Mozilla 1.8b1 Released, Firefox Growth Slowing 425
An anonymous reader writes "Mozilla 1.8 Beta 1 has been released, and in addition to numerous bug fixes now includes ECMAScript for XML (E4X). Mozilla 1.8 will serve as the code basis for Firefox 1.1. In other Mozilla related news, WebSideStory saw Firefox's usage growth slow down to just 15% (Jan-Feb) from 22% (Dec-Jan) making Firefox's 10% marketshare goal for 2005 potentially more challenging. Their stats also saw Internet Explorer usage drop below 90% for the first time in many years."
Is this the end of the ride? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Is this the end of the ride? (Score:3, Insightful)
Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:5, Insightful)
A lot of why IE has been so problematic is that during their war for the browser they "extended" the crap out of it, adding a lot of out-of-standard enhancements and extensions. IE has countless API's that keep web sites and applications stuck on IE and making it harder to switch to something else (really, no different then anything else Microsoft has ever made.)
Firefox is open source, it adheres to standards more strictly, and it's a lot more light-weight. There's less opportunity for malware to get in with Firefox, and if there's a security flaw it's fixed a lot faster. On the other hand, because of IE's extensions and extra functionality, it makes it much more difficult for Microsoft to back off on all the extra (and not soundly designed) features because everyone is stuck on them.
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:5, Informative)
Sometime in the last couple of weeks, Fastclick, a major ad network, started exploiting this to get its popups around Firefox's popup blocker. The ad scripts load a small Flash movie which then lauches the popup.
You can block plugins from launching popups by using a hidden pref but this will block all plugin-launched popups, even ones launched in response to a mouse click. To do this, enter about:config in the Location bar, hit return and then right-click any where in the content area and choose New > Integer. Enter privacy.popups.disable_from_plugins as the name and 2 as the value.
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:3, Informative)
The one feature I wish Flashblock would add is a whitelist. There are some pieces of flash I'd always like to see, such as navigation bars on some sites. The rest of flash, forget it.
Flash is one of the worst things ever to happen to the web. "Look folks, here's another non-standard standard we're going to foist off on you, one complete with its own security holes and annoying behaviors that you (as an end user) can't modify."
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:5, Interesting)
- it renders your page inaccessible for blind,... people
- people can't use their browsers comfort functions with Flash (like Open in new Window)
- Flash is too dumb to distinguish between right mouse clicks and drags (like the ones used in mouse gestures), it opens a popup menu with lots of useless commands on right-click - Flash Animations and Intros annoy the shit out of your site users when they have to wait for them even though you have already seen them (slow down site usage which kills your userbase)
- Flash Player is not available for all Browsers on all Operating Systems
- Who says all your visitors want your page to look the same (Font, Font-Size,Sound,...)
You should think a bit about all these points before you decide you really need to break compatibility and comfort just for a bit of eye-candy/bells and whistles.
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:4, Insightful)
Modern browsers let you override a site's stylesheet for a reason you know, some people just want to read the content and dont want to be bothered with all the fancy stuff the author put in because he already has the content..
The number of sites i go to where the text is rendered unreadable by a background pattern/image, but atleast i can highlight it or cut+paste it into another app, can't do that with flash.
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem is that a lot of organisations seem to jump straight into using Flash as, probably, "it looks cool". It wouldn't matter so much except that many of the sites don't need to be done that way.
Now Flash cartoon sites, movie sites, music sites:
These I can fully understand being primarily Flash-driven. Granted I still think they should always have a non-Flash alternative - which some still lack. But these are sites based around audio-visual content, so displaying them as ausio-visual content makes
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:3, Informative)
Microsoft Active Accessibility (MSAA) makes it easier for all assistive technologies to incorporate support for Macromedia Flash Player. Once the contents of a Macromedia Flash movie are placed under MSAA, it is up to the individual assistive technology to render that content for the user. Since MSAA support is a new feature of Macromedia Flash Player, many assistive technologies still do not know how to handle
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:3, Informative)
Luckily recent versions of Flashblock include a whitelisting function. So as soon as you realise that you're regularly visiting a site that you do want to see the Flash animstion on, it's a (nearly) simply matter of going into the extension preferences and adding that site to the list.
Actually I was really glad to find that they had that. Blocking flash ads and useless presentations is good. But having to click-to-allow every single file on a site you visit specifically for the Flash cartoons is somewhat
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:5, Informative)
It cannot be assumed that FireFox doesn't have the same amount of bugs and vulnerabilities, it hasn't had as much attention paid to it. Frankly, the 'as much' number isn't all that important anyway. It needs to have one vulnerability to be a problem. Suppose a FF extension becomes really popular, and somebody finds an exploit in it?
I'm not defending IE here, rather I'm pointing out that one should be careful in making broad assumptions about the future.
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:5, Interesting)
People say this frequently but it is simply wrong. Imperfect security is not the same thing as bad security.
From some sort of theoretical perspective one vulnerability and many vulnerabilities are equally exploitable. From a practical perspective things are different. What is necessary for there to be a "problem" is for there to be a large quantity of vulnerable systems of a certain sort installed. There are a number of conditions which must be met to go from "a vulnerability exists" to this point. Among them are the range of installed versions of the system, the range of versions which contain vulnerability, the range and nature of individual vulnerabilities that vulnerability represents, the time between the discovery of the vulnerability and the patches, the patches take to be installed by the end user, and in general the likelihood that a potential exploiter of vulnerability may expect that attempts to exploit will be successful.
All of these are effected by the frequency and quantity of bugs, not just "has there been a bug ever". In particular, if major security patches are released on a bimonthly basis because the vulnerabilities are many and frequent, it is much harder to get everyone to upgrade and install all of these patches than if there's one big urgent security patch once. (One might say that hacking on this scale is a social process, not a technical one.)
There is some sort of basic human inability to create a perfectly secure software program. But this does not mean a focus on security cannot be beneficial.
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, being open source, it's had far more attention paid to it than IE has.
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:3, Insightful)
Suppose a FF extension becomes really popular, and somebody finds an exploit in it?
Wait, wait! Don't tell me! Let me guess!
Is it..... um, no.
How about...... no, that's not it.
Oh, I know...
You disable the fucking extension!
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:4, Insightful)
Before or after you've been exploited? Just like with IE, you have to use common sense.
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:5, Insightful)
FUD? No, but a pretty damn good guess going off past history of IE.
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:2)
And as for the original remark,the lack of activex solves a nice amount of the problems that bug IE. As does the lack of over-integration into the OS.
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:4, Informative)
light weight? is this why it sucks up about 122MB of ram before you even load a web page with it? (and this is with memory cache off)
122MB? TaskManager reports Firefox is currently using around 40MB, with 9 tabs open and I've been surfing on and off for around 4 hours now.
Compare to IE's 21MB with one window open and about 20 minutes worth of use.
I wouldn't call Firefox particularly "light weight" either but it doesn't clock in at anywhere near 122MB...
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Firefox isn't made by Microsoft. (Score:3, Interesting)
--Joey
Seems like a silly prediction to me (Score:5, Insightful)
Circumstances change over time
Re:Seems like a silly prediction to me (Score:2)
Growth rate still huge (Score:4, Insightful)
Especially since they're still growing, and incredibly quickly. They picked up about a percentage point a month two months straight. Since it started that at about 4%, they were seeing 25% *monthly* growth. Good god, how long could that have possibly continued?
Oh, and they only grew 14% this month. So I agree, that kills the whole "as many customers as they'll ever have" crap.
I mean, really. This is THE open-source success story of the year. How many companies see 14% monthly growth? Legally operating companies? Not between 1998-2000?
At this point, they'll easily see 7.5% by June. They'll need some continued press, and hopefully a few more killer IE bugs, but 10% by December is a very reachable goal.
I swear, sometimes I think the asshats around here won't be happy unless IE's at 0% by Thursday.
Re:Growth rate still huge (Score:3, Informative)
"Especially since they're still growing, and incredibly quickly. They picked up about a percentage point a month two months straight. Since it started that at about 4%, they were seeing 25% *monthly* growth. Good god, how long could that have possibly continued?"
Thank you so much for that. I was waiting to see how long it would take for someone to point out something obvious even to a mathematically challenged Arts major like me:
A steady rate of increase will result in lower percentage growth every mon
Re:Is this the end of the ride? (Score:2, Insightful)
No, the media hype about it is just over.
Re:Is this the end of the ride? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Is this the end of the ride? (Score:5, Insightful)
Exactly why you should get them using Firefox. If they don't see a difference, then that makes it all that much easier for them to switch.
You know what I do?
My mom bought a new laptop from Dell recently, and she asked me to drive up and configure it for her, which I did. What I did was to use Windows' "Set Program Access and Defaults" to use Firefox as the default browser, and completely removed IE altogether from menus, the desktop, etc. by telling the configuration program to not allow access to it. This is easier than it seems, since Windows will remove all icons and shortcuts to it so there's no way to bring up IE unless you either run WindowsUpdate or specifically type 'iexplore' into the Run dialog.
I then installed an IE theme into Firefox and *poof!* To them it runs exactly the same, and nobody is the wiser. If I really wanted to make it transparent, I could've renamed the shortcuts and changed the icons, and I could probably have figured out a way to make it actuallY SAY "Internet Explorer" in the title bar.
I did the same thing today with a friend of a friend who had so much spyware she couldn't even check her webmail.
In both cases, I didn't even need to make them THINK they were running IE, as once I told them that they wouldn't notice a difference in their web surfing experience, that firefox had copied over all of their previous settings and cookies, and that they wouldn't be getting any more spyware unknowingly, they were ecstatic. All they really needed was to have their default browser changed and IE removed so they didn't load it without thinking, and they were happy as pigs in shit.
I really don't think it's too hard to make people understand that the benefits of using a better program easily outweigh the small inconvenience of remembering that it's not called Internet Explorer. Once they understand that all of those annoyances won't be showing up later on, they are more than happy to double-click on a different icon.
Re:Is this the end of the ride? (Score:4, Funny)
Them: "This site doesn't look right in this new thingy. How to I open it in the windows one?".
Me: (lying at this point) "That probably means there is a virus at that site!!! You don't want to go there."
Them: "But I used to go here all the time!"
Me: "That's why your computer was so fucked."
Them: "Oh. Well let's say my bank didn't work right with this one.. then how would I open it in windows?"
Me: "*click*"
See More Internet (Score:3, Interesting)
Then I show them that you can see more of the screen in Firefox than you can in IE, "You can see more of the internet". This makes Firefox look better on every page they see. As dumb as that is, it works.
I then do as above, removing shortcuts to IE.
G4 optimized Firefox builds (Score:3, Informative)
http://homepage.mac.com/krmathis/
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Is this the end of the ride? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Is this the end of the ride? (Score:3, Informative)
Firefox is still growing, but there WILL be a point when we need to "cross the chasm" and get it out to the mainstream.
As of right now, Soccer Mom, Joe Sixpack, and NASCAR Dad don't yet know about Firefox. I don't think we want them to yet either -- Version 1.0 is great for all of my friends in Academia, but Version 1.1 will be time when I'm more comfortable with EVERYONE using Firefox.
Re:Firefox is the code base, not Mozilla. (Score:3, Insightful)
Mozilla 1.8 is basically just there to test Gecko which will be in Firefox 1.1. New Mozilla's are just testing bitches for Firefox.
Well duh (Score:3, Insightful)
Wait and see what happens when 1.1 is released.
Slow Firefox Growth (Score:5, Funny)
Disclaimer: The previous statement was not intended to spread FUD. Results may vary, click link at your own risk, yadda yadda yadda.
Mozilla nightlies versus Firefox nightlies (Score:5, Interesting)
Has anyone else noticed this, or is it just a side effect of my old hardware? It seems like Mozilla 1.8 will be noticeably faster than at least Firefox 1.0 and last night's Firefox Feb 26 build for sure.
It's a 1.8 improvement (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Mozilla nightlies versus Firefox nightlies (Score:5, Interesting)
Are small projects just easier to optimize?
Re:Mozilla nightlies versus Firefox nightlies (Score:3, Interesting)
I've not noticed bloat in firefox, I think extensions take care of that. You only need to install the bits you use.
Interesting theory, but wrong in this case (Score:5, Informative)
Yup, it's true - less COM (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:that makes no sense to me (Score:3, Insightful)
It would be nice if it had strong type safety. It would be nice if full type information was present on every interface. It would be nice if didn't have stupid funky memory management issues. It would be really nice if it didn't have the awful apartment models. It would be nice if it had a lot of things, actually. But what it does have is a pretty simple design, and it scales. It allows for neat
Re:Mozilla nightlies versus Firefox nightlies (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Mozilla nightlies versus Firefox nightlies (Score:2)
Mozilla still good (Score:5, Informative)
My sister uses GNU/Linux (Mandrake, with KDE) on her computer (No Windows) and prefers it to her old Windows ME OS. Mozilla was part of the reason - it is easy to use, helpful, securer and just makes sense. I'm not saying Firefox isn't any of these, but on Linux, I think it looks a little "Out of place", and Mozilla does not. My sister also preferred Mozilla to both Konqueror and Firefox.
Anyway, just wanted to point out that Mozilla itself exists for more than just feeding Firefox.
Re:Mozilla still good (Score:2)
Re:Mozilla still good (Score:3, Funny)
Linux beats Windows ME? (Score:2)
What about these statistics? (Score:3, Interesting)
lasindi
Re:What about these statistics? (Score:3, Informative)
It isn't really surprising that the people who visit a web developers site tend to use Firefox more than the general population does.
Growth is phenomenally fast & not really slowi (Score:5, Informative)
Here's my math. 0.15*(1.22)=.19, so 19% vs. 22% growth in market share from the December base, but the market is probably 1% larger. The way I see it, the number of new Firefox users is down probably 10% from January to February. Then remember that there were 3 fewer days in February than in January, which would account for the 10% difference. In other words, the number of new Firefox users per day stayed almost exactly the same from January to February. Maybe someone who RTFA can tell us what that number of new uses/day is and how it compares to earlier months.
The growth is remarkably fast, and may also be remarkably stable. How many more months would Firefox need to reach 10% market share?
Re:Growth is phenomenally fast & not really sl (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Growth is phenomenally fast & not really sl (Score:5, Informative)
Not quite accurate (Score:5, Informative)
It will pick up once the corps grab it (Score:5, Interesting)
In any case, a coporate wide switch won't happen overnight. I'd expect to see the next 6 months or so start to see more corporations install linux enterprise wide. Those same corporations will complain about sites that don't work in Firefox, which helps fuel the uptake.
Also note to FF people - one of the reasons cited for not installing FF enterprise wide was the lack of central patching and policy control. This means patching security holes and forcing down settings to the clients; from my desk, without spending hours writing scripts.
Re:It will pick up once the corps grab it (Score:3, Informative)
- ActiveX is switched off and the security settings are tied down and cannot be adjusted without a) admin rights b) knowledge of regedit
- All web access is controlled through a webproxy running websense filters. You can't get to pr0n sites from work (I know - I've tried
Re:It will pick up once the corps grab it (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It will pick up once the corps grab it (Score:3, Interesting)
Then, when it comes time to update, apply a patch, or what have you, they car
Re:It will pick up once the corps grab it (Score:3, Insightful)
Some people are just stubborn (Score:5, Insightful)
What can be done about these kinds of users? Is this the vast middle-ground of IE users that just won't switch?
Its because... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Some people are just stubborn (Score:3, Interesting)
Drive home the concept that it's the same web they're looking at whatever they use.
Oh, and show them a site they like but that has really bad ads, wi
Re:Some people are just stubborn (Score:4, Insightful)
I think typically this sort of behaviour is a result of previous bad bad experiences leading to a "if it ain't completely broke, then for God's sake don't touch anything!" mentality. People are so afraid that their computer will stop working that they don't want to take any risks at all. (keep in mind that these people have no way to fix their computer if it does stop working, so this attitude isn't necessarily a bad one!)
Re:Some people are just stubborn (Score:3, Insightful)
Done that. (Score:3, Insightful)
And no, I wasnt fired for changing to Moz. I quit.
Browser Speed Benchmarks (Score:5, Interesting)
Browser Speed Analysis [howtocreate.co.uk]
You know, Firefox's tabs convinced my buddy (Score:5, Interesting)
So, I get and download Firefox for him. I explained to him "OK, I'm going to reinstall this system and not give you the admin password when I get time. In the meantime, use this to browse the web". I got rid of the IE icon from his desktop and replaced it with Firefox using the IE icon.
A couple of days later, my friend says he wants to keep Firefox. He told me the tabbed browsing was "tight".
I think Firefox is currently the best open source application for non-technical people out there. It is 100% open source and better than the competition (better CSS than IE; more security than IE; more feautures than IE).
3 things from galeon I miss in firefox (Score:4, Interesting)
There are 3 things that have been in galeon for years and are not in Firefox yet:
1. Tab detach feature
2. password manager not based on autofilling (which is dissallowed by some banks thus my on-lin bank site has password unmanageble by firefox [operations requires one-time passwords and tokens so no, there is no extra security in that ]).
3. sessions - saved in given point of time (windwos with tabs) or when browser crashes
Also there is one feature needed:
4. disabling flash player - same way as hjava.
In other news.. (Score:2, Funny)
Google announches they now handle 112% of the nets searches.
This just in: Slashdot announches a new strategy to deliver 120% correct stories, no more dupes, fact-errors or posting lame stories about fake screenshots.
US users only (Score:2, Insightful)
90% for IE is a lot (Score:2)
And that's not counting the fact that robots account for 5% of my traffic. If you subtract Robots, that brings Firefox
slightly off topic (Score:2)
Here (Score:5, Informative)
Re:slightly off topic (Score:3, Informative)
Mozilla usage down... (Score:2)
Firefox is not as geeky as it was when I started using it at version ~0.6 beta.
Maybe it's time to switch back to Mozilla so I can continue to use a browser no one else has.
I could get round the bloatedness issue by compiling a version with stuff like the mail component left out...
Re:Mozilla usage down... (Score:3, Interesting)
You can leave out mail and newsgroups, the address book, and the IRC client.
With modern demand paging systems, it doesn't matter anyway, as long as you don't load and use the other components. If you don't do e-mail with mozilla, the email code won't even be fetched from the disk. Same for IRC or other stuff that you don't use.
Why Firefox downloads are slowing (Score:5, Interesting)
No one really knows a whole lot about the new extensions because Firefox relies almost exclusively on the OSS forword of mouth. The current batch of extensions are not quite primetime so no one is pushing them.
Firefox is solid, but its reached a platue where Netscape was at 2.0. Now Firefox has to take to the next level with better advertising and new features, or fall between the cracks, just like its older brother.
Deployment not easy enough (Score:3, Insightful)
Next week, I would like to install both apps on 12 desktops running Win2K and XP.
12 is not 1000. I cannot spend 2 days finding how to do it, testing it, correcting, etc. I could install manually, but doing 12 times the same clicking around doesn't sound like fun (I'm not a mouse clicking fan either).
While I want settings to be in the user's profile, I need to make sure the web cache is elsewhere and isn't copied through the network at every logon/logoff.
I want to get rid of the moronic paths both apps use with "default" and "some-random-string".
I would like stuff in the Default Profile, so new users get it automatically.
This sort of thing doesn't look easy and straight-forward enough yet, and I'm sure that it is what is keeping many admins from deploying it on their desktops.
I will try it anyway, but I won't be able to bill the time I will have to spend researching how to do it right. Especially since the client didn't ask me to do that anyway. They are happy with MSIE. So I will spend time on my own cost, just to find how to install something that will hopefully generate less work for me in the future because I won't have to spend so much time cleaning infected machines because of MSIE.
I hope FFDeploy [dbltree.com] will help, but there doesn't seem to be such a thing for Thunderbird.
Last but not least: Firefox and Thunderbird are terrible memory hogs, with Firefox sometimes growing to insane memory usage levels (75 MB right now, but I've seen it go to 150!), and sometimes also crashing consuming 99% CPU. Fortunately, this last problem doesn't happen very often, but I will hate it when users on whom I forced Firefox call me on the phone because it crashed, so I can tell them to "press Ctrl-Alt-Del, select Firefox, click End Task, restart Firefox but-you-know-it's-a-much-better-and-more-secure-b
I do believe it's a much better browser, and it's my default browser since it was called Phoenix, but instead of contemplating statisics, I think there is still a lot work to do to make it even better, and to help administartors actually deploying it.
Re:Deployment not easy enough (Score:3, Informative)
Once run for the first time, it'll add the profile.
Use a batch file and do it through the login script.
Then there's only a few steps - change the icons, which you can copy into the profile. This will get you at least part way...
E4X looks pretty sweet (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:E4X looks pretty sweet (Score:3, Insightful)
Please don't perpetuate the name. People have been doing this for years, and it was never called "Ajax."
Adaptive Path did not invent this method.
Statistics (Score:3, Informative)
1 120850 55.17% Mozilla/5.0
2 76857 35.08% MSIE 6.0
3 5897 2.69% Opera 7.54
But - ah - different statistics. Same site, mind you, same logfiles, just a different tool doing the stats:
Firefox No 2287166 39.1 %
MS Internet Explorer No 2202449 37.6 %
Mozilla No 556825 9.5 %
Opera No 515143 8.8 %
Now that's a major difference, isn't it? Ah well, as long as Firefox is #1 there, I'm happy.
Re:Not surprised at slowed growth (Score:4, Insightful)
Earlier you mention 'phony' statistics that were 'anecdotal'. Do you have research to substantiate what you've claimed above?
Re:Not surprised at slowed growth (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not surprised at slowed growth (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Not surprised at slowed growth (Score:4, Interesting)
Most users don't want tabbed browsing? Are you on Crack? EVERYONE I've showed tabbed browsing to has loved it. Even when I didn't do it intentionally, e.g., googling for something with a friend I start middle clicking, he sees these tabs extending off to the right and goes "WHOA - what's that?" -- I show the sites opening up in the background -- he says "That's cool!" That's the usual response from tech savy to friends who think AOL is a nice service.
As for the "90% IE", three words "user agent spoofing".
Re:Not surprised at slowed growth (Score:2, Insightful)
Note that the vulnerability in that last link was marked "confidential" for five years. Rather Microsoft-ish.
Re:Here's what I think (Score:2, Interesting)
Whenever some product has tried to compete directly with Microsoft, Micro$oft has just killed it. M$ is an unfair competitor, and it know just how to get ride of the rest of the market. Just look at the FUD campaign aginst GNU/Linux they are doing
Re:Here's what I think (Score:3, Interesting)
Rumor has it that IE 7 will sport all the little whiz-bangs like tabbed browsing and so on that Firefox has. What this means is that the "average" non-techie user will see no difference, and there for no reason to migrate from IE 7, should they already have it. As well, I see a problem with a feature that most techies like, but the average user sees as a big hassle: Surfing the web, only to find that the base
Re:IE7 Will take over (Score:2)
Re:IE7 Will take over (Score:2)
Anyway, I disagree that it is more of a hype. You are speaking as though Windows is the only platform in existence - it isn't. The Fedora I am typing this from had Firefox set up as the default browser from the start. I believe Ubuntu does the same.
Also there are millions of geeks who would use Firefox (or Mozilla) over
Re:Firefox bugs (Score:3, Informative)
Right from the Maxthon homepage:
So really, you've given up a good browser AND the security of your computer since in reality, you are now using IE.
As for your Firefox problems, it seems like it could be an issue with your machine (possible malware), internet connection, or perhaps even your selected DNS servers.