MSN's Slate Recommends Firefox over IE 493
brightertimes writes "That's right folks, Slate (Microsoft's on-line magazine) recently printed an article enitled "Are the Browser Wars Back?
How Mozilla's Firefox trumps Internet Explorer.""
In related news... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In related news... (Score:3, Funny)
Snowday in Hell!
IE sucks (Score:5, Insightful)
If you read the article (wolf in sheeps clothing) it knocks Firefox because it has fewer users and therefore hacks for IE are far more lucrative than for Firefox - True.
Does this mean there are as many potential hacks for Firefoxs - No, False, in my opinion. Why?
Because the types of hacks found in Ie are fundamental mistakes in design that would be universal to ANY browser if they were on the same par. They are not. These fundamental mistakes have not been made by the othere -especially the OSS browsers. This is because, as I have always said - OSS software is open to the world and gets more scrutiny. Major problems a re found earlier.
However, the makers of Firefox should not rest on their laurels...
Re:IE sucks (Score:5, Insightful)
I think that products can be secure without being open-source. Peer review is great, but let's not forget that Microsoft has some brilliant minds working for it, the problem is that MS management decides that they want to add some type of random, pointless feature and assigns these people to do it, and do it FAST, instead of allowing them to work on increasing security, maturing the browser etc.
Probably the feature of FOSS that makes it more secure is that it removes all PHBs(Pointy haired bosses for those who aren't dilbert fans)
Re:IE sucks (Score:5, Informative)
Re:IE sucks (Score:5, Informative)
Re:IE sucks (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think so. Even their newer products demonstrate that MS views security as something to be tacked on later rather than something to be designed in from the start. Right now if MS had the choice to include some cool new feature that they KNEW would get broken and damage their customers later they would do it in a heartbeat. Just look at Passport, even if they had the best security in the world it'd still get broken eventually simply because it's such a huge target. MS must know it's goint to happen and yet they keep encouraging people to dump their personal information into it. They just don't care.
Re:IE sucks (Score:5, Interesting)
They design their OS so well, they can't( won't really ) add USB support to it. Thinking Windows 95 and Windows NT here.
If you remember ANYTHING about Microsoft, remember that they are a marketing company first. The black magic they deliver is secondary and only important to the fact that it solves SOME of the customers needs. Now this isn't a bad thing if your only interest is $$$$. But, if you are a company or person attempting to use Microsoft products to solve a problem or simplify your live, it won't. It'll just change your current problem domain for the time being and you'll be back with bills in hand to get out of another mess they led you into( or you followed them into..
Microsofts security game is just that, their game and only yours when you follow them. I really think that's why GNU/Linux is really picking up steam now. Companies are starting to figure out that they have no control on the Microsoft threadmill. GNU/Linux gives them some control back. But, with some different issues though still without the lack of control Microsoft solutions/problems bring with it. IMHO.
LoB
It's the monopoly stupid (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:It's the monopoly stupid (Score:4, Informative)
Konquerer, Opera, Firebird (now Firefox), Mozilla, and many other Mozilla based browsers suffer the burden you speak of yet really are better than IE. All I was trying to say was that the website link referred to in the master blog is deceptive. It tries to make you 'click here to see how Firefox is better than IE' and actually turns out to be a refute of IE's security problem on the basis that hacking IE is a more lucrative business. I was merely trying point this out. I do all this just to try and make people aware of the shortcommings of IE. We are on the same side here. You may remember the laughable security bug a few months back where web hosts could use a simple button to redirect clients a bogie site masquerading as a legitimate one. This was the begininning of the end for me. I demonstratedthis to our Admin using a little php server in work. I showed how with one click it could be possible to gather credit cards with the bug. But more than that I was surprised that such a fundamental bud existed, and is no doubt already responsible for mass credit card fraud.. I really dont know how Ms are getting away with this. Almost Everyone (all though it is changing slowly) still uses IE. We use it in work, against my wishes...
I guess thats where your ActiveX controls comes in. I actually got forced to use Active X control today too, as it was required to participate in closed beta testing..ActiveX has its uses, but it could EASILY be substituted with something better...
ActiveX (Score:5, Funny)
Re:IE sucks (Score:5, Interesting)
To be fair, UNIX, and the rest of the Internet world, also went through this phase. SMTP being the prime example (still unsolved. Grr..). Everyone online are friends, so you only need enough security to keep out curious friends. The Morris Worm was the kick in the balls to get people thinking about security. The assumption changed from "everyone is friends who play nice" to "attacks will happen by determened (and smart) people." The "bug of the month club" that Sendmail admins were members of is quite similar to todays with MS.
This is no excuse for Microsoft programmers, or 3rd party app for Windows programmers. The evolution of internet security is well documented. And even if no MS programmer ever was at a university in around 1985-1995 durring this transition on the Internet (computer nerds at a Uni assumably having (some, limited) 'net access) there is enough foklore floating around that they should know better.
So what are they to do? Well, taking Sendmail as an example, many users gave up and wrote better mailers. And the Sendmail folks did fix many of its problems. Writing a mailer from scratch was probabaly less effort then "fixing" Sendmail, esp given the stupid design of Sendmail. (compared to modern mailer designs, anyway). I dont realy know enough about the internals of Windows (NT), but I do know that it was desigined by more-or-less the same team as that that desigined VMS. VMS is paticularly anal about security. So lets say that WNT is at its core, "secure". It is all the user level OS apps, add on packages, and 3rd party packages that suck. So it should be, line for line, easier to "fix" the windows problems then it was to "fix" Sendmail. (Because at its core Windows should be OK).
Re:PHBs (Score:5, Insightful)
Obviously, you've never worked for a big company.
Re:PHBs (Score:4, Insightful)
And the "maintenance cost" you speak of? If the change is a fundamental type change (say a pointer to a reference, rather than an int to a long), then you'd better check all those instances of a variable because you're liable to have problems (even if it compiles).
Hungarian notation won't make a stupid coder smart, but it will certainly help a smart coder avoid mistakes. I'm a smart coder; I can't speak for the rest of the world.
Hungarian notation or at least some subset of it, is a lingua franca that exists primarily in Windows programming due to an attempt to move away from IOCCC candidate coding with one character variable names or inscrutable naming conventions and abbreviations. The other step is consistency in the API's and libraries, something Windows fails at miserably, and MFC is only somewhat better. The code is would have written for these clowns would have required a minute fraction of the development and maintenance that their archaic "design" required, and yet they were proud of their ignorance. Oh well, it's no spin off the government's teeth, because they can just piss more millions as needed. I'll stick to private concerns where getting work done efficiently actually matters.
Re:IE sucks (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:IE sucks (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe so, but just as soon as a problem is found, it's patched and re-released.
I think linux's best feature is that shortly after the problem is announced, many different people "scratch their itch" and rush to patch it.
I would love to see a great desktop on linux. I think the modern ones are either too cluttered, or severly lacking. Windows has that beat, it's n
Laugh it Up (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Laugh it Up (Score:5, Interesting)
You are probably right. I base this on the fact that Microsoft would look bad if they pushed this guy (Paul Boutin) to be fired, and somehow they will manage to not only look bad, but release 2 conflicting press releases regarding this, making themselves looking worse. Well, if history is any indicator, anyway.
Maybe They're Testing the Waters... (Score:5, Insightful)
they make all their money from Office and the O/S itself.
What's to stop them from scrapping IE6, and replacing it
with a Firefox derivative labelled "IE7" ?
(no doubt accompanied with lots of unconvincing spin
about how they're cool now with open-sizzource, 'yo)
Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... (Score:5, Insightful)
>with a Firefox derivative labelled "IE7" ?
The fact that they spent three years integrating anything from "explorer.exe" to the kernel with IE?
Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... (Score:4, Interesting)
There are no technical reasons, nor even financial ones (I.E. loss of development costs spent on IE) but only political ones (they would look like the horses' asses we all know they are.)
Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not intergrated with the kernel. It's intergrated with the OS. MSIE is basically a set of libraries used by lots of applications, including msie.exe-the-browser.
You can compare msie intergration into the Windows OS with khtml intergration into KDE. You simply cannot rip khtml out of KDE without breaking a bunch of (critical) applications. Same goes with MSIE.
Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm sure Microsoft will suddenly start supporting the standards that Mozilla and Opera have supported for years in IE7, meaning that developers will start using those standards. Because IE6 won't recognize those standards, newly designed sites will look like sh*t in that old browser, and users will be forced to upgrade to IE7.
It looks like Microsoft found how to make its IE monopoly pay off for them after all!
Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... (Score:3, Insightful)
It seems more likely that IE7, included only in longhorn, will include new features (ActiveY?) that nothing else supports, making developers use them and cutting off Windows Longhorn regardless of browser choice.
Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides, many IE users refuse to switch to Firefox because many sites use proprietary extensions in IE, such as document.all. That means those si
Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... (Score:3, Insightful)
No, but you DID miss the releases for Solaris and HPUX.
Re:Maybe They're Testing the Waters... (Score:3, Interesting)
Check out the Netscape trial. (Score:5, Insightful)
If Microsoft doesn't control the browser, it doesn't control that interface. Windows becomes very easy to replace.
And there goes Microsoft's monopoly.
Re:Laugh it Up (Score:4, Funny)
"You've probably been told to dump Internet Explorer for a Mozilla browser before, by the same propeller-head geek who wants you to delete Windows from your hard drive and install Linux. You've ignored him, and good for you. "
Microsoft 0wnz Slate and uses it as one of their information outlets.
Re:Laugh it Up (Score:5, Interesting)
To be honest, Slate (and MSNBC) typically provide some of the most critical press Microsoft gets. I am guessing that the news sites are run entirely independent from Microsoft, and the sites feel obligated to criticize Microsoft to prove their independence.
Oops (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oops (Score:5, Funny)
I hope they didn't use Frontpage to make this article. I'd hate to see them violate their license agreement
I don't think BillG minds too much (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyways I don't think anyone will lose their jobs over this:
* IE doesn't make MS any money--it has been bundled into Windows XP so there is no lost revenue (at least for the short and medium term) if users switch en masse to another browser.
* MS has integrated IE into Windows so tightly that you cannot avoid it. You need IE to run Windows update, and a lot of software uses IE DLLs to function (even a lot of third party Windows-based software). Using Firefox to browse web pages doesn't completely obsolete IE
* Microsoft is doing enough on its own to obsolete IE--in fact they seem to encourage anything that will obsolete it. IE development has basically been abandoned since Windows XP was released (and even before 2002 there was little improvement). The Slate article just helps things along a bit.
* Anything that makes a Microsoft property look like it isn't part of a big machine bent on world domination is welcome--especially if it doesn't have a meaningful impact on the bottome line.
So that leaves one thought: Why does MS seem to be abandoning IE?
I think it has already been touched on by some here. Web browsing and other internet-related tasks are being integrated even further into future versions of Windows. Longhorn is supposed to be re-worked top to bottom to incorporate XML-based protocols, better support distributed computing technology (web services and so on). What is your machine and what is the internet is supposed to become almost seamless.
In achieving that goal IE has to disappear in BillG's eyes. Not only that, (X)HTML has to recede into the background as well--it is a document markup language at its roots and is poorly suited to development of highly interactive applications. Never mind that there are vendor-neutral/open standards emerging (XForms, XUL, SVG, etc)--they are not yet as established as HTML. MS sees this as a new opportunity to use Longhorn to establish an MS-controlled platform again using XAML and Avalon.
I think that BillG himself actually despises IE. The design is antiquated and insecure at its heart. The code probably gets more and more unmanageable with time judging by how often one patch sometimes creates other bugs. First and formost, however, by throwing resources as IE microsoft would prolong what it sees as "yesterday's Internet". Ideally, Longhorn would be released without any visible indication of a separate browser and enough HTML support to make existing sites function. As Longhorn grows in market share, MS hopes that sites start incorporating MS-specific protocols like XAML to transform websites into really interactive, whiz-bang internet applications that break completely in IE or Mozilla or any other mere browser on a competing or obsolete platform.
No, there will be no firings at Slate over this editorial stance. Far from it--it is probably quite compatible with the Chief Architect's long-term vision.
Re:I don't think BillG minds too much (Score:3, Interesting)
Because, as the article indicated, the menus are "interactive features designed exclusively for Internet Explorer." The lack of support in other browsers is intentional, or at least an artifact of how their base authoring tools detect browser capabilities.
They are sending different versions of the page depending on which browser is detected. The version sent to Firefox does not have these features. If you spoof the user-agent using a user agent s [chrispederick.com]
Exactly what is "funny" about knowing MS's plans? (Score:5, Interesting)
I've used Linux since 1995 or so but actually became an "open source affecionado" around mid-1997 on a student work term. My employer was well into migrating from old AT&T UNIX boxes to COMPAQs running Slakware Linux tuned to meet their needs (data collection/logging and web-based reporting). Actually seeing Linux used in a production environment run as rock solid as the old AT&T boxes (and much better than the Windows NT server) without any licensing costs sold me easily. In the years since then things have only gotten dramatically better for Linux.
However, in my field of work Linux is still very much the exception (unfortunately). Things run on either Windows NT or 2000 or in special cases QNX or a proprietary RTOS or UNIX. My present employer works in very close conjunction with Microsoft to develop drivers and application software. It is an important part of my job to stay current on Microsoft's direction as well as that of our own developers. As I am an applications specialist and not a developer/programmer at this point I cannot issue a decree that we shall adopt Linux as a platform of choice for our products--indeed no one can without reprocussions.
Because of my background with both sides I can see the strengths and weaknesses of both Linux and Windows (or Free vs proprietary systems in general). For example, Linux and BSD are unmatched for stability and security. Regardless of any studies that say otherwise, Linux is most often much cheaper to maintain than Windows. Free Software applications are also thr real kings of the enterprise. The Internet wouldn't survive without Apache, Sendmail, Postfix, BIND, mySQL, PostgreSQL and so on.
On the other hand, vendors reluctance to develop open drivers (or disclose enough information to the community to do so) ie frustrating. There is still too much crap to contend with for the everyday user to get their Centrino chipset to work, or to make their flashy new NVidia or ATI video cards work properly.
Microsoft/proprietary software has its own list of goods and bads. Microsoft developmer tools totally kick butt on the competition. Developing with
However, with Microsoft I have very real and grave concerns as well. While Windows has come a long way in stability and usability, Microsoft neglected security for too long. I think that poor security has been the most serious issue MS has ever had to face. Licensing schemes have been a royal pain to deal with for a long time too. I'm next to fed up with complicated licensing schemes, license key codes, dongles, product activation and other administrative nightmares, all of which add no function to the end solution at all and only serve as mechanisms to grant the user the priviledge of running an application. And as promising as Longhorn looks, MS is re-inventing the wheel in a blatant attempt to lock the industry into it's own solutions. Really, what is the point of creating XAML when open standards were already there? Longhorn also looks set to break a lot of compatibility and be even more resource hungry than ever.
I think _every_ professional should know as much about MS's plans as possible. Likewise they should all know as much as possible about development in Linux and Free Software in general (you know damn well many in MS are studying up on the "enemy"). How else can anybody be competitive? It is only wise to bet on both horses here in particular. With Longhorn so far from release and the potential for a disconnect in terms of hardware and software compatibility with previous versions of Windows, Linux is poised to make a breakthrough. Hopefully Those in the Linux camp can "steal" the best ideas from Longhorn and execute them with characteristically more elegant, interoperable design.
yawn (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft and Mozilla (Score:5, Insightful)
Cheers!
Erick
Re:Microsoft and Mozilla (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Microsoft and Mozilla (Score:4, Insightful)
Or, this is very intelligently-done propoganda. It is always hard to tell how efforts like Slate fit into the broader interests of their parent companies.
How would you feel if you hired a lawyer for a lawsuit in a software-related case and later found out that this lawyer also does a lot of work for Microsoft? Should I believe that a computer consultant is objective, when his company has "Microsoft Certified" in bold letters on their website? Should I trust Slate, whose financial standing is undeniably rooted in MSN?
While there is nothing wrong with a person reading news and articles on MSN or Slate, that person should always keep an eye on other news sources, especially ones with different owners or public funding.
Re:Microsoft and Mozilla (Score:5, Insightful)
They understand that it's a bad idea to mess with the "ethics" of journalism (though that's questionable these days), and that it can all be countered with advertising anyway.
The average consumer won't go looking for that article, and they know it.
Re:Microsoft and Mozilla (Score:5, Funny)
Ah, I knew Microsoft would beat slashdot somehow.
Re:Microsoft and Mozilla (Score:5, Insightful)
Hell here (Score:5, Funny)
What is so surprising about this? (Score:5, Insightful)
All in all, this is not really surprising, although it is certainly not good news for Microsoft.
Re:What is so surprising about this? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What is so surprising about this? (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, yes, they could do that.
In fact, it would be a great idea for Microsoft: actively supporting The Mozilla Foundation would give them some fantastic leverage in their different legal problems.
Something like: "Your honor, Microsoft has donated X thousand dollars to the Mozilla Foundation! How can we be accused of anti-competitive behaviour after such a generou
Re:What is so surprising about this? (Score:4, Insightful)
My Dear God (Score:5, Funny)
Talk about saving users from themselves.
Re:My Dear God (Score:5, Interesting)
Just like their support of Apple (Score:5, Interesting)
Microsoft is just looking for a way to convince courts they're not a monopoply.
integrity (Score:5, Insightful)
I've always thought Microsoft made the best keyboards and mice, but second-rate everything else. Turns out that they also deserve credit for making content sites.
Same old party line. (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not as impressed as you are. Paul Boutin is still dismissive, insulting and pulling the party line. He gives the wrong reasons for using Firebird and stops short of placing blame where it belongs. It's not just the browser, it's the OS that's got problems.
Here's a flamebait quote:
You've probably been told to dump Internet Explorer for a Mozilla browser before, by the same propeller-head geek who wants you to delete Windows from your hard drive and install Linux. You've ignored him, and good for you.
Paul does not go on to tell us why anyone who did not dump Windows after Melissa should be happy. Instead he gives us the now usual FUD equating M$ and Linux security and the M$'s lame excuse for poor security:
Even Mozilla's spokespeople stress that no software can be guaranteed to be safe, and that Firefox's XPInstall system could conceivably be tricked into installing a keystroke logger instead of Sun's Java engine. But for now, there's safety in numbersâ"the lack of them, that is. Internet Explorer is used by 95 percent of the world. Firefox's fan base adds up to 2 or 3 percent at most. Which browser do you think the Russian hackers are busily trying to break into again?
Sorry Paul, this normal user is very happy to have dumped Windoze 98 in favor of Red Hat and Debian years ago. I've had perfectly usable browsers, email clients, digital music, and everything else I've ever wanted with far less hastle and trouble than my Windoze suffering peers and relatives. The browser is just the tip of the iceburg. I've enjoyed stable systems that stay up longer than my utility company's electricity, and a plethora of superior programs and features without having to drive to a store and periodically "rebuild" my computers. Learning Linux has been easy, fun and never required me to wear a propeller on my head.
Re:Same old party line. (Score:5, Funny)
You not only read, but actually post on Slashdot. And you think you are a "normal user"? I suspect you need to recalibrate your idea of normalcy.
Perhaps this is the slap they need (Score:5, Interesting)
MS plan I think is Avalon.. (Score:5, Insightful)
However - I think they are making a mistake in that philosophy (if it IS there philosophy), in so far as much if they try and forceably tie people down to their platform then corporates and government departments will rebel against microsoft. Some already are - there will be more. Also if FireFox/Mozilla becomes the standard browser it could lead the way to a migration away from the Windows OS.
Microsoft have made mistakes concerning the global village paradigm before - I think they are doing it again now.
On MSN Slate's site... (Score:3, Informative)
I think it's another case of Microsoft making stuff look crap in other browsers for no good reason.
Haven't tried it on a mac yet, but I'm betting it looks like ass in safari too.
IE Maintenance (Score:5, Interesting)
Broken Sites (Score:5, Insightful)
From the article: Whether or not you do, US-CERT advises increasing your Internet Explorer security settings, per Microsoft's instructions. (Alas, the higher setting disables parts of Slate's interface.)
Sorry, you seem to have misspelled "Alas, the higher setting highlights Slate's use of insecure and nonstandard features." You might want to have that keyboard checked.
Interesting way to see it (Score:3, Insightful)
That is an interesting way to see it. Blame IE's popularity!
Re:Interesting way to see it (Score:4, Interesting)
The Average User (note: this is the person who calls their Slashdork friend to install Kazaa for them) has no problems switching at all, and in my experience generally appreciates being switched. There really aren't that many people in the "picky enough to stick to IE" camp when it comes down to it, it's just that they hang around in roughly the same areas online as the Enlightened.
As for the theme, only the most anal of the anally retentive care. I hated Qute but the energy required to complain about it dwarfs the energy required to switch themes. The mythical Average User is lucky if they've changed their Winamp skin since they got the computer and have no problems dealing with its UI.
- Chris
The hardest part (Score:5, Insightful)
I've been trying to get my dad to use it (with threats like, "when the russian mafia gets your credit card because you were using IE, don't complain to me"...) but it doesn't work. And he's not terribly illiterate. I can't imagine trying to explain to my girlfriend's grandparents, "Ok, Don't click on the blue E anymore... click on the icon that looks like an orange fox"... they would never do it.
As nice as Firefox is, it's going to be an uphill battle to get those illiterate folks to switch.
Re:The hardest part (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The hardest part (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The hardest part (Score:4, Interesting)
In a strange way, this is an expression of my faith that the "average user" actually isn't a moron. I don't believe that people who simply cannot understand the concepts of hardware, software, applications, operating systems, and networks, and the distinctions between them -- no matter how carefully and reasonably you explain them -- are "average users." I believe they're the bottom of the user barrel. They're hopeless cases. They have mental blocks which ensure that they will never, ever, ever learn how to use a computer with a modicum of sense, and the only thing the rest of us can do is tune out their complaints when their systems are buggy and virus-ridden and crash ten times a day.
There are people who will never be able to learn to drive a car without crashing it ten feet down the road, too, and it's not worth your time to keep trying
Re:The hardest part (Score:3, Insightful)
I help motivate them by not giving more than one tech support freebie. If I give advice on avoiding worms, malware, and general stupidity and it is ignored then they can pay me
Is IE is on the way out? (Score:5, Interesting)
The very fact that this was published on MSN must hit at deep rumbling in the MS camp. IE users are, quite frankly, sick of IE. The recent warning from the US government must have been the last nail in IE's PR coffin. People now know other browsers are out there, and have begun to download them. MS issued a hasty patch after Homelland security recommendations for another browser, but it seems they won't upgrade IE functionality until Longhorn, 3 years away! That will mean IE will have spent 6 years in development limbo.
Or then again this could be a lone cowboy at MSN, eager to leave for the fresh pastures of The Register.
I reckon MS will soon dump IE in favour of a new browsers, or maybe a new 'kind' of browser(.NEt based, XAML interface anyone?). Maybe MSN client?
Tellingly IE still runs off version numbers IE5, IE6, whereas most MS apps run off the 98,2000,XP versioning scheme. These are my crackpot prediction for a rumour hungry world.
secretly switching people to fire fix (Score:4, Interesting)
For Web Designers out here... (Score:5, Informative)
That, along with Firefox extensions IE View [mozilla.org] and Web Developer [mozilla.org] makes coding websites compatible in both IE and Mozilla browsers a hell of a lot easier.
How Safe is FireFox? (Score:3, Insightful)
But then, i don't think it has been designed with security in mind as much as convenience, exactly the same predicament that made IE such a huge security hole. There is auto-install of plug-ins, there is auto-install of skins - i kind of have a hard time believing that all of these were written by people wrecking their brains about possible exploits. [if you know different, let me know]
With IE, we know it's broken beyond fixing. With FireFox, we don't know. It has not been tested, as it has not been the target of serious malware writers.
Imagine - unlikely as it may be - FireFox wins the new browser war. Will it still be safe? IMHO, only a real security model like the one built into Java can really protect users.
And from working with that, i know that it places lots of seemingly unnecessary and annoying constraints on development and web apps.
Re:How Safe is FireFox? (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, Firefox is safe. Or, rather, as safe as it can be reasonably expected to get. Plugins and skins can only be installed by whitelisted servers, and must prompt the user before installation.
Re:How Safe is FireFox? (Score:5, Interesting)
I know better. I've been involved with the Mozilla and Firefox development process for years and I can tell you with great confidence that we've considered security at every step of the way, from design, to implementation, to testing. We've got some of the top minds in the business constantly trying to find holes in our security story. They find 'em and we fix 'em.
If you don't believe me, then ask Bugzilla about it, or take a look at the code. Maybe then you won't have such a hard time believing it.
With IE, we know it's broken beyond fixing. With FireFox, we don't know. It has not been tested
Um, hasn't been tested? We've got tens of thousands of people who have tested and reported bugs (including security bugs) on Firefox and the rest of the Mozilla code base. We've got millions of users using it. We've been the target of malware writers and we are beating them with a strong security ethos that defines almost everything we do.
Imagine - unlikely as it may be - FireFox wins the new browser war. Will it still be safe? IMHO, only a real security model like the one built into Java can really protect users.
You're suggesting that Firefox and the Mozilla codebase don't have "a real security model"? I'm guessing you really haven't even looked.
Do yourself a bit of a favor and actually look at the code, the bugs, the process, etc. before you start talking about security.
--Asa
News (Score:3, Funny)
Total Replacement of IE (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Total Replacement of IE (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Total Replacement of IE (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Total Replacement of IE (Score:3, Insightful)
ActiveX (Score:5, Interesting)
ActiveX was meant to make it easy to add the latest interactive multimedia and other features to sites, but instead it's become a tool for sneaking spyware onto unsuspecting PCs.
Now, we all know that ActiveX, a technology that has been around for years and years, is perfectly insecure. Moreover, now there are other ways to do most things that ActiveX achieves: Java apps, server side scripting (with, let's say, PHP) and many more. Secure ones.
So what? We have better alternatives. Microsoft obviously won't drop ActiveX support from IE until someone still asks for it. Then, the problem is with companies and sites that make use of them.
It's strange that someone would still be using something that's not portable, and an increasing audience won't be able to benefit from (if they follow CERT raccomandations, at least
At last, I think that sooner or later ActiveX will disappear (given Microsoft doesn't try some horrible marketing move), because no-one wise will use it. Many users have been educated to click "NO" to those popups requiring you to install a BHO... so new site will have an hard battle against users' suspicion. The problem here is: will Microsoft let this happen, or has it some interest in keeping a buggy technology alive?
I remember it were just for one reason I switched to Mozilla Suite (no, Firefox just doesn't suits me
PS: also the pop-up blocking thingie has been useful, but I am a Mozilla user since before it was introduced.
Microsoft needs FireFox (Score:5, Interesting)
Without FireFox the safe solution is to get rid of Windows and that is Microsofts worst nightmare. So for now Microsoft will be happy that FireFox exists and that Windows remains as the desktop platform.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
My own stats (Score:4, Interesting)
It's a markeing trick ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Their reputation is so bad right now that without a clear admission of how bad it is nobody will believe them when they announce SP2 "fixes everything".
I notice the timing is really close to SP2 coming out ...
Or, maybe I've been reading /. too long ...
Re:It's a markeing trick ... (Score:3, Funny)
Missing the point a little... (Score:5, Insightful)
Well it's interesting to see that an MSN run website has slammed Internet Explorer, and spent some time extolling the virtues of Firefox, which is indeed surprising at first glance. But in many ways, there is one other important factor to consider.
Even Microsoft *knows* that Internet Explorer is antiquated. They pulled developers off it years ago, and afaik have only recently started some work on it. It displays none of the features that all the modern competitive browsers have, and has FAR more security issues than possibly any other browser.
But at the end of the day, they don't care. It doesn't provide them any revenue, so they don't really give a damn about what features you want. It comes free with every OS they distribute, and it doesn't have advertising panels or anything like that, so it doesn't really matter to them what browser you decide to use with their OS, you're still using their OS.
And that's another thing to consider. Until they bother undertaking a vast overhaul of Internet Explorer (which they may not even do), they know that users will be vulnerable to all sorts of these problems that keep reoccuring. So in some ways it can be construed as a good idea for them to move you to other browsers, especially free ones like Mozilla where they do not provide another company with revenue. This will keep their users much safer, and at the end of the day, I think that's what this is about. Their users. You can use any browser you want on their OS, but again, you're still using Windows.
Consider the two scenarios. You get extremely frustrated with all the viruses and bugs that Internet Explorer throws up, and you decide that you've had enough. What are your options?
With those choices in mind, which would you expect Microsoft to prefer? ;)
For me, Mozilla is getting there... (Score:4, Interesting)
MSIE: 52.0%
Mozilla: 27.4%
Now for this month, July: MSIE: 48.1%
Mozilla: 32.9%
Yes, it's only the first five days of July. But still, it looks like a pattern to me. (btw: OS stats are 68% Windows, 18.5% Linux)
If you think... (Score:3, Insightful)
The Reasons (Score:5, Interesting)
1. The new standards, XML, etc, are going to be controlled as much outside the browser, by the productivity suite, as they will be within it. The standards for basic browsers have more or less solidified at this point. There's no more control to be taken here.
2. The browser market has been driven into the ground. There's no money to be made here anymore, as decent free alternatives are available, and the market has gotten used to not paying for their browser. There won't be another Netscape threat.
3. The whole "browser as your desktop" idea has faded away. MS is no longer in danger of losing its OS or productivity-suite sales to a browser company.
Put all of this together and you've got the reason why MS doesn't really give a crap if people use IE or not anymore. But why go the extra step of taking it down?
1. Even in its recommendation, the article is a backhanded compliment at best. Very much in the league of "If you have to switch, this one will work." Which leads to a setup for the future version of IE.. "All the features of Firefox, plus..." which of course will only be able to run properly on the new Longhorn system.
2. IE's security problems have really started to hit the mainstream. The article isn't telling folks anything that wasn't known already, but lets MSN Slate look like a wonderfully independant publication while doing so.
Most importantly:
3. IE doesn't make them money anyway. At this point, the various holes are costing them more than IE provides them both in actual dollars in support and programmer hours that have to be devoted to containing the mess, and in PR.
So it's really to Microsoft's interest at this point to get people *off* of IE, especially to something simple that they'll be able to easily port settings from for the new version. The only thing that might keep them there is stubborn pride. If cooler heads have prevailed in the boardroom, expect to see more on these lines from Microsoft sources.
Re:The Reasons (Score:5, Interesting)
1. The new standards, XML, etc, are going to be controlled as much outside the browser, by the productivity suite, as they will be within it. The standards for basic browsers have more or less solidified at this point. There's no more control to be taken here.
I think this sort of control was always very much the "consolation prize" for MSFT. (One of) the original point(s) of bundling IE in with Windows was probably to try and force people, via "embrace and extend", over to using Windows NT servers and IIS to serve content. Unfortunately this was the first example of them underestimating The Power of Open Source(TM) as Apache emerged at round about the same time, and could scale far better than NT4/IIS could, on proprietary Unices before the true rise of Linux.
2. The browser market has been driven into the ground. There's no money to be made here anymore, as decent free alternatives are available, and the market has gotten used to not paying for their browser. There won't be another Netscape threat.
If you're implying that MS perceived Netscape as a threat in a revenue sense, then I think you're a bit off base. Remember, the anti-trust trial witnesses explained at great length about the "applications barrier to entry" (namely, the positive feedback circle that Windows is popular because it has loads of applications written for it, which in turn feeds its popularity so more applications are written for it). Netscape, and especially Java (remember the still-born WordPerfect for Java?) threatened to undermine that barrier if the browser could become the platform for applications. With Mozilla and technologies like XUL, this threat is more alive than ever.
3. The whole "browser as your desktop" idea has faded away. MS is no longer in danger of losing its OS or productivity-suite sales to a browser company.
Possibly, but even KDE and GNOME perpetuate the "tradition" of using the same application for browsing the local file system and the web. I kind of agree about the threat to MSFT's OS business not coming from a browser company, but I think that's partly an artefact of history - MSFT's continued anti-competitive behaviour made it pretty clear that ANY serious threat to them would have to come from a decentralised organisation (e.g. FOSS) simply because MSFT would crush, by fair means or foul, any other company that tried to compete with them.
3. IE doesn't make them money anyway. At this point, the various holes are costing them more than IE provides them both in actual dollars in support and programmer hours that have to be devoted to containing the mess, and in PR.
Did IE EVER make them any money? OK, we never knew what the cost of Win95b and Win98 would have been if MSFT had been forced to unbundle IE, but it didn't directly make them money IMO. I think your last sentence is closer to the truth than you realise - MSFT has limited programming resources and I read a statistic (can't remember the source alas) that 80% of the Longhorn developers have had to be pulled off Longhorn work, to patch 2000/XP/2003 (and by implication, IE since the codebases are so inter-twined). It's worth reviewing ESR's discussion of Moore's Law [opensource.org] as part of Halloween IX - basically, the easily-overlooked consequence of computer power roughly doubling every 18 months is that the software to make use of that power must also double in complexity concurrently with this. IMO, MSFT is becoming a classic victim of this, just as [old and new] SCO did. Of course, MSFT has far more programming resources than SCO does/did, but it will only buy them time and the continued delays and feature shedding of Longhorn are precisely the sort of symptoms to look for.
Not Suprised (Score:3, Insightful)
Reverse Psychology... (Score:3, Funny)
It's like when your mom decides she likes rap too and you have to burn every 50 Cent CD in your collection because of it...
for those who have ingrained mistrust of MS.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Realizing they are gaining an ever increasing degree of mistrust by the consumerk, they simply figure that if they attach themselves and there perception of mistrust to Firefox.... then they can create enough confusion in the minds of the consumer, as to what the consumer mind trusts...... then it becomes a crap shoot (playing the odds of chance) to maintain at least a part of the market.
And of course maybe everyone was already leaving IE anyway and MS just decided to make it look like it was their idea and of course creating/maintaining the illusion that people follow what MS says...
Or maybe MS just had some "Black-Scholes Formula" in marketing that has turned bad all around (like the trillion dollar bet -- search google)....and they have yet to realize their marketing mouth has gingivitis...
Hmm. (Score:3, Funny)
Heh. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Heh. (Score:4, Insightful)
Nope, MS can't let mozilla come in and dominate the browser market. That's potential death right there. If mozilla has 90% market share when Longhorn finally comes out then MS is going to have a very hard time selling XAML - what with a massive install base of XUL capable browsers already out there. If MS fails to sell XAML and XUL takes off, then all of a sudden you don't need MS APIs, or OSs to use all those XUL apps. That's a huge kick in the balls for maintaining a desktop OS monopoly. Lose that, and they lose REAL leverage.
There's a long line of dominoes, and as long as MS is relying on having a desktop monopoly to leverage their products they need to guard every point of entry into that line. They can't afford to give up the browser just yet.
Jedidiah
K-Meleon for Win32 (Score:4, Informative)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:When Firefox becomes top dog... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The Author of this article (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Timing? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Timing? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Scepticism (Score:3, Insightful)
OK, sceptic [sic], hold the judgment...I agree that it probably wasn't really a server-side error, but the Acrobat Reader plugin to IE is a piece of crap.
I've had to set up quite a number of sites that serve either static or streamed PDF content, and IE has problems with handling content in SSL in some inappropriate cases (Pragma/Cache headers cause IE to 'lose' a download file in SSL). The Reader plugin, like I said above, i