AP reports on renewed "Browser War" 628
An anonymous reader writes "CNN and others are reporting an Associated Press story on "the revived browser war" with Mozilla paired against Microsoft. It seems the 1.0 release is creating some waves out there. " Considering most people consider
the war long since over, I can't imagine this mattering much.
90%+ for IE still (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:90%+ for IE still (Score:5, Funny)
Re:90%+ for IE still (Score:5, Funny)
Re:90%+ for IE still (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:90%+ for IE still (Score:2, Insightful)
Not too uncommon for the nerd minority, but still extremely uncommon in general. Thats not going to influence the numbers.
Re:90%+ for IE still (Score:3, Informative)
Believe it or not, this doesn't seem to work with the newer builds of Mozilla.
By this I mean you can set the user agent pref (See prefs.js and edit/create user.js to set your own) and the about:mozilla page reports the correct faked agent. But go to any web page that reports your user-agent string back to you (such as here [lycos.com] near the bottom) and it still gives the old built-in user agent string. Since I have no real reason to fake my string, (and this therefore doesn't affect me) I haven't filed a bug report.
Curiouser, an outdated mozilla.org page [mozilla.org] reports the correct values. (Scroll down to "Profile of Your Browser".
Another thing is that navigator.appVersion string cannot be changed other than modifying the source... it won't get changed with a faked user agent string. There's an entry in bugzilla for this.
So what gives? I dunno, other than there seem to still be a few quirks of Mozilla that won't likely be worked out for a few more versions.
Re:90%+ for IE still (Score:4, Interesting)
And when I use curl, I use an IE5 user-agent string. Some sites just won't let you in otherwise.
We've all heard it before: when (yes, I said when) AOL switches to Mozilla, there will instantly be millions of Mozilla users.
Re:90%+ for IE still (Score:4, Insightful)
You want a site to fix this in under 24 hours? Just tell them that you're blind and that their site won't let your blide-enabeled web-browser in.
Dreams of ADA lawsuits start dancing in their heads. It works really well for government sites, and moderatly well for medium sized corporations.
Re:If you can't get into the site, (Score:2)
I have two clients who are legally blind, but when I write webmasters and complain about poor site accessability on my clients' behalf, I have yet to get a response.
Re:If you can't get into the site, (Score:3, Insightful)
Hopefully that mentality is going away with the fall of easy VC money. My own company is standards complient due lazyness - we don't want to waste time dealing with any gripes. We've found that doing it right the first time is actaully the lazy way - a we like being lazy. Give us more time to post to Slashdot!
So you and the other 5 people using curl... (Score:2)
Re:90%+ for IE still (Score:2)
Probably never going to happen unless things change fast.
1.Microsoft really does not want to give up it's control over the browser market (and pragmatic Internet standards at that).
2. AOL does not want to lose the AOL icon on the Windows desktop/Start Menu.
3. There are existing contracts between MS and AOL about using IE as AOL's default browser.
4. There would be a service/support nightmare in AOL as customers ring in and ask why obscuresitexyz.com or obscurestoreasd.net do not work suddenly.
Re:90%+ for IE still (Score:2)
I just read where some people estimate at least a million of them are using their "1000 free hours for 45 days" and will never pay AOL.
When their time runs out and AOL ships them a new CD the month after switching to Gecko, there will *quickly* be a million users on it.
Additionally, while I'm sure a lot of AOL users don't upgrade regularly, if only 5% do, there's 1.7 Million new Mozilla users, *quickly*.
But, you're right, not instantly...my bad.
Re:90%+ for IE still (Score:2)
AOL provides an Internet-connected IP address, and software that handles the most commonly used Internet protocols. What more could they do to not be a "walled garden"?
Don't forget the PS3 (Score:5, Insightful)
Add to those:
Mozilla will almost certainly break IE-domination in this year (by reaching more than 10% marketshare, which is too much to ignore for webdesigners) and will become the standard browser within 10 years.
Re:90%+ for IE still (Score:2)
35+
40+
20+
25+
30
---
150%
Methinks you need remedial math or reading skills, but probably BOTH!
Cheers!
Perception is reality (Score:3, Insightful)
So, now it's back. More media exposure for Mozilla (especially when it's quite positive) is a good thing. If Mozilla were bad, no one would care. Mozilla is good, very good, and people notice that.
Go Go Mozilla!
Re:Perception is reality (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Perception is reality (Score:2)
Either way, I am using Mozilla because it's better for me. I think it rules the earth and the seven seas.
War is over unless AOL changes default (Score:4, Interesting)
Why AOL hasn't switched after buying netscape must say something about microsofts control...
Competition is good though, so hopefully this will help all browsers get better..
Re:War is over unless AOL changes default (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, to convert your entire userbase to Netscape will mean a significant portion of sites will no longer look correct or will cease to work entirely. Your customers don't understand browser compliance, they merely know that they could visit sites with AOL 7, but not AOL 8. Is the deluge of customer support phone calls and email really worth the hassle?
Re:War is over unless AOL changes default (Score:3, Insightful)
If I were in charge of AOL, and I wanted to once again make one of my products (Netscape) a staple on the internet, I would employ one simple strategy. I would pick a version of the Mozilla engine (aka, Netscape). Mozilla 1.0 final seems like a good choice, as it's a stable release, and it has reached approval from many critics. Now, I would make a development timeline for AOL version 8 (or whatever version might be next). Then, I would make an all media announcement: "AOL version 8 is scheduled to release on December 1st. At this time, we will fully implement the Mozilla engine into our browser, using Mozilla 1.0 as our framework."
The important step is the follow through, however. I can say that, but I have to do two things to make sure I maintain my market share. First, I have to make sure that I do in fact implement the Mozilla engine completely. Second, I have to make some sort of incentive for AOL users to upgrade. Nevermind a minor release. This would have to be a major release with lots of new features. Maybe take advantage of Chatzilla and get that fully integrated into AOL. Whatever it takes...but just changing the rendering engine or the browser will not be enough for most AOL users to upgrade.
The old addage is "If it isn't broken, don't fix it." Many people know that. But many people also know the caveat: "If its got new features, it might be worth a try."
Re:War is over unless AOL changes default (Score:2)
Most sites, whether designed for IE or not, still look fine with other browsers. It's really a small minority that absolutely don't work at all with anything but IE (and some of them only because they just plain block non-IE referers).
Now if (when) AOL changes to Mozilla, suddenly only half the population is using IE. That small minority of sites will now be blocking 50% of their potential customers instead of 5%.
Why they chose to block any customers remains a mystery, but blocking the entire AOL population is just not economically viable.
They don't know, but they do care (Score:3, Informative)
I like to browse with konqueror and I try to do something about it when I can't. I send a polite email to the webmaster telling my problems. They usually are surprised that their site, created with whatever "point-and-click" website creation tools their artists are able to use, doesn't work for standard browsers. They are even ignorant of the fact that the web standard is published by the W3C, not microsoft. The happy ending to the story usually is that one more website becomes compliant with the *true* standard and one less website requires IE.
Re:War is over unless AOL changes default (Score:3, Informative)
Re:War is over unless AOL changes default (Score:3, Insightful)
No... it will mean designers will have to think about W3C compliance. The days of dual-coding for NS4 and IE4 are long gone. Anybody who can't right a page that works on both browsers without even detecting which one you're on has done of one two things:
a) Designed it poorly.
b) Written it without ever looking at the standards.
Re:War is over unless AOL changes default (Score:4, Informative)
AOL 8.0 Beta still uses IE (Score:5, Insightful)
A bit of history (Score:5, Interesting)
Unfortunately for Bill Gates, his company has rested on its laurels. IE6 offers little that wasn't present in IE5, and the many useful features in Mozilla 1.0 (tabbed browsing, anti-popup features, speed, stability, and security) mean that IE will be losing a significant amount of market share very soon.
And how can we complain about that? May the best product win - again. It's nice to see open source come out on top.
losing a significant amount of market share (Score:3, Funny)
Bookmarked.
Care to bet on this?
Re:losing a significant amount of market share (Score:5, Funny)
Bookmarked.
Care to bet on this?
Don't you mean "My Favorites" ?
Here's a hint: Right click on "My Computer" then rename it to "My Komputer." Then all your fiends will think youre a cool KDE Linux user.
Gotta go.. The paperclip is helping me write a letter.
Re:A bit of history (Score:3)
Sounds good! Where can I get the rpm of IE for linux?
IE6 offers little that wasn't present in IE5, and the many useful features in Mozilla 1.0 (tabbed browsing, anti-popup features, speed, stability, and security) mean that IE will be losing a significant amount of market share very soon.
Sorry, you were making sense up until the "Speed" part there. I'll admit it's getting much better with 1.1a, but it's not nearly as quick as IE4/5/6 yet (at least with DOM manipulation via javascript).
I'm using Moz more these days, mostly to test pages, but it's not quite good enough to become my default browser under Windows as yet. Maybe on the next release...
Re:A bit of history (Score:4, Interesting)
And I guess the fact that MS:
1) "Integrated" IE into the OS so that you got it whether you wanted it or not, and
2) Threatened the computer OEM's with withheld Windows licenses if they installed Netscape on computers going out the door, thus forcing them to pull Netscape
had nothing to do with it.
Face it, with actions such as these, in which MS used their power to skew the market by shutting off marketing channels, you do not have a fair fight. If MS had played fair AND achieved the market share they have, THEN they would have something to brag about.
IE7 and CSS (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a hugely significant event for advocates of CSS. I'm eagerly looking forward to this, even though I don't plan on ever using Windows on a regular basis. Given Microsoft's ability to bulldoze Windows users into upgrading, we may soon have a world in which, for the first time ever, *the dominant Web browser* has good CSS support.
This could improve things for CSS in general even if we don't end up with the dreaded Microsoft-only world. Developers of *other* browsers will no longer be able to hide behind claims of industry-leader compatibility when releasing buggy CSS implementations.
Of course DOCTYPE sniffing is going to complicate the situation somewhat, since IE7 will still have a bugwards compatibility mode. I'm hoping that the existence of IE7 will cause enough people start intentionally invoking standards mode that other browser developers notice. While from a theoretical point of view DOCTYPE sniffing makes no sense--it's a pure hack--in practice it's a lot better than no standards mode at all, which is the only likely alternative.
Furthermore, my secondhand source also tells me that IE7 will finally bring full PNG support to IE. This is a major step ahead in InterNet graphics.
Re:IE7 and CSS (Score:4, Informative)
Actually, IE6 already has doctype sniffing [microsoft.com]. Unfortunately, it has a glitch so that if you put <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> or something similar as your first line, which is standard for XHTML, IE becomes confused, even if you specify the proper doctype on the second line. The result is that this puts the browser into "quirks" mode, which is probably exactly what you don't want if you're writing XHTML.
Of course, even in its "strict" mode, IE6's CSS layout is far from perfect, so the changes in IE7 will be great. And finally being able to use PNG's properly will ROCK!
The key to the Browser Wars... (Score:2)
For IE, the future "killer app" will be integration with (blech)
We'll see. My money would, alas, be on Microsoft right now. Monopolies are just too damned effective in this space.
Re:The key to the Browser Wars... (Score:2, Insightful)
As long as enough users adopt Mozilla, sites will be forced to write standards-compliant pages. That is all that really matters. AOL alone could bring in enough Mozilla users to cause such a change.
IE4 and netscape 4.7 (Score:2)
Who can only use 1 browser? I have to have 4 on my pc, just to get my damn work done. War, hell ya its a cluster fuck.
-
Mozilla, sweet sweet mozilla...
Why Mozilla? (Score:2)
<clip> Mozilla's Baker insists the project's success is critical to the Web's future: "If there's only one browser and that browser is tied to the business plan of a particular entity, it's quite likely that what we see on the Web will be limited." </clip>
In otherwords, eventough the trouble of installing Mozilla instead of IE is a pain for most average people, and the gain might be minimal, people should do it just because: otherwise we are doomed. If this is the motivation, it will never happen. Getting it pre-installed on Windows (AOL,IBM, HP/Compaq to the rescue?) is really the only chance IMHO.
Re:Why Mozilla? (Score:2)
If the Army of Lemmings (AOL) (Score:2, Funny)
If the war is over, who's the loser? (Score:5, Insightful)
If I added up all the time spent closing those annoying pop up/under windows with IE, I'm sure it'd more than make up for the time spent waiting for Mozilla to get swapped back into memory (I often run a lotta apps, and Mozilla uses a lot of RAM (who doesn't these days?)...
And then there's the seizure-inducing rapid-flash animated gifs that loop to infinity in IE...in Mozilla I can set them to run just once. Or not view them at all (or only ones from the same server). The savings from not paying those medical expenses...I could put a down payment on a house with that money instead!
The Tabs are a nice feature...when I'm running a lotta apps, there's no room for text on the Taskbar...but my tabs can tell me what page they're holding for me.
If everyone else sticks with IE, at least I know I'm happier browsing now than I was before. Thanks Mozilla!
It's not a real war.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Since Mozilla is the 'better browser' but doesn't accept sloppy coding, IE has an advantage.
There is not a huge difference inbetween the commands that Mozilla accepts but IE doesn't.
Frosted glass (Score:5, Interesting)
Those of you using IE will need to switch to Mozilla. Those of you using Mozilla won't even notice the part that doesn't work under IE, it feels so natural.
Cool effect that works only under Mozilla and just feels right. Now who's at the disadvantage?
That is a cool effect.... (Score:2)
It does use a lot of CPU, but oh well. That's what the CPU is for right?
Re:Frosted glass (Score:2)
Re:Frosted glass (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Frosted glass (Score:3, Insightful)
Whoever made that web page, that's who.
I looked at that page (with a browser that has CSS), and it was pretty cool! So then I looked at it with a completely CSS-ignorant browser, and the page still worked fine. It just looked bad. When I see a web page that looks bad, I don't think, "Oh no, my browser sucks." I think, "Wow, whoever made this page, was clueless."
MSIE users will surely draw the same conclusion. And it's the right conclusion too. If someone makes a web page that requires CSS (or requires that some specific style be used) to look good, then they're messing up.
Re:Frosted glass (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, so you admit that people who make pages that require IE to look good are messing up too?
I hope you also realize how some really neat stuff is not being done because of lack of standards support in IE. IE is to Mozilla now what NS 4.x was to IE before now.
IE = Old and Busted
Mozilla = New Hotness
The Real War -- Battleground Web Developers (Score:2)
The battleground will be the Web Developers. When they realize that Moz and Moz based browsers command the largest collection of suckers^H^H^H^H^H^H^H consumers on the Internet, then they will change their sites to make the pages look "good". When they change their sites, others will move to the browser that displays the pages best.
And the browsers that are W3 compliant, and render pages correctly, will move back into a position of competition.
Re:It's not a real war.... (Score:2)
What you just said there basically translates to:
IE renders most Mozilla pages fine, and Mozilla renders most IE pages fine.
For the most part, there is overlap in the two sets of pages that the browsers render. However, there're a few pages that won't render in one or the other. No big deal, really. It's a question of which 'most' is more important to you.
Re:It's not a real war.... (Score:2)
Self-Hype (Score:5, Insightful)
Mozilla may thrill some tech-savvy users, "but it's not going to make a dent with the mainstream," said WebSideStory's Geoff Johnston, unless, that is, AOL Time Warner puts major marketing muscle behind it.
Like, oh, I don't know, having the news division of AOL Time Warner run stories on the browser?
-jon
Browser war over for me since 0.9.2 (Score:2)
There is no question of which browser is far superior. And since these products do not generate direct revenue, I'd say that the better one is clear winner.
It's Over (Score:4, Insightful)
It really doesn't matter to me which browser people use as long as it supports 95% of the latest specs (in this case HTML 4 and CSS-1). If it supports DOM, XML, and CSS-2 even better.
Mozilla's path to victory: Annoyance free browsing (Score:5, Insightful)
I think Mozilla's chance to grab some market share is by pushing for the fact that it gives you control over these annoyances. Turn off all of those unrequested popups with a couple of mouse clicks, or you can go back to using IE and have to close a bazillion windows every time you are done surfing.
So, I think the browser war isn't quite over, it's just going to be fought on a different front.
You can browse annoyance-free with IE, too. . . (Score:4, Informative)
Turn off all of those unrequested popups with a couple of mouse clicks, or you can go back to using IE and have to close a bazillion windows every time you are done surfing.
Actually, that's all it takes for IE, too--just use the highest possible security settings, including "Disable Active Scripting," for your "Internet" zone. Probably 90% of the websites I surf render just fine without it. And if I think I'm ever going to come back to one of the 10% that don't, I can add it to my "trusted" sites list, which uses "Internet"-level security settings.
Re:You can browse annoyance-free with IE, too. . . (Score:3, Informative)
Which is burried under Edit->Preferences... then "Security Zones", then Zone: Trusted Zones then "Add Site..." THEN "Add..." THEN type the friggin URL (or well yea, paste). AHHHH Why isn't there a "Trust" button I can add to my Toolbar that just does this?
Microsoft: As feature-rich as a Mac with all the ease of use of a Univac.
Re:You can browse annoyance-free with IE, too. . . (Score:4, Informative)
That means 1 in 10 don't render fine. Would you buy a car if it didn't start 1 in 10 times?
Having "toggle JavaScript On and Off" as your only option isn't an option. Deciding what Javascript can/cannot do is better. In Mozilla, you can tell it, specifically, no unsolicited pop-up windows. Yes, it even differentiates between click-generated pop-ups and automatic pop-ups.
Washington Post has a story too (Score:5, Informative)
Anyway, here is the link [washingtonpost.com]. One of his favorite features was the ability to block ads. He even tells people how to turn that feature on.
-Pete
These aren't the Browser Wars you're looking for (Score:2, Insightful)
Quality Choices (Score:3, Interesting)
There are a lot of high quality choices out there for browsers right now. Konqueror [konqueror.org] is probably my favorite right now. Mozilla is a strong contender. Netscape [netscape.com] as we knew it is pretty dead right now, heavily wounded in the "browser war". Opera [opera.com] has some nice features and is reported to be very fast, if you are willing to pay for it or put up with ads.
A simple fact is that IE comes bundled with MS Windows. And the vast majority of PCs sold in the US (and the world for that matter) come bundled with flavor of Windows. As long as PCs come bundled with Windows, and thus IE, and as long as the average consumer is lazy enough to accept the default choice for their software IE will be the leading browser. Of course this isn't really new news and we all know that MS has been convicted of antitrust violations for this very practice of bundling.
All the while something that I don't see very much material written about is that other OSes come with their default browsers and apps as well. KDE's [kde.org] default browser is Konqueror. It just so happens that I like Konqueror, so I use it. But if I didn't would it really be that hard to switch to Netscape or Mozilla or if I really wanted something different to use Lynx? Not really.
Re:Quality Choices (Score:2)
I want to see Slashdot Log Files (Score:2, Insightful)
I use Linux, I use Windows, and I develop site every now and again. Noting to fancy shcmancy but just for pocket change. So I keep all browsers on my system so I can see that whatever I am developing remains uniform. And usually it does. I do not develop for any one but so all can see it in pretty much the same way.
Netscape sucks the big one, while I can make anything run like a charm on IE and Opera. And stability issues(Java applets working and not crashing browser, win again with the IE and Opera).
So what do we do? For one lets stop turning this into a MS bitch and moan session. Tired of it, it is worn out. We are talking about browsers and ya'll are whining about all Microsoft products. Show me the slashdot logs and see how much traffic is IE. And do not come back the the fricken answer"I gotta use IE cause it is a work box" BULLSHIT. If we are all the hotshot admins we claim to be we can run a nix on a box at work, or at least another browser of choice on Windows to show we are fighting the good fight.
I imagine that the
Hell, I use IE, no skin off my nose. I have one box just for browsing and I use opera on it and it works fine. Ilove opera. But IE ain't bad in many ways. Show me the logs TACO
And MS might be the monster that ate the world but some of there products are not too bad. Office works and people like it. Star Office eats it, open office eats it less but still bites. I would rather use wordstar.
You know what the next killer app would be? Us coming off the high horse that linux is the be all end all salve for anything that ails a computer. It is good stuff, but UNIX is UNIX, and a new Nix is just an old nix.
Christ, I love
Puto
Word to the wise... (Score:2)
Wasn't she fired? (Score:2)
Mozilla's general manager Mitchell Baker says the browser is "a critical component of keeping the Web open and allowing innovation.
Wasn't she fired last year [slashdot.org]?
Please don't point out what I could otherwise be doing with the brain cells I used to store and retrieve that bit of information. I'm pretty concerned about it myself...
There shouldn't even be a browser war (Score:4, Insightful)
All the discussions about IE looking, feeling, being better then any other browser don't matter to me. IE is MS's tool to internet domination through bad standards support and proprietary tags. This is what we should be fighting against. Educate web-developers not to take the easy road but follow the standards, drop IE-only tags, use validator.w3.org. If I can do it for my personal pages, they should be able to do it too.
---
"Anyone who slaps a 'this page is best viewed with Browser X' label on a Web page appears to be yearning for the bad old days, before the Web, when you had very little chance of reading a document written on another computer, another word processor, or another network."
-- Tim Berners-Lee in Technology Review, July 1996
Favorite Quote (Score:4, Informative)
Eh? What's that? Is this the same company that called the GPL "pac-man like" and Linux "unamerican?" How is it that all of a sudden that can't speak on rival products?
<snort>
The War is Over (Score:2, Funny)
Microsoft lost the browser war. (Score:2)
Think about it: why did Microsoft have such a low opinion about the Internet? They recognized the same thing that Marc Andreesen did: that it was a new platform for delivering applications. Microsoft didn't want that to happen; the incumbent platform was Windows. They were eventually forced to get into the browser business because the monopolist doesn't allow third-party applications with an installed base of more than a few thousand seats, of course, but it's all still standards-compliant.
Applications and information services are now delivered on the Web, not as little standalone Windows apps that you have to download and install. And that means the paradigm has shifted. The war is most definitely over, and Microsoft has lost.
"Browser War Already Over" (Score:4, Insightful)
One, did you ever read about "The War to End All Wars"? That was WWI! They were much more realistic about naming WWII.
Also, please realize what you thought about history perpetually progressing forward was a lie. Things are never determined. It's all still up for grabs. Winning is what happens in board games, in the real world it's a perpetual struggle. Yes, even among browsers.
CNN article does Moz a serious disservice (Score:2)
the point of the article... (Score:2, Insightful)
It All Depends on AOL (Score:2, Insightful)
See also the recent discussion about browser wars
Mozilla would win the browser war (Score:4, Interesting)
Unfortunately, most people are completely unaware of that simple, yet extremely powerful feature.
Mozilla has a greater advantage over IE (Score:2)
First of all, any issues involving bugs are fixed from a meare few hours to a few days. If I do recall correctly, Microsoft takes a few days to a few weeks, even longer and in fact, they don't even fix the bugs, they just remove the part that doesn't work (IE: the gopher hole).
Second of all, you OWN the browser. Once you download it you are free to do what you want with it within the policies of the GPL. If you have the skills to write an addon that will stop popup banners and banners in general, you are free to do so. If you want to make it so it runs on your PalmPilot or even your refridgerator, you're welcome to. Microsoft basically states they own the browser and they are free to rape your computer at will. To make matters worse, you are only able to get it for Windows, Macintosh, Solaris, and HP-UX, nothing else. Mozilla? It can run on almost any OS these days.
Mozilla, or Gecko rather, will be availble in the newer versions of AOL. What does this mean? This means that there is potential to have at least 1,000,000 new Mozilla users as there are something like that number using the free 1,000 hours. Over time it might mean that the 35,000,000 AOL users will be using Mozilla over IE and that can cause a huge dent in the amount of hits our webservers get with IE.
Mozilla may not just a web browser either. It has been said that you could write spreadsheet or word processing software from it's rendering engine. If this is true, then Mozilla is way better than IE.
Most Mozilla users don't use Windows either (Score:2)
Mozilla may be the best thing available on Linux or other systems, but nothing can yet touch IE on Windows.
Also, don't expect IE to come to a Linux box near you anytime soon without a court order. Not supporting Linux is a key part of their rule-the-desktop strategy. When Joe Avg. finds out Linux can't run his two favorite programs, IE and Word, he'll think twice about installing it.
Microsoft has won the Windows browser war. Any browser war now is inextricably tied to the OS "war".
Make mozilla.org your signature. (Score:3, Insightful)
Get the word out as best you can.
The harsh truth (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not trying to troll here, but it's the truth. And don't give me the typical "but IE breaks web standards, etc." I'm not talking from a developer's perspective, but from a user's perspective which we have seen time and time again is the real deciding factor in most technology "wars," fair or not.
I try my best to keep my machine MS-free, but when it comes to browsers, there was little choice in the matter. Netscape 4.x was a joke and Netscape 6.0 was freaking slooooowwwwwww. A lot of people (even those who despise MS) fled to MSIE for relief, and let's be honest. MS did a decent job with it, at least from a user's perspective.
I'm using Mozilla 1.0 now, trying to give it time to grow on me and replace IE. Mozilla has a few quirks, but its benefits outweigh the negatives and I see significantly little difference between it and IE in terms of user experience. I've been actively encouraging others to try it out, but it will take time. Netscape botched the browser war very badly and IE has rooted itself in the public mind as THE ONE AND ONLY BROWSER. Although I like Mozilla, I have real doubts that it will get far, but best of luck to them. I'm on their side.
--Rick
Dude, Galeon, j0 (Score:3, Informative)
One idea for another front on this "war" (Score:5, Interesting)
Not to Mention Fully Supported PNG in Mozilla (Score:3, Interesting)
What do most people who design for IE do to avoid this silliness? Is there any 24 bit graphic format that supports an alpha layer in IE? No, really, I'd like to know.
Re:Not to Mention Fully Supported PNG in Mozilla (Score:3, Informative)
Yes. There is. PNG.
You just can't use it straight in an IMG tag, you need to instance a DirectX blending filter. It's not complicated at all, but granted, it is platform-specific.
I have bookmarked this story (Score:3, Interesting)
These people control what you see and what you read - they make no bones about their desire to dominate the media world and for them to turn around and start lawsuits against a former ally and best buddy (MS) shows the level of loyalty and trust worthiness they should be afforded.
I use Mozilla on Linux - i like it - its not as stable nor as useable as IE5.5 but it is a damn good browser. Netscape is a bloated, buggy unuseable piece of crap on windows and from my experiments on linux as well. To defend AOL and beg for them to do something like this is a joke, they WILL not do anything unless they can gain a competitive advantage from it - this is the way they have built a business (and previous slashdot stories can attest to it)
Im bookmarking this so when they become 'evil' in the eyes of
It might sound bad to some people but superior products win marketshare - IE was better than Netscape - IE won whilst netscape frittered away a lead and became a second rate product (yet mozilla is a first rate ? go figure)
And yes the majority of the real world (non open source) consider IE a very good product.
It's an AP story on CNN's site.. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not objective (Score:4, Informative)
The War War (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously, who really wants to read about browser wars any more? The market will dictate which browser "wins." The rest of the browsers will have to be happy with less than a majority of users.
Big friggin whoopty-do!
I use mozilla because I like it. If MSIE comes out with something better, I might use it instead.
Re:The War War (Score:3, Funny)
Market broken (Score:3, Insightful)
If IE really did suck (Score:4, Insightful)
It's our job to change that. To make sure that people move to bigger and better browsers.
Re:If IE really did suck (Score:2)
I'm an Opera user, but I'm relatively happy with the web basically working like it should now. I don't wanna muck it up with having to use one browser for some sites and another for others. That is so 1995.
Oh, but it does. . . (Score:3, Insightful)
And more!
Having my desktop re-organized in terrible ways by IE 6, allowing Windows to make unauthorized connections to the web even when I don't have my browser fired up. . , well that just pisses me off.
I don't like to be a shill in some corporate control ploy.
Mozilla 1.0 is like a breath of fresh air! It does what I ask, it gives me power over simple things IE does not, such as turning off pop-ups, "unrequested windows" in the preferences, among many basic, sensible features. --Features which would only ever be written by non-corporate, private individuals who want a good browser.
IE is for the uninitiated, the unaware, the manipulated consumer sheep of the world.
And damn it, I AM NOT A NUMBER. . !
*ahem*
-Fantastic Lad
Re:Market broken (Score:2, Troll)
I don't care the market (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't care who uses IE. It's just that i don't want to be forced to use IE.
To avoid the web using proprietary formats, all we need to do is, to keep public awareness of the browser war. We don't need to win the war for Mozilla. We just have to remind content providers, that they may not decide the war.
For this aim, I see a good future. The amount of word documents offered to me as single choice is decreasing and the local online newspaper is fully mozilla compatible.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbo (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Wait till there's a security hole (Score:2, Informative)
The fact that the source is available doesn't make a program more vulnerable. You need to do some research on insecurity through obscurity before you start spouting -- it's a well-known fact that crypto algorithms are made available for peer review for exactly this purpose. A thoroughly reviewed code-base is much more secure than a closed-source one, and can be fixed much more quickly if a vulnerability is found.
Re:Wait till there's a security hole (Score:2)
Now I'm not saying that the hole will be that easy but the one that IS there will be easier to find and exploit with the source.
Re:I'm unimpressed with Mozilla. Opera, though... (Score:2)
Not really sure what your complaint is. If its just that the default theme looks like Netscape 4x then change the theme. Its not hard and it ships with the Mozilla Modern theme which I find very pretty. Heck I read somewhere that there's a theme that makes it look like IE!
The 'feel' is the same in someways but again the themes can change the button locations and there are tons of ways to customize. Just take a peek at the prefs menu before you dismiss it so easily.
Re:1 battle. (Score:2, Informative)
Mozilla is slow,
Moz 1 beats IE on page loads. The slow part is start up and the only reason that IE can do it faster is that you load everything but the window when you start your computer!
large
well apps usually take all the memory they can get (at least on Linux) and me not running much right now top reports that its taking only 35 megs right now. That's not bad and moz will run on a machine with 16 megs.
buggy at best
I can count on one hand how many times moz has crashed on me since 0.96, oh maybe you're talking about IE only webpages. You should stay away from those anyway.
The war of the browsers is over and IE won. Not because it's the better browser, but because everything is now written to be IE compatible rather that standards compliant.
No not everything. I'm in charge of a web development team and we write standards complient code. We've designed dozens of sites, they all work and work right.
And I'm not the only one either. I have visited maybe one site in the last few months that didn't show right in mozilla. So try it before just assuming things. Sweeping generalizations are bad.