I use that feature extensively. The only time I use IE is for Windows Update.Johnson wrote:Firefox... once you learn to whore the middle mouse button (or scrollwheel) to launch links in new tabs/close tabs, you'll wonder how you lived without it.
What browser do you use?
Moderator: General Mods
I use Firefox, for most of the many reasons listed above.
Last edited by Cecil on Wed Mar 16, 2005 7:54 am, edited 1 time in total.
System Specs:
2.2GHz Athlon64 X2 4400+, 2GB DDR 400 SDRAM
EVGA Geforce 7600GT 256MB
Realtek AC '97
Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium
2.2GHz Athlon64 X2 4400+, 2GB DDR 400 SDRAM
EVGA Geforce 7600GT 256MB
Realtek AC '97
Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium
I use Konqueror for general browsing.
Konqueror is more of a host for KParts than anything else.Noxious Ninja wrote:KHTML is a good engine, but there needs to be a seperate, specialized app for web browsing instead of having everything integrated in with the file manager. It's convenient sometimes, but other times it makes me scream. It also needs some sort of extension mechanism, and the equivalent of AdBlock and the Web Developer Toolbar, at the very least.
Right, because Microsoft products have been known to have few to no bugs, and any bugs that are found are patched right away.Miyomei wrote:That's stupid.
Note: They recently offered the US government bug fixes a MONTH before the general public. Either a) they don't care about the average consumer, or b) they're mad that the government is switching alot of their computers over to *nix based systems.

-
- Trooper
- Posts: 535
- Joined: Wed Jul 28, 2004 3:26 am
I'll bet if Firefox was in IE's place, that being what the majority of people use, just as many bugs and holes would appear. It all depends on what everyone else uses.
[code]<Guo_Si> Hey, you know what sucks?
<TheXPhial> vaccuums
<Guo_Si> Hey, you know what sucks in a metaphorical sense?
<TheXPhial> black holes
<Guo_Si> Hey, you know what just isn't cool?
<TheXPhial> lava?[/code]
<TheXPhial> vaccuums
<Guo_Si> Hey, you know what sucks in a metaphorical sense?
<TheXPhial> black holes
<Guo_Si> Hey, you know what just isn't cool?
<TheXPhial> lava?[/code]
-
- Regular
- Posts: 203
- Joined: Tue Jan 11, 2005 8:40 pm
- Location: house of the rising sun
- Contact:
You are wrong, Megabyte. And here's why:
All browsers EXCEPT IE do not employ ActiveX (some can be modified but this is an advanced user 3rd party unsupported configuration) nor do they share components with Explorer, the system shell for Windows. What does this mean? It means the following:
1) Any vulnerability in IE has the potential to compromise the entire system.
2) Components damaged via IE can render the system itself damaged
3) It is impossible to remove IE from Windows (completely)
4) It is possible for IE to execute any and all ActiveX content regardless of source
IE's biggest 2 problems are ActiveX and Explorer integration. This was a bad idea from the start, an insecure idea from the start, and IE will continue to be an inherently insecure browser until these issues are addressed.
What would this have to do with Firefox assuming the roles were reversed?
Firefox, akin to Opera, Mozilla, et cetera, is a standalone, modular browser designed from the start to fix many problems and quirks with browsers past. It was designed to provide various security protections and to be easy to upgrade. Being open source, exploits are no longer a hush-hush subject. Remember mid 2004? IE exploits that had been around for over a year were still present and weren't patched until SP2 and beyond. The rollovertime for IE is far greater than Firefox despite the 90+% marketshare it has.
Firefox would not be in the same position IE is in now had it been the most popular browser. Would more flaws have been found? Of course. And they would have been corrected. However, a majority of the flaws that exist in IE simply cannot exist in Firefox because of the aforementioned reasons.
All browsers EXCEPT IE do not employ ActiveX (some can be modified but this is an advanced user 3rd party unsupported configuration) nor do they share components with Explorer, the system shell for Windows. What does this mean? It means the following:
1) Any vulnerability in IE has the potential to compromise the entire system.
2) Components damaged via IE can render the system itself damaged
3) It is impossible to remove IE from Windows (completely)
4) It is possible for IE to execute any and all ActiveX content regardless of source
IE's biggest 2 problems are ActiveX and Explorer integration. This was a bad idea from the start, an insecure idea from the start, and IE will continue to be an inherently insecure browser until these issues are addressed.
What would this have to do with Firefox assuming the roles were reversed?
Firefox, akin to Opera, Mozilla, et cetera, is a standalone, modular browser designed from the start to fix many problems and quirks with browsers past. It was designed to provide various security protections and to be easy to upgrade. Being open source, exploits are no longer a hush-hush subject. Remember mid 2004? IE exploits that had been around for over a year were still present and weren't patched until SP2 and beyond. The rollovertime for IE is far greater than Firefox despite the 90+% marketshare it has.
Firefox would not be in the same position IE is in now had it been the most popular browser. Would more flaws have been found? Of course. And they would have been corrected. However, a majority of the flaws that exist in IE simply cannot exist in Firefox because of the aforementioned reasons.
[url=http://whattheboat.com]whattheboat.com : [b]still not dead[/b][/url]
[url=http://playithardcore.com]playithardcore.com: we are better at games than you[/url]
Join boat web IRC and talk to boaters: [url]http://irc.whatthebert.com/[/url]
[url=http://playithardcore.com]playithardcore.com: we are better at games than you[/url]
Join boat web IRC and talk to boaters: [url]http://irc.whatthebert.com/[/url]
-
- Lurker
- Posts: 138
- Joined: Thu Jan 20, 2005 2:45 am
-
- Lumberjack
- Posts: 110
- Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2004 4:59 pm
- Location: The Land of Trees, PA
-
- Soul Hacker
- Posts: 88
- Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2004 10:00 pm
- Location: Vortex World
It's Lyn from Fire Emblem 1 US (Rekka no Ken).Noxious Ninja wrote:OT, but I love your avatar. where is that from?Johnson wrote:Firefox... once you learn to whore the middle mouse button (or scrollwheel) to launch links in new tabs/close tabs, you'll wonder how you lived without it.
And because about:config > you.
As for the topic, Firefox, primarily for most of the reasons everybody else stated.
Toot toot Sonic Warrior, deep in space and time
Toot toot Sonic Warrior, forever in your mind
Nothing can survive the will to stay alive
'cause if you try, you can do anything
Toot toot Sonic Warrior, forever in your mind
Nothing can survive the will to stay alive
'cause if you try, you can do anything
-
- Dark Wind
- Posts: 1271
- Joined: Thu Jul 29, 2004 8:58 pm
- Location: Texas
- Contact:
OK, fine, having an HTML rendering engine integrated into the shell may have its advantages, but having a separate one for web browsing is also a good thing. I've had explorer (the windows shell) crash on me on multiple occaisions and all my IE windows I had open mysteriously vanish as my desktop reloads. Since I started using Mozilla as my main browser, explorer still crashes but my windows stay open. Yeah, my hard drive needs a good formatting but I haven't had the time to do it lately.
[i]"It is better to have tried and failed than to have failed to try, but the result's the same." - Mike Dennison[/i]
-
- Romhacking God
- Posts: 922
- Joined: Wed Jul 28, 2004 11:27 pm
- Contact:
Yeah.. I read in one of the what's new logs for 1.7.x that they had supposedly fixed that and one tab could crash and not take down the broswer. However, still with the latest 1.7.5, one tab crash takes down everything. It will certainly be nice if they can properly fix that.Lizking wrote:well, Mozilla has that problem too. If one instance of it gets goatse'd, then all instances of mozilla die.AntoineWG wrote:I've had explorer (the windows shell) crash on me on multiple occaisions and all my IE windows I had open mysteriously vanish as my desktop reloads.
[url=http://transcorp.romhacking.net]TransCorp[/url] - Home of the Dual Orb 2, Cho Mahou Tairyku Wozz, and Emerald Dragon SFC/SNES translations.
[url=http://www.romhacking.net]ROMhacking.net[/url] - The central hub of the ROM hacking community.
[url=http://www.romhacking.net]ROMhacking.net[/url] - The central hub of the ROM hacking community.
Another thing that I have noticed is that when Mozilla crashes, the next time you staart up the program, the cache will get deleted.Nightcrawler wrote:Yeah.. I read in one of the what's new logs for 1.7.x that they had supposedly fixed that and one tab could crash and not take down the broswer. However, still with the latest 1.7.5, one tab crash takes down everything. It will certainly be nice if they can properly fix that.Lizking wrote:well, Mozilla has that problem too. If one instance of it gets goatse'd, then all instances of mozilla die.AntoineWG wrote:I've had explorer (the windows shell) crash on me on multiple occaisions and all my IE windows I had open mysteriously vanish as my desktop reloads.
Slight tangent (as I always seem to do) - IE7 (codenamed Rimjob or something) information leaked, and guess what, tabbed browsing and PNG transparency are included. Surprise, surprise. No prizes for where they got those insanely far-out ideas.
http://www.microsoft-watch.com/article2 ... 290,00.asp
http://www.microsoft-watch.com/article2 ... 290,00.asp
-
- ZSNES Developer
- Posts: 3904
- Joined: Tue Jul 27, 2004 10:54 pm
- Location: Solar powered park bench
- Contact:
That's only if the instance that crashed launched the other instances.Lizking wrote:well, Mozilla has that problem too. If one instance of it gets goatse'd, then all instances of mozilla die.AntoineWG wrote:I've had explorer (the windows shell) crash on me on multiple occaisions and all my IE windows I had open mysteriously vanish as my desktop reloads.
May 9 2007 - NSRT 3.4, now with lots of hashing and even more accurate information! Go download it.
_____________
Insane Coding
_____________
Insane Coding
-
- Romhacking God
- Posts: 922
- Joined: Wed Jul 28, 2004 11:27 pm
- Contact:
I guess Mozilla is pretty much dead now. That's unfortunate because I really do like Mozilla better than firefox. Guess I'll have to eventually switch when Mozilla becomes outdated as Firefox will continue to grow and support new features and standards.
[url=http://transcorp.romhacking.net]TransCorp[/url] - Home of the Dual Orb 2, Cho Mahou Tairyku Wozz, and Emerald Dragon SFC/SNES translations.
[url=http://www.romhacking.net]ROMhacking.net[/url] - The central hub of the ROM hacking community.
[url=http://www.romhacking.net]ROMhacking.net[/url] - The central hub of the ROM hacking community.
-
- Dark Wind
- Posts: 1271
- Joined: Thu Jul 29, 2004 8:58 pm
- Location: Texas
- Contact:
Firefox unless IE is needed. I really only use IE...
1) To see how my webpage looks in a widely used browser, for some reason valid html still is renders slightly differnt.
2) www.windowsupdate.com (I don't like the idea of automatic downloading or instalation of updates)
3) Some sites, mainly motherboard vendor's driver downloads are set up kinda funky and dosn't seem to like firefox.
The only thing I somewhat dislike about firefox is I wish you could exclude files by extension from showing up in the download basket. Such as .jpgs, .gifs and other picture formats.
1) To see how my webpage looks in a widely used browser, for some reason valid html still is renders slightly differnt.
2) www.windowsupdate.com (I don't like the idea of automatic downloading or instalation of updates)
3) Some sites, mainly motherboard vendor's driver downloads are set up kinda funky and dosn't seem to like firefox.
The only thing I somewhat dislike about firefox is I wish you could exclude files by extension from showing up in the download basket. Such as .jpgs, .gifs and other picture formats.
[quote="Clements"]People who [i]dye[/i] their hair blonde are usually the dumb ones, since they often care more about their outward appearance than their personality or intellect.[/quote]
-
- Locksmith of Hyrule
- Posts: 3634
- Joined: Sun Aug 08, 2004 7:49 am
- Location: 255.255.255.255
- Contact:
Hey, does anyone know where Firefox stores: your internet Cache, your history records, cookies, etc? I'm asking because I've got this thing called Clean Disk Security, and I can point it to those places where it stores that stuff, and I can fully erase it. 

<Nach> so why don't the two of you get your own room and leave us alone with this stupidity of yours?
NSRT here.
NSRT here.
-
- Veteran
- Posts: 743
- Joined: Tue Aug 10, 2004 4:38 pm
Type about:config into the location bar
To move the cache add this key:
user_pref("browser.cache.disk.parent_directory", "/tmp/browsercache");
Read this guy:
http://windowssecrets.com/041202/#top1
To move the cache add this key:
user_pref("browser.cache.disk.parent_directory", "/tmp/browsercache");
Read this guy:
http://windowssecrets.com/041202/#top1
-
- Locksmith of Hyrule
- Posts: 3634
- Joined: Sun Aug 08, 2004 7:49 am
- Location: 255.255.255.255
- Contact:
Cool, thanks for the information casualsax3. 

<Nach> so why don't the two of you get your own room and leave us alone with this stupidity of yours?
NSRT here.
NSRT here.