Mozilla 1.5 Alpha Available 437
An anonymous reader writes "Mozilla.org released Mozilla v1.5 alpha today, with flavors available for Linux,
Mac OS X, and Windows. Some of the new features include Composer enhancements, Chatzilla logging, multiple tab window closing confirmation, and quicksearch support in about:config. A more detailed rough changelog is also available. In a somewhat related note, Mozilla 1.4 has been downloaded over a half million times in the past 3 weeks (not counting mirrors)."
sweet (Score:5, Funny)
Re:sweet (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:sweet (Score:3, Informative)
You'll be waiting a lot long than that...
*Mozilla Firebird 0.6.1*
- Need to start selling it as a technology preview
- It'll take a year to get something shippable to end users (brendan)
- Depends on hyatt's and ben's time
http://groups.google.com/groups?as_umsgid=3F1C4
Re:sweet (Score:5, Funny)
tell me about it... I thought Firebird and Thunderbird was supposed to be integrated into 1.5a. That sucks. I guess we'll have to wait until 1.6.
Why would you want to integrate a database into a webbrowser?
Re:sweet (Score:3, Funny)
Quicksearch (Score:4, Insightful)
stats? (Score:5, Funny)
Is that the *official* count, or the RIAA count?
Re:stats? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:stats? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Firebird based? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Firebird based? (Score:5, Informative)
Besides, IE7 comes with longhorn, Mozilla has plenty of time, and is already in the lead, Firebird and Thunderbird are already proving to be ready for prime time
Re:Firebird based? (Score:2, Funny)
That's all well and good, but when will Trans Am and Viper be out?
Re:Firebird based? - not quite yet (Score:5, Informative)
This is disappointing to me as I use Firebird regularly and am really impressed, but I guess they (the developers) know what they are talking about.
Re:Firebird based? - not quite yet (Score:5, Informative)
Now, we hope to hire a Firebird developer fulltime at the Mozilla Foundation, and we expect to go faster. No promises yet; the roadmap will be updated in due course.
Re:Firebird based? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, I'm sure we'll se ASSLOADS of innovation from IE7. Like "a send a DRM report to Microsoft" button added, along with a few other "enhancements" 99% of the population would find useless and annoying like the pop up image toolbar. Well I'm half joking, but MS isn't going to innovate until they see some sort of serious threat, and as it stands now, I doubt they'll make any significant improvements.
I think the "browser wars" are probably over. It's not really about browsers anymore as they're practically considered essential OS components. Mozilla probably will play a key role in spearheading the Linux movement, along with providing a good open source cross platform browser across many different venues.
Re:Firebird based? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Firebird based? (Score:5, Interesting)
That sounds like a boring dismisal of Mozilla. I use windows regularly at work, and at home, and Mozilla is my browser of choice. I have also successfully converted a number (probably around 20) regular joes who like to call me their tech geek
I think Mozilla needs to promote a consumer oriented browser, particularly now that the AOL cord has been severed. It is certainly light weight enough if you strip all the geek features - Venkman, DOM inspector, Chatzilla, Composer etc... - and I think most web developers who target standards would agree that it is vastly superior to what IE would provide. My team would love to be able to drop IE as an obsolete monster. But its hard to convince users to install the whole Moz suite, let alone Netscape 7.1.
Firebird needs to evolve. And it needs a grass roots movement promoting it. If every developer out there could convert 10 people - and those 10 convert 10 more. Well I don't have to tell geeks how to do math. Do I?
Re:Firebird based? (Score:3, Funny)
Nope, and we'll all count correctly despite the fact you didn't tell us how to do
Binary 10*10 = Decimal 2*2 = 4 = Binary 100
Decimal 10*10 = 100
100 no matter how we count.
Re:Firebird based? (Score:5, Funny)
Longhorn being a large, dumb animal which consumes vast quantities of resources and turns most of them into shit?
pic [geocities.com]
Re:Firebird based? (Score:3, Funny)
That sounds eerily familiar to those proclamations back when Mozilla M14 was released...
Re:Firebird based? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Firebird based? (Score:5, Informative)
Buried deep in the To Do list on the official Roadmap [mozilla.org] page is one small but significant change. This is the passage that has been added. (There are probably other changes today as well but that is the one I noticed and pertains to this question).
It's clear now that we will not be able to switch to Mozilla Firebird by the Mozilla 1.5 final milestone. Instead, we expect Mozilla 1.5 to coincide with Mozilla Firebird 0.7. But we intend to implement the new application architecture in the next several milestones, till most of the community is won over to the new apps.
Hmmm... At the bottom of the page, the Roadmap states that it was last changed July 22, 2003 - so it appears that they were forced to make the change and only sort of let it be known. Wonder what is going on?
Well, until then, I will keep using Firebird. But for those migrating - another positive is that 1.5alpha is 1.4 Mbs smaller.
Re:Firebird based? (Score:3, Insightful)
You imagine we didn't see that coming?
it appears that they were forced to make the change and only sort of let it be known
Not really. Admittedly, this change could have done with being posted elsewhere as well, but there's no conspiracy or coverup. The roadmap just changed to reflect reality. I think most people who looked at the issue could have seen that the
What's up with Camino (Score:5, Interesting)
ObSafariSucks
Re:What's up with Camino (Score:5, Informative)
That said, the bug button in Safari still exists (it is disabled by default in 1.0) so report those bugs so it can get even better! This will help KHTML advance more quickly as well!
Re:What's up with Camino (Score:2)
still no MNG support? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:still no MNG support? (Score:3, Interesting)
It's probably due to something unaccelerated in my exact setup, but whatever it is only cropped up recently and only happens with moz.
Re:still no MNG support? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just to be fair to IE (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Just to be fair to IE (Score:2, Interesting)
But has the big Lizard lost any weight? (Score:3, Insightful)
And stop with the features already.
Safari is where it is at anyway.
Re:But has the big Lizard lost any weight? (Score:3, Informative)
http://tegu.mozilla.org/graph/query.cgi?tbox=co m et &testname=codesize_embed&autoscale=1&size=&units=b ytes<ype=&points=&showpoint=2003%3A07%3A23%3A01% 3A32%3A23%2C13244550&avg=0&days=100
shows the codesize of the core engine graphed over the last 100 days (on Linux; Mac and Windows numbers are a little different but show the same overall trend).
omg 500!! (Score:5, Informative)
some useful ones imho
*Mozilla crashes when magnifier is used
*Browser crashes when javascript closes a window [@nsDocShell::InternalLoad]
*Save As > withoua> extention result is a html fila> and a directory > *When saving a
*mozilla can't subscribe to existing imap folders
*Browser crashes on HTTPS urls - Trunk M140RC1 [@cert_get_next_general_name
*Loading personal certificates
*pop3 password failed error msg missing
Bloat (Score:5, Insightful)
I know Firebird/Thunderbird/Dodobird exist but they seem like separate distinct projects, and the apps are definitely not as stable as stock Moz; trust me, I've used em all.
I mean, does my web browser REALLY need an IRC client?!
At this rate, Moz 1.6 will have an included oral sex plugin.
Re:Bloat (Score:5, Funny)
Fuck, I just installed Firebird.
Re:Bloat (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Bloat (Score:2)
I know Firebird/Thunderbird/Dodobird exist but they seem like separate distinct projects,
Looks like you just answered your own question there.
On a side note, can we call the next spinoff standalone project Dodobird? I'd appreciate that. Or at least Goonybird.
Re:Bloat (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Bloat (Score:5, Funny)
Some people tell me Mozilla sucks, but this would be proof.
Re:Bloat (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, wait. My bad--it
My settings (Score:5, Informative)
user_pref("dom.disable_window_flip", true);
user_pref("dom.disable_window_move_resize
user_pref("dom.disable_window_open_featur
user_pref("dom.disable_window_open_featur
user_pref("dom.disable_window_open_featur
user_pref("dom.disable_window_open_featur
user_pref("dom.disable_window_open_featur
user_pref("dom.disable_window_open_featur
user_pref("dom.disable_window_open_featur
user_pref("dom.disable_window_open_featur
user_pref("dom.disable_window_open_featur
user_pref("dom.disable_window_open_featur
user_pref("dom.disable_window_open_featur
user_pref("dom.disable_window_status_chan
user_pref("browser.block.target_new_windo
to keep crappy web pages from disabling my menus.
Re:My settings (Score:2)
Re:My settings (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:My settings (Score:3, Informative)
A middle or right click on a javascripty haloscan comment pop-up just results in a "(Untitle)", empty tab.
Choreographed releases. (Score:4, Insightful)
I think the Mozilla developers have been doing an excellent job lately, especially with respect to choreographing releases with future development needs. --- the switch-over to Firebird could have been disasterous or annoying, but it's been smooth.
Re:Choreographed releases. (Score:5, Insightful)
How about convincing software companies to (Score:4, Insightful)
Mouse Gestures (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Mouse Gestures (Score:3, Informative)
Couldn't agree more. When I first learned about mouse gestures, I thought "That's interesting but probably pointless." I decited to try it anyway, and after learning a few basic gestures, I was hooked. It is one of those things that don't seem that great until you actually try it.
Re:Mouse Gestures (Score:3, Informative)
New feature I'd like to see... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:New feature I'd like to see... (Score:2)
Re:New feature I'd like to see... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:New feature I'd like to see... (Score:4, Interesting)
Try opening a page with 15 flash applets in IE, and the same page in Mozilla and you'll know how crucial this feature is.
We need to put this as a high priority bugfix.
Re:New feature I'd like to see... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:New feature I'd like to see... (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, the latest 1.4 was really speedy, relative to 1.3 at least. I admit that mozilla is one of the slower browsers, but every release is faster than the previous one, in my experience anyway. I haven't tried this one yet, but I'm about to.
Re:New feature I'd like to see... (Score:3, Informative)
Eh? I'm typing this on a system with an 800 MHz Duron, and Mozilla doesn't seem slow to me.
Mozilla news, but what about Opera? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Mozilla news, but what about Opera? (Score:5, Insightful)
Mozilla is one of the biggest open source projects out there. Slashdot has lots of people that like open source stuff.
Mozilla is more than just a broswer, it's a runtime (Gecko Runtime Engine), GUI language (XUL), bayesian mail client, html composer, etc.
People can actually contribute and test mozilla beta releases, as opposed to opera releases.
Mozilla is available on more platforms than opera, and is 7.2b2 even available on linux?
Mozilla has a 30% share of slashdot traffic, and thus is more directly popular with slashdot readers in general.
Re:Mozilla news, but what about Opera? (Score:4, Interesting)
Opera is an alternative, standards compliant browser with a geeky/nerdy user base. Why should it not be interesting for a site which has "news for nerd. Stuff that matters"? It's a nerd's browser, so it's definitely relevant for nerds.
Re:Mozilla news, but what about Opera? (Score:5, Insightful)
Your whole argument seems to be that paying for anything when you can get something else that does the same job is only for morons.
If that's true it's a good thing for Ferrari/Porsche/Aston Martin/ Rolls Royce have plenty of rich dumb customers who don't know that they could buy a cheap Ford/GM/Crysler/Nissan/Skoda that'll work just as well.
Similarly, all those people who pay more than $5 per head on eating out at fancy restaurants are also morons. Don't they realise they could fill up on a Big Mac and fries rather than fillet steak? And what about those idiots who buy designer clothes when the bargains at TK Max will keep them just as warm?
God-awful? Only for morons? Just exactly what browser are you talking about here? You sure ain't talking about Opera.
Anyone who's used Opera for more than five minutes (and that's obviously not you) would never come to that conclusion - it's small, fast, innovative and feature-packed. Try saying that about any other browser available on all the major platforms.
Paying for a browser isn't for everyone - just as paying for a luxory car, gourmet meal or designer labels aren't either - but just because you don't see the benefits of using Opera (hint: open your eyes) that doesn't mean that that's true for everyone else.
Re:Mozilla news, but what about Opera? (Score:4, Funny)
They aren't rich and dumb, they are rich and have very small penises.
Re:Mozilla news, but what about Opera? (Score:5, Insightful)
With features, unfortunately, comes size.
MSIE works, eh? (Score:5, Funny)
In other news, the Wheel will never catch on because Dragging Things on the Ground works and is very widely deployed already.;)
Re:Mozilla news, but what about Opera? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Mozilla news, but what about Opera? (Score:3, Informative)
As was said at the time that the MacOS 9 build got deprecated, OS 9 builds will happen when and if someone steps up and offers to maintain the OS 9 port. As yet, no-one has done so.
I think someone did an unofficial build of 1.4, but I don't know where you might get it from.
Gerv
This will help a lot. (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh thank Dog.
This is my only gripe about tabbed browsing, as it makes life annoying for people who are switching over from IE and haven't used a tabbed browser before. I can't count the number of times I've absent-mindedly clicked on the closing X in the window bar as opposed to the lower X for the tabs...
Now, if only they could fix the issue with multi-language support in Moz 1.4 Win32. Every time I go to a Japanese website I get a notification telling me that I need to install a language pack, but so far as I can tell, I've done this. The popup doesn't say exactly where to go to configure this in Preferences, and as far as I can tell, I've done set it up already (Preferences -> Navigator -> Languages), and it's not doing anything. So, either the language support is broken, or the instructions/setup procedure are non-intuitive.
Re:This will help a lot. (Score:5, Informative)
It hasn't been five minutes since I posted this comment and I've already figured out what the problem is.
In order to set up the language support, you must go to View -> Character Coding -> Customize..., and add the language support you want for browser rendering. This is *not* at all what the popup message indicates, and seems like something that needs to be present in Preferences as well, and more clearly labelled. If a person is likely to be using a web browser in more than one language, then they'll probably want to configure all the language options all at once, so there's no sense in putting them in two separate places in the application.
So, kudos to Moz for a lightweight multi-language browser, but demerits for making it counter-intuitive to configure.
Re:This will help a lot. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:This will help a lot. (Score:3, Informative)
In windows 2000, go to Control Panel, Regional Options, General. Check any of the languages you need in language settings.
It will copy the necessary files from your windows 2000 cd... i'm guessing it will be much the same in XP.
Mozilla Firebird seems better (Score:5, Interesting)
I have been using a recent nightly build of Mozilla Firebird as my primary browser, and it has been very stable and already feels much more polished than Mozilla.
Small things like the Ctrl-Enter shortcut and automatic mouse scrolling make Mozilla Firebird feel more like a polished product than Moziila does.
about:config (Score:5, Funny)
I always knew that IE had a built in crash timer, but Mozilla?
Re:about:config (Score:5, Informative)
Re:about:config (Score:4, Informative)
As the man says, it's a code relic.
Gerv
Re:about:config (Score:3, Funny)
Let's see Chatzilla and Mail put in a tab! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Let's see Chatzilla and Mail put in a tab! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Let's see Chatzilla and Mail put in a tab! (Score:5, Informative)
It's not really supported or production worthy, but try typing "chrome://messenger/contents/messenger.xul" and "chrome://chatzilla/contents/chatzilla.xul" into your URLbar.
It's clearly not totally debugged, and weird stuff can happen (who knows), but it seems to sort of work for me.
Re:Let's see Chatzilla and Mail put in a tab! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Let's see Chatzilla and Mail put in a tab! (Score:3, Informative)
open a tab, type:
chrome://chatzilla/content/chatzilla.xul
chrome://navigator/content/navigator.xul
and so on...
Enough Mozilla, More Firebird! (Score:5, Insightful)
CVS checkins to the Firebird suite have also lagged behind. Personally, I would like to see FB development accelerated instead of put on the back burner.
Re:Enough Mozilla, More Firebird! (Score:4, Informative)
Mail Notification in Linux? (Score:4, Interesting)
Is there some simple work-around that I don't know about? Are there any plans to fix this? I've raised this issue on mozillazine.org and reported it to Netscape (a few weeks before AOL killed Netscape), but it seems to get no attention. This is a total showstopper for me. Someone please rescue me from having to use Netscape 4.8 for email...
Draggable tabs (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Draggable tabs (Score:3, Informative)
(well, I think that's the one. I just tried dragging a tab in moz1.4, and it works without a glitch.)
Re:Draggable tabs (Score:3, Informative)
and now back to Evil Software Patents (Score:3, Informative)
Yeah, everybody wants it but Adobe has a patent [phrasewise.com] on it. Or is there uncited prior art [mail-archive.com]?
I cant read html without Mozilla any longer..:D (Score:5, Interesting)
To the Mozilla decelopers and Netscape/AOL, thank you!
Composer Tips? (Score:4, Interesting)
I've been doing a fair amount of mucking around in Mozilla Composer lately and, while it's okay for writing first-approximation Web pages, I've found the UI to be really inconvenient for some things.
The thing likes to pollute the document with line breaks (<BR>) everywhere, which is darned annoying. Creation and maintenance of directory lists (<DL> <DT> <DD>) is really finicky -- do things in the wrong sequence and the formatting will be ruined. I find myself making constant trips to the source window, fixing up broken or unnecessary HTML. It also offers no help at all in composing and previewing style sheets.
I'd really like Composer to be a good WYSIWYG HTML editor, but it seems to be sorely lacking. Is it just me? Is there some Secret Book of Composer Power Usage Tips that I haven't found yet, or does it really fall as short as I think it does?
Schwab
Re:Composer Tips? (Score:4, Informative)
About definition lists: I agree too and I am working on it.
About nested lists, bug 54479: that's a major issue, and solving it is a HUGE work. I have a partial fix for this that helps **creating** valid nested lists but does not handle copy/paste yet.
About editing stylesheets, you were probably on another planet during the last year and a half
Daniel Glazman, Mozilla Composer module owner and author of CaScadeS.
Roaming? (Score:4, Interesting)
what timing (Score:3, Informative)
Interestingly enough, Netscape/4.7 came up with about 3.2% (3/4 of which were from on-campus).
fortunatly we're approaching 1-year of being xhtml & css devotees and its suprisingly easy to be xhtml1-strict compliant and use tableless or low-table layouts that work in 96+% of our 'human' traffic (which btw IE 6.0 is more than 65% of).
Anyway, sorry for the stats ramble, I just though it was really cool to have access to real numbers today, not just rumors and zealous flamewars.
No STARRTTLS Support Yet. (Score:3, Interesting)
There's no STARTTLS support [mozilla.org] (on port 143) yet, which renders Mozilla Mail and Thunderbird useless in some ultra-paranoid corporate settings...
Mozilla tips ! (Score:5, Informative)
They've got some good stuff already, but could probably use the extra traffic !
D.
Mozilla Composer (Score:4, Interesting)
The different colours make identifing the code much easier
Re:Why make a Windows version? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Why make a Windows version? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why make a Windows version? (Score:5, Insightful)
I use Solaris a lot, and Linux a bit. Mozilla is on both of those platforms.
But Windows--Oh man, it's nice to have a really GOOD broswer on the universal de facto platform. Given that Windows is a toy to begin with (no insult intended--I use it for games, and nothing else), why would you NOT want to have the best browser on it?
OK, look at it another way: If 99% of the Linux people used Mozilla (an exaggeration, I'm sure) and 0.5% of the Windows market used it, then which group would account for more browser downloads?
(Hint: The answer is Windows)
At any rate, I know a lot of people--100% pure Windows users--who are quite happy about having Mozilla. Tabbed browsing and pop-up blocking is a boon.
Re:Why make a Windows version? (Score:3, Informative)