SeaMonkey 1.0 Released 229
johkir writes "SeaMonkey has been released. Mozilla.org's open source internet suite features a state-of-the-art web browser and powerful email client, as well as a WYSIWYG web page composer and a feature-rich IRC chat client. For web developers, mozilla.org's DOM inspector and JavaScript debugger tools are included as well. It also has a few nifty features, of particular interest: drag&drop reordering of tabs, support for a common inbox for multiple email accounts, SVG, , and phishing detection."
For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2, Interesting)
1) Compatability with Thunder/Fire themes and extensions.
2) Does it share the same security holes, or will it have its own
3) Will it be udated as often as Thunder/Fire?
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2, Informative)
1) Any plugins that worked with the old Mozilla suite should work (many plugins worked with both Monolithic Mozilla and Firefox). I doubt Thunderbird ones would, but I haven't tried.
2) It will share Gecko security holes, but not Firefox-UI based ones.
3) Update speed all depends on the developers and their quality standards.
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:5, Informative)
It's both more and less. It has a different approach to what such a program should be. Firefox and Thunderbird operate on the principle that it needs to be usable by the proverbial grandmother, and make a lot of sacrifices to get there. Features that are considered "bloat" or confusing are cut rigorously, the user interface gets lots of polishing, and everything that isn't considered essential for basic operation is delegated to the status of extension (which leads to a number of problems [dbaron.org]). Because of this, Firefox and Thunderbird are supremely usable products, which I'll heartily recommend to any computer novice.
SeaMonkey on the other hand continues the tradition of the Mozilla Suite, which cared less about appearing clunky and confusing, and is far more customizable and ultimately usable for power users, web developers and other geeks. The SeaMonkey people understand that people can have ways to browse which aren't intuitively obvious to grandmothers, but which are ultimately more efficient, and that enabling this is a great good.
As a result SeaMonkey has a number of features that aren't present (by default or at all) in Firefox/Thunderbird, ranging from roaming profiles, to the dom inspector and javascript debugger, to tighter integration between the email program and the browser to far more preferences exposed and easily editable. On the other hand, Firefox has more money behind it, and so has been developing rapidly in some areas, resulting in a large gap in SeaMonkey in an area such as extension management (of course, extensions aren't as necessary for effectively using SeaMonkey, but it's still a big gap).
So, to answer your three questions:
Partly, depending on the specifics of the extension, and the effort its developer went to. I answered this question more fully here [slashdot.org].
It will mostly have the same (as most security problems are in the backend), but a few less in the frontend, as SeaMonkey has tighter review requirements than Firefox does. (I can think of one big security problem in the last year that was related to extension management which was only present in Firefox, not in Mozilla/SeaMonkey.)
Yes, that is the goal, give or take a few weeks and some point releases. A SeaMonkey 1.1 release should come around the time of Firefox 2.0, and a SeaMonkey 1.5 for whenever Firefox 3.0 happens. (They'll be matches fairly closely in time, as both depend on the same branches and heavily tested stable code.)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:3, Interesting)
Missing: The "New Tab Button" on the Tab Bar. It's removal flew in the face of consistency (You can remove tabs with a button on the bar but to add them you must navigate a menu or use a keyboard combo). At the same time Firfox added the ability to create a new tab by double clicking blank space in the tab bar which works well until you have several tabs and no more easily clickable blank space. This is poor design. I would suggest amending it
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2)
Now re-read his comment 5 times before posting again please
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2)
And the tight integration with the e-mail client is a bogus feature; when you click on a mailto link within FF, Thunde
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:3, Informative)
"The SeaMonkey project is a community-based project hosted at mozilla.org that emerged around Mozilla's suite codebase when the Mozilla Foundation announced it would discontinue further development of its suite product.
SeaMonkey is not Mozilla... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:SeaMonkey is not Mozilla... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:SeaMonkey is not Mozilla... (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.sea-monkeys.com/
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2)
Are you thoroughly confused yet? Good, that's the idea.
Me? I'm waiting for a release of Chocolate Sex. (Bonus points to those who understand that reference.)
P.S. Don't forget about Chimera!
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2)
Damn, I screwed up that gag. Oh well, here's the reference [mozilla.org].
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2, Funny)
Is it chicken or is it monkey?
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2)
If you don't already know what SeaMonkey is then it's probably of little interest to you. It's the original Mozilla codebase that has since been replaced by Firefox, Thunderbird, and Nvu.
Its user interface design is largely based off of Netscape Communicator 4 and is only meant for those who are nostalgic for the days of yore.
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:3, Insightful)
Dang, that sounds elitist. Where is the fun in only learning what we already know and using what we already use???
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2)
You may recall that the fruits of Mozilla.org's efforts did not gain any traction with the general browsing public until the Firefox interface came along, at which point the old SeaMonkey interface was rightfully dropped. An independent group of developers has since formed to continue development, essentailly moving new Firefox and Thunderbird features b
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:2, Insightful)
What I 'recall' is that I used the Mozilla suite for a long, long time and was quite happy with it. Then a bunch of people started hollering about 'Firefox' so I thought I would give it a try. I installed it, and found it missing all kinds of features and menu items I made use of with the suite. It basically gave me the impression of being the 'Window
Re:For those of us who don't follow mozilla.org... (Score:4, Insightful)
> for those who are nostalgic for the days of yore.
Or else for those who think that Firefox is just a dumbed down version.
imho.
Roger
SeaMonkey - how cute (Score:5, Funny)
Re:SeaMonkey - how cute (Score:2)
Re:SeaMonkey - how cute (Score:2)
Well, duh! After you download it, you have to put it in water for it to work...
Re:SeaMonkey - how cute (Score:2)
Re:SeaMonkey - how cute (Score:2)
WYSIWYG (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:WYSIWYG (Score:5, Informative)
SeaMonkey 1.5 should contain the results of this work, so basically a WYSIWYG editor nearly identical to current NVu.
Re:WYSIWYG (Score:2, Informative)
Ah, ok. In that case, yes, there've undoubtedly been a number of fixes to the editor code since 1.7 (which is what NVu started of with). I'm seeing "+3703/3280) Lines changed" in the /editor directory in the rough timeperiod between the two branches (April 2004 to September 2005) and 56 bugs marked as fixed for the same timeperiod in the editor component. (Not linking, as slashdot referers are
Re:WYSIWYG (Score:5, Informative)
Re:WYSIWYG (Score:4, Informative)
Anyway, "suite" here is only 12-13 megs -- it's not like installing Office or Open Office.
WYSIWYG Followup: server side scripting? (Score:2)
Re:WYSIWYG Followup: server side scripting? (Score:2)
Try Bluefish
http://bluefish.openoffice.nl/index.html [openoffice.nl]
Enjoy,
Re:WYSIWYG Followup: server side scripting? (Score:2)
Re:WYSIWYG Followup: server side scripting? (Score:2)
IE? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:IE? (Score:2)
What's new: (Score:2, Funny)
canvas tags! Boooo!
Drag and drop tabs! Eh.
Also, "Attempting to compose, forward, or reply to a message may result in a non-functional compose window." Sounds handy.
Really, I've just been waiting for autoscroll.
More at http://www.mozilla.org/projects/seamonkey/release
Re:What's new: (Score:2)
Autoscroll? How does it know when you reach the bottom of the page?
canvas tags! Boooo!
wtf are they?
Drag and drop tabs! Eh.
Wake me up when you can attach and detach tabs at will.
Re:What's new: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What's new: (Score:3, Interesting)
What's wrong with <canvas> tags? I think they are a revolutionary idea.
Once they become part of the HTML5 spec (and WHATWG is working on it now), then suddenly web developers will have a way to show those corny Flash movies without needing a plugin. The browser will support dynamic bitmap refresh natively. Eventually, it will support 3D rendering natively too, probably through OpenGL. Imagine playing Doom in a web browser, with no plugins. Or a contractor showing clients around a vi
Link on Seamonkey site is bad (Score:3, Informative)
Link for full download is: ftp://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/seamonkey/r
Link for ftp of releases: ftp://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/seamonkey/r
For those of us not in the know... (Score:2)
Is the "Mozilla Suite" project dead? Is Seamonkey the replacement for the old Mozilla Suite? Will the next version of Netscape be based on Seamonkey 1.0?
For whatever reason, many people in the business world don't know what "Mozilla" means, and may take them a while to recognize the name of "Seamonkey". However, they still recognize the name "Netscape".
I'm shocked to find o
Re:For those of us not in the know... (Score:5, Informative)
"Mozilla Suite" will only get security updates. No more new development. SeaMonkey is a good replacement for the old suite - it's effectively Mozilla 1.8 (SeaMonkey 1.0 alpha was what would have been Mozilla 1.8 beta 5). If Netscape decides to ship annother "Communicator" (rather than just a browser), they would be wise to use SeaMonkey as a base for it.
Seamonkeys.... (Score:5, Funny)
So go ahead Mozilla, and sell the world on your little state-of-the-art web browser and powerful email client, as well as a WYSIWYG web page composer and a feature-rich IRC chat client. I'm not gonna be sucked in to your little scheme. In the words of our great President Bush, "Fool me once, shame on... you.... The Fooled man can't be fooled again"
Re:Seamonkeys.... (Score:2, Funny)
Sheesh... I mean if even the president can get it right you should at least put some effort into quoting him correctly.
Re:Seamonkeys.... (Score:2)
Yay! (Score:2)
Now, if people would start making themes for mozilla again. The default and the ones I have found are butt ugly.
Maybe I will learn to make some myself. I wouldn't mind a firefox themse for mozilla or a kde theme ( for current releases ).
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
Eric
Real-life applications for PageRank [memwg.com]
Re:so un-Unix like (Score:2)
Actually, my favorite description of the difference between Windows and Unix philosophies goes like this:
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
I think it is not good to have multiple html rendering engines running in different processes either... in theory they could be shared, but un Firefox/Thunderbird practice this does not seem to happen.
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
There are a bunch here:
https://addons.mozilla.org/themes/?application=mo
Pssh. You call that life-like? (Score:5, Funny)
Personally, I think it's a cross between a blue bird [altech.ab.ca] and a scorpion stinger [asu.edu].
Re:Pssh. You call that life-like? (Score:2)
Re:Pssh. You call that life-like? (Score:2)
http://community.livejournal.com/sea_monkeys/7571
When will lightning strike? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:When will lightning strike? (Score:2, Informative)
Dear Mozilla (Score:2, Funny)
In case you missed it, let me clue you in. Suites are dead. People want lean applications with user-selected add-ons. Funky cutesy names are out...they lingered on a bit after the dot com bust (along with e- and i- names) but descriptive branding is the order of the day. "Microsoft Office" "Mozilla Internet Suite" "Apple Music Player". Oops...Jobs is going to kill me for leaking the last one...
READ PREVIOUS POSTS PLEASE (Score:2, Insightful)
Hehe, thats ironic (Score:3, Funny)
The flexibility of OSS (Score:2, Insightful)
A browser that was dumped in favour of something newer and shiner was picked up by a community willing to put work into it. This is a perfect example of what Open Source is all about. Compare that to software like OS/2 or BeOS, both of which have a following and a community which is willing to back them. Instead they are gathering dust in some proprietary repository.
Live Bookmarks When? (Score:2)
However, I am disappointed that there seems to still be no support for "live bookmarks" (RSS feeds in bookmark form). That is the killer feature that made me switch from the Mozilla suite to Firefox. Are there any plans to implement this handy functionality in Seamonkey? If so, when?
Re:Live Bookmarks When? (Score:2)
The bug for this is bug 240393 [mozilla.org] (copy paste link, as /. referers are blocked) and doesn't have any activity. If a developer who cares about this steps up to the plate, it could be in soon, but otherwise I wouldn't expect it for a while.
Ho
Does anyone know if they fixed the chatzilla bug? (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone know if they fixed the chatzilla bu (Score:2)
The Sea Monkeys... (Score:2)
Yes, I'm a natural blue.
Internationalization? (Score:3, Interesting)
Are the current i18n groups willing to translate Seamonkey or will this have to be setup completely from scratch?
Presumably a Mozilla 1.7 translation can be used as a basis...
I would like to install a Dutch version at work, but I see no mention at all of Seamonkey on the Mozilla-NL site. It is centered around Firefox and Thunderbird these days, but still had a Mozilla 1.8a translation last year.
Redundant (Score:2)
You have no idea how much time I've wasted with the Internet Relay Chat chat. If I only had a nickel from the Automated Teller Machine machine for every day I've wasted...
Re:Redundant (Score:2)
G
too many name changes (Score:2, Insightful)
Bravo SeaMonkeys! (Score:2)
Re:Am I just confused? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Am I just confused? (Score:5, Informative)
In the begining there was Mozilla Suite, and it was good. However, a large number of people wanted a standalone browser. Instead of just splitting Mozilla Suite, they made their own browser, Firefox. Despite having an inferior UI, the Mozilla FOundation decided to drop the Suite in favor of Firefox. Some of the users of Mozilla don't particularly like the UI of Firefox, so we revived Mozilla Suite. Unfortunately, Mozilla is a trademark and the Mozilla Foundation does not let them call it Mozilla Suite, so it is now SeaMonkey.
You can tell what side I'm on. I'll be dling the new SeaMonkey tonight.
Re:Am I just confused? (Score:3, Informative)
As one of those users who prefers the Mozilla UI and likes having Composer around on the rare occasions it's needed, I'm glad that the Suite has a new lease on life.
Re:Am I just confused? (Score:2)
Re:Am I just confused? (Score:2)
Anyways, how are people stupid when they simply don't care about web browsers enough to even know there are alternatives? Cause, fyi, most people don't care, and couldn't be bothered to care. And no amount of bitching by web developers is going to make them care. Get over it, or find a new profession. Cater to your customers and their choices, or fuck off and do something else fo
Re:Am I just confused? (Score:3, Interesting)
This sounds like a rewrite of history, although it may be part of the story.
More importantly, there was a set of Mozilla developers who were tired of working with a vast code base where each decision had to be made by a committee and was endlessly criticized by posers who never wrote a line of code. These developers decided to write a new browser front end on their own so they could have fun again coding and be accountable to no one.
Amazin
Re:Am I just confused? (Score:2)
Re:Am I just confused? (Score:2)
Actually, according to the Mozilla trademark policy [mozilla.org], Seamonkey is one of their trademarks anyway.
I also suggest people read that policy in general, as there's a good chance most people are technically breaking it already. Put that ® or (TM) next to Mozilla® Thunderbird(TM) recently? (Mozilla is a registered trademark of the Mozilla Foundation. Thunderbird is a trademar
Re:Am I just confused? (Score:2)
Any opinions on whether I should stick with Thunderbird or go with Evolution? I'm using KDE instead of Gnome.
Re:Firefox extensions? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Composer (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Composer (Score:2)
Re:Is it compatible with extensions and plugins? (Score:2)
I have been testing the alpha and beta for some time and have not yet run into incompatabilities.
Re:Is it compatible with extensions and plugins? (Score:2)
Part of the install docs [mozilla.org] say that you should uninstall older Mozillas, and delete the older install directory, if you used extensions (they note the spell checker as one). They also caution: "Do not install over an old Mozilla version." (They have it in bold, too.)
Apparently, you can have the older version co-existing with SeaMonkey, (not a surprise) so you can still use the old extensions with the old version.
Re:Is it compatible with extensions and plugins? (Score:2)
Re:Is it compatible with extensions and plugins? (Score:2)
Re:Is it compatible with extensions and plugins? (Score:2)
Re:drag&drop reordering of tabs.... (Score:2)
Note that the release announcement mentions features added since Mozilla 1.7, since that's what we figured many users would be coming from, so we've actually had a lot of these features in the nightlies for quite a while.
There are a lot of other features too - these are just ones we happened to think we
Re:Compilation instructions? (Score:2)
Use the following links.
http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Build_Documen tation [mozilla.org]
http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Category:Buil d_Documentation [mozilla.org]
For help
http://irc.mozilla.org/ [mozilla.org]
http://forums.mozillazine.org/viewforum.php?f=42 [mozillazine.org]