Two Interesting Mozilla Articles 80
DragonHawk writes "First, a short review of the Milestone Ten release, which gives you a good idea of where Mozilla is at. Second, and more interesting, is this article on press attitude towards Mozilla. It gives you a real good idea of how big a project this is, and just how far they've come. Any web user should check them out. "
Re:Mozilla for Mac == Word 6 for Mac? (Score:1)
Between that and the fact that Mac users are much more finicky about interface design, I'm kind of pessimistic about Mozilla's popularity on the Mac. It's a shame -- I mean it's not as if any of the Mac hardcore want to use Microsoft but IE is rapidly becoming the only real choice. (Although I'm writing this in Navigator.)
Latest Win32 verses Linux Mozilla observation (Score:1)
I just ran 10/18/1999-12 Win32 release.. I have
to say.. WOW.. It is REAL REAL nice, I love
the translation/search features, its a VERY smooth
browser, and I'm seriously thinking about running
it 100% of the time I spend in Windows.
Now I also ran the 10/17/1999-09 Linux Release (I've noticed they seem to release more Win32 nightly builds then Linux builds, why is that?)..
And I had trouble even getting it to run.. I
untared it in
so that it could find all those libs.. and WHAT A MESS. Its ugly, its PURE STRIPPED browser window, thats it. How come it doesn't have all the pretty stuff thats in the Win32 release? I was soo encouraged by the way the new Win32 build works, I seriously wanted to have the same thing in Linux and finally give Netscrape 4.7 the BOOT.
SO can anyone tell me if I'm an idiot or is
this just the code hard facts? That Win32 people
have a better Mozilla then Linux people?
-Matthew
Technetos, Inc.
Re:Will Mozilla have... (Score:1)
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"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds." - Albert Einstein
Re:I don't know... (Score:1)
on the page where you downloaded mozilla, it tells you to check a bug report about proxies.
Add the following to your prefs.js file (created after you launch mozilla for the first time) user_pref("network.proxy.http", "servername"); user_pref("network.proxy.http_port", port#);
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Re:Will Mozilla have... (Score:1)
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"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds." - Albert Einstein
Re:Latest Win32 verses Linux Mozilla observation (Score:1)
Did you run mozilla-apprunner.sh or mozilla-viewer.sh?
the first is the full browser, the second is just the rendering engine (raptor)
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Re:Come On (Score:2)
Are you actually saying that, if Mozilla takes another 18 months, but when it is released it is better than the contemporaneous releases of either Opera or Internet Explorer, and you don't have to pay for it, you wouldn't switch to it? And that enough other people wouldn't switch to it that it would utterly fail to gain enough marketshare to not be considered "dead"?
And, of course, on Linux and many other platforms the only competition to Mozilla is earlier versions of Netscape, as Opera and IE on those platforms is either neither planned or still vaporware. Are you saying that a free Mozilla released in 18 months would not replace Navigator 4.x as the dominant browser on those platforms? If so, is this because you think people would keep paying for Opera, because IE will be released for Linux, or because nobody will upgrade from Netscape 4.x to Mozilla?
I really wonder what standard has to be applied to a reply to your post to qualify as a "stupid remark" relative to your post.
Re:Yes, but can it compete? (Score:3)
No, it doesn't help crush Microsoft directly. But for MS to use open source software as a major part of its OS? Can you say PR victory? Can you say credibility? If Microsoft did this, they'd render themselves completely unable to FUD open source software.
Re:Latest Win32 verses Linux Mozilla observation (Score:1)
-Matthew
Re:Latest Win32 verses Linux Mozilla observation (Score:1)
Re:You missed something (Score:1)
Also, try disabling gfx in Prefs|Debug.
Re:There must be a business to OpenSource (Score:1)
Re:Mozilla for Mac == Word 6 for Mac? (Score:1)
There must be a business to OpenSource (Score:1)
Re:Will Mozilla have... (Score:2)
Berlin-- http://www.berlin-consortium.org [berlin-consortium.org]
Film at 11? (Score:1)
Now don't get me wrong, that is actually very good news. No scandals, no ugly crashes, just a good product.
Point is, how to tell the world?
-John
Running M11 nightly build here (Score:1)
Anyway, M11 nightly builds went from barely usable (couldnt http-post) to http-post working, but quitting when you press any key
I wont push my luck this time...
Running M11 nightly build here (Score:2)
Anyway, M11 nightly builds went from barely usable (couldnt http-post) to http-post working, but quitting when you press any key
I wont push my luck this time...
That wasn't the biggest problem with Word 6 (Score:2)
It was slow as blazes, and took out or encumbered features that I used daily. Equation editor is no substitute for the old typesetting commands, inserting symbols (greek) is much more complicated, and the mail merge is, well, wretched.
Aside from the unbearably slow, these problems exist to this day (or worse: open a file that uses the old formats, and it changes the *original* file to the new format without permission, unless you knew ahead of time to mark it read-only).
If it weren't for LyX, I'd still be using Word 5.1 today, as well as Excel 4. IM!HO, these were the last good products to come out of Redmond.
A while back, I needed to send out many job applications. I figured out that it would be easier to add mail-merge to LyX than to fight with the current MS version (hey, let's display the results of the conditional from the first record, rather than the conditional! See, a nice easy nothing to click on to make changes. Bleach.). I was right. With the mailmerge patch applied, I can now not only write merge code as was once possible, I can do the things that *should* have been in word's merge capacity to start with. (IF/ELSEIF, unlimited recursion . .
What worse can you say about a product than that it was easier to write something to replace it than to use it?
Shouldn't judge Mozilla speed yet (Score:1)
In short, you should never judge the speed of an app before the release version.
Correction (Score:1)
You can download MozillaClassic source code.
Originally Seen on Linux Today (Score:2)
Nail on Head (Score:3)
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"You can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding."
Not just the press (Score:4)
Will Opera be better than Mozilla? Possibly. Is that a reason for abandoning Mozilla as doomed from the start? Absolutely not.
I've been using M10 for a while now, and I've got to say I'm impressed with the progress that's been made.
Shame on Netscape. They were supposed to build a web browser to meet the growing needs of today's users and instead they went and built a web browsing architecture to meet the growing needs of tomorrow's users and businesses. But I wanted it now, damnit!
Well said, that man. You've stirred at least one soul into resolving to finally getting around to submitting bug reports.
Remember: Mozilla may be bug-ridden, but that's mainly because of the large number of unreasonable assholes who look on it as a finished product, and give up as soon as there's a dodgy refresh.
It's not even beta, for fuck's sake.
does open source have a time table like other (Score:1)
Today's browser (Score:1)
Will Mozilla have... (Score:2)
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"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds." - Albert Einstein
Re:Public attitudes to Mozilla. (Score:1)
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Re:does open source have a time table like other (Score:1)
Cool. (Score:1)
And read the article. This is all positive press, and very true. I liked M10 a lot, it's come a *long* way from the previous builds. (and even then I managed to build it on my old P133+32MB RAM--unlike Microsoft, the system requirements for development are even understated!)
However, if KFM improves (and I hear it has), or if I only need text-browsing (W3M) then I might not have to worry about it for a web browser. If I also want Mail/News/Page Design and all that in a GUI, then Mozilla starts looking better. (but why do it in a GUI?)
However, with so many good, fast, free web browsing efforts, I really don't need Opera.
I don't know... (Score:2)
Just compiled M10 this morning, and I'm not
impressed at all. On my AMD K6/2 400 Mhz it's
really jumpy and slow. Also, the proxy info
dialog doesn't let you enter in anything.
The text fields are there, but no input is
possible, so I couldn't even test out the
browsing. However, just trying to open windows
and pull down menus was quite slow.
I just did a default configure and make; did I
miss something?
Public attitudes to Mozilla. (Score:4)
I don't think I've had a usable result out of any of the linux milestone builds since M6. It seems to be hellishly sensitive to shared library versions that I just don't seem to find commonly in place on many of the linux boxes I use.
I realise that this comment will generate a multitude of responses along the lines of "It works just fine for me loser, stop spreading FUD" but I'm just honestly reporting the state of play as I find it.
I would love to use a OS browser with the functionality that Mozilla offers , I would like to chip in to the development towards stability, even if only in the form of usable bug reports, just not quite enough to manually upgrade my libc , C++ runtime , compiler , ORB etc to match what seem to be specific linking requirements that you just don't get from the majority of GTK Unix Apps, even including that cherished old scapegoat for stability problems, GNOME .
The searching I have done seems to indicate that the released builds will work fine out of the box on up to the minute Red Hat installations, but I haven't been able to coax them into working on the older Red Hat SuSE or Debian boxes I have access to.
I'm just wondering if the ability to run on a wider range of GNU/Linux systems out there might engage or enhance that massively parallel debugging engine that helps drive OS projects along at such a staggering rate of improvement.
The lost Milestone (Score:1)
Re:does open source have a time table like other (Score:1)
Re:Public attitudes to Mozilla. (Score:1)
So I don't think that the .debs will work on slink without a wholsale compiler upgrade. The box in question is already upgraded to glibc2.1 / kernel 2.2
Mozilla for Mac == Word 6 for Mac? (Score:3)
HOWEVER, isn't this precisely what happened with Word 6 on the Mac? In the interest of making the software identical across platforms, the Mac version lacked consistency with all other Mac applications, and didn't function in the way a Mac application was supposed to behave.
Everyone was up in arms about this, even causing Microsoft to release a (non-free) "downgrade" to Word 5.1. The people rejoiced when Word 98 felt much more (though not enough, imho) like a standard Mac application.
Is not the same thing happening to Mozilla? After all, even if, a skin is written to make it LOOK like Mac app, as long as it uses XML and not standard Mac toolbox controls, it simply will not FEEL like a Mac app. In M10, for instance, text-selection is a simple inverted white-on-black box, instead of using the standard Mac settings for text-selection coloring.
Likewise, many controls do not function as they do on a Mac. This will not be changed with a mere skin.
I think interface consistency within an operating system and the apps written for it are incredibly important, and I'm afraid Mozilla will not achieve this goal, and remind us in many ways of Word 6's cross-platform interface fiasco.
So my question is, will it be possible to actually make the Mac version of Mozilla use actual standard Mac controls? Does XUL support this? Or does it only support an approximation, in effect rewriting the Mac controls and not quite getting it right and getting a slightly off feel?
Re:Come On (Score:1)
Prettier Mozilla please (Score:1)
To Mozilla Developers:
First, Mozilla is doing well and surprising everyone. The new layout engine is fast and stable, despite the hideous number of standards that need to be supported nowadays just to view a web page.
My nitpick is that on initial load, it is ... well... damned ugly. If you are at the stage where you are looking for a large number of testers, pretty up that interface so that people can stomach using it on a daily basis. Also, people's initial impression of Mozilla will change with a prettier interface. Mozilla is a product in the latter stages of development, more things work than don't work. But to anyone not familiar with the details of the project, loading Mozilla for the first time makes it seem that you have just figured out how to make buttons. Its understandable, but not excusable, for a journalist to "check it out", run it for an hour or so, not be impressed, and write a bad review. They are used to dealing with a commercial software industry where the interface comes first (to wow the journalists, spread the FUD, etc.) and the backend comes later.
Bottom line, make it prettier and you will draw more testers and better press.
mozillazine.org (Score:1)
You missed something (Score:1)
Re:Running M11 nightly build here (Score:1)
If you're looking for even moderate stability, you should download the real milestone, not the nightly.
Greg
Mozilla Does Have... (Score:1)
The Mozilla confirmation for me (Score:1)
Re:Running M11 nightly build here (Score:2)
M10 didnt have all the functionality I wanted, (proxys were still odd) whereas M11 rocks. Its stable enough. My initial post (the one that died, heh) was amazement at the rate of progress, the post that made it to slashdot (twice for some reason
I meant to inform people about the rate of progress, and that the nightly builds are useable, but only for the strong of heart
Re:Public attitudes to Mozilla. (Score:1)
just run dselect and add everything todo with GNOME libs/GTK libs/
and goto kde.tdyc.com for the latest in KDE stuff.
Re:Mozilla for Mac == Word 6 for Mac? (Score:2)
IIRC you'll be able to simulate the Mac l&f with XUL. How easy it will be is another story; I'd imagine it will be a non-trivial exercise that requires a significant amount of testing time and debugging effort. If you've got mozilla look at the chrome directory - A quick search using windows explorer turned up 727 files, including directories. So, yes, some time and effort required...
I'm amazed at people's attitude towards issues like this in mozilla. This has been said (probably literally) a thousand times on
Give the guys a chance, OK? I doubt it's easy coming up with a list of innovatations as long as your arm, then implementing it cross-platform
Read the article first! (Score:1)
Re:Mozilla for Mac == Word 6 for Mac? (Score:1)
But UI is a big concern of mine, and, as you say, it would take a lot of effort to recreate the Mac L&F. But most importantly, as far as I can tell, little to no effort is being put in to this area right now.
Come On (Score:1)
To put it shortly: Mozilla is going to die if it doesnt get finished VERY soon. Damnit, if I look at IE5 or Opera 3.6 (my favourite browser) and then compare it to Mozilla (M10) I just gotta admit that commercialism sometimes pays off. IE5 and Opera are better, put simply.
I do a lot of programming myself and I know its cool to have the best enginge, the most flawless layout unit etc. but - I need something to cruise the web NOW. I dont want to wait till 20xx to have a decent browser.
Mozilla being cool just because it is opensource? Come on, Ive been using Linux for more than 3 years and Im sick of trying to pull a BETA of this program to write my mail, using a pre-ALPHA of that program to browse my harddisc etc. I want a system I can WORK with and not a system I can PARTIALLY use.
Now to all those bongos who only seem capable of yelling: "GO AHEAD AND HACK SOME CODE, OTHERWISE SHUT UP" - you are obviously from another world. Otherwise I cannot understand how much time you have left each day after working. I dont have the TIME to waste on projects like Mozilla.
I know Mozilla is still far away from a finished product, but as long as I cant use it, Ill take Opera. And if Opera for Linux comes out and Mozilla isnt finished Ill pay the $35 and buy it - Mozilla being cool or not.
Re:Mozilla for Mac == Word 6 for Mac? (Score:1)
Looking back at my comment it comes across as a foaming rant - not the spirit in which it was intended.
Re:Public attitudes to Mozilla. (Score:1)
Anyone with inside info?
Stuart.
interesting articles (Score:1)
I checked out the M9 release when it was released and it looked like it was coming along fairly well. I don't think that the project is doomed. Not yet, it is only doomed if they dump the whole project. There is coming competition in the market once again. Yes M$ may gain market share but there will be choices. True computer users will be willing to download the new Mozilla when it is releaased if not just to try it out, but also to use. I know that I'll be getting a copy when it is completed.
Somehow I just cannot see M$ getting the whole enchelada(sp) ever. To many people and companies are opposed to them.
good to see but...... (Score:1)
The problem (if you want to call it that) is that most windoze users who I admin to (who have just barley heard of Linux) had no Idea that a version of the old netscape ran on it and have never heard of the Mozilla project. They hapilly live in a world where M$ spoon feeds them the apps (and bugs!) and the last thing they heard about Netscape was something that was glanced off the pages of a Ziff-Davis publication about the "Browser wars."
This is what the "shadow" is and it's really quite silly.
I thought this kind of sensationalist psudo-journalism just about as trite as the "cola-wars" (something cooked up by marketing companies and departments to sell more).
I've said it before and I'll say it again CONGRADULATIONS to the Mozilla Team for their hard work and persistance! When it's "Ready for Prime Time," "formallay" released, and periodical marketing machines get a hold of it, you will see a 180 degree turn around in what they say.
GO Mozilla!
-ravage
Re:Will Mozilla have... (Score:1)
unless... you write it!
Now that is the cool thing with mozilla: if you really want a feature you can write it youself. It should not even be that hard with XUL only.
Yes, but can it compete? (Score:1)
A good effect of this scenario is that it guarantees good code all round. The down side, of course, is that those who hope to see Microsoft beaten will continue to be disappointed.
Nightly builds are not M11 (Score:1)
who cares about john q public? (Score:1)
You know, its a great thing that open source projects are gaining greater visibility. But just as a side note, who cares about everybody else? Mozilla will live, regardless of whether it beats MS, whether it gets dumped by AOL. The point is to create an alternative for those who demand extensibility.
Sure, mozilla hasn't put anything major out on the table. This is the slow time. This is the time when a dedicated group of organizers and programmers toil to make something the right way-- for the benefit of everybody following.
When Mozilla is released in a finished state, we will begin to see the exponential advances that we expect from open software.
Come one everybody, look at the graph of x squared. Down before 1.0, everything sure looks slow. But later...
Re:Come On (Score:1)
Mozilla won't die as long as there are people interested in it. Nobody can kill it off.
Don't discount Mozillas importance even though it is pre-alpha. Even now, Mozilla is dictating MS's direction with IE; they've announced the next version will be more standards compliant.
As for Opera, go ahead and use it. I'm sure it is a fine product. But just remember, you are at the mercy of one company to implement improvements; whereas anyone can improve Mozilla. And note that any large company could kill off Opera by buying it up.
Re:Nightly builds are not M11 (Score:2)
I think its the target milestone that this nightly build is aiming at, please dont hurt me, I really like moz, its quick and has a nifty interface, besides, no other decent graphical browsers work at all for me.
Re:Mozilla for Mac == Word 6 for Mac? (Score:1)
If noone seems to be working on the Mac look and feel, how about signing up to work on that?
Re:Public attitudes to Mozilla. (Score:1)
Re:Public attitudes to Mozilla. (Score:2)
This is a known problem with glibc 2.0 and lower.
Read this [deja.com] newsgroup posting for more information.
Also, bug #8849 [mozilla.org] contains a lot of info:
Re:You missed something (Score:1)
Umm, no, I didn't.
The pre-compiled build didn't even run.
Gave some GTK warnings then exited.
So, why don't you type more than three words
and explain why you think I missed something
in the rel notes.
Re:Will Mozilla have... (Score:1)
Re:Cool. (Score:1)
There is a solution to this and it is to simply put
while (gtk_events_pending ())
gtk_main_iteration ();
somewhere in the code that is taking a long time to complete and this will redraw all the UI and process all the events.
iain