-compliant (it claims HTML4/CSS2 compatibility, and I haven't seen anything which implies otherwise yet), has a small memory footprint, does Java, Javascript and SSL well... what more could you want?
Finally there is a browser for *nix that I want to use. It feels good.
Re:Very nice. (Score:2)
Actually, the 2-3x figure is deceptive (Nothing new for MS). You don't know how much IE5 is using because so much of it is built into the OS and executed on bootup.
Re:Here's the thing... (Score:3)
Don't forget that windows
are quite different beasts, despite doing roughly
the same thing.
Windows dlls are not fully PIC (position
independent code) so they are smaller than an
equavalent unix one. OTOH a unix
be shared between processes, but a windows one
may not be able to unless it can map to the exact
same address in both processes!
Unix is better if you have many processes using
the same lib, and windows wins if there is only
one copy being used.
Stephen.
Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been... (Score:2)
Mozilla isn't ready for primetime. It was painfully slow compared to Konqueror, and it didn't render a page w/ CSS anything like IE or NS4.x does.
I'm going to put it through more tests, but I'm finding it hard to keep my hopes up.
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Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been... (Score:2)
Wait, how is this different than the currently shipping Communicator?
holy slow browsers batman (Score:2)
Re:AOL On Desktop?! (Score:2)
I do understand the difference between the two, I just would have preferred an option to disable that "feature" I don't take very kindly that Netscape put an icon for itself on my desktop either without asking.
-Julius X
Re:Size? (Score:2)
At this point, its something of a lost cause to try and prevent bloat in NS6.
Re:Doesn't work with dynamic data (Score:2)
Web Page checks to see if I'm using IE, nope.
Checks to see if I am using Netscape 4.x, nope.
So none of the javascript gets called. I've tried a few of these pages where if I take out the browser checking, the script works fine.
Re:AOL On Desktop?! (Score:2)
Observations... (Score:2)
Thats because of the DOM Support (Score:2)
The DOM support is severely lacking at best. Its hard to find out just what it supports, but I don't believe even DOM 1 is really implemented yet.
Apparently, we can expect that to drastically change when the next big release comes up (which I believe will be 4.5). Considering the way that 3.5 went from no CSS to one of the best implementations in Windows in a single release, I think they can pull it off.
- A frequenter of the opera newsgroups.
Re:Size? (Score:3)
I was under the assumption ... one of the goals of the mozilla project was to reduce the size of the code
Well, they sort of have and sort of haven't. For starters, Netscape 4 is about 12-15MB IIRC, and a Mozilla nightlies are about 8-10MB. The Mozilla tarballs contain at least two entirely seperate skins, and Netscape 4 doesn't even have one (it lets Motif do most of the drawing, while Mozilla Does It All Itself). So that's a chunk of stuff Mozilla includes and Netscape doesn't, so chop that off the Moz filesize.
Next, remember that Netscape 4 on all three platforms is ported from one platform to another - only the very core code stays the same and the rest (GUI, networking, and so forth) is provided by the platform. Mozilla is designed to be as portable as possible, and so abstracts away as much of the underlying OS as possible so almost all of Moz is cross-platform code. This is more functionality that you won't find in Netscape 4, so for comparison, chop another hunk off the Mozilla filesize.
After taking into account the (sizable) extra functionality that Mozilla has over Netscape, Mozilla *is* a lot smaller. But really, it's shifted the bulk of code, rather than removing it, so you can make up your own mind.
Personally, I don't mind - from what I've heard of Netscape's current situation, they've only resources to write their browser once, not three times, so it's a choice between extreme crossplatform-ness or Mozilla being Windows-only... I'm glad I've got Mozilla for Linux at all.
Re:Mozilla (Score:2)
It'll be interesting to see what AOL does with Netscape 6. If they decide to replace IE with it then we could see a massive dent in IE's market share.
Chris
Nice! (Score:2)
I am impressed with the amoun to f improvement since PR2. The UI is lightning fast even with the new "modern" skin in Win98 on a PII233 with 64MB. The menus all pop up instantly, and the HTML canvas scrolls smoothly.
This is just sweet! I'm one happy camper. Now, hopefully the linux version is just as good...
"Free your mind and your ass will follow"
Re:Doesn't work with dynamic data (Score:3)
And your point is what? You can't write portable code and neither can NatWest? You need to look a bit deeper and see who is at fault. It might be Netscape: if so log a bug report. On the other hand there are a lot of crappy web sites 'designed for IE'. You need to work out which before you go shooting your mouth off.
Re:Gone are the days... (Score:2)
PR3 is working really well for me. Try it, you might be pleasantly suprised.
"Free your mind and your ass will follow"
Re:So? (Score:2)
IIRC the first public release of the Linux kernel was 1991. So not only are you are troll, you're also a liar
Chris
Re:AOL On Desktop?! (Score:2)
Re:Mozilla/Netscape policy branch? (Score:3)
Remember that Netscape is AOL and AOL is by nature evil. AOL needs to have a proprietary, closed browser, so they *have* to fork Mozilla. No way around that one. That's the bad news, the good news is that right now we have our own Mozilla, it's a damn good browser, and we can use it to hit AOL over the head with standards compliance. Don't freak out about this too much, because right now AOL's interests are running in parallel with ours, and they will until Microsoft is beaten. It's our job to take Mozilla, now GPL, and make it *better* than AOL's closed version. Damn, all we ever needed out of this deal is a replacement for Netscape that is open source and can handle all the current standards. We're actually getting a good deal more: we've got an 800 pound gorilla for a friend that is intent on busting up Microsoft's attempt to corner the web server market.
--
Re:RDF support... (Score:2)
On another Note, to get Shochwave to work under windows copy the program netscp6.exe to Netscape.exe, then install shockwave and when it asks vor the cersion point it to the plugins directory. It works, but is not perfect.
To get quicktime 4 to work install quicktime for netscape 4. Then copy the QuickTimePlugin.call file as well as the npqtplugin.dll, npqtplugin2.dll, and npqtplugin3.dll files. That should work. I was able to view a few movies with that with no problems.
I don't want a lot, I just want it all!
Flame away, I have a hose!
Very ad blocking unfriendly (Score:2)
I can get rid of the box pop-ups if I run apache, then I get a quick "not Found" message in the ad space. But I don't think I'll be switching from IE anytime soon. How's junkbuster work with this version?
NS6 accelerates Mozilla development (Score:2)
Sure, there are problems in the NS6 preview releases which are fixed in the latest nightly build, but that's because the NS6 preview release is not based on the latest nightly build. You should expect that. Generally, you will find that the fixes from the Netscape NS6 team's most recent preview release appear in the latest Mozilla build. By contrast, it is literally impossible to have the latest Mozilla fixes in the most recent NS6 release.
As for Konqueror, I haven't used it, but my understanding is that Konqueror was intended to be a leaner, meaner browser based on Gecko. It darn well ought to be faster. But does it have the all-important AIM integration? I think not! Take that, Konqueror!
Java support is excellent (Score:2)
It ran flawlessly, and without some display artifacts that I have seen in IE - so actually it ran better than it did in IE.
-josh
Where's the español? (Score:2)
>from Netscape is that French and German will be
>"soon".
Considering that a lot more people in the world speak spanish then german, french, or japanese, this seems a weird choice in languages. Or perhaps Netscape incorporated is only looking at where the advertising dollars come from.
AOL On Desktop?! (Score:5)
(Sigh).
-Julius X
woah (Score:2)
"mommy, I got a +5 informative today.. the world must truly be going to hell*..."
* especially since i was actually dopey enough to read that irc transcript..
Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been... (Score:2)
Current Netscape runs lots more pages than the new NS 6PR3.
But the NS6 PR3 renders much faster then the current shipping one, but lots of pages are not rendered well, or rendered at all. Also - you cannot use SSL (I've just tried few seconds ago - it's just freezes)
Re:Opera 4 is great. (Score:2)
Re:This is not true (Score:2)
But don't be too hard on poor gcc - it alone supports the entire non-windows open source movement. It's a good think WATCOM C is getting free huh? With gcc's front end and Watcom's back end we will run the world. Err, we will rule the world *sooner*.
--
Re:AOL On Desktop?! (Score:3)
Oh, it says that the AOL on Desktop option is disabled when building a custom configuration, yet we found it still put the icon on about half the desktops we ran the setup on. We ended up having to use Novell Zen to do a check for the icon and remove it after the installation.
*Sigh* indeed. From IE to RealPlayer, I loathe programs that insist on throwing useless crap on your desktop.
Re:So is this PR3 based on M17 or M18? (Score:2)
Re:Here's the thing... (Score:2)
Windows DLL's are position independent though. The 80386 design allows PIC code without too much loss, this was certainly due to a desire to allow the chip to be used for Unix with shared libraries.
I suspect the main reason for the smaller size is that by default all symbols in a DLL are local to the library, while by default all symbols are public in a Unix library and thus harder to "strip". They did this by requiring "_dllexport" macros to be stuck before any symbols that can be linked outside the library, in effect adding something that should have been added to C a long time ago... (of course they royally screwed it up so that you cannot write a header file for a DLL without using macros, as the syntax changes for code inside and outside the library!)
Very nice. (Score:4)
Big selling point---the "Modern" skin looks much better. Its very smooth and doesn't clash with every other program I'm running. Many people will like it just because it looks good.
The stability is much improved, and its faster than Internet Explorer 5.5 in loading and in downloading web pages. One thing I noticed....I'm just sitting at Slashdot typing this right now, and Netscape 6 is using 34 MB of memory! That's a bit excessive, 2-3x what IE5 uses.
Overall...I think PR3 is a huge improvement over PR2...and could be the best Netscape release to date. I'm actually looking forward to the final release now...as long as they cut down on the memory usage.
I wonder how Mozilla M18 will compare to this.
-Julius X
Re:Not for RH 7.0? (Score:2)
Shame really, I'm really looking forward to being able to replace Netscape 4.x...
Cheers,
Tim
Re:Mozilla/Netscape policy branch? (Score:4)
Gerv
Skipstone (Score:5)
With the creation of the mozilla-gtk widget many new mozilla-likes have sprouted up, but i think Skipstone may be one of the greatest of lightweight browsers. (Of course a full mozilla/netscape session is needed for SSL or other features)
java - hooray, doesn't work - boo (Score:3)
Size? (Score:3)
This is not a troll or flame, I'm just wondering what happened to those ideals.
Re:Here's the thing... (Score:3)
It's that installer again (Score:2)
You know the one:
'Thank you for downloading Netscape 6, you are held in a queue and will be attended to shortly....your download is important to us... please hold...if you have a numeric kepad press * now....etc...'
It still doesn't play The William Tell Overture in four-part square-wave harmony though, so it's not all bad...
This is not true (Score:3)
try it - take a large set of XP code, and build a dll on each platform. the linux
Re:Is it a good alternative to IE5? (Score:2)
Mozilla (Score:2)
Re:Very nice. (Score:2)
It's amazing what you can discover about Windows running wine
Mozilla/Netscape policy branch? (Score:4)
As a 'business' decision I couldn't really care less about Netscape as a company. Politically though, NS6 is the browser to watch for for a lot of people, not Mozilla, and a lot of people are mistaking NS6prx with 'the new Netscape'. And they're getting scared off. As a webdesigner, I do not want to use MSIE but it's slowly getting so I have to use it more and more often - both professionally and personaly.
jedrek
-- polish ccs mirror [prawda.pl]
Netscape homepage also updated (Score:2)
Re:holy slow browsers batman (Score:2)
Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been... (Score:3)
As I said - I downloaded it and tested it here - I got at work 2 machines (K7 650 and K7 700 with 128MB RAM on each)
I have tried both browsers. Mozilla is slower on rendering long pages (try slashdot page with 300 comments, or huge tables with 30,000 entries) and see what I mean...
It also doesn't understands well Javascripts on some pages I tried.
I'm not trying to say Fuck Netscape! what I'm trying to say that *this* version of netscape sucks in terms of speed and compatibility. A co-worker here tried the latest night built mozilla (from yesterday) and all the bugs and speed issues I mentioned are gone!
Maybe I didn't make myself clear - but I've been tired of trying Netscape PR1, PR2, PR3 and get lousy results! Once I've tried Konqueror, I really liked it (although it got its small number of bugs), and I'm planning to use it as my sole browser.
I'm not trying to start Desktop Enviroment war here - lots of people at my work like Gnome and Window maker - but they also like Konqueror and they run it without any problems on their machines with their favorite window manager!
Re:Is it a good alternative to IE5? (Score:4)
Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been©©© (Score:2)
I was also unclear, in that I stupidly assumed that when you said "Netscape", you mean Mozilla which I use¥almost every day¥I would use it constantly, if it wern't for the friggin' auto-focus feature[bug]© And yeah, the latest nightlies are bloody amazing :
Dave
'Round the firewall,
Out the modem,
Through the router,
Down the wire,
Just crashes on SuSE7.0 (Score:2)
Back to Konqueror.
(Which handles even my online banking since yesterdays CVS!!! https, java, javascript at once!!)
Maybe a kgecko html kpart will one day be useful, but I doubt it if I look at the quality and development speed of khtml.
It's still not as fast as IE. (Score:4)
Very pretty.
Quite small to download and install.
Skinnable.
Slightly better DOM and Javascript rendering than 4.72.
All of which is good.
But, most importantly, it's _STILL_ not as quick as IE. Pages seem to take twice as long (not as long as in 4.7 or in any of the Mozilla builds though) to load in PR3 than in IE5.
Sorry, it pains me to say it, but Microsoft STILL have the better browser.
--
jambo
system.admin.without.a.clue
Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been... (Score:3)
Don't try this version of Netscape on Linux. I just tried it few hours ago..
Lots of rendering bugs, slow (very slow!), a very slow java implementation, problems with Javascripts...
I just compared Konqueror from CVS against it - Heck, it seems to me that Konqueror is twice faster, more compatible, IBM's java runs on it perfectly well, rendering is fast and Javascript is almost always working... (2 scripts didn't work from the 30 web sites I checked), and I really like the damn fast resizing rendering which they added yesterday.
Also the SSL works perfectly now - I logged in to sourceforge with SSL, checked other web sites with SSL (Amazon, fat brain)..
Sorry Netscape, it was nice.. but I'm switching to Konqueror...
From the release feature list ... (Score:4)
Netscape 6 is a full-featured yet lean browser that bucks the trend in software bloat. Netscape 6 was developed from the ground up to be as small as possible while still providing a rich feature set.
It's always amazing how differently geeks and marketing people see things.
ebw
Re:Is it a good alternative to IE5? (Score:2)
Netscape 6 ? (Score:3)
You are currently using:
Netscape Communicator 5.0
English language, 5.0 (X11; en-US, Weak or Unknown Encryption
Re:The nicest moz platform to date has been... (Score:2)
I just installed the latest Debian packages of KDE2, and switched over from Blackbox (perhaps temporarily). The first thing I did was try Konq - and honestly, I'm not that impressed. It doesn't even render Slashdot properly (the topic icons are way to the left, some text doesn't line up, forms aren't spaced properly, etc). Moz renders all this perfectly. It's also not particularly 'sleek' - it's using about 25 MB of RAM for me, and I've only been browsing for about 4 or 5 minutes. Pages also seem to render at about the same speed as Moz/Gecko.
It has some nice features - it's fairly responsive, and contains 'just the basics', which is good. But it's not nearly as good as you make it out to be. Maybe the Debian packages are out of date, and the version in CVS is much nicer.
Re:Mozilla/Netscape policy branch? (Score:2)
--
Re:Is it a good alternative to IE5? (Score:2)
Windows NT 4.0 - Netscape PR3 - VERY USEABLE! (Score:4)
Re:and it installs something that immediately cras (Score:2)
Re:Netscape 6 ? (Score:2)
Netscape releases a new reason to crash. (Score:2)
Remember, JavaScript is a half-valid excuse for programmers to make uncompiled work. Sure it's cross-platform, but it's SLOW!
Re:Not for RH 7.0? (Score:3)
Gimme Bigass Tarball (Score:5)
ftp://ftp2. net scape.com/pub/netscape6/english/6_PR3/unix/linux2
Re:Here's the thing... (Score:4)
I think this has to do with XPCOM. For some reason, when the Mozilla team decided to do a cross-platform component-based architecture, they made it in such a way that it conveniently wraps around Windows' COM stuff. That means they don't have to include it on Windows, which trims out quite a lot of stuff.
Hey, how else could you explain why the Windows Mozilla downloads are a full third smaller than the Mac or Linux ones?
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Re:Size? (Score:2)
-Asa
*shudder*, it's useful! (Score:2)
Just think.. finally, a version of netscape to be *proud* of using.
Getting it to run! (Score:4)
Sweet (Score:2)
Microsoft Internet Explorer (a non-Netscape browser) 5.0
English language, Windows 98, Weak or Unknown Encryption
Upgrade Available!
Netscape Communicator 4.75
English language, Windows 98, Strong 128-bit Encryption
Thats the coolest greeting I've ever gotten from a web page.