Firefox 1.05 Released 85
Zebbie writes "The Mozilla Foundation released Firefox 1.05 today. The release notes indicate that there have been some 'security fixes' and 'improvements to stability.' From the web site: 'Firefox 1.0.5 is a security update that is part of our ongoing program to provide a safe Internet experience for our customers. We recommend that all users upgrade to this latest version.' It is interesting that these security updates are not yet posted on the security advisories page."
I beg to differ. (Score:2)
here's the link (Score:1)
Re:here's the link (Score:2, Funny)
You should really consider downgrading to it.
Re:here's the link (Score:2)
Or try the protocol-agnostic link.
Re:here's the link (Score:2)
Re:here's the link (Score:1)
Re:I beg to differ. (Score:2)
Permission to beg granted. Start differing.
Re:Why bother with a Mac version? (Score:4, Interesting)
Go try that instead of the 1.0 series if you have complaints about speed.
ok, then (Score:2, Funny)
Taken in Deer Park Alpha 2, default theme.
Re:ok, then (Score:2)
Re:Why bother with a Mac version? (Score:2)
Re:Why bother with a Mac version? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why bother with a Mac version? (Score:2)
Or use a custom css sheet for safari (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why bother with a Mac version? (Score:1)
http://toolbar.google.com/firefox/ [google.com]
Re:Why bother with a Mac version? (Score:1)
Anybody else experience (Score:5, Interesting)
Firefox should focus on improving the bookmark manager, the preferences, and polishing up the UI, but not forget about the most important things, speed and stability that is.
It started as a lightweight mozilla, but it consumes just as a big chunk of memory as Mozilla does.
Today, Firefox is the only serious competition to IE, (I see a lot of people using FF, even non geeks). Also, remember that another of Firefox key features is security. Lets hope that IE7s new features (that are similar to the ones FF always had, tabs, search box, etc), dont take away market share from FF.
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:2)
It's not like your going to get them to switch with 'Look! It's open source and standards compliant!'
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:2)
Yeah, flash... (Score:2)
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:1)
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:4, Insightful)
I have three computers (all Linux) which has firefox as their browser. Two desktops and one laptop. All three of them run cpufreqd.
My two desktops stay up for months on end. Thanks to tabbed browsing, I leave just one browser window open and use it for everything. I've had firefox stay up for as long as the machine, without problem.
For all three computers, I comfortably browse a various collection of websites, including many which have flash or java. None of the machines are taxed enough to force cpufreq into the gigahertz range.
You sound like you know what you're doing, so I won't question the poor behaviour you're seeing. Maybe you're browsing multi-lingual websites? Multibyte fonts killing the browser? Maybe a bad plugin or extension? I'm not sure what the problem might be or what to suggest if you've already talked to the developers.
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:2)
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:1)
Moral: Try running Firefox in Safe Mode before you conclude something's wrong with the browser itself.
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:2)
Note I am not saying your firefox problem is directly related to the kernel. I still use mozilla on Slackware, and have not been experiencing the problems you claim to experience.
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:3, Informative)
Did you say that right? (Score:2)
This is not a Slackware problem - a friend of mine with an identical Slack 9.1 setup has never had any problems like this with Firefox.
If you can prove that Firefox works on your other friends Slackware, then as well as saying there is nor underlying fault with slackware, it also says there is no underlying fault with Firefox (in that equation).
So the factor would seem to be your own system setup.
I had some rough
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:2)
fonts and other prettyness, it's all slow (Score:2)
There's always the option of building a faster but slightly uglier GTK1 version, but then you start to get hung up on the performance limitations and RAM usage issues of the Gecko rendering engine itself.
Mozilla/Firefox is slow, even today. Buy more RAM and a faster hardware, I guess.
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:1)
Actually a new IE "feature" usually means a "new hole to exploit".
So I am optimistic that FF will be able to continue to gain market share.
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:1)
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:2, Interesting)
A comparison of unpatched known vulnerabilities[1] in latest public version browsers (by securityfocus), ranks firefox as 8/9th:
Browser: Number of known vulnerabilities
so although they are making security a priority, it looks like they're not a "key" leader.
- p
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Re:Anybody else experience (Score:2)
Your inference that security focus listing several browsers with 0 known security holes makes them secure, is erroneous. I'm sure we'd see a flaw or two with some of the other browsers if they were enjoying the recent surge in popularity and attention that firefox is enjoying.
Oh, and your reference URL shows firefox at 0 vulnerabilities now. And Safari now has 1.
Right (Score:2)
Oh wait, it doesn't. So much for that theory.
Re:Right (Score:2)
So much for reading comprehension.
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:2)
I wonder if they fixed css handling on 'save page as' (I doubt it) or if this release will break all my plugins and niceties. (they don't mention)
Firefox wins on security because of philosophy, that is, educate the user, and empower. Microsoft says use 'run executable' if they are signed.
And activeX. And the fact that IE is still closer to the OS, and thus more of a hole.
Re:Anybody else experience (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:why 'automatic upgrade' not working? (Score:2, Informative)
FF Performance on Linux (Score:3, Interesting)
On Win32, on my Athlon 64 3200+ system, Firefox takes about a second and a half to render a 1000-comment Slashdot page (IE takes about half a second, interestingly - Trident seems to be very good with nested tables).
On the same box, under Ubuntu Linux (and Fedora as well), Firefox takes over NINE SECONDS of 100% CPU to render the page. Konqueror, in comparison, takes under two seconds.
What's wrong here? Why is Firefox on Windows nearly six times faster than it is on Linux?
No one at the LUG seems to believe me until I *show them* the difference - and demonstrate it on *their* system to show that it's not a config problem.
Try it yourself.
Re:FF Performance on Linux (Score:2)
Disable IPv6 (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Disable IPv6 (Score:4, Informative)
IIRC it has to do with DNS hosts that don't answer at all (or correctly) to IPV6 DNS requests. Some bad home routers also are said to be a possible cause
(From https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=6879
When IPv6 is enabled on the client machine, mozilla does a AAAA lookup first,
and if there is none, does a lookup for the A record. Correct response for a
name server if there is no AAAA record (but the domain exists) is to return
NOERROR, with an empty reply. The BBC server returned NXDOMAIN (which was
incorrect), and mozilla exhibited correct behaviour by assuming that the domain
did not exist.
See also
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2316
Re:Disable IPv6 (Score:3, Informative)
Disabling it just in Firefox was good enough for the browser, until I got a local DNS running on the same system, at which point it reverted to the slow lookups, until I disabled IPv6 system-wide.
Re:FF Performance on Linux (Score:1)
I cannot speak of the difference between IE6 and FF since I so rarely run IE.
Re:FF Performance on Linux (Score:2)
Off-topic, I know, but you'll get my eternal respect and I'll mark you as an official
My user page says:
Comment Limit (only display this many comments, for best results, set this to a low number and sort by score) If set above 100, then it is ignored and 50 is used instead.
I just _hate_ the way
Re:FF Performance on Linux (Score:2)
It's not 1000 comments on one page, of course. But it is enough to fring FF on Linux to its knees.
FF/Windows does OK, and, interestingly, Trident seems to chew threw nested tables.
The annoyances of Mozilla products (Windows) (Score:3, Interesting)
2. Why do they still insist on supporting many profiles per user? If I would like multiple profiles, then I would also create multiple users on my Windows.
3. Why are profile paths so strange? The mozilla creates something like
4. Why do they use Application data folder for cache? It's making the users' profile LARGE! They should use
Re:The annoyances of Mozilla products (Windows) (Score:2)
I am not sure the purpose of 2... I'd call it a relic from userless systems like Win 9x, but in fact even that can be set up with (weakly separated) users; so I dunno. I've never used the feature myself.
4. Perhaps allowing roaming (for bookmarks, etc.) is exactly why Application Data was chosen over Local Settings.
Re:The annoyances of Mozilla products (Windows) (Score:1)
Re:The annoyances of Mozilla products (Windows) (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Why do they still release just complete versions? I want an update to distribute to all our clients. Mozilla products are update hell.
Scheduled to be fixed in Firefox 1.1
2. Why do they still insist on supporting many profiles per user? If I would like multiple profiles, then I would also create multiple users on my Windows.
Because it can be usefull to some people.
3. Why are profile paths so strange? The mozilla creates something like ...\Application Data\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\default.21a
Re:The annoyances of Mozilla products (Windows) (Score:2)
Re:The annoyances of Mozilla products (Windows) (Score:1)
Re:The annoyances of Mozilla products (Windows) (Score:2)
Re:The annoyances of Mozilla products (Windows) (Score:2)
>> Seems pretty reasonable to me!
> Yep, pretty reasonable...to a geek. Not to a non-technical end-user.
Application Data is a hidden folder. Non-technical end-users never look at it. Hell, they shouldn't even know it exists.
All your points are moot.
Profile paths are strange because... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The annoyances of Mozilla products (Windows) (Score:2)
No, the NTFS permissions on the %USERPROFILE% directory (i.e., ...\Documents and Settings\SomeUser) default to full control for Administrators, SYSTEM, and the user, nothing for anyone else. "Local Settings" belong to the user on that machine, not all users on that machine.
And if you're running Windows with %USERPROFILE% on a FAT filesystem, you're quite obviously not "trying
Re:The annoyances of Mozilla products (Windows) (Score:1)
You must be joking. How about instead I ask:
Nobody stops you from using one profile if you like. I'm very happy on my system, which has one user (plus an administrative account) and multiple profiles (for myself and my wife, who likes a different set
Gecko in Firefox not inherently safe... try KHTML? (Score:3, Interesting)
In an inherently safe model, the interpreter wouldn't contain any mechanism to request unsafe actions... they'd simply be syntax errors. They would only be added explicitly when the script was known to be running from a safe environment.
Same with URI handlers: they would only be available from a reference within a safe environment.
As I understand it, KHTML is an inherently safe design. Extensions have to be explicitly loaded into an instance of the HTML display object through I/O slaves. Gecko, apparently, isn't... at least not in a broser that uses Chrome for its user interface. It's better than the Microsoft HTML control, but it's not an inherently secure design as it sounded like originally.
What are the options for a KHTML-based browser for Windows? On the Mac, of course, Safari is secure (so long as you turn off "open safe files after downloading"), but I haven't been following WIndows browsers that closely.
Tabbed browsing and mouse gestures (Score:1)
Tabbed browsing is the future in browsing, and Mozilla should think about that.
zip'ed Windows version of 1.0.5 (Score:1)
http://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/firefox/ni
Do the release notes contradict themselves? (Score:1)
"Prior to installing Firefox 1.0.5, please ensure that the directory you've chosen to install into is clean and doesn't contain any previous Firefox installations."
and this,
"When upgrading, all your Extensions and Themes will be disabled. This is not an issue, but it may appear to be one (hence its listing here). For rationale, see "Extension and Themes" above."
Surely that's a contradiction. If you install into a new directory then you aren't going to get your old extentions.
Re:Do the release notes contradict themselves? (Score:2, Informative)