Mozilla one more time
I am trying Mozilla FireFox So far, It's a possible winner (Update: It isn't winning. See comments.)
I have always been reluctant to relinquish the default browser to Mr. Gates, but it was increasingly a hassle to deal with the variations, especially after Netscape joined the AOL Time Warner gang, it made no sense to stand up to Microsoft to be loyal to AOL(?) That was not logical, Mr. Spock.
My very first graphical browser was Mosaic, that fit on one floppy. (eventually became IE) You had to manually build a text file associating viewers and utilities and bind it to the browser for it to work. I became a Netscape user along the way, trying anything that moved and was free, for dialup too. I have tried each variation of Mozilla, really like Opera, and some splinter things on the side, but eventually, like 97% of the market, avoided problems by using Internet Explorer.
But the problems were just hiding. Microsoft tries to seem in control by forcing sometimes daily "security upgrades" on us if you let them auto update. The mess was full of "back door leaks and vulnerabilities" And despite having the best antivirus protection and spywatch, ad-aware, pop-up blockers, a knowledge of how to set up a firewall and private IP, all that crap, I was still being bombarded with junk from the web. Just dealing with the software to block it makes me mad. I felt violated like the time some kid ripped down our Christmas lilies, and we couldn't find out who did it.
I know it is not really all Microsoft's fault. They are the target because of their ubiquitous operating system-browser combo. If another browser was out there and vulnerable, the hackers and the unscrupulous ad forces would fine tune it for them. To some extent MS has brought it on themselves because of their tight reliance on the OS, and disregard for the user. For instance, they still have mean spirited error message copy popping up blaming the user for errors that more likely are system or software glitches. A monopoly, however valid, does not have to please the customer, as they would if they had some competition.
Well, the last straw was my laptop, which has win 2000, was taken over by a nasty that they call a home page hijack. Every time you start IE it runs a script that changes some hidden files and makes scores of new entries in the registry changing the home page to a full page of ads and links to e-commerce sites. Of course there is no return address or company claiming responsibility for this, who you can contact to complain, it is all carefully anonymous. I immediately wonder how this could be profitable for them Who would go to these links and buy anything from someone who has rudely and probably illegally hijacked their system?
I was able to reverse engineer this thing and block it, however, each time IE starts, it still tries to take over, even though it fails. Why go through that hassle? Pop in Opera, no problemo Pedro!
Even though I liked Opera as a solution, many sites still appeared wrong in formatting, especially ones with Dynamic HTML, it even screwed up my own page, and not in a subtle way.
So far, Mozilla Firebox has been great. On install, it sucked in all the bookmarks, and even set up most of the plug-ins automatically. I'm sure I will find weaknesses, but so far,every difference I see is a benefit, it is the alternative that doesn't have the holes in it that MS does, and it seems to be fine otherwise.
4 comments:
Well, even displaying this blog, FireFox doesn't interpret the CSS (cascading style sheets) right. Colors and fonts. It drops some elements out of the display - just normal HTML stuff, too. Not serious ones, but really! More seriously, some pages just have a hard time. I have an interesting photo transition effect from javascript that I use,and it just ignores it. It fails some video playing, in the worst fail mode, the one that if you hadn't seen the page on IE, you wouldn't even know you were missing something.
I hear rumors that Google is developing a browser based on Mozilla. Maybe we can hope somebody will get it right.
Well, on your recommendation, I downloaded it yesterday, and like it quite a lot! I'm not sure how you mean your blog to look, but to me, on Firefox it's a bit more legible.. (I have difficulty with black backgrounds.)
I like the bookmarks panel and the built-in Google search on the top toolbar, and the bottom FIND panel that appears when I do a search on the page. I think I'll keep on using it for a while!
Geez, I am trying to use FireFox, I want to make it work, but I just don't think I can. I have found invisible problems. I went to a company web site to download drivers for a scanner I got at goodwill for $10. There were selection boxes to select the model, OS, etc. but there was no button to click to download after selection! I fiddled around and mocked the site for stupid design, then realised it might be the browser. Sure enough in IE, it looked totally different, giving me more options, and of course a download option.
Update: January of 2005 and I am still using FireFox. I put aside the few anomalies, and still jump over to IE when I need to, but all-in-all, I think I can live with it. I solved one bugaboo, the non-display of alt text (by using title text), and certain formatting issues, but we must admit that certain things are just built into IE and will never be used by other browsers. For instance I used a little known "thin line" image transition effect on my wwww.VictorChiarizia.com first page, that was added to IE by microsoft because they had developed it in Powerpoint. You know that is owned by MS and will never work in FireFox, Opera or whatever.
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