Firefox Slides, IE Gains? 228
limber writes "InformationWeek is reporting that a Dutch Web metrics company is stating that Microsoft's Internet Explorer has gained market share, contrary to other recent studies, while Firefox has lost market share, during the last two months. 'People are not switching so often to Firefox as before,' said Niels Brinkman, co-founder of OneStat."
In Other News (Score:2, Funny)
Actually (Score:5, Funny)
Edit: Upon further inspection, that article seems to refer to a completely different market slide by Firefox.
Edit to the edit: Upon even further inspection, it seems that there were about six articles between that one and this one saying that Firefox has gained marketshare. Now I'm confused.
Edit to the edit of the edit: Yet another further inspection reveals that there is no consistant definition of "gain", "loss", "market" or "marketshare" amongst all the articles, making them appear to be completely unrelated, unreliable, and possible questionable, if not outright self serving. But this is Slashdot, so that can't be.
Final edit: Upon yet another even further again inspection, I've come to a conclusion. Fuck it.
PS To The Final Edit: I just reread my own posting, and realized that I did explicitly point out that this is Slashdot. I had almost forgot that! So, I'm editing the post to that fact.
All Your Base Are Belong To Firefox! After all, oonly old people use IE! In soviet russia, my new beowolf cluster of Web Browser overlords welcome me.
Statistics.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Statistics.... (Score:3, Funny)
That is only true %66.7 of the time.
-matthew
Re:Statistics.... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Statistics.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Statistics.... (Score:2)
Re:Statistics.... (Score:2)
Different numbers mean different things to different people.
It's the emotional quality, not the quantity, of the numbers that are more important in the post-factual world of today.
Just because little Chris cannot successfully enumerate the fingers on one hand should make no difference, if he decides on the accounting arts for his career choices.
Quite the contrary, to look at the recent headlines: this non-grasp of the basics might be the ultimate qualificatio
Re:Statistics.... (Score:2)
Hey, be kind! (Score:5, Funny)
Now, if you were to talk about 99% of Internet Explorer die-hards jumping off a bridge, that would be another matter. I'd even be willing to help them look for a suitable bridge.
The browser distribution does matter, however. At the present time, many sites are IE-specific and will not function under Firefox, SeaMonkey or Konqueror. I do not accept the argument that to be good, browser-specific code must be used. Nor do I accept the argument that nobody can test on all the browsers in use - that is why we have standards. And I definitely don't accept the argument that you'd design for the browser most in use, because a good design will work just as well on IE as a specific design, it'll just work everywhere else too.
Think global and long-term, not just next-cube-down and next-week.
Re:Hey, be kind! (Score:2)
From what I can tell, good design works on everything *but* IE. My proper XHTML pages which are served as mimetype application/xhtml+xml simply will not load on IE. My SVG widgets (necessary because the only alternative would be -involuntary shudder- flash or **retching** java) would have
Re:Statistics.... (Score:2)
Re:Statistics.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, my solution is that if sites are spewing popups, they're not worth my time. If they won't work pro
Yes (Score:2, Funny)
Maybe a little off-topic, but so I am too.
Re:Statistics.... (Score:2, Funny)
Now the ecological ramifications of all that biomass decaying at the same time.... I wonder if any enviroterrorists have calculated that one yet....
Re:Statistics.... (Score:2)
I'd go last. Everyone else would break my fall.
Re:Statistics.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Firefox is _the_ reason why many pages work today with other browser others than iE. Plus, if microsoft controls the browser market, it controls a big part of the internet. RSS? standars? CSS? We need firefox to keep microsoft away from controlling people like they've done in the desktop market....
Re:Statistics.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Web developers. Like anybody else, they don't want to have to work any harder than they have to. When IE has > 95% marketshare, you end up with stupid things like checks for browser ID string, and then displaying a "You must upgrade [sic] to IE X.0 or better to use this site". They would have every motivation to use Microsoft specific HTML extensions, and your lovely Firefox browser slips into irrelevance and uselessness as a result.
By having a
FP (Score:5, Insightful)
I love my phoe-firebird/fox/something, but that's my choice.
Alternatively, could slash include a ticker on the frontpage?
Look at the story icons (Score:4, Insightful)
One for firefox, one for IE, and a red stapler - the editors' way of saying that they're doing a Troll Tuesday article on the readers.
Its a bit more subtle than posting "this story from the YHB[TT] YFI HAND department"
What's the cause? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What's the cause? (Score:4, Interesting)
- RobM
Tech Lead
CompUSA #531
Re:What's the cause? (Score:2)
We need a internet-related name: "mozilla www explorer"....whatever. "firefox" is a stupid name.
And then, the firefox installer could include some tweaks, like for example tweak the registry to start firefox when you double click in the blue e or something if you set firefox as default browser...
Easy solution (Score:5, Interesting)
Phase 2: Right click FF icon --> properties --> change icon --> select IE icon
Phase 3: Delete old IE Icon from desktop
Phase 4: Rename Mozilla Firefox icon to Internet Explorer
Before you mod this funny, I have done this to at least half a dozen people's computers. They arn't smart enough to realize the difference (all they need is an address bar and bookmarks), so FF stays. Their computers get less spyware, they see less popups, I get less "OMG HELP ME" calls. Which brings me to Phase 5, which is profit.
Re:Easy solution (Score:2)
AOL (Score:2, Interesting)
Patiently explained that the browser wasn't the internet, just used to view it and browse it. Hence being called a browser.
Haven't tried explaining why Firefox should be used instead. Something along the lines of "well, whenever you use IE, likely as not a load of hackers can look at what you're doing"
"So why do you use IE for windowsupdate"
erm...
Sites that only work in IE... (Score:2)
(Well, actually, if there's an IE only page, I guess I have to click one button to make it work. But that's all.)
When I use IETab, I wonder if it reports my browser as IE or FF for these statistics?
Re:What's the cause? (Score:2)
I can say that I've done my part
Re:What's the cause? (Score:2)
If no one uses the standard, it's irrelevant. The only relevant standard is the standard that is used. It makes everyone's life easier when eve
Re:What's the cause? (Score:2, Insightful)
Ok, how about this; every day, there are a lot of computers sold. A large percentage of these computers have Windows XP pre-installed. All the computers with Windows XP installed have IE. I have not yet seen any computer that had XP pre-installed that also had Firefox pre-installed. I know it pains you, but computers sold with desktop Linux just aren't that popular among the general population; they want their Play-skool Windows, with the nice big 'e' that says 'Int
And thus shall it always be (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:And thus shall it always be (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:And thus shall it always be (Score:2)
Remember, there are a lot of r
Re:And thus shall it always be (Score:2)
The point was not related to cost, but to a specialty market. We (geeks, nerds, et al) like Firefox because we can tweak it to suit our needs. The designers made it that way. Not everyone can use Firefox to its full intended potential.
You do not just jump behind the wheel of a Ferrari and drive it to its full potential. It takes an on-going investment of time and learning (dollar cost is irrelevant) that most people are unwilling or have no desire to make. Anyone (well, almost)
Re:And thus shall it always be (Score:2)
That obviously isn't a concern with Firefox, so the example isn't a good one.
Re:And thus shall it always be (Score:2)
Lemmegitthisstraight.
So, you basically just turned someone else's analogy into a springboard for a self-important socio-political tirade, which was carefully disguised as a pointless nitpick about one of the least important aspects of the analogy. In fact, if there existed such a thing as a "Most Irrelevant Aspect of the Analogy," your comment about fuel economy was it. I mean, you didn't demonstrate any correlation betewen the comment you made and the original analogy you were apparently dissatisfied en
Re:And thus shall it always be (Score:3, Insightful)
The fact is that some people really like FF much better than IE, but comparing FF to a fine car and IE to a crappy one is just another way of saying you really like FF better. No additional information has been added via the analogy.
Seamonkey (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Seamonkey (Score:3, Funny)
School's in, SUCKA (Score:5, Interesting)
...which means that all those new computer sold to students are using IE. Not all those students are migrating to FF.
Every new computer that runs Windows is a new IE user. Not so for Firefox or any other browser. Nothing to see here. Move on.
Re:School's in, SUCKA (Score:2)
Tech support phones ringing in 5... 4... 3...
Re:School's in, SUCKA (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:School's in, SUCKA (Score:2)
As such, the university pre-configures the computer, and because it's in their best interest to prevent viruses and worms from entering their network, virtually all choose Firefox.
Believe me. Out of any demographic, College students probably represent the bigge
Re:School's in, SUCKA (Score:2)
Re:School's in, SUCKA (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:School's in, SUCKA (Score:2)
Re:School's in, SUCKA (Score:2)
Maybe, maybe not. (Score:3, Insightful)
Many regular users of Firefox like myself are forced to use IE for some things like Launchcast and many other nonFF friendly sites. Also, many people employ FF extensions like IE Tab to use IE within FF. Of course, this may also have something to do with the IE 7.0 beta usage.
http://religiousfreaks.com/ [religiousfreaks.com]Another day.. another "statistic" (Score:2)
The big things like if something had 1% 10% to 100% share.. yes those might matter, but is something 11.2% or 11.5% in things like this... totally irrelevant.
Re:Another day.. another "statistic" (Score:2)
Re:Another day.. another "statistic" (Score:2)
In this case they did none of the above, thus in general one can assume that for the subsection of the market they are using the thing is true, but says nothing at a level that is more precise
Re:Another day.. another "statistic" (Score:2)
Re:Another day.. another "statistic" (Score:2)
I love Firefox... (Score:5, Interesting)
Maybe I've just had bad luck, but Firefox seems bigger, slower and less stable than it did a year ago - and I can't think of any added feature that I've cared about during that same period.
Re:I love Firefox... (Score:2)
Re:I love Firefox... (Score:3, Insightful)
Last time I dared mention that, I was told that FF is perfect, it's probably just a buggy extension, which may be true, but if the extensions I like (adblock plus, html tidy, and web developer) don't work, I might as well use Opera or IE.
Re:I love Firefox... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I love Firefox... (Score:2)
Re:I love Firefox... (Score:2)
Face it, Firefox is a terrible browser. Sure, it's better than IE, but that's really not saying very much. I hate the fact that it's so useless out of the box -- the defaults are awful, and you need to resort to a whole bunch of extensions to get it to work even halfway sanely, and then half of those don't work with the version of Firefox you're using. I hate the fact that it crashes so much, and it's way
Re:I love Firefox... (Score:2)
Re:Blame where it belongs. (Score:5, Insightful)
It's "Windows" but you called it "Windoze", how cute.
Microsoft sabotages the better programs on it's platform
Please go ahead and provide some proof that Microsoft is sabotaging Firefox. Please, I'm sure every single Slashdot reader would like to get their hands on that kind of evidence. Really, you need to provide some proof of what you just said. Thanks.
you need to change your evangelism to platform migration
"Evangelism" - is that your term for making insane, ridiculous claims about "Windoze" and "M$"?
There's enough to take Microsoft to task without people like you "helping" those of us who are working for broader acceptance of free software. Thanks, but no thanks.
Flawed stats (Score:2)
Also, note that many of Firefox users will block any advertising and counting scum, thus reducing the visible usage. IE users tend to be non-technical, and thus they simply don't have the means to do so, at least until the bad evil sysadmin at their company blocks the relevant spies on DNS/squid level.
Who f*cking cares? (Score:5, Insightful)
Not real gain (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't imagine anyone would actively download and install IE, so unlike Firefox, IE's gain is not a real gain, but a side effect of its parent -- Windows.
And the correct answer is... (Score:2)
Re:Not real gain (Score:2)
Probably more like people shopping on line in the Christmas period. There are a lot of extra hits from people who normally only surf one or two sites (CNN, Fox), but suddenly start looking all over the place for good deals at Christmas time. Hence the 'drop' (1.4%) in Firefox in the USA, but stable in Europe. Although it's interesting that IE usage remained constant. I wonder if there was a jump in old or wierd browsers like Netscape or WebTV.
The article is mostly trash though. Anyone who thinks that
Very normal with such high novice user rate (Score:3, Insightful)
Firefox, Opera, etc (and even avantbrowser [avantbrowser.com]) for advanced users only. Nowadays it's considered "difficult" to install software by clicking "next, next, next".
Do not get me wrong. It's not that Firefox is not user friendly or easier to use, however there are so many "PC users" below "novice" level which will disable an antivirus if they're unable to open an infected file. And there are many "system admins", (which are in charge of internet cafes or school labs) who only knows how to install Windows and Office (and probably from "recovery CDs"). Times are different now.
(Previously everybody not only knew what every file in their C:\DOS and C:\WINDOWS were for, they could also program in at least in one language).
We cannot expect any more growth until PC users are more educated.
Re:Very normal with such high novice user rate (Score:2)
I refuse to believe anyone could be that stupid. This is a problem that needs natural selection: No, I won't fix your computer again because you screwed it up doing exactly what I told you not to do last time. Fix it yourself.
As long as people know that when they frack their computers up they can get a nerd to fix it for them for free, they will remain ignorant because
Re:Very normal with such high novice user rate (Score:3, Insightful)
People dont' get a computer cuz they want to run Firefox or Office (at least most don't); they do it because they want to check stocks, read the news, talk to family members world wide, share photos and videos, type letters, etc. A lot people on here give Mi
Re:Very normal with such high novice user rate (Score:4, Insightful)
Now do they need to know when and how to implement a radix sort? No. In the same way as I don't need to know how to do and oil change, or tune the engine in my car. But I am expected to fill it up myself and check the tyre pressure, maybe even fill the screen wash. I'm also obligated to drive safely, and act with courtesy towards other road users and pedestrians.
It doesn't even need to be as complicated as a car for this analogy to work.
Take a sledgehammer. You don't need any formal training, or a license to operate it. You do have to be strong enough to lift it, and look halfway responsible when you buy it (more than a computer). In the right hands a sledgehammer is a wonderful tool that can be used in a variety of different ways. In the wrong hands it can be used to destroy your house and kill people. The difference between a computer and a sledgehammer is that when a sledgehammer is used by a moron, its the moron that gets blamed.
Its not even like there arn't equivalents to viruses and malware. Sledghammers are suseptable to variety of attacks: fungal wood rot, rust, termites. Still, if a moron gets hurt, or does damage with a damaged sledgehammer its the morons fault.
This is why nerds think that people who use computers should have at least a basic understand of how they work, before they use them. Computers are tools, and tools need training and care if they are to be used without damaging the operator and those around them.
Well, of course! (Score:4, Funny)
They're right (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah I never switch to Firefox anymore, once was enough. The same is true for most of the people I know using it. Something about switching to it that first time, they never switch to it again, I wonder what causes that. For awhile I tried downloading it from mozilla.org every time I wanted to surf, but that got tedious rapidly. I'm sorry I guess I'm just not doing my part. Hey I know, I could load up IE then close it, then load Firefox again, would that count as another switch? I promise to do it more often if it will help.
Skewed data? (Score:5, Informative)
So that would suggest that their statistics only count people who visit their customers' websites. I don't think I'd count that as a complete, objective picture of the Internet as a whole. Plus, whether or not you accept cookies from a site might skew their data further. [For the record, I use Firefox and only accept cookies when I have to].
Skewed data? Adblocked users not counted (Score:4, Interesting)
So, if I use Adblocker to block the javascript - which I do for most ad sites unless it's a poll or something I need - then they aren't counting you AT ALL when you use Firefox, since you blocked their ads and their popups.
Every time you buy a Wintel box (Score:2, Insightful)
Every time you download Firefox, you get counted as "buying" Firefox.
Of course:
1. if you have twenty boxen like we do, you only download Firefox once and then roll it onto each boxen internally - 20 copies, one download.
2. if you stop using IE on your laptop and use Firefox, noone REDUCES the count of IE users by one, they only INCREASE the count of Firefox users. Thus, IE will always have more users, since they never LOSE them when you switch to Firefox or Opera.
First of all, stop saying "boxen", its really... (Score:3, Insightful)
Secondly, they count browser usage based on network traffic, not based on number of downloads/PC's sold.
RTFA.
Re:Every time you buy a Wintel box (Score:2)
(Note: Your point 2 applies to every other browser, as well.)
Re:Every time you buy a Wintel box (Score:2)
Depends on if you're trying to track downloads and installations, or trying to track users based on user agent strings. Both have problems, but the second method doesn't suffer from the problem you mention.
Bundle Extensions with Firefox (Score:4, Interesting)
1) Its faster,
2) Tabbed browsing,
3) Adblock,
4) More secure.
Items 1 & 4 are difficult to present to new users. Item 2 is also in IE7. Item 3 does not come standard with Firefox.
In addition to Adblock, there are several other really great extensions that make Firefox the browser for me. I use other extensions to sync my bookmarks between computers, provide thumbnails of all open tabs (available in IE7), and to more tightly lock-down pop-ups and javascript.
What Firefox needs is a bundle that includes several "essential" extensions pre-installed. As MS plays catch-up with where Firefox was a year ago, the Mozilla Foundation could stay way ahead bundling these great tools. The average user is not going to go out and find these free additions on their own. By adding only a couple of MBs for the initial download, I bet you could bundle several great extensions and market the additional functionality.
Re:Bundle Extensions with Firefox (Score:5, Interesting)
the thing that made me delete firefox was realising how it managed passwords. as far as I can tell you have 2 options:
1. you passwords are free for everyone to see by looking in the preferences (secured only by a "are you sure?" box), or
2. you must enter a master password every time you start a new session.
this is absolutely insane. I guess it's because firefox isn't OS-integrated so can't use OS-protection such as Keychain to keep passwords safe.
Re:Bundle Extensions with Firefox (Score:2)
Re:Bundle Extensions with Firefox (Score:2)
Of course, this defeats the original purpose of Firefox: to have a simple and fast browser.
Re:Bundle Extensions with Firefox (Score:2)
1.5 wasn't so good. (Score:5, Interesting)
if anything, I'm an old school netscape fanboy. My first browser was Lynx, then I eventually jumped on the bandwagon and got netscape 3, then eventually moved on to long lasting netscape 4.x series. Netscape 6 sucked so I stayed with netscape 4.x during that time. I eventually starting using the Mozilla suite pre 1.0 after stumbling upon it. The lack of AOL branding at the time was a major reason for my jump from Netscape proper. Since then I've been using Mozilla, then Phoneix, then Firebird, then eventually Firefox. When 1.5 came out, it really sucked major ass for me. FF1.5 would crash at least 7 to 10 times per day. I'm fairly computer savy and I followed explicit instructions on making sure it was a clean install. I was browsing with hardly any extensions at all, which sucked.
There have been other major changes behind the scenes that might not be so apparent to the average user. In my attempts to create an extension for FF1.5 extension contest I came accross a shitload of bugs. Very simple XUL markup could make the browser disappear by simply clicking on a hyperlink. And by disappear I mean as in invisibile, except for plain text. And there are others, but my attempts at using Bugzilla have sucked. I've reported bugs in the past only to have them recently deleted because no one want's to fix them.
OSS is fine, but it seems to foster a mentality that if a developer can't reproduce a bug then the end user must be stupid. That's annoying, especially for a company that's marketing its browser to everyone, including urging people that don't know what a browser even is to upgrade.
The feeling I've gotten from this open source netscape project is that I'm using a product, such that if it ever gives me serious problems, I'm left with no recourse since there is no focused method for attaining a definitive solution or fix for something. It's like the bystander effect [wikipedia.org] when it comes to fixing or even acknowleding problems.
Re:1.5 wasn't so good. (Score:2)
When I installed 1.5, it took over the Windows file associations for URLs in a different way than it did before. From that point on, whenever I typed a URL inside of Internet Explorer itself, it would open a new Firefox window and go to the site. I literally couldn't use Internet Explorer at all. As a developer, I really need to make sure my programming runs on both, since this was a web based project.
I uninstalled Firefox, and
Re:1.5 wasn't so good. (Score:2)
Seeing as I have full MSDN access, though, I wouldn't say it was illegal. Whether or not Microsoft would, I couldn't care less.
Re:1.5 wasn't so good. (Score:3, Informative)
I used to get occasional crashes starting with the Deer Park builds before it was called 1.5, but they seemed to go away completely after I installed the flashblock extension and disabled java. Lots of flash ads across several tabs is a recipe for disaster. There's still a Linux-only tab dragging bug (drag doesn't end when
Maybe it is /.'s fault! (Score:2)
Now if it only ran on my SUSE 10.0 laptop....
Re:Maybe it is /.'s fault! (Score:2)
Firefox is the most unstable program in common use (Score:5, Informative)
The CPU and memory hogging bug in Firefox 1.5 is well known. In two extensive articles, Information Week reports that opening and closing many Firefox windows and tabs causes crashes and CPU and memory hogging. That kind of heavy user often sees Firefox consuming 99% CPU while idle and/or more than 400 Megabytes. See Firefox 1.5: Not Ready For Prime Time? [cmp.com] and Firefox 1.5 Stability Problems? Readers And Mozilla Respond [cmp.com].
The bug seems to be due to insufficient allocation of resources inside Firefox, such as inadequate stack space. Those who use a browser to do extensive research, for example, are likely to have more windows and tabs open than the average user. Apparently Firefox developers did not plan for that.
The bug has been reported to Bugzilla, and is very easy to reproduce (see below), but Firefox developers have marked it invalid because there is not enough specific information! The bug has existed in Firefox for more than 2 years, and several people report that it is worse in Firefox 1.5. Firefox's Bugzilla does not allow direct links from Slashdot, so copy and paste Bugzilla URLs into a new tab. Remove the space:
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=131 456
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=222 660
See comments #48 and #49 of bug 222660 for an example of the symptoms under Windows XP. A typical Windows Task Manager screen shot attached to comment #49 shows the "I/O Other Bytes" increasing by 20K/second with no program activity. At that point, the bug was not yet showing the worst symptoms.
The huge memory use, and 94% CPU use or more with no activity, normally occur after opening and closing many Firefox windows and tabs, as happens when researching something on the internet over a period of hours or days. The bug symptoms are worse after putting the computer on standby or after hibernating. My experience has been that the memory and CPU hogging always occur together, so they appear to be the same bug. However, the CPU hogging symptom takes longer to appear. If the computer has perhaps 256 Megabytes of memory, the most obvious symptom at the beginning is hard disk thrashing.
You can demonstrate the memory use problem quickly by loading and closing the following large web page into multiple Firefox tabs a few times:
http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_mono/ libc.html [gnu.org]. To see the memory and CPU percentage used in Windows, right-click on the Taskbar and choose Task Manager. Choose the Processes tab.This demonstrates one aspect of the bug, but is not representative of big occuring in normal use, since that web page is huge.
Maybe the only solution is for a developer who knows the code to reproduce the problem and see what causes it. It is not clear to me why they are unwilling to do so. This bug seems especially interesting to me. It is likely that fixing this bug will fix other issues. It is likely that fixing this bug will make it easier to work on the Firefox code.
The bug has often been reported on Slashdot. Here are a few examples:
" >http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=169676&cid=14 143632
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=168683&cid=140 62501 [slashdot.org]
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=168683&cid=140 62671 [slashdot.org]
Re:Firefox is the most unstable program in common (Score:4, Funny)
Not to mention people who look at pron. Note to Mozilla: must fix!!!!!11one
Re:Firefox is the most unstable program in common (Score:3, Interesting)
I have filed bugs in the past for crashes, too - those few cases where I could actually work out a consistent trigger co
Re:Firefox is the most unstable program in common (Score:3, Informative)
Ever heard of Windows?
The old Windows versions were bad, but when using WHQL drivers, the only time I had stability problems with Windows NT, 2000 or XP was with failing or faulty hardware. I suppose in all fairness, there are probably more copies of 98 or ME in use than there are of the entire Firefox installed base.
Re:Uninstall Adblock and try again. (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh yes, and on Linux you need a GNOME environment or must turn over backwards just to change fonts, C-q doesn't work, Shift-Button1 doesn't work, too many preferences are hidden, etc.pp.
The firefox developers think they know better than their users what a good program is. Well, I had to discover that this means I'm not among their t
Firefox needs approved extensions. (Score:3, Insightful)
The fact is, Mozilla.org heavily advertises the existence of extensions. Then, when you have problems with them, blames the problems on the user or the extensions author. Not even the author [mozdev.org] thinks that recent versions of Adblock Plus actually have worked well. Here are the recent bugs:
Detailed changelog for Adblock Plus 0.6.0.4, released on January 21, 2006:
Obligatory Sony Rootkit Joke (Score:4, Funny)
Gatta love those double standards (Score:4, Insightful)
A 'Firefox slips this month' story and what do you get? 'GOD STOP TELLING ME WHATS UP WITH FIREFOX ALL THE TIME I DONT CARE'
Hmmmm...
Yeah, Well I Got Another Client Interested (Score:3, Interesting)
after going through yet another marathon spyware cleaning yesterday and today.
Goddam Spystrike and a dozen or two other trojans...
The Spystrike bitch is just that - people everywhere, according to various spyware Web sites, are having one hell of a time getting rid of that one. New variants every other day and almost no antispyware or antivirus vendor is up to speed on it yet; estimates are it's infecting 2,500 PCs an hour. Rides in on various conventional trojans, then is extremely hard to get rid of without specific knowledge of how - and even then.
I had to use a special removal tool, plus a-squared, Ewido, SpybotS&D, spywareblaster, Windows antispyware, a repair install, SFC, and one hell of a lot of reboots to get rid of this fucker.
Somebody find the fuckwads who put this one out - I got something for their asses - and Bill's.
OTOH, I made some money out of it, so maybe I love those guys...
Re:IE won't kill FireFox as Ballmer says- (Score:2)
You can't use that joke for every thread, or it'll get worn out.
That said, I wonder which browser Natalie Portman uses...