Mozilla 1.4 Released 421
Phil writes "MozillaZine is reporting that Mozilla 1.4 has been released for Windows, Mac OS and Linux. The new version is pretty similar to today's Netscape 7.1, which is based on the same code, but lacks Netscape's proprietary features. More information can be found in the release notes. The release can be downloaded from mozilla.org's releases page or via FTP. From here on, mozilla.org's focus shifts to Mozilla Firebird and Mozilla Thunderbird." The official release news is now up on Mozilla's main page, so let the downloading begin.
YES! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:YES! (Score:3, Funny)
But, But, But, ... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:But, But, But, ... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:finally, I can mount Buffy! (Score:2, Funny)
Must be browser day (Score:3, Funny)
That's too much browser info to digest in one day. Get some PS2 articles in here.
Re:Must be browser day (Score:3, Insightful)
Install caveat (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Install caveat (Score:3, Informative)
So definately uninstall previous versions, or install 1.4 into a new directory. It does recommend this in the install documentation, btw.
Re:Install caveat (Score:5, Informative)
From the relnotes: Note: It is recommended that you uninstall previous versions of Mozilla before installing Mozilla 1.4. This will not delete your bookmarks, history, cookies and other information which is stored in your profile directory.
Re:Install caveat (Score:5, Informative)
The installation is aware of mozilla.exe running, and prompts that it is shutting it down.
I didn't even have to restart.
I'll see how well the update goes on a redhat box when I get home from work
NTLM Security! (Score:5, Informative)
MS Content Insecurity! (Score:4, Interesting)
Is anyone at Mozilla working on a quirks [mozilla.org] mode for Word- or Excel-generated HTML? Don't even think about Powerpoint!
Re:MS Content Insecurity! (Score:3, Informative)
hmmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:hmmmm (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, it is. (Score:5, Interesting)
Slashdot is the appropriate place to make such release announcements. If you don't like them taking up space here, turn off mozilla stories in your prefs, if you want to track Mozilla closer turn on the Mozilla slashbox.
Re:No it's not (Score:3, Insightful)
If you want to use IE, Opera, or Konqueror, good for you. However, I roll my own Mozilla, have several code changes that I wrote (wallet and javascript functionality) and some 3rd party diff patches (spellchecker and menu enhancements). I optimize the hell out of the code using every compiler option available to me and it takes just shy of 20 minutes to compile. The result? My self-built Mozilla puts IE and
Re:hmmmm (Score:5, Informative)
No. The announcements for RC1, RC2, and RC3 were really unnecessary.
However, this release--1.4 final--is definitely worthy of a post. This is the official 'stable production' release (the first since 1.0, I think), and is also the final relase in the old development path. If there were only three Mozilla announcements on
Re:hmmmm (Score:3, Insightful)
The RC posts are great. They attract stress-testers and help the debugging process move. If you don't like em, don't click the freakin link.
Re:hmmmm (Score:2)
You're just mad because we wouldn't let you join our club.
Re:hmmmm (Score:4, Funny)
Well I'm not giving up my girlfriend just to join you guys!
This was my Post!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Lovely... (Score:2)
mozilla.exe - Application Error
The instruction at "0x610f0769" referenced memory at "0x4349656f". The memory could not be "read".
Click on OK to terminate the program
Click on CANCEL to debug the program
Re:Lovely... (Score:5, Funny)
Increment by 1 so it reads 0x610f0770.
Results may vary.
Re:Lovely... (Score:2)
Regardless of that, perhaps some of the lovely folks in #mozillazine on irc.mozilla.org can help you out.
Re:Lovely... (Score:2)
Re:Lovely... (Score:2)
I installed it since I'd read a post here claiming that someone had gone back to Moz from Opera 7 after using 1.4, but if this is the kind of quality we can expect from Moz I think I will stick with Opera...
The memory could not be "read". (Score:2)
Psshaw.
Mozilla, you lie out of both sides of your mouth.
[this comment posted with Mozilla (TM)]
Re:Lovely... (Score:3, Funny)
Thanks, "Windows." That was a really "useful" error "message."
Re:Lovely... (Score:3, Funny)
-
The fix! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Lovely... (Score:2)
lacks Netscape's proprietary features (Score:5, Funny)
Re:lacks Netscape's proprietary features (Score:5, Funny)
Same as RC3 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Same as RC3 (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Same as RC3 (Score:4, Insightful)
This is the way release candidates should always be handled, yet it seems they rarely are. How many times have bugs snuck into an official "stable" Linux kernel release that weren't in the preceding "pre" kernel? A strict policy of only releasing final versions as re-releases of release candidates would reduce this danger...
Re:Same as RC3 (Score:3, Interesting)
Or throttling the CPU usage of Flash/Java applets so it won't grind to a halt when I open a few pages with flash ads?
Same as Mozilla 1.4rc3 (Score:4, Informative)
If you already installed 1.4rc3, don't bother wasting your time with 1.4 final.
Re:Same as Mozilla 1.4rc3 (Score:2)
You waited just long enough for me to download and install 1.4 to tell me that what I already had was exactly the same. Thanks for nothing man! :(
The good news is that my dsl was actually working at full speed for a few minutes earlier and so the download and install only took about 3 minutes.
Re:Same as Mozilla 1.4rc3 (Score:4, Funny)
For those of us used to Microsoft's 'Release Candidates', it's a big frigging surprise for the RC to be identical to the release version.
Microsoft Release Candidate == alpha version
Release version == beta version
Service Pack 2/3/4 == almost there...
Got it, love it (Score:5, Informative)
When I noticed that 1.4 had been released (in the comments for the Netscape 7.1 story) I figured I'd give Mozilla another try under Windows.
I was amazed.
Mozilla 1.4 is noticeably faster than previous versions under Windows, and seems on-par with Opera 7. For a while, I was running Opera 7 for browsing and Thunderbird for mail... I think now I'm going back to Mozilla for both.
Once the xft-enabled RPMs are up for Red Hat 9, I'll give it a try on that OS as well, but, as I said, speed didn't seem to be an issue there to begin with.
Bravo, Mozilla. Firebird is certainly fast, but some people like the integration of the web/e-mail programs, and it's nice to see a speed boost for us as well.
I would like to get this, but... (Score:3, Funny)
We do not guarantee that any source code or executable code available from the mozilla.org domain is Year 2000 compliant.
We've been in the year 2000 for a while now. How can an organization continue to release code that has not been tested to comply with four digit dates? This seems like a disaster waiting to happen.
Re:I would like to get this, but... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I would like to get this, but... (Score:5, Funny)
Parent: I don't know why you haven't upgraded to 2003. I did it nearly seven months ago...
I'm not sure which is more worrying: being 2 1/2 years behind the times or almost a month ahead. Or the state of the U.S. educational system?
Re:I would like to get this, but... (Score:5, Interesting)
Mozilla isn't guaranteed to do ANYTHING. It's not guaranteed to be Y2k "compliant," it's not guaranteed to cause no damage to your hard drive, it's not guaranteed to cause SOME damage to your hard drive! Nor is it guaranteed to render web pages correctly, avoid sleeping with your spouse, or save the world.
The y2k non-guarantee was put up many years ago, because nearly every organisation on the planet was being hounded with the "are you y2k compliant?" question. Mozilla is just as non-compliant today as they were then, which is to say that nobody has found any issues.
Mozilla HAS been tested to work with four digit dates, and also been tested to render almost all web pages properly (certainly all proper web pages). It has NOT been guaranteed to do these things.
Seriously, download 1.4 and give it a go. I think you'll be very happy with its behaviour.
Re:I would like to get this, but... (Score:2)
Re:I would like to get this, but... (Score:5, Funny)
RPMS ... (Score:2, Informative)
So many yummy downloads (Score:2)
Good googly I have a lot of downloading to do tonight when I get home...
Favicons? (Score:2)
Re:Favicons? (Score:3, Informative)
As I recall, however, Mozilla Firebird *does* do favicons in the bookmark menu.
Re:Favicons? (Score:2)
Re:Favicons? (Score:2)
So site icons seem to work everywhere except the Bookmarks menu. Cool!
BitTorrent (Score:5, Informative)
Re:BitTorrent (Score:5, Insightful)
FWIW, this torrent is probably fine--it's identical to the one on www.mozilla.org. Checksums are:
MD5(mozilla-win32-1.4-installer.exe)= 28cb37dfe56476fe0c5a74689cdc0063
SHA1(mozilla-win32-1.4-installer.exe)= c46336c7ceeeaa349f2546c1009f53271b186213
But you shouldn't take my word for it... Mozilla should be providing checksums; their distribution build instructions [mozilla.org] even recommend making a MD5SUM file.
GTK2 (Score:2, Interesting)
Anybody here have an idea how long we'll have to wait for GTK2 builds? I'm spoiled by the 1.4RC1 GTK2 build on RH9.
Re:GTK2 (Score:2)
I was building Mozilla with GTK2 on my box for a while, but moved back to GTK because 2 was 'crashy'. I didn't notice any difference besides very minor widget appearance changes. What's the draw to GTK2? Are there any 'real' advantages?
Re:GTK2 (Score:2)
also released today... (Score:3, Funny)
I know, it's a tough job, but some site in the open source community needs to take this on. Now some of you might say this gets in the way of actual news, but I don't think there's actually that much risk of that here. If it pushes another Anime story off the front page, I think that's a risk I'm willing to take just to make sure that I have the latest version of Mozilla available to me. And I'm sure the rest of you will agree, once you see the new vision for slashdot's software section, which will soon greatly boost our daily story posting, as well as provide reviews of all the software, and meaningless license debates, which will surely degenerate into GPL misunderstandings and anti-BSD flamewars, and more zealotry! As you can plainly see, everybody wins.
Also Released Recently Today:
- CodeTek VirtualDesktop 2.3.5
- dnspython 1.0.0 (Stable)
- Alt+Connect 2.5.7/9 (Development)
- Advanced Bash Scripting Guide 1.9 (Stable)
- bes-cms 0.3
- BlogPlanet 1.0.2
- PhotoGen 1.9b
- imgSeek 0.7.2
- The Tamber Project 1.2.10 (Pogo)
- OSSP fsl 1.2.0
- Minimalist Queue Services 0.0.3
- OSSP l2 0.9.2
- Cyrus SASL 2.1.14 (SASLv2)
- Bugzero 2.7
- tclperl 2.5
- tclpython 3.1
- PHPXref 0.3
- SimpleData 3.0.17
- Postfix 2.0.13 (Stable)
- Firepass 1.1.1a
- Nmap 3.30 (Stable)
- GKrellM 2.1.14 (GTK 2.0)
[...]
SLASHBOXES (Score:2, Funny)
Re:also released today... (Score:4, Informative)
wow, bug-city! (Score:5, Informative)
Within 1 minute, I found that it's listing sans-serif fonts as serif, and serif fonts as sans-serif. Yikes.
Also some weirdness in the toolbar buttons with vertical alignment. (Back & Forward buttons 'valigned' to the top, whilst Reload & Stop buttons are on the bottom). Bizarro.
At least this is the FIRST time a Mozilla release has actually NOT decided to make itself the default browser in spite of my always telling it not to. One bug fixed, yay!
Re:wow, bug-city! (Score:5, Informative)
I've seen stuff like this happen when you install a new version of Mozilla on top of an old version, or you install a new version and still continue to use your old profile.
Try wiping out your old profile after backing up your bookmarks and mail (rm -r ~/.mozilla/ or delete Mozilla under Application Data in Windows), and let Mozilla 1.4 generate a new one for you. After that, you may find that all your problems have disappeared!
-- Nathan
Re:wow, bug-city! updated! (Score:3, Insightful)
The button label weirdness is, however, gone. Yay! Thanks for the advice. I'm temping on a piece of crap laptop and it had some old profiles laying around (though not Moz itself). Whew, stinky.
So, it's still got problems, and the installation of Moz is still pretty ridic
Re:wow, bug-city! (Score:4, Informative)
Actually, it's allowing you to select _any_ font you want to be displayed when the page author has suggested serif, it's not saying "these are serif fonts, pick one". Therefore, both dropdowns contain all installed fonts. It's a feature, not a bug.
I will admit, however, that toolbar weirdness is probably not a feature.
Re:wow, bug-city! (Score:2)
That's a cool feature, now that I think about it. Now I can specify no fucking serif fonts EVER. *ahhhhh* 'Trebuchet MS' goodness wherever I browse. Schweet.
Okay, so my only gripe about it is the crappy handling of old Moz profile data left lying around, which is hardly a big deal to me. Yayness and goodness.
danka for de 411
WinOSXnux? (Score:3, Interesting)
What the fsck! Are the editors even awake! Come one guys, read the damn article! There is nothing in the article that says it's released for those systems, especially not the implication that it's released JUST for those systems. Mozilla 1.4 has been released for all platforms!
The systems that Mozilla 1.4 work on are: Linux (all architectures), GNU/HURD, IRIX, Tru4, BSD/OS, Solaris, AIX, HPUX, NetBSD, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Windows, OSX, OS/2, BeOS. There are probably others systems as well...
Re:WinOSXnux? (Score:3, Interesting)
$ ./run-mozilla.sh ./mozilla-bin: fatal: relocation error: file ./mozilla-bin: symbol gtk_set_locale: referenced symbol not found
ld.so.1:
Really? Solaris?
Not yet. (Yeah, it's the goddamn GTK libraries, and which compiler they were built with this week. And which things you'll break if you replace 'em. And where the hell do you get 'em?)
Rant: Mozilla binary tarballs for Solaris 2.6/7/8
Re:WinOSXnux? (Score:3, Informative)
mozilla-i686-pc-linux-gnu-1.4-installer.tar.gz 30-Jun-2003 12:38 95k
mozilla-i686-pc-linux-gnu-1.4-sea.tar.gz 30-Jun-2003 12:40 13.4M
mozilla-i686-pc-linux-gnu-1.4.tar.gz 24-Jun-2003 11:38 11.9M
mozilla-i686-pc-linux-gnu-egcs112-1.4.tar.gz 30-Jun-2003 17:03 11.8M
mozilla-mac-Mac
Proprietary "features" (Score:2, Insightful)
Uhh... and it's a bad thing that Mozilla lacks these "features"? I personally like Mozilla with less crap. Oh well. To each their own...
ikeya
Problems I have with Mozilla 1.3 (Score:5, Interesting)
1) I still find an occasional page that renders incorrectly. Or maybe what its actually doing is rendering correctly due to spec compliance. But I don't really care what the problem is, I just want them to always render like other browsers.
2) There are weird problems with keyboard keys not working right sometimes. For example, occasionally if I click in the document that has been displayed, the arrow keys will not move the page. Or in forms the home/end keys, etc. dont work. It seems like these events aren't being captured, although I can't find any consistent way to cause it.
3) When I view my rental queue in Netflix, Mozilla crashes completely. This is the biggest problem...other things are just irritating, but I can't get rid of IE while this still happens. Again, maybe Netflix is using improper javascript or something. But, my perspective as a user is only "does it work." In any case, the browser should be able to handle nasty code in a way that doesn't cause a complete crash even if it infinite loops or something.
Despite these kinds of annoyances, I am going to stick with Mozilla. I love tabbed browsing, and I really like being able to bookmark a set of tabs that I may want open for reference while working on a project. 1.3 was the first version I started using regularly because my form filler/password manager finally supported Mozilla, and with googlebar all my needs are met.
I guess I'll go see now if 1.4 has addressed any of these issues...
Re:Problems I have with Mozilla 1.3 (Score:5, Informative)
http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/clubhouse?team=co
It looks like total ass in Mozilla, and basically any browser I've tried besides IE. It used to look just fine BEFORE that damned MSN ad bar that takes up most of the screen now. You can write terrible code, and have it look fine in IE because IE just ignores a lot of mistakes. I see this as a bad thing, because when browsers try to correctly render a page according to standards, it makes you think the browser is broken and not the page.
BTW, I have tried repeatedly to notify the ESPN guys about all their messed up pages, but obviously nobody cares as long as they get their MSN money.
Re:Problems I have with Mozilla 1.3 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Problems I have with Mozilla 1.3 (Score:2)
Re:Problems I have with Mozilla 1.3 (Score:3, Insightful)
At any rate while I have sympathy for your points, consider it from the point of view of mozilla. There is an internationally agreed-upon set of standards on how to write HTML. A website that doesn't follow those standards is broken, in the same way that a PCI card that requires a nonstandard voltage is broken. If you got a card that didn't fit in any PCI slots other than the ones on motherboards made by the same ma
Re:Problems I have with Mozilla 1.3 (Score:2)
If I were to post that IE crashes every t
so... (Score:2)
So what ever happend to Mozilla Camero and Mozilla Trans-Am?
Re:so... (Score:2)
Type and find... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Type and find... (Score:3, Interesting)
Oh, and don't be fooled by the 'unix' in the URL - most of the info on that page is completely cross-platform.
Typical (Score:2)
Does anyone know if anyone is working on a usable 'save tabs' feature? When I use Opera, and accidentally close it (or it crashes), I load it up and all my previous windows are there. I *need* this feature because I can't just browse in a single window, and I have yet to use a browser that doesn't crash after a few arns
Features? (Score:2)
AIM? Yeah, right. Other than that Netscape 7.1 has _less_ features* than Mozilla 1.4, as well as having the wholesome open-source-goodiness impaired.
*Does it still not block pop up ads from AOL.com BTW? Nice trick there I must say.
SGI IRIX version? (Score:2, Interesting)
Java Plugin doesn't work for Redhat 7.x (Score:2, Interesting)
Any good ideas for how to fix this?
Why is Firebird that wonderful? (Score:3, Insightful)
I haven't bothered to update from Moz 1.2.1 because it works and I am happy with it. I don't see how the browser (the only portion I use) has improved significantly. From the 1.3.x and 1.4 release notes, it seems most improvements have come to the newsgroups/mail.
As for Firebird (a.k.a. the browser formerly known as Phoenix), is it just me or is this the most IE-clone, kiddie like browser. I know we're all supposed to say how much better Firebird is, but I don't feel like an adult while using it. Most of the settings are only reachable (unless I am missing something) from the about:config screen. The preferences (under the Tools menu, just like IE) is so icon centric. Maybe Firebird is trying to reach out to the mom/pop crowd, but could I have an option to put it in advanced mode? In addition, NONE of my XUL/XPI/whatever plug-ins/skins work. The plug-ins and tabs are what makes Moz worth running in my opinion.
Yeah, the bloat comments have legitimacy, but I have HDD and CPU speed to waste (except when gaming). The only thing I am concerned about is the way Win Moz 1.2.1 seems to memory-leak.
Re:Why is Firebird that wonderful? (Score:4, Informative)
That's strange. None of my XUL/XPI/whatever plugins don't work in Firebird and there are considerably more of them available for Firebird than for Mozilla (74 for Firebird vs. 51 for Mozilla extensions at last count at http://extensionroom.mozdev.org/index.html [mozdev.org] and 55 themes for Firebird http://texturizer.net/firebird/themes.html [texturizer.net] vs. about 25 for Mozilla http://themes.mozdev.org/ [mozdev.org])
--Asa
Re:Why is Firebird that wonderful? (Score:4, Informative)
> most improvements have come to the
> newsgroups/mail.
Frankly, this is because the release notes just list "new feature" type things. There is a lot of work going on with the layout engine, starting after 1.3 and still going strong. None of it is mentioned in the release notes, except in the form of the vague "performance, correctness, stability fixes".
Re:Why is Firebird that wonderful? (Score:5, Interesting)
Functionally, Firebird is as full-featured as the Mozilla browser, and there are more extensions and skins available for it (most of the Mozilla extensions just work).
Old easter egg (Score:4, Informative)
Try it in IE too. You get something rather cryptic, to say the least... No, I don't know what it means either.
Re:The only question that remains: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The only question that remains: (Score:2, Funny)
It's true.
Re:The only question that remains: (Score:2, Troll)
Or when 4.0 is released, which I think is around the same time...
Re:Nice improvements, but.... (Score:5, Insightful)
You can use "Quickstart" in Mozilla or NS to enable to same behavior, but honestly I find the whole idea of an app sucking up RAM when you aren't using it to be pretty stupid. Like leaving your car running all night just so you don't have to waste the 5 seconds in the morning to start it.
I mean, really: compare the startup time to how long you spend actually ON THE NET. Do a few seconds really matter??? Isn't it nice to close it and have it be GONE FROM MEMORY (unlike IE)?
Re:Nice improvements, but.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Nope. That's an urban legend that's nice to spread around, but it's nothing more than FUD. If you don't have the fancy crap enabled int the shell and don't open any other components (or third party apps) that use the HTML parser/viewer, the first time you click on that "e" icon you load 90% of it (excluding libs already used by the rest of the system, like common controls. On Windows there's no GTK/LessTif/Motif/Yadda to contend with).
I dare you, like I'
Re:Nice improvements, but.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Firebird has much beter a startup time than Mozilla does at the moment.
Re:Proprietary Features (Score:4, Informative)
However, no AOL icons available, sorry.
Answer! (Score:2)
options -> privacy+security -> popup windows
options -> advanced -> scripts and plugins
Re:NT Authorization (Score:2)
To be sure, cross-over office can do it, as can vmware, et al, but those all run the actual Outlook client so compatibility there is a non-issue. Evolution connector is close, but still not 100%.