SeaMonkey 1.0 Alpha released 236
An anonymous reader writes "SeaMonkey 1.0 Alpha was released last week. Users of the Mozilla Suite or Netscape should check it out - it contains numerous new features and bugfixes when compared to Mozilla 1.7, but offers the same basic look and feel. There are a few screenshots on the SeaMonkey blog showing off some of the features. For those who don't know, SeaMonkey is the continuation of the Mozilla Suite after the Mozilla Foundation ceased shipping new releases."
what's the point? (Score:4, Interesting)
2. Do they really expect Netscape users (e.g. people on AOL that don't know any better) to download something called seamonkey?
Re:what's the point? (Score:5, Informative)
I admit you could probably live without some of these things, but then again they all add up. I know that I really miss the middle-click behaviour on emails when using Firefox and Thunderbird.
Re:what's the point? (Score:3, Informative)
Firefox offers a very similar function. Set the following option and any links you click in your email client (or any other app, for that matter) will open in a new tab (provided Firefox is set as your default browser).
Tools > Options > Advanced > Tabbed Browsing > "a new tab in the most recent window"
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
Re:what's the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
I never understood that. Firefox is a backstep on Mozilla, and mostly an ego trip.
I prefer Mozilla for the following reasons:
a/ I use every single day a browser, and email client, and, sometimes, have to compose simple HTML pages. I seldom use IRC, but when I need it, I use ChatZilla (no need to download and track yet another piece of code).
b/ I don't like to upgrade. I have better things to do with my life. Not having to track a browser and an email client is godsend. Mozilla took care of most of my online needs (okay, it could have included some additional applications)
c/ I use three different platforms (Win 2K, Mac OS X and FreeBSD). Having the same software on all three was very handy, even if it is less great than the native software.
d/ I don't like to track plugins. Firefox is ridiculous in that area. It does very little out of the box, but is so configurable that it is a usability nightmare. You have to spend *hours* drilling into hundreds of extensions, trying them, restarting the browser, to get something that may fit your needs. Upgrade are painfull, as extensions often stop working, and, as the browser is now splitted into dozen of components, you cannot count on functionality beeing always present (extensions come and go). It is a waste of time.
To get a suitable replacement of the one-shot mozilla download, you have to get Firefox + a random number of ill-named extension + a separate email client + an HTML editor. This take more time, use more RAM, is less nicely integrated, and follow conflicting release schedules.
For me, mozilla = FreeBSD, while FireFox+Extension+Thunderbird+Nvu+... = Linux.
Both have their use. I just happend to prefer FreeBSD philosophy.
Re:what's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd, on the other hand, prefer to update only the IRC client when there is a flaw in the IRC client, rather than 4 packages. You know how long it takes to compile Firefox and Thunderbird?
Re:what's the point? (Score:3, Interesting)
As a netscape user for most of my time on the internet, I was very sad when I learned
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
Maybe if you're using something [redhat.com] that isn't designed to resolve those dependencies...hell, my understanding of RPM is
Re:what's the point? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
Compared to Opera, you miss a lot of little things - movable tabs, sessions, zoom, fit to width, hotclick menus
Fair comment but.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Fair comment but.. (Score:3, Informative)
Edit->Preferences, Navigator->Downloads, "Automatically download files to the specified folder".
Re:what's the point? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
And most of the developers "diverted to Firefox" are still working on the same Gecko engine and underlying technologies that powered the Mozilla suite. The number of (paid) people hacking Firefox specific stuff isn't really that many.
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
That sounds painful.
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
Even on my system with 512 megs of ram I notice that firefox is snappier and I prefer it over mozilla for that reason.
Re:what's the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
The simple answer is that they're not better versions. I was eager to switch to Firefox (or Phoenix and later Firebird as it was then), as I don't use anything from the suite other than the browser anyway. But when it surfaced, it turned out to be a poor substitute for the real thing. Mozilla was and continues to be a better browser. That's why I use it.
I'm sure that with the addition of various extensions, I could probably get Firefox up to the same level as Mozilla. But Mozilla does it all out of the box, and I don't have to go around hunting for addons, or spend ages customising it in about:config.
Me Too (Score:2)
It seems to be more stable for me, and I actually use most of the parts of it at least occaisionally. If you leave Mozilla Mail running all the time (which one tends to do with mail), then you can get a browser/composer/IRC window fast, much snappier than FireFox startup. It seems there's always a few fiddly little settings (like turning off animated
Re:what's the point? (Score:2, Funny)
Besides, it's easier to tell users to click seaclunky/setup.exe than first firefox/setup.exe, next thunderbird/setup.xe etc.
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
Can someone explain why this exists? I thought Firefox/Thunderbird/Sunbird[/Nvu] were basically better versions of what existed in the original Mozilla platform? Why is this continuing to be developed? Who is their target audience here?
I'm still a user of the suite and see no point to move other than TBird extensions like SyncKolab. Yes I have tried Firefox. I have it installed on other boxes here. I don't want to use it for day to day use. Ever. Personally if I were to migrate, it wouldn't be to FF or TB.
F
Re:what's the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd like for someone to show me how Firefox and Thunderbird are "better" than Mozilla/SeaMonkey.
Things I've observed...
Mozilla and Firefox take the same amount of time to start, they render at the same speed as well, and in no way is Mozilla sluggish when compared to Firefox.
I have yet to see how Firefox has a "smaller footprint". On my system Firefox seems to use more memory when loading the exact same pages as Mozilla.
So if Firefox isn't faster, isn't "smaller", etc.. Then how is it better?
And I only use the suite as a browser. I don't use it for email, irc, etc... Although sometimes I will use Composer for a quick and dirty web page.
As for the UI. The default themes that ship with Mozilla/Seamonkey are just horrid! However, there are MANY third party themes that look great. I use the pinball theme here. Mozilla looks grea with it!
Sure Mozilla doesn't have the customizable menus that Firefox does. but I've never found that to be an issue?
I'm quite happy with Mozilla how it is.
Also... Mozilla is/was by no means a "failure". When Mozilla announced they were "dumping" Mozilla, they said that the number of users was in the "low millions".
I don't know about you, but an OSS app that has a few million users is a pretty good success!! And it definitely deserves to live on. Which is why the SeaMonkey project was started.
There's still a demand for Mozilla and quite a large user base.
I personally think Mozilla would have done just as well as Firefox if MoFo had put the same level of advertising into Mozilla as it did Firefox.
I've been a supporter of Mozilla for years now, and I continue to test SeaMonkey nightlies and submit bug reports.
But yes... They could have come up with a better name than SeaMonkey.
Re:what's the point? (Score:3, Insightful)
UI != themes
Re:what's the point? (Score:3, Insightful)
bzzt. wrong. I, and many other people, use Firefox because the User Interface is (or was) far, far superior. I don't care that it isn't any faster than Mozilla or doesn't use any less disk space, and I am fully aware of the differences (or lack thereof) between Firefox and the Mozilla suite, but I still use Firefox. It has nothing to do with Intern
Re:what's the point? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
Re:what's the point? (Score:4, Interesting)
Firefox is somewhat annoying to use, because lots of little things are just different (for example, if you type something in the URL bar, SeaMonkey will open it in a new tab if you hit ctrl+enter, while Firefox uses alt+enter; Firefox's download manager has annoying default behaviors; having a separate search bar instead of just searching from the URL bar means both your URL bar is smaller and you can see less of what you type when you search for something; find-as-you-type has a weird dialog in Firefox; many other things). If you haven't used SeaMonkey before, though, some of these won't be a problem for you. Another annoyance is that Firefox changes a lot between each release - the fact that the options window was redone basically from scratch between FF1.0 and FF1.5b means that a lot of things are in different places now. A nice thing about the suite is that since it's integrated, you don't have to set all your preferences twice (in the browser, and in the email client).
As a developer, I don't like some of the practices used in Firefox... for large patches, their philosophy seems more like "include the patch and let users (people who use the nightly builds) find bugs" whereas in SeaMonkey we do more up-front code review. When porting Firefox patches to SeaMonkey, I've had them be rejected because the code quality I copied wasn't good enough, so they had to be cleaned up. I really don't like the way the "lead Firefox developer" (Ben Goodger - in quotes because that title is really unfair to the other Firefox devs) seems to do his big patches... in the cases I've looked at, he checked in patches that either were entirely broken (when he rewrote the options dialog, it didn't work at all and was mostly invisible (see-through, I'm not kidding)), or full of bugs that a few minutes of testing would find (the info bar that alerts you to blocked popups, blocked extensions, missing plugins, etc. had a lot of bugs I came across when I ported it to SeaMonkey).
A lot of Firefox's popularity probably just comes from the fact that it's new and therefore "cool" or interesting, whereas the suite looks similar to Netscape 4. It seems that the new name "SeaMonkey" is actually generating a little interest though, which is kind of cool.
If you're into testing lots of extensions, Firefox makes it easier (specifically, uninstalling extensions in SeaMonkey is hard), but the thing about SeaMonkey is that I don't need extensions with it, so it isn't really a problem. I have one extension (FlashBlock) that I've used for years and never needed to uninstall... and I used autoscroll until recently (autoscroll will be integrated in SeaMonkey 1.0 Beta, so I don't need the extension any more).
Anyone who tells you Firefox is faster is probably confused or buying into hype. Every recent test I've seen has SeaMonkey starting up faster (even without QuickLaunch, which makes it launch almost instantaneously - a feature Firefox doesn't have), and they use the exact same rendering engine, so pageload speeds are the same.
I'm not sure how they compare in memory use, but in my experience, the cache and webpages themselves tend to use significantly more RAM than the interface itself, so I wouldn't expect much difference. People like to say SeaMonkey is "bloated", but if you also use an email program, however, SeaMonkey is going to be a LOT smaller than Firefox+Thunderbird, because it shares a lot of data, while FF+TB duplicate a lot. A quick test showed Firefox alone was ~21MB at launch, and SeaMonkey ~22MB. Opening the mail client for SeaMonkey only bumped it up to ~28MB though, while Thunderbird is going to eat another 20MB or so for itself.
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
I could not book mark in Firefox like I could in Mozilla. Firefox had modal windows that would not die. Some of the ease of anti-corprate pr0n blocking (ads) was *removed* from Firefox.
Thunder...bird had similar problems and ate some of my mail.
There were other UI issues. It's damn near takes a programmer to convert *back* to mozilla. I did not appreciate this.
Firefox and Thunderbird seem to hate each other. Try sending an entire webpage like you can in Mozilla. Wow, the button is gone. Try pasting
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
AWG, feel free to jump in and correct me if I misunderstand you, but I think what you're trying to sa
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
Nobodys sure how to make money out of linux yet. It clearly provides something that people want, and creates a lot of market interest whenever you say it loud enough, especially when you say your going to give it to them for free, but how do you turn free into profit. Who knows how to convert free to profit? Here are the options as it stands:
None of the
You know what day it is! (Score:5, Funny)
Avast me mateys! Aargh! It's International Talk Like A Pirate Day! [talklikeapirate.com]
Aargh! Me SeaMonkeys! Aye, they waited for the right date to announce it.
Bljarne!
Re:You know what day it is! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:You know what day it is! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:You know what day it is! (Score:2)
A: Because they Aaaarrrrrrr!
SeaMonkey 1.0? What an odd name (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:SeaMonkey 1.0? What an odd name (Score:2, Informative)
Same goes for v1.8. mozilla.org strongly recommended against using 1.8. And since they have kindly offered to host the souce, dist, bugs, etc for Seamonkey, you pretty much have to do what they recommend. Even 2.0 would be tricky, because people might think it's a upgrade from "Mozil
Re:SeaMonkey 1.0? What an odd name (Score:2)
Mozilla as well? (Score:2)
I don't get it. Is there still a Mozilla? Does this compete with Mozilla?
Why is this not Mozilla 2.0 or 1.8 or some other number?
And why did people split out and make different components? Netscape / Mozilla were great because all your net needs were taken care of: browsing, email, web authoring, and eventually IM. Now things don't work together.
It should have been called Foxzilla 1.0 (Score:2)
Re:SeaMonkey 1.0? What an odd name (Score:2)
I had the same confusion when Open Source Netscape was branded Mozilla and announced they were working toward a 1.0. To me, Netscape Navigator/Composer was already Mozilla and had always been, and it was at version 4.x going on 5.x+.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The interface is gross (Score:3, Insightful)
I know most people don't care about this, but i really do, and it prevents me from using a lot of software. Mozilla's UI is hideous. It always has been. It doesn't look good on any platform that i've ever used it on
Sucks to be you.
Yet another Mac fanboy whining about the "hideous" interface, or the look of the widgets, or whatever insignificant little thing that makes your life unliveable with anything but the "perfect" Apple interface.
I guess I'm just dense, but doesn't this get down to the level of n
Re:The interface is gross (Score:4, Insightful)
Based on your tone, you're preparing some comment about how only namby-pamby GUI users would ever care about that. But ask why people who have strong preferences for Emacs over Vim or vice-versa have such a preference. I can guarantee that "Emacs has a much prettier interface that matches my drapes nicely" is not going to come up very often. Now, ask why there are people who prefer NEdit, or BBEdit, or another full-featured GUI editor over both of those. I can guarantee that you for 99% of those people, it's because all of the functionality they need is wrapped up in an interface they find more intuitive, faster to learn, and faster to use.
UI "prettiness" is subjective, but a lot of usability principles aren't. NEdit will always be faster for a new user to learn than XEmacs. This isn't a slam on XEmacs or its functionality or on users who've become comfortable with it and have little reason to change, but NEdit is not less functional because it is easier to use.
And, yeah, Mac people tend to be more sensitive about UI design than some others. That may be because they're all nitpicky whiny bastards. Or, it may be because they've had twenty years of programs largely designed by people who put a lot of thought into how good interface design makes programs more intuitive and usable. Frankly, I wish free software developers would get down off their "the console is god" high horses and listen to the whining just a little more.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The interface is gross (Score:2, Insightful)
If you don't like themes, then you don't have use them. Please don't try and generalise them into a universal evil. It makes you look like a retard.
Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)
Off topic: unfortunate helicopter analogy (Score:2)
It was fly-by-wire, of course. It consisted of a Plexiglas half-sphere that could be tilted in any direction ("go that way"), lifted up ("go up"), or pushed down ("go down"), with spring returns to zero position. When at zero position, the helicopter DIDN'T MOVE, PERIOD. They used an inertial guidance unit to hold position, automatically adjusting for wind.
My mother could fly this helic
Re:The interface is gross (Score:2)
In any csae, I don't see any difference in the menus from native ones; the status bar looks exactly the same; most of the buttons look like standard windows buttons (either flat or 3d). Though I do agree that Go and Search should be normal flat buttons.
BTW, are you talking about the standard Win2000 look, or the standard XP look, or the standard Office 2003 loo
The point (Score:5, Insightful)
The point is that it's a continuation of the Mozilla suite. Just because mozilla.org is too busy to handle the project, doesn't mean that a lot of developers don't want to code for it, nor does it mean that a lot of users don't want to use it.
Who's the target? Simple: People who have Mozilla 1.7.
Why? Same reason people use Mozilla 1.7.
Sure, Firefox is leet and is made by leet ex (and current) Mozilla developers, but it was not made as a replacement for Mozilla.
People who hate Firefox's simplistic options (or hate being uber-leet and going into about:config to change even the simplest config options) are the target. People who want a mail/news app bundled with their browser are a target. People who dislike the attitude of the leet Firefox developers when they first started up are targets.
Go ahead and troll rate me for calling Firefox users/developers leet if you want. I remember distictively when Firefox first came out, the users were bragging they were leet.
Re:The point (Score:3, Funny)
I remember that, too. During recess, they would all gather around the swing set and the teeter-totter and tease us:
We are lee-et and you-ou're no-ot.
Neiner, neiner, nei-ner!.
We use firefox and you-ou do-on't.
Neiner, neiner, nei-ner.
And the Principal never did anything.
Good times.
Re:The point (Score:2, Funny)
It's spelled 1337.
Troll!
Re:The point (Score:3, Interesting)
Uh... Yes it was.
Re:The point (Score:3, Insightful)
Then where are its composer and integrated mail/newsgroups apps?
-Eric (who still uses Mozilla because of it's convenient composer functionality and it's better security than Firefox)
Re:The point (Score:3, Informative)
Also, learn yourself some grammar. The word "it's" isn't a goddamned possessive.
Please keep the name "Mozilla" (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Please keep the name "Mozilla" (Score:2)
Re:Please keep the name "Mozilla" (Score:2)
What about a scheme Mozilla XXXX (Score:2)
Address Book (Score:2, Interesting)
I dont want to have to fire up a mail program just to get someone's phone number.
Re:Address Book (Score:2)
For example I access my home email at home, and my work email at work, and I want to keep them separate. In fact, for legacy reasons, I dont even run Thunderbird at home. Its not 'efficient' to be have two mail programs (or one mail program and a monolithic mail/browser/address book) running when one isnt being used except for a very limited part of its functionality.
A Simple Observation (Score:2, Funny)
That is a perfectly named browser!
Re: (Score:2)
Bloat? (Score:2, Insightful)
* browser
* mail
* newsgroups
* chat
* bittorrent client
* other smaller features (gestures, panels, SSR, slideshow...)
* ad banner everyone is scared of
in 3.7mb.
SeaMonkey is much bigger package, and any major difference is having WYSIWYG editor (which I wouldn't use for anything other than occasional HTML mail).
I think SeaMonkey could do better.
What's the installation image? (Score:2)
GRE installation improvement (Score:2, Informative)
Your Alpha, My Beta (Score:5, Informative)
Netscape's "0.9x Beta" releases in 1994-5 forever changed the marketspeak of these release designations. "Beta" just means "not finished" in that language. But the same people also made "Under Construction" mean "please rely on our new software". It's a marketdroid scam to get you to impatiently accept unacceptably broken software.
It's probably too late to reclaim "Beta" from a generation of kiddies who think it means "new and cool". But we can't let the ghost of Netscape destroy the "Alpha" boundary. The distinction between Alpha and Beta is even more important than Beta vs Master. Software is never really finished, especially in the era of open source and user extensions. But the feedback from development team to their product is blind to many results that outsiders provide in real Betas and Masters. Without that critical perspective, or without distinguishing between that outsider perspective and insider lingo/preconceptions, software will never get a chance to grow up.
We've developed these Alpha/Beta/Master phases after decades of experience developing and rolling out software. We can't afford to discard the discipline that got us here, just as we're scaling up all our operations, and losing many of the in-person artifacts we use to know how to work on these products. Don't let "Netscape" strike again.
Re:Your Alpha, My Beta (Score:2)
And they've worked so well for us, too. I mean, our desktop software today is much more reliable than the batch processing software run on mainframes thirty years ago, isn't it? No? Oh.
The Alpha/Beta disctinction was mostly arbitrary. Every large project that ever used them, from Apple's Mac system software team to tiny shareware developers, has abandoned them and moved to a progressive build numbe
XMLterm (Score:3, Informative)
ONCE and for all (not really)... (Score:4, Interesting)
That's what I thought.. SHUT-IT!
FF is fine for those that don't need an email client but once you need both the suite is better suited. I've done both and I'm back at the suite due to the smaller memory footprint.
It's amazing how ignorant people are. They will say FF and TB are better because they are smaller. Yeah, smaller downloads individually. Now look at what is happening to your system when you run them both.
The sad part is that the proponents never post a comparison between the two that highlight this fact or even want to discuss it. I'd rather see FF & TB die than the Mozilla Suite. If SeaMonkey disappears then I'll probably use Opera or some other suite. Feel free to mod me down since only the ignoramuses get modded up. Stuff that is just downright dumb gets modded as "insightful" and comments that lend weight to an argument get modded down.
Re:ONCE and for all (not really)... (Score:2)
Re:ONCE and for all (not really)... (Score:4, Interesting)
Good for you. Meanwhile, I've done both, and stuck with Firefox and Thunderbird because I like the the way they work better. How much RAM do they use? I haven't the foggiest. Disk space? Not really sure... Does one load faster than the other? Not that I can tell. Maybe by a tenth of a second or two. But I wouldn't know which; my watch only has a second hand.
Personally, I don't see much need for better integration between my email and web browsing. As long as a new browser opens when I click a link in an email, and a new email message comes up when I click a mailto: link in my web browser, I'm happy.
That said, I would love to use Mozilla as my primary browser again if they can sort out some of their serious user interface shortcomings, because I do have some issues with Firefox, but last I checked (1.7.1?) they still had a long way to go to even match Firefox, much less surpass it.
And for the love of ${deity}, please come up with a better name. I don't care what it is- I'm assuming that there are good reasons that the "Mozilla" name has been dropped, but come on guys, you could have tried harder than that.
Why the name change? (Score:2)
Why Seamonkey? (Score:2, Informative)
I understand the *what* and *how* of Seamonkey, I don understand the *why*.
I'm not sure why anyone is bothering to keep Seamonkey alive, in these post-Firefox times.
Please contro, your twitches, Trollmods.
Martin
Re:Why Seamonkey? (Score:2, Insightful)
Different folks, different preferences.
Re:Why Seamonkey? (Score:3, Informative)
There is even a button that you can add (right click on the toolbar, customize), that gets a button with popup, for ex., in my case: Read Mail (7 new) and New Message.
And what you've asked for is there, believe me.
Re:Why Seamonkey? (Score:4, Informative)
The ctrl-M shortcut within Firefox unleashed a sea of iexplore windows on this machine. I shall not be doing it again.
Please understand that those are only examples.
I understand that the differences are trivial for some people. It should not be difficult for those people to understand, however, in a general sense, that seamless integration (like most features) is more important to others.
It cannot be reasonably argued that Firefox, Thunderbird, and NVU provide a seamless integrative experience. That's not a flaw overall, but a design decision.
It is therefore not unreasonable for those for whom a seamless integrative experience is important to prefer the integrated suite.
You asked, I answered. That's the "why".
Re:Why Seamonkey? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Why Seamonkey? (Score:2)
I'd say that Firefox is more like the Linux development process. It's not as well engineered, but there's the community impetus behind it that keeps the work going. Sometimes the quality is a bit lacking, but such problems are dealt with soon enough.
Mozilla Suite/SeaMonkey is more like the *BSD development process. Things move more slowly, but the product is quite solid and well designed.
In the end, it's difficult to say which is a be
Re:Why Seamonkey? (Score:2)
There are plenty of other people in the same position as me it seems and some of them decided to work on the suite.
Fair enough?
Roger
Re:Why Seamonkey? (Score:2)
So, some people who like it continue to develop it. If you, personally, prefer Firefox, then continue to use that; but also let others who don't continue to use the solution that works f
Re:Why Seamonkey? (Score:2)
Because, there are a lot of people out there who have kept using Mozilla because we wanted the suite together -- that's what we're accustomed to and what we like.
From what I'm reading in this thread, I'm not looking forward to replacing my beloved Mozilla with two separate programs and going thro
Re:Why Seamonkey? (Score:2)
Re:Wherefore (Score:2)
Excellent piece of music that. Shickele is an unsung genius...
> I understand the *what* and the *how*, I'm just not surely I
> really understand the *why*.
Presumably, so that people who prefer the suite can get the advantage of any recent Gecko rendering engine improvements. Duh.
Why would someone prefer the suite? Well, at first I preferred Navigator over Firefox because the Firefox extension management mechanism frankly sucks. (The existence of the extension mec
Re:Wherefore (Score:2)
Re:Wherefore (Score:5, Insightful)
1.) The middle finger housed at this site [66.102.9.104] certainly implies the user and anyone who differs with the holy developers is wrong. Here, the customer is wrong, so it throws community accountability into question.
2.) Read lines 96 to 111 in the Firefox readme [mozilla.org], and tell me that the developers are not being arrogant. While I see the value in meritocracy, to an extent, I fail to see the value arrogance. Secondly, it fails to offer anyone in the community any standardized channel for getting the attention of the developers, were the individual to have something that actually warranted their attention.
- Begin Quote -
96 ian 1.7 Q6: So to whom do I send patches?
97 ian 1.6
98 We are not currently accepting any input. No UI specs, no bugs,
99 and definitely no patches. See Q3.
100 ian 1.9
101 Q7: How do I get involved?
102
103 You don't except by invitation. This is a meritocracy -- only
104 those gain the respect of those in the group can join the group. See
105 Q6.
106 ian 1.6
107 ian 1.10 Q8: I don't like the mozilla/browser process! This sucks! I'm
108 never going to contribute to Mozilla again!
109
110 Oh no, please, don't go, whatever shall we do without you.
111
- End Quote -
The software may technically be open source because I can fetch the source via CVS; but under the policies of its developers, it is unaccountable and closed to my submission. How discouraging.
This is off the topic, but my final complaint about Firefox and Thunderbird is merely technical. Before anyone claims that I am wrong due to the fact that the user can write extensions and thereby participate in the community, I would agree in this argument, but I believe that it overlooks something: Everyone raves about extensions as if they are the best solution to ending the bloat of the original software. That view is fine, but I beg to differ with tradeoff of how cheap and poorly integrated the majority of main extensions feel. I have yet to use an extension that feels integrated better than the numerous features included in the Seamonkey suite.
If my views are not sufficient here, consider taking a look at this large list of individuals who think otherwise: http://wiki.mozilla.org/SeaMonkey:Reasons [mozilla.org].
Re:Mozilla Suite (Score:2, Interesting)
There might be a nice market amongst luddites and regressives, and those who think they are sticking it "to the man" by using something with such an aging and nasty interface.
But other than that? I dunno.
I would have thought the devs could have found better projects to turn their resources to.
Martin
Re:Mozilla Suite (Score:2, Insightful)
Odd. The interface is exactly why I use Mozilla and not firefox. What genius moved the google search to an entirely new field when on Moz you can just type in the address bar and hit the down arrow? There is also the distinct lack of huge memory leaks which means Mozilla can run for a month or so at a time without a restart on
Re:Mozilla Suite (Score:2)
Yea, thats what bugs me the most about Firefox as well. If someone writes an extention to put that feature back into Firefox I might consider it, untill that time, the Mozilla Suite rules the day.
/greger
Re:Mozilla Suite (Score:4, Informative)
about:config
keyword.URL=http://www.google.com/search?q=
Just type your search into the address bar and hit enter.
Re:Mozilla Suite (Score:2)
Arrow-up + enter is hardcoded into my spine by now.
You can't use : and some other special chars in the search string, killing stuff like site:.com. Not a valid URL, my ass!
It doesn't combine well with the drop down history. If I kinda remeber the URL of a page I previously visited, I'll start typing and if I'm lucky I get a match in the history, if not I'll try Google. With keyword search the history matching is deactivated.
/greger
Re:Mozilla Suite (Score:2)
The search interface was for me too the reason why I switched back to Mozilla (and I use the browser only, nothing else) after having given Firefox a try.
Maybe it's possible to configure Mozilla's original behaviour in Firefox with about:config, but why not implement it like Mozilla in the first place?
So many times a day I type some words in the URL field (and I want the whole width of the field), hit Tab+Return and I have the Google resul
Re:Mozilla Suite (Score:5, Interesting)
2nd: I'm running a Mozilla suite 1.8 alpha for about a year already at work. It's so much more stable than the Firefox I had at home for a while, where I had more hangups in the two weeks I was using it than I had with the Mozilla (Alpha!) in the whole year. Granted, Firefox is more stable than IE, but that isn't that much of an achievement. I don't see any bloat in the suite. I'm using it on my development machine at work, which isn't exactly packed, and have no problem with speed. The only time I have problems with speed is when I start the Visual Studio. That's the reason I almost never do that. I develop with emacs...considering that this was once the standard example for bloat it's sort of funny.
3rd: The suite has so many more features important to web developers, such as the integrated DOM Inspector etc...
4th: Much better intgration (naturally) of all basic internet usage tools
5th: It may be ugly in the standard themes, but there are countless themes available. And yes, even themes that make it look like Firefox.
6th: Speed? How often do you start up your browser a day? If the load time of your browser starts to eat significant time of your day, because you start it up so often, then you should maybe take a closer look on your work habits, since those seem to have more impact on your little time.
Re:Mozilla Suite (Score:2)
I see this complaint a lot, and I have to ask, in the days of tabs, why are people opening and closing their browser all day long? Seems like a waste of time and effort to me.
I mean, do you also shut down your PC every time
Re:Mozilla Suite (Score:2)
That's not why Firefox took off. Firefox took off because it was actually advertised. Mozilla.org supported projects such as SpreadFirefox and an ad in the New York Times.
The Suite, on the other hand, they went to every effort to make sure people didn't use it. There was never any push to make people use it. The officia
Re:Much faster and lighter (Score:2, Insightful)
It has an ermmmmm integrated memory testing functionality suite built in.
However, in the real world, I do agree with you and the hole(s) should be fixed. Depending upon usage FF basic footprint can skyrocket (usually multiple large gallery pages makes this problem worse). A loss of just a few bytes per image is made much worse by pages with thousands of images.
Add to this addins created entirely out of script and it becomes sluggish on large pages.
HOWEVER, ff is 100x bett
Re:Using Mozilla, not going to use Firefox? (Score:3, Funny)
And here I thought Firefox was just the browser component of Mozilla without all the other useful components. Why would you insist on using a less-functional, cutesy program (whether it is called Pheonix, Firebird or Firefox) when Mozilla can do everything it can and a hell of a lot more?
If there is one upside to open source software is that legacy software will never die so long as some people actually want to use it and find it useful. Instead of re-inventing the wheel, they can go on improving existi
Re:Just in time for... (Score:2)
Hey, moderators. Mod parent up. This is actually news for nerds.