Mozilla M10 Released To The World 100
johns713 sent us the word that Milestone 10 of Mozilla has been released. For more information on what M10 has read the release notes. Now I gotta see if it will stay up on my machine this time - or at least beat Netscape for uptime.
erm.... (Score:1)
Bad memory? (Score:1)
These proves computers effect our memory!
hah! a good one (Score:1)
Cool! (Score:1)
But seriously, M10 looks really pretty. I was very impressed. The Mozilla team is doing a damn fine job. That is to say, slashdot loaded fine, it was fast, I could log in, and it didn't die on me. That's all I really want from a browser.
Two different editors, two stories (Score:1)
Hell.. It's much more annoying when you actually *pay for* a newspaper with one editor, and see the same story in it twice or even three times. (Only once that I've seen, ever... Vancouver Province)
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Other release news, Linux 2.3.20 is out (Score:2)
(No offence meant to the admins here, who do a great job.)
new layout eng. rules! (Score:1)
Crashes over and over and over and over, though.
The two ways to run it are to execute apprunner or viewer. Viewer is barebones, back, forward and address only, whereas Apprunner launches the new communicator, which is pink (......) and has a lot of
Personally, i like the stripped down viewer a lot better! If it only had bookmarks, and a way to open links in a new window, I would make viewer my only browser
Turnips (Score:1)
Here is the difference (Score:1)
Fairly usable (Score:1)
Download the builds and give bug reports or criticism. Check that it works with your favourite sites. Read the relavant documents on http://www.mozilla.org/ for information on bug reporting and helping the mozilla team.
The main problem with Mozilla is that it needs glibc2.1 or higher to work, if anyone can help them work on a solution then please do so if you have the time.
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Deja vu -- perhaps a new script would help? (Score:5)
Just a suggestion -- this sort of thing happens, but it does have a way of bringing out the malcontents with their flamethrowers set to kill.
But before the malcontents scream too loudly: there is plenty of new stuff on
turnips (Score:1)
If i had been expecting the taste of a turnip, things would be different for me today, and possibly all of society.
right-click (Score:1)
(I could download and install, but I generally find I have to then unisnstall cos it's so unstable, hopefuilly you folks can save me some time?)
Mozilla and the armies of Trolls (Score:1)
I was pleasantly surprised. Yes, there are some incomplete things and little bugs, but it renders far faster than netscape and is generally usable. In my book, that's pretty good for pre-beta software, especially considering where these guys are coming from
Doesn't seem to run on stampede... (Score:1)
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Pre-post filter (Score:1)
Re:Turnips (Score:1)
Redundant article? (Score:4)
Sorry to make this short, but I gotta run in about 5 ms (milliseconds, not Microsofts...)
Hey...that's pretty cool (Score:1)
Seriously tho' I dl'ed the Win release to use here at work and it is fast and almost usable...once it gets stable enough it looks like somthing that a lot of people may like...
-Red
Re:Other release news, Linux 2.3.20 is out (Score:1)
*points at l-k*
thats terrible man (Score:1)
Re:I want software that doesn't suck! (Score:2)
Re:Fairly usable (Score:1)
Deal.
How to detect glibc version? (Score:1)
My system is RedHat 5.2 based so I'm guessing that it isn't 2.1
I've got RH 6, Caldera 2.2-N and Suse 6.2 CDs lurking about, I wonder if I can pull it off one of them without completely screwing my system? Any suggestions (or more importantly warnings) before I give it a go?
The Great Chunder Page - Alcohol Induced Fun!
Re:Redundant article? (Score:1)
They used to read every comment. Is it too much to read at least every headline? Sorry to see this happen...have they lost the passion?
The Reuse Rocket [mibsoftware.com] - more than 6000 open source software links, PLUS the info and FAQs you need to use them.
Stripped down browser (Score:1)
Re:Pre-post filter (Score:2)
Re:right-click (Score:1)
Pretty strange but hey it's still an alpha !
J-F Mammet
Still not good for release... (Score:1)
Even though M10's unstable it seems there's still too many bugs for release. Perhaps we won't see NS5 this year?
Re:Deja vu -- perhaps a new script would help? (Score:1)
Clearly hemos doesn't read slashdot. :)
Re:How to detect glibc version? (Score:1)
Re:How to detect glibc version? (Score:2)
Re:I want software that doesn't suck! (Score:1)
MS IE 5 doesn't run under Linux, and probably never will. Not a ringing endorsement, if you have to install a second OS, just to run a web browser.
WTF?! At least you can get to the license agreement dialog under Solaris. That's one better than M10!
I would happily pay $50 for a Linux version of Internet Explorer.
Re:Again, a duplicate... (Score:2)
wow (Score:1)
Re:wow (Score:2)
Re: Software that doesn't suck (Score:1)
....Mozilla M10.... (Score:1)
Re:How to detect glibc version? (Score:2)
The question now is can I safely upgrade (using an RPM or by spending a day downloading and compiling all the bits and pieces) without breaking other things?
The Great Chunder Page - Alcohol Induced Fun!
Re:I want software that doesn't suck! (Score:2)
They keep adding on extra Sh!t I don't want. That shopping button in the latest release, wtf? I can find a site to buy stuff from very well myself... I'm still using 4.5, & even keep my 2.x & 3.x versions on here for nostaglia. If Mozilla.org can't deliver within the next year+, i'll prolly use 4.5 for as long as it can work for all the sites I visit...but I might end up switching to Opera, even tho the design/interface/everything of that browser just makes me sick...we'll see what happens w/ the Beta release of Mozilla...
Tom
Mozilla with SSL (Score:1)
a little ahead of the times... (Score:1)
Maybe that'll be a fairly reasonable assumption by the time Mozilla is released (hehe), but it's not right now. On the one hand, it doesn't make sense to cut out of alpha testing everyone who's running RH 6, TurboLinux (me), older SuSE, Debian 2.2, et cetera. But OTOH, I can see how some enterprising soul could d/l the current source and figure out a workaround so that it eventually *will* run on 2.0.
I still hope against hope that Mozilla 5.0 will manage to pick the best features from Netscape 3.x and 4.x, and put them together in a browser with the speed of lynx
MoNsTeR
Re:Doesn't seem to run on stampede... (Score:1)
gives some GTK warnings and exits...
Time to try the source.
Fun little bug (Score:1)
Everything seemed nice to me. I pulled up www.enlightenment.org, and it looked REALLY screwed up, but I'm guessing that's because mozilla is a lot more strict about it's html code. I bet the site is doing something funky.
The real fun part came when I decided to quit from mozilla. File/Quit appears to be set to print.
I tried to exit the program, and was prompted for my printer settings.
WHEE!
Re:Deja vu -- perhaps a new script would help? (Score:1)
Re: Software that doesn't suck (Score:2)
I also agree that getting the core stable first is the important part. A UI is (a) trivial, and (b) totally unimportant when it comes to what the software can do.
The cost of IE has been blended in with other products, making it an invisible cost. Whilst it's d/l is "free", you can bet their accounting department can say exactly how much profit they've made on it. Having said that, from the user's perspective, IE is free. That deters them from using anything else seriously, as anything else has to cost more, somehow... ...doesn't it?
give it a BREAK!! (Score:1)
I'd almost like to see what IE 3 looked like in alpha... LOL
(they never released 1 & 2, for fear of looking too primitive and too far behind Netscape)
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Wish it would work on Alpha (Score:1)
non working executable. I haven't been able
to run this on alpha since around m5. I lose more and more faith in mozilla every iteration.
there was an IE2 (Score:1)
ie2 came with the initial release of Win95... OSR2 started giving out IE3 (which billy boy was so proud of, he put it in their bootscreen bmp.)
:)
i suspect the original IE was a win31 app that no one cared about, because a) the web wasn't big way back in that day, and b) netscape and mosaic stilled ruled the (small) market.
Re:Wish it would work on Alpha (Score:1)
Yup... it's because they use a lot of very badly written code in it - code that specifically depends on pointers being 32-bit. The code is way too buried in the rest of Mozilla that the chances are it will never work on anything besides a 32-bit box.
"Software is like sex- the best is for free"
Re:New? I've had it at least two days. (Score:2)
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Re:a little ahead of the times... (Score:1)
question: socks? (Score:1)
I set network.hosts.socks_server and network.proxy.type just like my old prefs, but I still can't load anything from the outside world.
Setting netowrk.proxy.http and http_port won't work, I wouldn't think.
Re: glibc2.1 clarification (Score:1)
glibc2.1 is relatively easy to install from source (since it's binary compatible). Red Hat has been glibc2.1 based since 6.0, and Debian is glibc2.1 based in potato. In short, get glibc2.1. It's a Good Thing to do.
Re:a little ahead of the times... (Score:1)
Re:Wish it would work on Alpha (Score:3)
If you can find a case of code depending on 32-bit pointer width, please file a bug [mozilla.org] and Cc: shaver@mozilla.org on it. I will _personally_ repair it, if you don't get rapid response for the owner of the code in question.
Try the nightly builds (Score:2)
If you're using the latest version it may help in submitting useful bug reports and will help you spot bugs as they happen (remember to quote the build ID when submitting bug reports - it is found in the status bvar at the bottom).
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Re:I want software that doesn't suck! (Score:1)
Sorry. I've used Arena. I haven't seen a page yet that it renders correctly... it manages to screw up even the most basic HTML. lynx produces better formatted and more correct page renderings than Arena does. I think lynx may even handle tables better than Arena...
Amaya, now, is a different story. Still not as good as Netscape, but close. If it didn't try to edit every page you brought up in it, it might even be better than Netscape... it's certainly more stable.
Re: Software that doesn't suck (Score:1)
Netscape also have Icon Artists that can draw buttoms and stuffs. Theose buttons on Mozilla are Temporary.
Re:Wish it would work on Alpha (Score:1)
My offer stands, though: find code that assumes sizeof(void *) == 4 in Mozilla, and I'll fix it for you.
Oh dear... (Score:1)
Mozilla M10 Released [slashdot.org](166)
This from the main page, a mere few hundred pixels from the this story!
Re:Turnips (Score:1)
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Answer (Score:1)
So I downgraded to glibc2.1.1 and am still stuck with the same problem
Installing glibc2.1.1 might do it for you. But it didnt for me.
Re:Deja vu -- perhaps a new script would help? (Score:1)
I don't trust other peoples moderating. The traffic isn't that massive anyway.
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Re:Turnips (Score:1)
(PurpleBob runs screaming across the Internet until he is safely 19 links away.)
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A stripped down browser, try W3M! (Score:1)
Lynx is nice, but this one really is outstanding. On a slow machine (such as my poor workstation at work), W3M is big relief compared to using Netscape (even compared to Lynx for that matter).
Find it here:
ftp://ei5nazha.yz.yamagata-u.ac.jp/w3m/
Re:thats terrible man (Score:1)
Does Mozilla work on Linux/PPC? (Score:1)
Is there an RPM avaialble, or should I get give it a go when I get home?
Jay (=
Re:I want software that doesn't suck! (Score:1)
So there simply won't be any moves to address the major faults of Netscape 4.x -- that was what Mozilla was for.
Anyway, Netscape 5.0 probably won't be anything more than the first release version of Mozilla with a bunch of bells, whistles, and gongs bolted on. I'll have to wait and see, but it's likely that I'll stick with Mozilla, and only go to Netscape 5.0 if there's some major functionality that I can't live without.
Re:I want software that doesn't suck! (Score:2)
Well, the story I've heard goes something like this:
MS: We need a web browser, quick. We've never rapidly developed anything as good as flakey software on our own before, so we'd better buy it. Let's go buy Spyglass to obtain their Spyglass Mosaic browser.
Spyglass: No way are you going to buy us. We know what happens to people who get bought out by MS. Forget it.
MS: Well shoot, I guess we can't fool you. What about a licensing agreement.
Spyglass: Wellll... what kind of agreement did you have in mind?
MS: Tell you what, we'll give you guys 50% of the gross. Now that's a good deal.
Spyglass: Say, that is a good deal. No tricks?
MS: Would we lie?
Spyglass: It's a deal!
MS: Great. Did we mention that we're going to give it away for free, which means you get nothing at all?
Spyglass: ;_;
The moral is, don't deal with the Devil^H^H^H^H^H Microsoft.
Wish it would work on ANY Redhat 5.2 (Score:1)
... but with linux, it's "tough luck, go upgrade."
This, to me, doesn't seem like the unix way at all... whatever happened to trying to be as portable as possible?
Flamebaiters go home! (Score:1)
If you want to flamebait Mozilla, wait at least until a beta is released.
Re: Software that doesn't suck (Score:1)