

Mozilla Poised for Revival? 430
MarkedMan writes "An interesting and fairly lengthy CNET article on Mozilla and the pending 1.0 release. Kind of shallow research, making some common mistakes (Like many others, he half implies that AOL picking Mozilla as the default browser automatically puts 35 million users in the Netscape camp.) Good to see this getting some fairly mainline press."
All right (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:All right (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:All right (Score:2)
but they do not know that (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:but they do not know that (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm up for some good old-fashioned AOL-bashing, so let's *really* pile on, eh?
The AOL cluelessness is so rampant...
It's so rampant that in my neck of the woods, AOL's renaming their products to accomodate. Apparantly, a large section of the AOL community is confused enough by "Internet Service Provider" that Time-Warner is now running radio ads billing their RoadRunner Cable-Modem service as (((DEEP shudder))) "The RoadRunner High-Speed Online". [gack!]
Re:but they do not know that (Score:2)
Re:All right (Score:2)
Wishful thinking. These AOL users will still have Internet Explorer on their machines. A good majority of them will just change their AOL options to use IE instead of Netscape once they upgrade to a version that defaults to Netscape. They may not be completely computer literate, but they aren't morons...
At any rate, neither DHTML nor CSS are IE specific features, so you have no idea what you're talking about to begin with..How did your post get moderated up?
Re:All right (Score:3, Interesting)
Wishful thinking. These AOL users will still have Internet Explorer on their machines. A good majority of them will just change their AOL options to use IE instead of Netscape once they upgrade to a version that defaults to Netscape. They may not be completely computer literate, but they aren't morons...
I think you are overestimating AOL users. The majority of AOL users use AOL because they don't know how to work a computer. That's AOL's big selling point, that they don't have to think.
At any rate, neither DHTML nor CSS are IE specific features, so you have no idea what you're talking about to begin with..How did your post get moderated up?
How did your post get modded up? IE uses proprietary tags not found in the WC3 standards to implement "features" exclusive to IE. Many web sites use these tags that only work in IE.
This has been going on since the earliest days of web browsers, and in the past both IE and Netscape were just as guilty of inventing proprietary tags to give their browser more "features". That is what is so great about Mozilla, it is the most standards compliant web browser available. Now developers can code to the WC3 standards and know there is a browser capable of displaying the page correctly. Once (if) AOL converts their users to Mozilla it will hopefully force MS to make IE more standards compliant and in return allow developers to finally be able to easily design browser agnostic web sites.
Obviously you don't have much experience dealing with either end users or web page design issues.
Re:All right (Score:2, Funny)
Re:All right (Score:2)
> specific features, so you have no idea what
>you're talking about to begin with..How did your
>post get moderated up?
Ahh...Believe it or not -- IE has found some way to add extensibility to DHTML/CSS that go "above and beyond" what the "meak" w3c had published. Thus all it takes is one page to rely on these extensions in a way that it disturbs the intended usage, navigation and look of their page -- to alienate the browsers who stuck to the w3c published standards. Have you been in a cave?
Re:All right (Score:2, Informative)
Re:All right (Score:2)
Even if (Score:2, Interesting)
Would be nice if you could count on 35 million to just switch at the drop of a hat... but howmany are still using AOL3, 4,5,6 etc...
Re:Even if (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Even if... (Score:2)
Now pretty good (Score:3, Informative)
Now its probably one of the more stable browsers.
It does show that dumping a large amount of commercial source into the open community can produce results - but with this amount of code it does take time.
(Running mozilla 0.9.9)
Re:Now pretty good (Score:4, Insightful)
(running Konqueror 3.0.0-2)
---
AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:5, Insightful)
If nothing else, this seems particularly important to me because it will force more Web developers to stop using IE as a test browser.
With the poorest standards compliance of all browsers, this has created a flood of these "Best Viewed with Internet Explorer" pages, because they write THML, Javascript, etc. that is broken.
Now, if these broken Web sites are revealed as such by a larger audience, we could see some improvements in the overall quality, because something tells me the typical AOL user will happily complain about anything.
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:2, Insightful)
Rather, it will seem like the Web site is broken, which is what I would love to see.
This "fixing" that I am optimistically hoping will happen is what I think the biggest benefit might be.
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:3, Insightful)
Why not?
Especially if these users are used to browsing the web at work (with IE), or are upgrading from a previous version of AOL, or are coming from a different service (to AOL? yeah.. it COULD happen).
"It USED to work. This new AOL x.y is messed up. I'm going to call Customer Service."
AOL will then have to a) explain to the users that the web sites they're viewing are not standards-compliant, which most people won't care about, and will just want their AOL to work, or b) start trying to support non-standard technologies in the AOL release, which will be hard or impossible, and could lead to them eventually switching back to IE.
Yes, I'm cynical. I hope for the best, but I'm realistic.
S
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:4, Insightful)
Things I have observed:
- End user types wrong data directly into input screen, presses enter, naturally gets wrong result. All other software works as before. "There must be a bug in this software"
The absolutely last thing the end user will do is blame the AOL 7 software. After all, AOL is their friend, the web site designer is not.E.U. downloads software from Internet (say IE6 or Netscape 6.0), installs, new software crashes and blue-screens the PC on every startup. "There must be something wrong with the configuration of this PC".
E.U. goes to old PC, fires up Netscape 2.0, surfs to site which says in big, bold letters: YOU MUST USE IE4/Netscape 4 TO VIEW THIS SITE, gets garbage. "There must be something wrong with this web site".
sPh
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:2)
/Brian
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:2, Funny)
ME TOO!
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:3, Insightful)
W3C Validator (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't know, that thing is awefully picky. It doesn't even validate with the Mozilla [w3.org] web site (although it is possible [w3.org]). Are the Mozilla developers bad at web development? Perhaps. More acurately, I think a good web site doesn't necessarily have to follow all the W3C standards (although it is nice, I suppose).
I've seen countless web sites that display very well in Mozilla that get torn apart by the validator. I know, by ensuring W3C compiance you can be sure it will work in almost all browsers, but I don't necessarily care. I only worry about Mozilla and Internet Explorer. (Sorry Opera users, but it's bad enough dealing with two browsers on 3 different operating systems.)
I guess that's not why I'm not a web development professional...
Re:W3C Validator (Score:3, Interesting)
The whole ideal behind standards is so that you (theoretically) shouldn't have to care about all the browsers.
From my point of view, if I design a web page and follow the standards to the "t" and verify it for compliance after every single minor change, then if a browser doesn't render my page properly the browser is at fault and I don't give a shit. It's not my problem.
Now from a more practical standpoint. If my web page is going to be making me money and 90%+ of my users are IE users then I better make sure it renders properly in IE. However, that's still no reason not to follow standards. Because if I make a concerted effort to follow the standards then I can be reasonably sure that any other browsers (that I haven't tested it with) stand a good chance of rendering it properly.
With the above stated there's absolutely no reason not to verify your pages for standards compliance with the exception of pure lazyness.
--
Garett
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:2)
/Brian
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:3, Insightful)
People that put stuff like that on their sites are morons anyway. If they halfway good at doing simple html and make a few mistakes here and there, it'll render just about the same in every browser anyway..
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:2)
Re:AOL Using Mozilla/Netscape (Score:2)
Where humans can discern intent from ambiguity, computers cannot. Thus, standards are much more important than in human cultures. Computers require exact instructions, thus the nature of getting major syntax errors when you leave off a semicolon in your code. Computers interpret things literally, and that's the whole idea.
Your argument would only hold up if all Web browsers could interpret crap code (thus the usage would stray from the standards), but the entities adhering to the standard could still interpret the meaning of the non-standard information. For example, I can interpret, "I ain't goin'." to mean, "I am not going." Does this define the language? Certainly it does in certain cultures, but that's the whole point. Even when a "culture" is dominant, it still must comprise the whole to really be the defining word.
Jurrasic park (Score:2, Funny)
Just proves Joel's point (Score:2, Interesting)
I know that as a software developer, I've certainly learned from Netscape's mistake.
Re:Just proves Joel's point (Score:2)
Re:Just proves Joel's point (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just proves Joel's point (Score:2)
Mozilla is great software NOW, it only took four years, and it was re-written from scratch to compete with MSIE and blow away the last version of Netscape.
Sounds like you and Joel need to revise your views?
Generalizations like that are typically foolish. (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem with application development is that new features tend to get tacked on over the years. Joe Idiot Manager says, "Ahh, it looks good, but can you make it do my laundry?" and all of a sudden, you're given a chice: either hack on a modification to make the code do something it wasn't originally intended to do, or rewrite it from scratch. The first choice is quicker the first few times through, but programs grow more and more buggy and cumbersome as more and more extra features are hacked into the code. Pretty soon, you're left with a horrid, unmaintainable mess that has tons of random, hard-to-find bugs--much like Netscape 4.x.
If you're writing a piece of software the second time around, you know what mistakes you made the first time, and can avoid them. Mozilla may have taken longer to write because it was written from scratch, but you can be damn sure it's a better browser than it would have been had it been based on the Netscape 4 code. The Mozilla project wouldn't have thrown away all that code unless they had a good reason to do so, and anyone outside the project who arbitrarily says they should have kept it is talking out of their ass.
Re:Just proves Joel's point (Score:3, Insightful)
foolish (Score:2)
Further, "good software takes ten years to write" is a silly generalization from a silly man. Software simply takes, as long as it takes... like Duke Nukem Forever, which may take 20 years ;-)
It'll be a victory for standards. (Score:5, Interesting)
Exactly (Score:2)
The site sorta works in Mozilla, but not terrifically. We're busting ass to redo the site with full HTML 4.01 compliance, CSS 1.0 compliance, and verifying everything in Netscape 4.7. Once you know Netscape's quirks, you can avoid using CSS features that confuse it.
We'll stay away from XHTML until Netscape 4.x is dead, and a properly working Netscape 6.5 will go a long way towards that. It's mostly corporate users, and they'll migrate when something better is available. In about 2 years, I'd expect Netscape 4.x to be dead, and we can all move on to XHTML.
Of course, there is always the option of doing two renderers, one for Netscape 4.x in HTML 4.01 and CSS 1, and one for IE 5+, NS 6+ in XHTML + CSS 2.0...
Alex
Re:Exactly (Score:2)
Re:Exactly (Score:3, Informative)
Every other browser will either honor or ignore your font color selections, either of which looks okay. Netscape 4 will honor your font color selections only on the table row where the text is longest, in some circumstances, which invariably looks awful. Setting certain vertical-alignment properties on images will either work or not work in other browsers; in Netscape 4 it will randomly reorder your images. And so on.
For every other browser ever made, you can safely use any feature of CSS and get something which will look *okay* - either your stylesheet will be honored or not. With Netscape 4, if you happen to use the wrong part of CSS, your page will be completely unreadable.
You might not agree with the previous poster's position, but it is a logical approach. If Netscape 4 is remotely widely used among your site's visitors, it's really the only approach.
Stuart.
Because I'm trying to do the right thing (Score:2)
For everyone else, HTML 4.01 and CSS 1.0 should work fine. If they don't understand a tag, they ignore it. Netscape 4.x has some cascading and inheritance issues, so we need to work around them. After you've done it a bit, you get the hang of it.
Of course I'll test the site on IE, you think that I'm an idiot?
I won't, however, bother with Konqueror, Opera, OmniWeb, or other "fringe" browsers. They can take my compliant web sites and deal with them or not.
I am coding to the standards because its the best approach. Search engine spiders will understand the code, fringe browsers will understand the code, and anyone that writes a user agent that understands the standard will understand the code.
I need to meet business needs, and that requires the site being usable under IE and Netscape, so I'll do so.
If I'm coding to HTML 4.01 Transitional (with the DocType) AND CSS 1.0 to the standard, why the hell do you care that I'm ignoring certain CSS options? I'm giving you a standard document, I really don't understand your hostility to my approach?
Alex
Why are you offended
Some interesting weblogs by mozilla developers (Score:5, Interesting)
Cell Phones (Score:5, Funny)
So the next generation of cell phones will have 256MB RAM?
Mistakes (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah a it is a easy to a make a some a common mostakes.
Knunov
Mozilla is flexible and everywhere (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Mozilla is flexible and everywhere (Score:2)
Mozilla an alternative, not a competitor. (Score:2, Interesting)
I run linux 99% of my uptime. And I use galeon on top of Mozilla. Why? Not because I hate the concept of IE (I hate IE for other reasons) but because it's an alternative. Sure I have a Sun that I could run IE on, but the velocity of the Mozilla and Galeon development is the alternative solution that I'm looking for.
OpenSource developers aren't "let's go give MS a run for their money!" people. They're "let's go make a browser that sucks less." Not everything is a competition - some projects exist just to provide alternatives.
What is Python a competitor to? I dunno... It's just an alternative... Just like Mozilla...
-c
Re:Mozilla an alternative, not a competitor. (Score:2)
Python's only a competitor to every other high-level language out there. It was conceived as a language to do stuff better than other high-level languages. That's competition.
Grab.
Re:Mozilla an alternative, not a competitor. (Score:2)
Probably not, you have a much nicer way with words than me
Re:Mozilla an alternative, not a competitor. (Score:2)
Looks like the moderators are smoking pot and wearing sandals...
Get Real. (Score:3, Insightful)
Folks, I have a newsflash for you. AOL is never, ever going to use Gecko/Mozilla as its default browser. Not in 8.0, not in any version.
This is all about negotiating leverage: AOL's contract with Microsoft is up for renewal, and they want to squeeze the best terms possible out of MS to ensure that the little AOL icon is on as many OEM Windows desktops as possible. So they'll threaten and bluster about dumping IE for Gecko, and in the end MS will make a few token concessions and AOL will re-up with IE.
For all of their public bravado, MS and AOL's executives are both painfully aware that their respective near-monopolies are entirely dependent upon a mutual detente. Neither one can survive without the other.
Reality (Score:2)
What are you talking about? (Score:3, Insightful)
AOL wanted a deal, Microsoft said AOL would have to ditch AIM, Winamp and Realplayer, AOL would have to use Microsofts Media Player, MSN IM and IE in their product?!
Please, AOL is not spending millions if not billions of dollars so they can waste it in a deal with Microsoft.
AOL purchased netscape, made AIM, purchased ICQ and Winamp because they knew at some point it would come down to this
ITs all part of a bigger plan, now that AOL is Time Warner, AOL is bigger than Microsoft and does nt NEED a deal, AOL is set to take Microsoft out.
Note to idiot moderators. (Score:3, Funny)
If you disagree with that prediction, I'd be happy to wager a Guinness over the matter.
Re:Get Real. (Score:2)
Just how big a slice of Microsoft's profits are you suggesting AOL contribute?
Re:Get Real. (Score:2)
I agree with your assessments. There is also another good reason for this: having two big web browsers on the same system can cause no end of confusion to end users and many application programs, and that is something everybody wants to avoid, especially for casual computer users.
Now, AOL 8.0 with the Mozilla 1.0 browser makes way more sense if the DoJ as part of its final settlement with Microsoft requires a Plain Jane version of Windows XP, since the default install will have no web browser or multimedia programs on the system.
Re:Get Real. (Score:3, Insightful)
This is all about negotiating leverage: AOL's contract with Microsoft is up for renewal, and they want to squeeze the best terms possible out of MS to ensure that the little AOL icon is on as many OEM Windows desktops as possible.
So AOL spent millions of dollars funding Mozilla development, buying ICQ, WinAmp, etc. just so they can make a deal with Microsoft?
Or did they do all that to have answers to MSIE, MSN Messenger, and Windows Media Player?
Then again, I don't presume to issue my opinions as "news flashes."
P.S. With the remedy phase against Microsoft coming, I don't think AOL Time Warner is quite as scared of Microsoft as you think.
Speaking as an AOL beta tester... (Score:5, Informative)
FWIW (Score:3, Interesting)
If AOL uses Moz, that'll help it gain acceptance much more quickly. Ask yourself where IE would be if Netscape had played nice with AOL all those years ago. Okay, probably still on every PC, but it'd be sharing much more mindshare with Netscape.
If you just Try it (Score:2, Insightful)
2 months ago i heard Moz was making good prograss and seing how IE 6 is Junk(keeps freezing when Looking up DNS) I gave Moz a shot. I am converted.
I dont have to worry about pop up ads and VIruses. I say if We just Get Ppl to acutally try it the word of mouth with spread.
Just think of what will happed whejn AOL includes it with AOL 8?(is that what the next number wil be?) Kudos to the devs they put out a great product
AOL Pushing Mozilla (Score:2, Insightful)
Mozilla 1.0 and Microsoft's Mac Strategy (Score:3, Insightful)
One big appeal of Mozilla is that, with this browser, non-Wintel users aren't second-class citizens.
IE 6.0 for Windows came out last August. Yet Mac users still aren't even at the 5.5 version -- the most current version for Macs is still 5.1.
The unstated message Microsoft sends to Mac users is, "You want the coolest, latest browser, then switch to Windows. If you want your browser to be two years obsolete, stick with your little toy Mac."
With the release of Mozilla 1.0, this browser will be giving IE some heavy competition -- particularly on non-Wintel platforms. It'll be interesting to see if Microsoft suddenly starts offering Mac users a much more current and attractive version of IE. And if they do, the question will be: why weren't they doing this all along?
Re:Mozilla 1.0 and Microsoft's Mac Strategy (Score:2)
I run a PC and Mac at work, with IE 5.1 on the Mac. I'm typing this message on the Mac, because IE 5.1 is a damned good browser - I've been using it for the past few months, and it hasn't crashed on me once (and I browse a lot).
meaningless version numbers (Score:4, Informative)
The reason for this is because Microsoft's Mac products are produced by an entirely different division of the company [microsoft.com], which focuses on Mac-specific interfaces and features as well as maximum compatibility with Windows-made files. It's also partly because most of the whiz-bang features for IE-Win (and Office-Win) are specific to the Windows OS, nearly impossible to reproduce on the Mac even if Mac users wanted them. Microsoft's Mac and Windows products may have the same name, but invariably that's where the similarity ends.
Mozilla and Netscape Navigator have used a common code base for all platforms, so identical version numbers were meaningful there. Microsoft does not. Comparing IE-Mac and IE-Win by version numbers is an exercise in futility.
And as an unrelated aside: is IE6 for Windows [microsoft.com] really all that different from IE5? I sure don't see any major differences in my day-to-day browsing.
Re:Mozilla 1.0 and Microsoft's Mac Strategy (Score:2)
Version numbering is not a fair comparison. The codebases are separate. You may as well say that Windows 2000 is two hundredfold better than OS X.
In fact, large chunks of v6 Win standards rendering is based on v5 Mac, which was the first browser to implement CSS1 [alistapart.com] 99+% correctly.
Yes, there are a couple bonus features in 6 that aren't on Mac. Personally, I can live without the My Pictures folder and the Windows Media sidebar.
I personally use the latest Mozilla as my browser, but IE 5.1 doesn't suck.
Missing the server (Score:2, Interesting)
Yeah yeah yeah - quote netcraft at me with Apache = 60% and so on. I believe it too, but it doesn't matter. *MANY* commerce site - the things your parents and friends visit - run on IIS (for better or for worse). You can argue percentages all you want, but there's enough of them out there. Heck Macs are about 5% of the computer market, but some people still care about them.
If you even concede that IIS has a 15% share of servers conducting commerce, that's a big number.
My point? If mozilla ever starts to be a credible browser threat, IIS7 (or 8 or whatever) will suddenly either not work with mozilla at all, OR give lower priority treatment to mozilla requests. Or, better yet, just occasionally drop requests, making it even harder to diagnose.
"Works fine when I use IE7.5, but danged if Mozilla 1.01.02RC3 (cause that's about where they'll be) crashes sometimes!"
There's already issues with SSL between IE and Apache servers and non IE browsers and IIS. MS controls too much on both sides - IN BUSINESS/COMMERCE, WHERE IT COUNTS - to ever let anything else ever get too big again.
Responses?
Give me a break! (Score:2)
Now I've heard some paranoid things before, but Microsoft is not quite so stupid as to cripple the performance of their software for a competing browser, just to make "15% of the web" slower to surf for Mozilla users. They will INSTANTLY lose credibility with MANY IIS MAINTAINERS. Companies tend to get pissed off when software excludes some of their customers. (Ignoring those companies in bed with Microsoft, of course.)
Works fine when I use IE7.5, but danged if Mozilla 1.01.02RC3 (cause that's about where they'll be) crashes sometimes!
You're trying to make fun of the version numbering for Mozilla, but I've got IE 6 installed right now, which lists it's version number as: 6.0.2600.0000.xpclnt_qfe.010827-1803.
Yes, that is what it says in the "About MSIE" window for "version."
Re:Give me a break! (Score:2)
But it's generally known as IE6.
Now I've heard some paranoid things before, but Microsoft is not quite so stupid as to cripple the performance of their software for a competing browser, just to make "15% of the web" slower to surf for Mozilla users.
DR DOS.
Now that that's out of the way, I'm being conservative when I say 15%. I've watched my wife surf, and probably 50-60% of the sites she visits are IIS-based.
They will INSTANTLY lose credibility with MANY IIS MAINTAINERS.
Whoops! Here I thought it was CEOs and CIOs and whatnot that make purchasing decisions, not 'IIS maintainers'. People will take what's pushed to them by IIS, by and large, and MS is smart enough to go after *large* public customer accounts with gusto. It's not Amazon, but bn.com is IIS based. They are a very big company with a lot of public exposure (stores around the country, etc). That's just one example.
Doesn't matter how many people are using mozilla - if they sites they're going to to shop/browse don't work, they won't use that browser. And it's a hell of a lot easier to change a few servers at a few companies than it is to try to get people to switch en-masse to a new browser.
Re:Missing the server (Score:2)
How do you think cripling software would make people want to use it? You're paranoid:) If most of the Mozilla users that visit my webshop would not be able to buy anything because I run an intentionally cripled webserver, I'd ditch that webserver immediately. The same story for cripled browsers. Stability is very important to nearly all users so I don't think there is any reason for your scenario to happen. Ever.
Could you tell me more about the Apache/SSL problems with IE? I've never experienced any trouble at all.
(Is it cripled, crippled or kriplet?:))
Re:Missing the server (Score:2)
Re:Missing the server (Score:2)
If something was working for you, then you switch and things are worse, what is your natural reaction? As much as I'd like to see this happen, I suspect AOL will lose some people and MSN will gain some as a result.
NOTE above I didn't say that things just won't work at all. My own theory is that IIS will sporadically drop stuff and/or give lower priority to requests from non-IE browsers. It won't be 'you can't visit here!' plastered on the site. Just subtle performance differences.
Dumb question - is Mozilla worth it? (Score:2, Interesting)
Slow as molasses. Tuned it a bit, but it's still dog slow.
I hate IE - but I need something that uses my DSL and doesn't take 60 seconds to render an email or bring up a page.
Is there much difference between the Mozilla 1.0 build and the Netscape 6.11? Should I have chosen native Win code during the install instead of "generic" code?
Are there any useful sites to help with this - and what are their URLs? And does anyone know how much of a difference (stats, URLs, basic ratio) there is between the Netscape build and the Mozilla build?
Yes, I tried Google - and it helped a bit in tuning some things. But I've got a Qwest DSL line, and it's dog slow now.
-
Re:Dumb question - is Mozilla worth it? (Score:2)
Is there much difference between the Mozilla 1.0 build and the Netscape 6.11?
One major difference I saw first-hand from a development standpoint is that Mozilla 0.9x has better support for CSS than Netscape 6.2
Re:Dumb question - is Mozilla worth it? (Score:2, Informative)
IIRC, Netscape 6.11 is based on mozilla 0.9.2, which was released about 9 months ago. There have been some improvements since then, notably:
- substantial performance tuning
- tabbed browsing
- the javascript debugger
- DOM inspector (I think)
- a complete re-jig of the menus and context menus (though the latter is driving some people nuts)
Re:Dumb question - is Mozilla worth it? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dumb question - is Mozilla worth it? (Score:2)
Secondly, 4.7 may be fast but it's handling of CSS is absolutely abysmal. No point clicking on my homepage (which has been verified as HTML 4.01 and CSS compliant by the W3C validators).
Thirly, tabbed browsing is so very, very cool.
Re:Dumb question - is Mozilla worth it? (Score:2)
Using Mozilla everywhere (Score:5, Insightful)
So I have changed my user agent string, and both Mozilla and Galeon now claim to be Netscape 4.0. Given how buggy and crash-prone 4.0 was, everyone is using 4.7x if they are really using Netscape, so "Netscape 4.0" ought to be a red flag in a server log.
Here is my user agent string for Mozilla:
Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; Mozilla 0.9.9; Debian GNU/Linux;)
So there is at least a chance that if webmasters look at the server logs, they can see that I'm actually using Mozilla. If they just use scripts to tally what browsers have visited their sites, and the scripts ignore the "compatible" remark, my visits will show up as Netscape 4.0... oh well, no trick is perfect.
Here is what you put into prefs.js to set the user agent string this way:
user_pref("general.useragent.override", "Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; Mozilla 0.9.9; Debian GNU/Linux;)")
Mozilla can handle every web site I care about, if it can get in. This trick lets it in.
Maybe Mozilla should have a feature that lets you set the user agent string on a per-site basis! That way we could be leaving "Mozilla" in the logs on most sites, and only lying to the sites that won't let Mozilla in.
steveha
Re:Using Mozilla everywhere (Score:2)
But really, the good thing is that I've seen fewer and fewer sites that require this. Having an incorrect UA string is counterproductive in the long run -- it's better to leave it as it is and whine to the broken sites.
Here's a Good Question (Score:5, Funny)
Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; Q312461)
The new Mozilla browser, which AOL calls Netscape 6, is showing a user agent string like this:
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:0.9.9+)
So when the 1.0 version is released, are they really going to follow that same trend? Or will they use the user agent I propose here:
Mozilla/1.0 (No, really, this is Mozilla 1.0, not Netscape or shitty old MSIE pretending to be Mozilla.)
And just imagine when we get to Mozilla 4.0:
Mozilla/4.0 (No, not Netscape 4.x or MSIE 6.x, this is truly Mozilla 4.0... PLEASE, YOU MUST BELIEVE ME!)
Mozilla Still Does Not Have Multilanguage Support (Score:2)
Note about Mitchell Baker... (Score:2)
I personally don't like her (having met her in person), and think that she deserved to get laid off because she didn't seem to have a good attitude and was not very outgoing. She was even pushing for a "source-only" release of Mozilla 1.0 so they "don't have to support it".
I personally hope that Mozilla 1.0 will bring in fresh new developers to the project. That would definitely be a boost, otherwise I am afraid that developers are getting burnt out.
Is it just me... (Score:2, Interesting)
1. It is not really a "real" 1.0 release
2. It has always been buggy and not useable
3. It is not as mature as IE
4. AOL might switch to it, but only because of sour grapes
5. Its history shows it is unreliable
6. No one in their right mind would trust their future in Mozilla.
Maybe I read too much into it, but that was the sense I got. As someone who has been using Mozilla on Windows, Macintosh, and Linux since 0.8 or so, none of this has been my experience. It is more solid than IE, faster, and very reliable. It now has at least as many features as IE and crashes almost never on any of the platforms I have used it on.
VS .NET generated code (Score:3, Informative)
It is going to be UGLY when the 35 Million Gecko users (I know, shush) smack up against hundreds of ASP
Re:Netscape is dead (Score:5, Interesting)
While this was actually true to some degree in the early days of the Mozilla project and the later days of the IE project (IE 6 is almost respectable...for a Microsoft project), I believe Mozilla has surpassed Internet explorer in several areas that are important to at least myself. For one, as a sometimes web developer, Mozilla sticks closer to the standards. I've found myself on more than one occasion having to go back and figure out how to crap-up my HTML code to make it look right in IE. That's a waste of time, but because of people like you, and companies like Microsoft, I have to do it. Further, when I used to use IE back in the dark age of my OS use (i.e. Windows...also note that that i.e. has no relation to IE. In fact, even i.e. is embarrased by IE), I used to open up new windows like crazy! With tabbed browsing in Mozilla, I can keep a single instance of Mozilla open and keep all the sites I'm at organized! I'm never using a browser without tabs again!
For these and other reasons, I truly like Mozilla better than IE...even better than Navigator as well, as it seems less bloted than Communicator 6.0.
Why I prefer Mozilla (Score:2, Informative)
Mouse gestures in Mozilla (Score:3, Insightful)
After you have installed [mozdev.org] mouse gestures from Optimoz [mozdev.org] simply edit .../chrome/mozgest/content/gestimp.js to modify gestures as you like.
However, there's a bug [mozdev.org] that causes install to fail partially in some of the latest nightly builds. After install you have to edit .../chrome/mozgest/content/ pref/mozgestPrefOverlay.xul and replace all occurrences of "outliner" with "tree" to make preferences work (pref should be the in the advanced preferences branch, after editing you need to restart Mozilla). Do this only if you cannot see "Mouse Gestures" pref in the Advanced preferences brach.
Re:Netscape is dead (Score:2)
Re:Another one? (Score:2)
See slashdot reader change their perceptions of slashdot?
Re:Really kewl. Yeah, right. (Score:2)
Yeah, 1.0 will have bugs. Guess, what? IE 6.0 will have bugs too. Bugs MS knows about. Software projects that feel the need to get released sometime damn near always shipped with known (and deemed acceptable) bugs. Welcome to the real world.
Your complaint that they haven't generated a stable release to date is somewhat weak as well. They are shipping 0.X.X versions. That ->0- out front stands for not stable. You can complain much more when there are unacceptable problems with the 1.0. Until then, just yell at the Netscape folks for releasing a 6.0 version based on someone elses beta software.
Re:funny browser compatibility experience (Score:2, Informative)
"Have you tried Internet Explorer 6, as that is the most recent and should solve your problem. That is actually what 95% of our Customer's use who access our website. Thank you."
Can you imagine that? Think they were blowing me off?
But you have to appreciate your credit union's point of view. They need to do what they can to keep their costs down. In this context, it means designing their site around what the vast majority of what their users are browsing with. If they had to design, test and maintain the site for every single version of evey single browser under the sun, it would significantly increase their development costs (and keep in mind that such costs have nothing to do with the day-to-day operations of the credit union, it could still operate without a web-banking solution.) which would in turn raise the costs you would be paying to your credit union.
There was another posting in a forum here in which someone was complaining that a certain image-based spam trap was bad since it would not work with Lynx. If this logic is followed, it means every website out there would have to be designed to run under Lynx. Unfortunately, this is not realistic if you want to make money off od your website.
Granted, if everything was designed to run under Lynx, then it would most likely be standards-compliant with every other browser out there :)
Re:funny browser compatibility experience (Score:3, Insightful)
They could do that by coding to W3C standards and letting browser makers do their job - conforming to standards.
Re:Kmeleon comes along? (Score:2)
Are they?
Re:Kmeleon comes along? (Score:2)
I will use mozilla as long as it is a quality product and remains as such. I will not dump it for the new fad unless that new fad is truly better.
Re:jksdhjklas; as ;vak (Score:2)