Firefox 4, A Day Later 435
Yesterday we noted that Firefox 4 is out in the wild. Since then, the popular browser has been downloaded 6 million times, double the numbers reported for MSIE9. Now the development team is talking about a new development process and what to expect for FF 5 and 6. And unsurprisingly, naysayers proclaim that IE will survive, while Firefox will die.
Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Is this guy really saying "wow, look, Firefox took forever to release a version which was just 0.5 higher, while Chrome went from 9 to 10 in four weeks."?
How the FFFFFFFFFUUUUUU- does a moron like this get hired to write a tech column?
Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:5, Funny)
We should blow his mind and claim the true Firefox version number is divided by ten for display so it doesn't harm monitors.
Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:4, Insightful)
He writes articles with inflammatory headlines and gets clicks. He gets it into clueless middle managers' heads that IE is better than Firefox. There are people who will pay well for both of those things.
Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Yeah, they could at least pick one that is a bit negative yet not utter crap and flamebait - but I guess it drives hits. If you go to news [bbc.co.uk] on BBC it says:
Millions download latest Firefox
Mozilla celebrates more than five million downloads of its latest browser, however Firefox's market share is declining.
The article goes on to say that the 5.5 million downloads is short of the 8 million downloads Firefox 3 saw, that it has gone from a peak of 24% to 21% now etc. Those are at least reasonably supported facts, until the ZDNet crap which in one sentence goes
It took Google only a bit more than two years to ship Chrome 9 last month, and it was replaced by version 10 just a little over four weeks later.
then a bit later
Itâ(TM)s also easy to be skeptical about Mozillaâ(TM)s ambitious roadmap that has them shipping versions 5, 6, and 7 before the end of this year.
So Google shipping monthly releases, no problem but Firefox shipping quarterly releases
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My understanding from reading other online articles is that Firefox 4, within the first 24 hours, was downloaded over 7 million times.
Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:5, Funny)
According to their roadmap [mozilla.org], Firefox will be up to version 7 by the end of 2011.
They say that they want to "ship our new technology to users in smaller bundles, more frequently" but personally, I just think they want more cake [slashdot.org].
Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, I don't like this new tactic of a major version number increment every 3 months or so. I think it was helpful to think of the major version number as a really big, API-breaking change that didn't happen very often, with minor version numbers representing significant but not too major evolutions of functionality.
This new scheme means we'll have Firefox 40 by about 2020. I predict that somewhere before that, they'll either stop the major version increments, or drop the emphasis on major version number altogether and just call it 'Firefox'.
What a waste (Score:5, Funny)
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Every time I change something in my code, I up the version number by one! That must mean my browser is awesome, right?
That guy is a serious shill. He asks what IE's greatest challenge is then answers it incorrectly. IE's greatest challenge is it's a piece of crap. It's slow, unresponsive, buggy and non-standard.
I'll use ANY browser (other than IE) because I frankly don't care about all the bells and whistles and don't have a favorite. But if you give me a browser that is so obviously slower (the fact you
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Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:5, Insightful)
That sounds great! Where can I download the Linux version?
Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:5, Insightful)
no, he; actually says "Firefox took 2 years to go from version 3.5 to version 4", whereas Microsoft managed to put out a beta and a release candidate in that time - go microsoft devs!
I suppose he completely forgot about Firefox 3.6 while he was kissing Ballmer's shiny bum, and the 12 (?) beta releases that FF put out, or the 2 release candidates.
Not that I consider a beta or a RC a proper release - they're 'toys' for the early adopters to play with, but regardless of that, you cannot be considered a serious journalist if you don't compare the same way.
Incidentally, I can say that IE9 will not get a foothold too much - we've just had an email sent out from corporate IT saying "don't install it, it breaks all our lovely enterprise apps". So I could install it, but then I wouldn't be able to fill in my timesheet (I know, the pain) so I guess I'd better do as they say and continue all my usual surfing using FF4. I know my salesman has converted to Chrome and he barely knows what the internet is so I can't say IE9's future is as cheerleader-bright as he thinks it is.
Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:5, Funny)
Well, everyone knows that version numbers are a measurement of how many featuritons are included in the product. A featuriton is a fundamental subatomic particle which represents the basic unit of innovation. For every version number, an additional 3.82e26 featuritons is included in the product. So really, the version number is just measuring the total featuriton level and comparing version numbers is a completely valid way to compare the development of two products.
Let's not bother getting into the quantum developodynamics of it, just take my word for it.
Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Ed Bott is just a pro-Microsoft troll (usually... though he has done a few good pieces). His job is to piss people off, and generate visitor sessions for ZDNet.
Any "Microsoft App Platform" will be for Windows. Microsoft's definition of targetting code for multiple platforms means multiple versions of Windows. XP, Vista and Windows 7 32 and 64 bit etc.
Funny how their crap doesn't catch on like it used to. For example, they have resorted to forcing Silverlight on people's computers. If you want MSN Messenger, or anything in the Live Essentials suite you get Silverlight. I have yet to see any content I couldn't view for lack of having silverlight. (That doesn't mean there isn't, just that I haven't encountered it. It's really not that popular). No sane developer is going to put their money on that, and risk alienating visitors. There's a reason that Flash is the most widely used technology today and that is because there's a good chance that most all of your visitors have a Flash plugin available. It's the closest thing to multi platform there is, for media content. Flash Player Square allows pure 64 bit browsers to participate too now. .Net Framework is rubbish. Fragile, hardware intensive rubbish (They work around that now by having services that run all the time to pre-compile byte code) that produces apps chock full of GUI annoyances. Many computers need to have multiple implementations of it too. 1.1, 3.5 (which covers 2.x) and now 4.
So I think we'll be seeing Firefox survive Internet Explorer 9, or Chrome, or Opera regardless of what nonsense Ed Fucking Bott extrudes from his flabby rectum. With a more level playing field in this day and age, it will remain a viable choice.
Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:5, Insightful)
So, you're saying that the Google funded, closed source, web browser "Chrome" is capable of quickly catching up to the features that the free donation & ads supported Firefox took so long to develop.
Basically you're saying: more money and developers == Faster Development. Thanks for your input Mr. Obvious.
P.S. Yeah, that's right: I said, "Chrome is closed source". Chromium is open source, and Chrome may or may not be a direct derivative of the open source Chromium. Needless to say, Google adds their own proprietary bits to Chromium before they ship it as Chrome, ergo: Chrome = Close Source.
Don't get me wrong, I like Chromium [chromium.org]. Chrome is a joke -- Why anyone would want to use the closed / proprietary version (with Google's late-night secret sauce added), when there's a clean open source version available is beyond me.
Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:4, Interesting)
Why anyone would want to use the closed / proprietary version (with Google's late-night secret sauce added), when there's a clean open source version available is beyond me.
By the Chromium team's own admission, there is no such thing as a "stable release" of Chromium. And they don't seem interested in making it so. Basically, you download top-of-tree and build it. Sorry, I don't use stuff like that for daily work.
When I download software, open source or not, I tend to want it in binary form. At least then I have a hope in hell that maybe the thing has been tested somewhat. Open source developers are way too squishy with this kind of thing. "The latest stable is 1.2.3, go get it and build." Uh, no. The latest stable is some particular binary that YOU built and YOU tested and YOU found to be adequate. My compiler might (very well may be) different. My dependencies may be different. My system is certainly different. This is not the definition of "testing" or "stable." Build a binary, test it on a variety of environments, bless it, and put it out there. You CAN be open source and professional at the same time.
Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:5, Informative)
Why is the non-profit Mozilla Corp not spending that money to hire developers to add new features to their browser?
Just look at their jobs page...
Re:Jesus Flipping Christ... (Score:4, Insightful)
However, it is worth stressing that Chrome had the advantage of no prior baggage, and the benefit of hindsight. So the architecture of Chrome was built from the ground up to resolve issues that afflicted other browsers including Firefox, and at the same time, did not have to be compatible with existing add-ons/extensions. Mozilla presumably have a tougher time resolving existing issues, whilst maintaining compatibility with a *huge* number of add-ons. If they did massively break compatibility, they'd be kissing goodbye to one of the main advantages to Firefox.
and STILL no official MSIs, or AD templates
^ this
Sometimes I'm not sure Mozilla are really helping themselves though! It strikes me that this would be relatively easy to resolve, so I'm not sure what's gone wrong with the Mozilla world domination team.
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Actually, the sad forgotten child that is Opera is already at 11.01. Poor Norwegians, but hey, I'm typing this using that very browser. As one great feature, it lets me put the tabs on the right side of the screen, Chrom(e,ium) only allows vertical tabs on the left...
Animated UI icons (Score:2)
So one of the major thinsg to expect in FF5 is "UI animation"?
For some reason, this makes me feel kind of sad....
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I'm using an nVidia GT 240 connected to a BenQ T241W LCD running in its native resolution of 1920x1200 via HDMI on Windows 7 Ultimate, with graphics drivers updated earlier this month and I'm seeing the font issue as described by the previous poster.
Some letters look randomly bolded. Some letters look randomly thinned.
I believe I've done ClearType tuning already.
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I'm using an nVidia GT 240 connected to a BenQ T241W LCD running in its native resolution of 1920x1200 via HDMI on Windows 7 Ultimate, with graphics drivers updated earlier this month and I'm seeing the font issue as described by the previous poster.
Some letters look randomly bolded. Some letters look randomly thinned.
I believe I've done ClearType tuning already.
In my case, that seemed to be a side effect of the hardware acceleration. If you set gfx.direct2d.disabled=true in about:config [about] and restart Firefox, that might fix the issue for you.
To play devils advocate (Score:2)
And unsurprisingly, naysayers proclaim that IE will survive, while firefox will die.
IE has been getting faster, I can't say the same thing about Firefox.
Re:To play devils advocate (Score:5, Interesting)
People keep saying this, but I just loaded the new Firefox and it feels to me like the interface is much more responsive and flash-intensive pages that used to take forever to load now show up extremely rapidly. I was sticking with FF3 because of the great plugins, but FF4 actually seems to be pretty decent out of the box.
Re:To play devils advocate (Score:5, Informative)
Same here. The performance difference for me is huge. Its so big, its instantly obvious from the second it starts, which even includes a much faster start for all my tabs. Its instantly snappy and I'm an extremely heavy tab user too. Flash sites are slightly more responsive and now I'm even running greasemonkey (didn't before) which should further slow things. And yet, things are definitely faster. I'm even observing a reduce memory footprint, which I didn't expect, of roughly 200M for the same tabs. I'm extremely impressed. Version 4.0, by far, exceeds my expectations.
As for plugins and add-ons, everything I use is already available for 4.0 so I'm pretty pleased. The only gotcha I've run into is the default linux release is 32-bit and you have to dig to find the 64-bit download. If any cares, you download the 64-bit linux release here. [mozilla.org]
Oh ya, am observing an extremely annoying issue with 4.0 and slashdot in that entry fields get pushed past the bottom of the screen when making posts, with the new slashdot interface abomination, truly a pain in the ass. Yet another reason to continue to use the old interface. Works great with the old interface. New interface is broken with 4.0.
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If you're running Ubuntu 10.04 or 10.10 there's a PPA (for both 32-bit and 64-bit versions):
Firefox 4 PPA for Ubuntu 10.04 and 10.10 users [omgubuntu.co.uk]
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You'll have to point me out to where they're catching up with the other browsers.
IE9 is catching up, in the sense that it's vastly better than previous versions of IE. It's not close to the alternatives, in my opinion, but it's a whole lot closer than it had been.
Now please excuse me while I go tack a shower for having written that.
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You'll have to point me out to where they're catching up with the other browsers.
How about any test where they include the 32-bit version of IE9 instead of only 64-bit? Like this one [zdnet.com].
Some relevant quotes from the conclusion:
OK, so what conclusions can we draw? Well, let’s begin with the obvious and say that Internet Explorer 9 64-bit is an absolute dog when it comes to JavaScript performance. This is to be expected given that IE 9 64-bit is using an older, slower JavaScript engine, while IE 9 32-bit was using the newer, more efficient Chakra JIT. ...
So, what’s the conclusion? Simple, IE9 64-bit is shockingly bad, and all the other browsers are, on the whole, pretty evenly matched.
Of course IE still has work to do with regard to things like HTML 5, as do all browsers, but it's pretty disingenuous to claim that they aren't catching up, or that they haven't already caught up in various respects. Look at the HTML 5 support tables, for example, to see how HTML 5 support in previous versions and current versions compare, and how each vendor has b
App ecosystem! (Score:5, Funny)
The "IE will survive/firefox will die" article:
Firefox will die because it ONLY has extensions. It doesn't have an app ecosystem, and is therefore not buzzword compliant.
Erm, yeah.
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I have a brilliant idea - rename the "extensions" tab to "apps". Sorted!
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Re:App ecosystem! (Score:4, Informative)
The author appears to be a die-hard MS fan with a lot of his history invested in MS products so it is unsurprising that he would write a pro-IE article.
Ref:
Personal website "Microsoft Expertise" - http://www.edbott.com/weblog/
Profile on MS: http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/expertzone/meetexperts/bott.mspx
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Seems Slow To Me (Score:2)
That said, does anyone know how to change the loading icon in the upper left corner of a tab that is loading a page? Personally I don't want a damn thing on my computer to remind me of the Windows OS eye can
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Apples to Oranges? (Score:2)
Maybe Firefox 4 is being downloaded more then IE9 because FF is a [b]release[/b] version and IE9 is a [b]release candidate[/b] version?
Not that I use either (Opera here), but if you want to compare the two, lets compare them right...
Re:Apples to Oranges? (Score:4, Informative)
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I'm guessing you don't know that IE9 was officially released last week [slashdot.org].
So they're comparing the released version of IE9 to the released version of FF4.
You just wait (Score:5, Funny)
awsome. (Score:3)
I love that page. I've been watching it for the past day. You can tell where daylight is by the download rates.
Even Europe slows down at night, but those europians seem to be up at all hours....
I love it when a pacific island lights up.
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That site drags Firefox 4 to a halt on my machine. It works fine in Chromium. Which is really too bad, because I prefer Firefox due to the UI and a couple of awesome plugins.
64-bit Debian on Intel Core 2 Dual E7500 @3GHz, 4GB RAM - 1GB still free, using nVidia binary driver.
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Yeah, I was afraid of that.
On Linux, Chrome does almost all of its painting itself, in software. Firefox, on the other hand, tries to play nice and hand of painting to the X server, using XRender.
Sometimes this works really well, XRender is able to hand the painting off to the graphics card, and you get performance comparable to what you see with IE9/Fx4 on Windows.
But sometimes the graphics driver decides to do the work in software anyway. And they tend to have pretty slow software fallback paths; much s
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I love it when a pacific island lights up.
Sorry, that was me. I've been upgrading some of the desktops at the University of the South Pacific campus here in Vanuatu.
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Re:Oh Thanks (Score:3)
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I see little to no activity in Africa, Australia, Central South America, the Middle East. Japan, and parts of Asia thereabouts has a seemingly slow take up. The mid-west in the US is also slow, particularly around Montana, North and South Dakota, and northern Texas.
If you are a resident in one of those areas maybe you should try to wake your neighbors to the idea of FF.
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Africa for the most part has no internet connections.
Japan and Australia are in the middle of the night right now. As of when you posted your comment, it's 1:39am in Tokyo and 3:39am in Sydney. There was quite a bit of downloading going on in Japan 10 hours ago or so.
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The stats show 108,749 downloads to date for Australia. The population of Australia is about 22.5 million according to . So figure one in 200 people has downloaded in Australia.
The same states show 2 million downloads for the US, with a population of about 300 million people; one in 150 has downloaded.
This is over one Australian day and 1.5 nights, and 1.5 US days and one night.
Seems like pretty similar download rates to me.
I suspect people seriously overestimate how many people live in Australia. For co
Meanwhile, in ExtensionLand... (Score:2)
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The rest of us who value our extensions (add-ons, whatever) will continue to hang out here with the most recent 3.x until said extensions become supported in FF4. I'm not saying this is Mozilla's fault by any stretch, either. I just want to make sure I still have gestures, web developer, firebug, and so many more well-tested and confirmed working before I make the jump.
The three you listed have been working since the beta versions. But point taken, not everyone is or should be an early adopter.
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That, and the extensions or well documented ways of disabling all that new and fancy crap and revert my browser to look like it's supposed to look.
Did it with the redesigned address bar, did it with personas and much of the other extra crap that went into v3. Going to do it with the retarded (imho) new look of v4. The first thing to fix is essentially to revert v4 to look like a browser in a PC with a large screen, and not a flashy portable device where every vertical line counts.
Re:Meanwhile, in ExtensionLand... (Score:5, Informative)
I just want to make sure ... firebug ... well-tested and confirmed working before I make the jump.
Don't know about "well-tested" (well tested like "a two year Debian release cycle" ?) but I can certainly confirm firebug is working or at least it hasn't failed yet.
Also working:
Adblock plus
flashblock
ghostery
noscript
xmarks
Not working:
Remove it permanently (I can survive without it, but its nice) .net framework assistant 1.2.1 (WTF is this anyway?)
Microsoft
Immediately upon installation:
Right click on that wee little down triangle in the address bar. Uncheck "Tabs on Top" then breathe a sigh of relief as your eyes stop bleeding. Then de-turd the toolbar by right click on the same triangle and select "Customize..." and then rip out the search bar (useless), the home button (so 1993), the stop button (again, so 1993), rearrange the refresh/reload button where god intended it to be, ditto the spinner. Basically just clean it up a bit. Should have come preconfigured this way.
I don't like the weird new forward / reverse buttons. I have muscle memory from FF3 to move back to the start of history in a tab, which no longer seems to work, epic UI fail to screw the user that way. That's the only UI problem I haven't been able to work around yet.
So with about five minutes of amount of work, upgrade results in only two dead (admittedly useless) addons, and one UI fail that'll only strike me about 50 times a day no big deal. I've seen worse dot-zero releases.
I have a clunky many years old desktop and on both FF3 and FF4 everything comes up in "blink of eye" speed, I don't even know how to test if its slower or faster because everywhere I go is faster than my visual cognition (and thats fast, I'm a very fast reader). Its hardly orders of magnitude different, anyway.
Don't forget Pentadactyl (Score:3)
With your nick, you may also be interested to know that Pentadactyl [mozilla.org] is working just fine with Firefox 4, and will help you not see those weird new forward/reverse buttons ever again.
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Why do we have to bring up IE9 (Score:2)
Why does this have to be some us versus them again.
How many people upgraded to Chrome 10?...who cares because the version don't really mean as much.
Firefox probably popped up and said 4 is available and people clicked okay.
IE won't do that for various reasons. Most windows client admins want this behavior because they want to control the rollout. That is part of the diversity...in some sense IE is a better option in large corporate environments and a worse one for individuals at home...aside from the standa
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Chrome is starting to go that way too. Its
he might be technically correct (Score:2)
> IE will survive, while firefox will die.
Probably. IE will live on at 30 -- 40% penetration solely due to being bundled with Windows, old fogies and unsophisticated users continuing to believe that IE is "the internet".
Firefox will probably go away at some point when Mozilla changes the name again.
There. Prediction confirmed.
What blog was that again? (Score:5, Insightful)
"Ed Bott's Microsoft Report" predicts that IE will survive and Firefox will die.
In other news a VCR said that VHS ain't going nowhere...
(And what's worse, the fkuc up is making arguments based on major version number delta over time. Such uncanny insight is rare!)
Kind of a dumb issue (Score:2)
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"When Can I Use?" rating (Score:2)
It's kinda sad, isn't it? Apple contributed WebKit to open source, Google used it to get a quick presence in
Worth upgrading? (Score:2)
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As has happened in other threads, you can go install "oldbar" to get the gimp autocomplete-only URL bar if you really want it.
The rest of us who enjoy having the ability to pull up a page even if the URL doesn't begin in www or we forget the URL completely will continue to use the Awesomebar.
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As has happened in other threads, you can go install "oldbar" to get the gimp autocomplete-only URL bar if you really want it.
The rest of us who enjoy having the ability to pull up a page even if the URL doesn't begin in www or we forget the URL completely will continue to use the Awesomebar.
I suspect the folks who hate the Awesomebar don't adapt well to change of any kind. Still, everyone has their own preferences and that's ultimately the value proposition for Firefox. You can make it work just about any damn way you please.
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> enjoy having the ability to pull up a page even if the URL > doesn't begin in www
Sorry, what? What does the www subdomain have to do with anything? I never type it in unless there's some site with no content on the sld. My problem is that if I for example type "forum", then I expect to get forum.paradoxplaza.com as first suggestion, since that site is the forum*-site I usually visit. Instead I
De-bloated (Score:2)
FF4 behaves like it went on a diet, fast and snappy like it used to be.
I approve.
Hihihihih ... (Score:2)
So is there a way to revert to the old layout yet? (Score:2)
I want my tabs just where they are now.
IE will survive, while firefox will die. (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure that MSIE is only available for one of the four operating systems I use every day.
What Ed Bott doesn't understand is amazing (Score:5, Informative)
Google is able to turn out new browsers quickly because it uses WebKit to render its pages. MSIE 9 uses Trident (MS's own) and Firefox uses Gecko (Mozilla's own).
Microsoft did not update Trident "over night." It has been going on for a very long time.
For Ed to assert that Google and Microsoft took a similar route on anything is simply inaccurate.
All this nonsense about "faster browsers" is already out the window due to this movement to hardware acceleration. Now different browsers will perform differently based on the hardware present, the level of support for the hardware and more. Linux is still the red-headed stepchild where hardware support is concerned. This is especially the case where graphics drivers are concerned. Microsoft does not have to worry about this because it controls the platform it supports. Google and Mozilla and more write for more than Windows and operate against the APIs which are known and documented.
Despite all of Microsoft's tremendous resources and programming talent, they are still not producing a standards compliant browser on par with Chrome or Firefox. I can't believe it is due to a lack of talent or resources. It must be for some other reason and I suspect it has to do with backward compatibility and possibly even maintaining the appearance that "all other browsers are broken" as users seem to perceive.
IE will survive, while firefox will die (Score:3)
So far so good.... mostly (Score:3)
So far I'm liking FF4. Everything seems to work well. I'm getting used to the little popup preview of links in the bottom right corner. The sync functionality looks cool and I'm planning to try it out to sync with my Android phone. The only real issue I've encountered is related to the interaction between the Tab Groups feature (aka Panorama) and the Tree Style Tabs plugin, which I consider an absolute necessity anymore.
If I switch to a tab group, and then try to go back to my full display with all tabs shown, the tabs get all scrambled, lose their hierarchical positions, and some seem to disappear completely. I really hope there's a way to fix that, although it'll probably be up to the TST developer to do it. For now I think I'll just have to avoid using Tab Groups.
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I have an interesting idea that Microsoft's marketing department are idiots.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
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Are you proposing a trojan that silently installs FF in the background? Yeah, that's going to work out really well for the reputation of FF.
Stupid idea is stupid.
Crikes.
--
BMO
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Nah, we'll just be in awe of their mad skillz and ability to own us.
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Yeah, right. I'm sure the vast majority of people downloading torrents have no clue what Firefox is and go about using IE6 all day. Clearly, the best way to target IE users is to target people downloading torrents. Brilliant idea.
Re:Interesting idea (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't see Firefox every rising above ~30-35%, due to fragmentation of the market:
- 1/3 for mozilla
- 1/3 for microsoft
- 1/3 for google
- Plus a few percentage points for "minor" browsers like Opera and Apple safari. Oh and if Firefox ever did "die", which I doubt, I'd sooner switch to Opera's opera or Mozilla's Seamonkey then IE.
I am forced to use IE with my Dialup provider (image compression only works with IE6/7/8), and it stinks. Mostly from the lack of features.
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I don't think that it would be healthy for the net to rise much about that 30-35% range. One of the problems that Firefox had to address early on was the after math of one of the two browsers losing the battle for market share. At least with 3 dominant browsers you'd be in a much better situation trying to claw back in.
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Firefox is currently at about 42% among web developers visiting w3schools.com
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I have an interesting idea on how we can drop IE's market share and gain more for Firefox. Someone should make a firefox installer that works without user, and we put those out on torrent sites as something else. Firefox gets installed on lots of people and internet is better again.
Most people that use torrent sites probably have firefox silly.
If for no other reason than to block all the obnoxious and possibly malware ads that torrent sites are infested with.
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While a bit "trollish" (mind you), that statement does have some truth. And don't forget opera. The Firefox UI is quite a copy paste of Opera's UI, at least on first sight.
Yeah, I agree that lately they have been dragging behind in most features, especially tab management. But I think its a good thing that they improve those things where they are lacking, even if it means copying others. New tab management? new javascript engine? new UI? new process architecture? OK, its been copied from chrome and opera, b
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I've been hearing a lot of this in the last few days, and, having never used Opera, I don't understand. Are we talking about FF4, or FF in general? Because once I moved my tabs back down and set my menu bar customizations (all of 5 seconds work), FF looks like it has for several versions now.
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The default look of Firefox 4 looks nearly identical to the default look of Opera 11.
They're also pulling features from Opera - "App Tabs" in Firefox are "pinned tabs" in Opera. Mozilla seems to be short of innovation lately, and is instead playing catchup.
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On the whole Opera vs Firefox thing, I consider tabs on top to be most useful on netbooks and their ilk. The status bar, title bar, tab bar, menu, bookmark
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LOL. For some time one of the Web interfaces (think corpo-ware) sold by my employer was broken under IE. Nobody noticed. For two+ years.
Our University recently e-mailed out to all students and employees to NOT download IE9 as none of the blackboarding, registration, payroll and admin, etc software works in IE9.
That was good for a laugh!
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You're using testing builds. Nothing wrong with that, but they don't guarantee the same stability that the release does. On the other hand, you get new features sooner. Some of us like that. ;)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
Requires an OS reboot, even on Windows 7, for installation.
I didn't have to reboot. It just installed without a hitch for me.
"Block images from this site" has disappeared as a right-click option.
Didn't even notice, with adblockplus and all that.
Re: (Score:3)
IE is no more integrated into Windows than Safari is into OS X.