NYTimes Reports on Firefox 549
Soldrinero writes "Just three days after running a community-sponsored two-page ad, the New York Times is now running a news story on Mozilla Firefox. Our favorite browser is presented in a very favorable light, and there's a good discussion on both Firefox's useability-enhancing features and its security merits. Being fair, they also present Microsoft's solution to security problems: 'Microsoft does have one suggestion for those who cannot use the latest patches in Service Pack 2: buy a new personal computer'"
Did somebody pay them ? (Score:5, Interesting)
Huh? Bill needs clue.. (Score:3, Insightful)
I got a cheaper solution. Download and install Linux.
First, it gets rid of that POS called Windows! Secondly.. its free!
Re:Huh? Bill needs clue.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Huh? Bill needs clue.. (Score:5, Insightful)
As far as I can see the only thing that is stopping a mass migration to Linux is a lack of software, especially games and business software. Joe User can't upgrade his graphics card under Linux, true; but he can't upgrade his graphics card under Windows either. What Joe User *can* do under Windows is go to the store, buy a prepackaged piece of software, pop in the disk and click "next" until its installed.
Also, we have to admit that some of the critical software for Linux isn't as good as the software for Windows. Last night I discovered that KOffice's KSpread program won't let me make a non-contiguous selection. KWord doesn't feature paragraph grouping or widow and orphan control. I *want* to use the free software programs, but I find myself using Crossover Office to run MS Office because MS Office works. Its expensive, but it does the job.
Linux is ready for the desktop, we just need software to run there.
Re:Huh? Bill needs clue.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, if it breaks you still need a fairly sophisticated idea of how everything works to fix it, but the computer is fast becoming a home applicance. Like any other appliance, it goes to a specialist for repair.
Linux needs the following
1 - An installation standard that is every bit as idiot proof as installing a self executing binary with microsoft.
2 - An out of the box user interface that has the polished look and feel users have come to expect form Apple and MS.
3 - Application suites competitive with pay products like Office.
Re:Huh? Bill needs clue.. (Score:3, Informative)
Errm... "yum install foo"
2 - An out of the box user interface that has the polished look and feel users have come to expect form Apple and MS.
Have you used a recent distro such as Fedora?
3 - Application suites competitive with pay products like Office.
OpenOffice?
Re:Huh? Bill needs clue.. (Score:3, Interesting)
There are graphical alternatives to that you know...
Besides, it's frequently been suggested that people who haven't used computers before are much happier dealing with a commandline than a GUI. (Can't find the URIs ATM but there have been studies that provide evidence for this).
OpenOffice.org is still missing a replacement for Microsoft Access, a graphical database design program. Novice or casual users do no
Geez, if only I had mod points... (Score:5, Interesting)
Joe User can't fix a Windows problem any more than he can fix a Linux problem.
To drive home the point, how about this very reference from this morning? [slashdot.org] It took a sysadmin with VERY MUCH clue 5 hours to nuke all the stuff off a Wintel machine, and all it takes for it to come undone is one little click on the IE icon.
I cleaned up a friend's machine last month. The father was sure the kids were surfing pr0n sites and nasty bits that he didn't want them to go into. To prove it wasn't their fault I logged on and I opened IE. We waited about 5 minutes with my hands off of the keyboard while we chatted about this 'n that. I logged off and re-ran the spyware and malware scanners. 50 hits in 5 minutes. He was stunned.
I couldn't get him to go to Linux, but at least he's running Firefox now.
Re:Huh? Bill needs clue.. (Score:2)
(Cut to scene of crappy robotic Peter Griffin running with a bucket on his foot)
Re:Huh? Bill needs clue.. (Score:2, Flamebait)
They are known and they are fixed. A few clicks of the mouse and you are up-to-date.
M$ is unfixable. It's a defective product that can not ever be repaired. Broken straight out of the box...
Re:Huh? Bill needs clue.. (Score:3, Insightful)
But no, you get linux with patches already installed, and even if you had to download them that's better than the 20 unpatched known holes that Windows XP Pro has.
Re:Huh? Bill needs clue.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Or worse yet... If you prefer to stick with Windows 2000 instead of XP, MS has blatantly said that the fundamental problems they've acknowledged with Win2K will simply never be fixed, and they have no plans to address them.
Re:Huh? Bill needs clue.. (Score:2)
The other questions aren't so easy to answer.
Re:Did somebody pay them ? (Score:3, Insightful)
You obviously don't understand the newspaper business. To get the article you have to buy an ad.
Re:Did somebody pay them ? (Score:5, Interesting)
I think the big ad resulted in some higher-ups at the newspaper noticing that big ad and the cash-flow, which in turn resulted in them asking their editors why nobody had looked at that product yet.
So some reporter took a look at Firefox and was delighted...
The rest is his[ s]tory... ;-)
Regards, Ulli
Re:Did somebody pay them ? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's called "appropriate context". A feminist magazine (I forget which one) stopped taking ads because the advertisers wanted to influence the editorial content. In this case, the NYT is rewarding the free software community as both a signal "we reward our advertisers" and an inducement for the community to advertise further.
We may still have a good article, but it wouldn't be excellent, and it wouldn't be now. Oddball minorities need a lot of "balance" to make an article appear neutral. Mainstream entities (and this ad. makes Firefox mainstream) can have more positive reviews without so much appearance of bias, and NYT readers having seen the ad. will see Firefox as mainstream.
The need for reward, and entering the mainstream both make this kind of coverage possible.
Re:Did somebody pay them ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, you're not wrong, BUT, an article following a 2-page add that comes about by a community pulling resources together is also a comment regarding a grassroots movement going mainstream.
Re:Did somebody pay them ? (Score:2, Insightful)
Yea, true, because Microsoft has not spent nearly as much on advertising in the NYT as Firefox has. That posting was modded modded 4, insightful?
Re:Did somebody pay them ? (Score:5, Informative)
The NYT, and their lead technology writer, David Pogue, have mentioned Firefox any number of times before. Just a cursory search of the archives shows 6-7 articles published prior to the advertisement, and I know Pogue has been advocating it in his online weblog and emails as well.
So, while yes, the advertisement in the NYT helped raise Firefox's profile, it's difficult to draw any direct causality between its placement and the timing of this article. (Not to mention the traditional church and state separation the NYT enforces between its advertising and editorial regimes.)
Re:Did somebody pay them ? (Score:2)
I read many articles in many newspaper about the ad and the way donations were collected, and in German newspapers, they wrote both about the ad in the New Yorks time and the one in Frankfurter Allgemeine (a major German newspaper) that was published on December 2. Firefox is, of course, a sufficient reason to write articles about, but this idea that users donate money for an advertisement for Free software is an additional topic to write about, and the mo
Re:Did somebody pay them ? (Score:2)
Are you truely that naive? Publishers don't bite the hand that feeds them. Ads may have little influence about what authors write, but it has a major impact on what gets past the editors and actually published.
Spread Firefox! (Score:2, Funny)
Or some community submission for that matter:
http://vcl.ctrl-c.liu.se/vcl/Artists/Wooly-Mitten
Re:Spread Firefox! (Score:2)
We seek acceptance and recognition of legitimacy from others, and randomly linking to a naked vixen does not advance that, nor does this advance the cause of Firefox within the context of Slashdot.
Re:Spread Firefox! (Score:3, Funny)
Okay, disclaimer here - the linked movie isn't quite work-safe though not "that kind". Funny. Not trollish.
Re:Spread Firefox! (Score:2)
The Firefox logo was a beautifully designed piece of artwork; if nothing else, that sexually explicit reworking is pretty amateurish in comparison. More on the level of that seriously fucked-up cartoon strip Boston and Shaun [bostonandshaun.com].
I would advise against its use for publicity purposes. Thank God they didn't use it in the NYT ad
Anyhow, I want a pornographic version of the Internet Explorer 'e' logo. That should be a challenge.
Re:Spread Firefox! (Score:3, Funny)
If you think the firefox logo is sexually explicit I advise you to seek professional help.
Re:Spread Firefox! (Score:2)
Ironically, the fox is at least wearing some clothes in the reworking...
Re:Spread Firefox! (Score:2)
Re:LINK NSFW (NOT SAFE FOR WORK) (Score:5, Funny)
To be fair, the fox in the original FireFox logo was also naked.
Actually, most foxes are naked for that matter...
Re:LINK NSFW (NOT SAFE FOR WORK) (Score:2, Funny)
They're also usually naked.
Re:Spread Firefox! (Score:2)
Word of mouth (Score:5, Interesting)
Just the other day, I had a friend who couldn't go to any site on the net without IE crashing and the Send Report box coming up (does anyone actually send the reports??). Anyway, she was getting frustrated, so I pointed her to Firefox's download site [mozilla.org]. She downloaded it and now uses it exclusively. She loves the look and feel and says it seems much faster in rendering sites. I told her there may be a couple sites she will have to use IE for, but for the most part, Firefox will work.
She said she is going to tell her friends about it. As I said earlier, word of mouth advertising is the best way to get the word out....especially for people that aren't very knowledgeable technology wise.
Re:Word of mouth / OT (Score:3, Informative)
Yes. I have to maintain a lot of Windows PCs the send feature is supposed to get you any suggested fixes. I have rarely seen it work for IE or for the OS but in Office XP and above you click send, wait a minute and a website comes up that sometimes even details your problem and how to fix it. Better yet, 1 out of maybe 8 times it just fixes it. While I would never use it on the servers (due to MS "fixing" things) I think it is great for PCs.
Re:Word of mouth (Score:2, Interesting)
How did she manage to download Firefox with IE crashing on every site?
Re:Word of mouth (Score:5, Funny)
While it can be said it's sometimes "surprisingly effective", it's certainly not "the best" if reaching and influencing as large a possible an audience is your goal (as often is with advertising).
TV commercials featuring well-endowed women diving in kegs of beer and by accident finding huge penises, followed by flashing logos to the blaring tune of elevator rock seem to be somewhat better.
Re:Word of mouth (Score:2)
If savvy folks, like the commenter who wowed a girl over to Firefox by installing sexy themes, tackle the problem one user at a time (or even a hundred users at a time) the solution will start to spread like wildfirefox.
In a week, when all the New Year's Resolutions start and Year In Review stories come out, this Firefox ad will be catching
What you can do (Re:Word of mouth) (Score:4, Interesting)
For example take this [weightwatchers.com], they support Netscape7, but lock out Mozilla and Firefox.
The webmaster did not want to believe me when I told him those browsers are essentially the same (I had a rather lenghty email conversation with him), but he will when he gets enough complaints from enough different people.
Re:What you can do (Re:Word of mouth) (Score:4, Funny)
(Sorry. Nom.
Which IE only sites? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Which IE only sites? (Score:4, Informative)
No registration required (Score:5, Informative)
By RANDALL STROSS
Published: December 19, 2004
IREFOX is a classic overnight success, many years in the making.
Published by the Mozilla Foundation, a nonprofit group supporting open-source software that draws upon the skills of hundreds of volunteer programmers, Firefox is a Web browser that is fast and filled with features that Microsoft's stodgy Internet Explorer lacks. Firefox installs in a snap, and it's free.
Firefox 1.0 was released on Nov. 9. Just over a month later, the foundation celebrated a remarkable milestone: 10 million downloads. Donations from Firefox's appreciative fans paid for a two-page advertisement in The New York Times on Thursday.
Until now, the Linux operating system was the best-known success among the hundreds of open-source projects that challenge Microsoft with technically strong, free software that improves as the population of bug-reporting and bug-fixing users grows. But unless you oversee purchases for a corporate data center, it's unlikely that you've felt the need to try Linux yourself.
With Firefox, open-source software moves from back-office obscurity to your home, and to your parents', too. (Your children in college are already using it.) It is polished, as easy to use as Internet Explorer and, most compelling, much better defended against viruses, worms and snoops.
Microsoft has always viewed Internet Explorer's tight integration with Windows to be an attractive feature. That, however, was before security became the unmet need of the day. Firefox sits lightly on top of Windows, in a separation from the underlying operating system that the Mozilla Foundation's president, Mitchell Baker, calls a "natural defense."
For the first time, Internet Explorer has been losing market share. According to a worldwide survey conducted in late November by OneStat.com, a company in Amsterdam that analyzes the Web, Internet Explorer's share dropped to less than 89 percent, 5 percentage points less than in May. Firefox now has almost 5 percent of the market, and it is growing.
Gary Schare, Microsoft's director of product management for Windows, has been assigned the unenviable task of explaining how Microsoft plans to respond to the Firefox challenge with a product whose features were last updated three years ago. He has said that current users of Internet Explorer will stick with it once they take into account "all the factors that led them to choose I.E. in the first place." Beg your pardon. Choose? Doesn't I.E. come bundled with Windows?
Mr. Schare has said that Mozilla's Firefox must prove it can smoothly move from version 1.0 to 2.0, and has thus far enjoyed "a bit of a free ride." If I were the spokesman for the software company that included the company's browser free on every Windows PC, I'd be more careful about using the phrase "free ride."
Trying to strike a conciliatory note, Mr. Schare has also declared that he and his company were happy to have Firefox as "part of the large ecosystem" of software that runs on Windows. In fact, Firefox is ecumenically neutral, being available also for both the Mac and for Linux.
Mr. Schare may be the official spokesman, but he does not use Internet Explorer himself. Instead he uses Maxthon, published by a little company of the same name. It uses the Internet Explorer engine but provides loads of features that Internet Explorer does not. "Tabs are what hooked me," he told me, referring to the ability to open within a single window many different Web sites and move easily among them, rather than open separate windows for each one and tax the computer's memory. Firefox has tabs. Other browsers do, too. But fundamental design decisions for Internet Explorer prevent the addition of this and other desiderata without a thorough update of Windows, which will not be complete until 2006 at the earliest.
How fitting that Microsoft finds itself in this predicament. In late 1995, at a time when Netscape Na
Re:No registration required (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:No registration required (Score:2)
Its old wisdom that if put something on top of the OS, the OS will be obsoleted and replaced by this upper layer. So, if they intruduce tabs in IE, people will start thinking "Internet Explorer" instead of "Windows". They make money from Windows, not from IE.
NY Times was fair with MS, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Being fair, they also present Microsoft's solution to security problems: 'Microsoft does have one suggestion for those who cannot use the latest patches in Service Pack 2: buy a new personal computer'"
They're shooting themselves in the foot here. Open source does not require you to 'buy a new personal computer'. Oh, the market does tho, and Microsoft is there for the market, not for the consumer. That's sad.
Re:NY Times was fair with MS, but... (Score:2)
Re:NY Times was fair with MS, but... (Score:2)
But what's really funny about THAT is there's a better than average chance the new computer will not have SP2 already installed. You'll have to connect to the internet & download the service pack, during which you stand a good chance ending up infected anyway.
Snappy reporting... (Score:2, Funny)
I exaggarate, I know.
Re:Snappy reporting... (Score:2, Funny)
What a brilliant Article (Score:5, Insightful)
That said, the article itself is a brilliant advert for FireFox and gives an excellent overview of the circumstances in which Internet Explorer overtook Netscape and how that compares to what is happening in the browser market right now.
And assuming NYTimes is not a technical journal (which I don't think it is) it doesn't have the problem of "preaching to the choir" as so many articles have had in the past.
Long live Firefox.
Re:What a brilliant Article (Score:4, Informative)
HP.com and spreading regard of content providers (Score:5, Interesting)
found here: http://www.spreadfirefox.com/?q=blog/1742
Great, now when? (Score:2)
More important news (Score:5, Funny)
My world has just turned upside down. Is the NYT now on the slashdot buddy list?
Re:More important news (Score:5, Funny)
You know, Firefox has a plugin for that.
Re:More important news (Score:2)
Re:More important news (Score:5, Informative)
BugMeNot [texturizer.net]
Re:More important news (Score:2)
Re:More important news (Score:2)
http://www.bugmenot.com/
Re:More important news (Score:2)
Re:More important news (Score:3, Insightful)
Everybody has a list of friends/buddy(s) that they meet every few months. The pre-condition is that alcohol is involved. These are not your drinking buds but the people who you meet very occassionally, and never ever meet in a setting where alcohol is not involved. It is impossible that you can tolerate these buds in real life without the booze shield. They say the same about you but in a happy setting in a happy hour at a happy bar, its all about being happy. They have fun and yo
Lots of free press, gotta do something about it (Score:5, Insightful)
This was the first step, now it's time to plan for the next.
Re:Lots of free press, gotta do something about it (Score:2)
My favorite line (Score:5, Funny)
This is like getting a letter from Ford saying they forgot to put in the airbag and if you want one, buy a new Mustang.
Re:My favorite line (Score:2)
So does Scrappleface... (Score:3, Funny)
Cool now spread xul apps across the web (Score:3, Insightful)
out how to program a hello world using it.
Seriously lets see some cool it only works in firefox xul applications.
At long last, the correct reply! (Score:5, Insightful)
Well I thank the author for addressing that quote which we've seen in other articles regarding Microsoft's comments towards Firefox. The reply was exactly what I (and many more) thought of the original quote.
I don't follow the logic. (Score:2)
I'll never understand this reasoning. No one forced you to use Internet Explorer. Certainly no one forced me. I used Netscape Navigator up through version 4.0, then got fed up with it and decided I'd give Internet Explorer a whirl. Liked it better, have used it since. I could have just as easily stayed with Netscape, or gone to Opera or Mozilla.
Just because something is bundled/integrated does not mean that your ability to choose an alternative is sudde
Re:I don't follow the logic. (Score:2)
In that case... (Score:2)
Then the way the article is phrased is misleading. So people don't know about alternatives - whose fault is that? The users' for not bothering to find out even after some of them get fed up with the IE browsing experience? The Mozilla Organization's for not marketing aggressively enough?
It's
Firefox at work? (Score:2, Interesting)
My love for Firefox is accentuated daily by comparison to my continued use of IE at work. Due to security issues (which one could argue are based on MS software in the firstplace) I, as an end user, cannot install Firefox. Now the obvious solution would be to have IT migrate the institution as a whole to a new browser, but that is unlikely to happen in t
Re:Firefox at work? (Score:3, Informative)
incredibly... (Score:4, Funny)
Hurdle for FireFox (Score:5, Insightful)
a new definition of being fair? (Score:3, Insightful)
That was being unfair. Being fair, according to TFA, Microsoft's solution to the security problems is to upgrade to the latest windows OS, i.e. XP. Not buy a new comp. Still not a solution per se. But, it's different from buying a new machine.
Now if you say that Microsoft's solution is to upgrade to a newer OS which is better suited to the problems of current time - it doesn't sound that bad - does it? hence it must be said that "microsoft wants you to buy a new comp". It doesn't even make sense. Buying a new comp will not solve the problems - it's a software problem not a hardware problem. Doesn't matter. it'll still run, because it shows microsoft
All these are the reason I don't read newspaper anymore. You don't know what is the fact after reading them - why take time off from fragging a few more fat tailed animals in UT.
Re:a new definition of being fair? (Score:5, Interesting)
If you're complaining that Slashdotters like to pick on MS a little too much, you're right. But in this case, it's MS unwittingly picking on itself.
Choice (Score:5, Insightful)
Beg your pardon. Choose? Doesn't I.E. come bundled with Windows?
Ah, so refreshing to see a mainstream journalist hit the nail on the head in a single line.
Firefox and Active X (Score:3, Insightful)
As much as I hate IE and the security nightmare it creates, the sad fact is that for banks, other financial institutions and coporate intranets, ActiveX and other IE gorp can't be avoided.
It sucks to introduce people to Firefox, have them all impressed and then get a call that they can't get through to their Wells Fargo account (if any IT people from Well Fargo are reading this, get a clue. Your bank is one of the biggest in Silicon Valley and the fact that you persist in being IE centric is pissing a lot of your customers off).
Company intranets are a hopeless case. Considering the bureaucratic, pin headed phb mentality behind most corporate IT departments, it will years (if ever) before company intranets are adapted for non-IE browsers. The only even partial solution to gain Firefox type features in this case is to use Maxthon, and that still leaves the door wide open security wise.
Re:Firefox and Active X - not necessary on Win32 (Score:4, Interesting)
And it's not just ActX now, we had to check all of our PCs for JRE when the recent vulnerability was announced, and installing JRE5 does not uninstall the defective JREs, annoyingly.
Corporate installs of FF 1.1 and/or Moz 2 would be nice with MSIs and options to retain trusted plugins like Flash, Acrobat and dictionaries. It's very annoying having to reinstall dictionaries when upgrading Mozilla.
Re:Firefox and Active X (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't mind using 3rd-party technology to "enhance" your site, but I'd better be able to navigate and perform all the basic functions on your site without flash, shockwave, javascript, and ActveX enabled. You want to add cool effects with flash? Great!, but don't do your menus in flash without having a fall-back method for basic navigation! The same goes for any such technology.
What needs to happen, is for the browser market to get so diverse that ALL browsers must be conscientious about accurately following standards and by the same token all web-sites/designers would be forced to actually USE those standards.
Re:Firefox and Active X (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't think onClick() works quite the same in all browsers. Last week I was designing an interface where I wanted to tie a help-window popup to disabled checkboxes and I seem to remember onClick() in the disabled checkboxes working for one of Safari or Firefox but not the other. A little question mark to the side now
There IS an activex plugin. (Score:3, Informative)
It has.
http://www.iol.ie/~locka/mozilla/plugin.htm#downl o ad [www.iol.ie]
In fact, I'm using it in my firefox right now, listening to embedded midi's
And yes, it ONLY enables windows media player. All other activex plugins have to be inserted by hand.
Re:Solution? (Score:3, Insightful)
It always irritates me when the solution is for the *consumer* to spend *more* money to fix a pro
Re:Solution? (Score:2)
Re:Solution? (Score:2)
Re:Why is FireFox such a big deal? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Why is FireFox such a big deal? (Score:5, Insightful)
Ive heard from others it has fewer features and options,
resulting in smaller memory footprint, less overhead and generally faster and "lighter" code - shorter load times, shorter page rendering times etc.
and a more dumbed down UI. Dumbed down UI != ease of use.
That's what you got wrong. The UI is task-oriented, not feature-oriented. In this way it's "dumbed down" - the user doesn't have to care X is a component of Y and Y belongs to Z. "Advanced"? "Security&Privacy"? "Tools"? Where is it? User cares only that X does task of type A and so it can be found in the "A". Associating downloaded file type - "downloads". Easy and simple. The navigation routes don't correspond to the program internal structure but to user requirements. The options are all there, only the less used ones are dug in deeper to expose the frequently used ones.
I think the less customisability software has the harder it becomes to use, for newbies and experienced users alike.
Another thing you get wrong. While Mozilla is a combine with kitchen sink and hardly anything to add, Firefox is meant to be "bare bones to be extended". Plugins for Firefox may change its face totally and they aren't meant as "some extra fancy" but as an essential component. You build your browser to be what you want it to be by adding what you need, not by switching off what you don't want. In this respect Firefox is way more customizable than Mozilla - just not "out of the box".
It becomes more difficult for the user to customise the software for their preferences and usage pattern, and more difficult to accomplish certian tasks.
Straight opposite. First - "reasonable defaults" so there's no thing like in MSIE prefs where I run a line of checkboxes and toggle all, on to off, off to on, because -all- of them are against my preference. And then flexiblity to add any extras you desire.
The trick with useability is not to remove customisbility, but rather make software as customisable as possible but simply design a good configuration user interface that places more commonly used options more prominantly than advanced one, such as through placing the more advanced options on advanced options screens or other such techniques, thus keeping the more advanced options from confusing newbies but allowing people to gradually begin using them and discover them (and making it easy to discover them by making them all avialable through a good UI) as they become familiar with software. People often start out using software by using a subset of its features and then gradually add to their knowledge of the software and use a more complete set of its features, and different users have different needs and will use different features sets. This is why software should be as customisable as possible and not try to restrict features and functionality, but rather allow the user to customise the software to their tastes. One feature that seems useless to one person is likely essential to someone else.
You just summed up an essential part of Firefox philosophy.
Re:Why is FireFox such a big deal? (Score:3, Interesting)
It's just simple things like having a search box instead of using the address box that make the little differences that matter. And I can still use the address bar for a Google "I feel lucky" search.
Mozilla does not understand ctrl+enter to add www. and
If you use Firefox and want an email client that goes with it, get Thunderbird. If you need a
Blow by blow rebuttal. (Score:3, Interesting)
Obviously you have no idea about User Interface Design. When you are dealing with a set of users (web surfers) that are not familiar with a given field of expertise (IT, Computers) the last thing you want to do is to burden them with too many choices and see
Re:What a friggin moron. (Score:2)
I hate to break it to you, but, in IT matters at least, the majority of computer users are absolute retards.
Re:What a friggin moron. (Score:2)
Not to mention the hypocrisy of admitting to running something called Maxthon instead of IE because "tabbed browsing" got him hooked on it. Seriously, this guy is speaking out of both sides of his mouth. MS says "our users don't want tabbed browsing." This guy basically repeats the mantra but admits to running another browser.
What the hell is going on at MS these days???? Between Ballmer's recent frothing in the press, and now they throw this clown to the wolves for an interview?Re:What a friggin moron. (Score:2)
You are a god damned lying sack of shit. The rest of your post is total bullshit too, but that one part just stuck out the most. Fucking retard.
Re:What a friggin moron. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:from firefox to ie (Score:2)
Re:from firefox to ie (Score:3, Informative)
in other words 95% of IE is already loaded...
Firefox != integrated into the OS...
in other words must be loaded before using. as in longer load time.
Once a single instance is loaded, try opening another instance? Quicker isn't it? Hmmm, I wonder why that is? IT'S ALL READY LOADED (like IE is when you first get into windows)
-Xystren
Ohh, and BTW I'm testing on a p-ii 233
Re:from firefox to ie (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Buy a new PC? (Score:5, Funny)
It will if you buy it from Apple. :-)
/me ducks
Re:Weren't you just griping about product shills? (Score:2)
Re:Weren't you just griping about product shills? (Score:3, Insightful)
People are not just excited about the products, they are also excited by the whole movement.. and they feel part of it. Something that rarely happens with proprietary solutions.
Re:regfree link? (Score:4, Informative)