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why switch from IE to alternatives?..
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lopardo
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RE: why switch from IE to alternatives?..
quote:
Originally posted by MenthiX
That's exactly with what i ment by "give a example". I guess this is one of the reasons why i prefer Firefox above IE too, but being able to costumize my browser how i like it is more important to me. I know that security should have higher priority... oh well, it's just a home system and i know what i do .

Totally agree, customization in Firefox is great (Y). This morning I was in a cyber cafe and I had to download Firefox to browse the net comfortably... :)
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08-24-2004 05:07 PM
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chungster
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RE: why switch from IE to alternatives?..
i like firefox better than ie but i like avant better than firefox firefox is good for going to porn sites though but its tabs arent used by default for clicking links avant its default though
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08-25-2004 09:13 AM
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lopardo
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RE: why switch from IE to alternatives?..
quote:
Originally posted by chungster

i like firefox better than ie but i like avant better than firefox firefox is good for going to porn sites though but its tabs arent used by default for clicking links avant its default though

You can configure tabs in Firefox the way you want with the Tabbrowser Extensions, it has many options, try it out.
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08-25-2004 03:00 PM
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bach_m
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RE: why switch from IE to alternatives?..
or use Tab Browser Preferences, as it is much less of a behemoth
08-25-2004 03:14 PM
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crank
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RE: why switch from IE to alternatives?..
i didn't read the whole thread but...
Nobody thinks that IE suxks it's just the fact that FF has more functions,runs faster,has extensions,... it's just better then IE. ;)
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08-26-2004 02:10 PM
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bach_m
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RE: why switch from IE to alternatives?..
*slowly raises hand* I think IE sucks....



well, i think it does more bad than good. ActiveX makes installing badstuff simple, the security flaws that go unfixed for months arn't helping anyone, and its lack of development is holding back the mass adaptation of Web standards.
08-26-2004 02:16 PM
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Pr0xY
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RE: why switch from IE to alternatives?..
I agree with bach_m.... my life would be alot better without IE. 
08-26-2004 05:05 PM
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Garndell
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RE: why switch from IE to alternatives?..
quote:
Originally posted by bach_m
*slowly raises hand* I think IE sucks....



well, i think it does more bad than good. ActiveX makes installing badstuff simple, the security flaws that go unfixed for months arn't helping anyone, and its lack of development is holding back the mass adaptation of Web standards.

Question I put to you is have you tried SP2?  If you have the reason you put for IE "sucking" doesn't exist (as far as my experience goes).
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08-26-2004 08:26 PM
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bach_m
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RE: why switch from IE to alternatives?..
quote:
Originally posted by Garndell
quote:
Originally posted by bach_m

well, i think it does more bad than good. ActiveX makes installing badstuff simple, the security flaws that go unfixed for months arn't helping anyone, and its lack of development is holding back the mass adaptation of Web standards.

Question I put to you is have you tried SP2?  If you have the reason you put for IE "sucking" doesn't exist (as far as my experience goes).

i've been an official beta tester for SP2, and most of my complaints still stand. granted, ActiveX is off by default. thats good. Security flaws go unfixed still. it isn't really being developed, short of fixing security holes that have been public for a while, and it STILL isn't being developed actively (maybe a bit more, cuz forefox is gaining ground) and is therefore holding back webstandards.

If Microsoft wants to have 90% of the browser market, it is their duty to keep up to date on all the new stnadards. or risk putting a stopper in further web development. and in fact, they've been LEAVING standards organizations recently , which doesn't help the interoperability of the web.
08-26-2004 08:34 PM
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Garndell
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RE: why switch from IE to alternatives?..
In reference to your poor attempt at sayimg MS is purposefully NOT keeping up to date:

Microsoft on Monday withdrew from a United Nations software standards group for commerce, citing "business reasons."

Earlier this year, Microsoft's participation had created controversy within the group, which is attempting to define standards for creating a new generation of Internet services to automate buying and selling through networks of computers.

Advocates of proprietary and open approaches to software technology standards had clashed within the organization, which is known as the United Nations Center for Trade Facilitation and Electronic Business, or U.N./Cefact. Microsoft, a maker of proprietary software, opposes the use of open-source software, which is freely shared.

But Microsoft's withdrawal on Monday apparently was not directly related to the earlier controversy, according to several industry representatives. Rather, they said, it stemmed from a set of thorny issues over control of intellectual property that is being contributed to the standards-setting effort.

In an e-mail message sent Monday to two officials of the U.N. standards group, Dave Welsh, a Microsoft program manager, wrote: "Microsoft regularly evaluates its standards participation and its available resources for effective participation. Unfortunately, for now, we have made the decision to stop participating in U.N./Cefact for business reasons and this serves as notification of our immediate withdrawal from all U.N./Cefact activities."

The e-mail message also noted that previous Microsoft contributions to the group were not bound by the negotiations taking place over the control of intellectual property.

Microsoft executives declined to comment on the message, but a company representative said that the decision to withdraw was a "question of priorities" and that the focus of the standards body was moving away from Microsoft's expertise.

Various U.N./Cefact officials also refused comment or did not return phone calls.

Two people who participate in the standards group said that several U.S. and European companies were concerned about guidelines regarding intellectual property rights that are in effect within the group. The guidelines would force corporations that contribute technology to indemnify the United Nations against potential challenges involving intellectual-property claims.

At a meeting of the U.N. group in May, the general counsel for SAP, the German business software company, announced that his company would suspend all participation in the organization until the intellectual-property issues had been settled.

The dispute parallels issues raised in a lawsuit brought in the United States by the SCO Group, a software company, against IBM. SCO has accused IBM of illegally placing software owned by SCO into the Linux open-source operating system.

Earlier this year, the United Nations group became embroiled in an industry squabble over an open standard for commerce known as ebXML. The United Nations standard, which was backed by some American companies and which has been widely adopted in Asia and Europe and by the Pentagon, competes in some ways with a joint Microsoft-IBM effort to establish a different set of standards.

The dispute became public in February, when some members of the United Nations organization complained that Microsoft was financing the group's activities in an effort to persuade the organization to adopt its software.

At the time, Microsoft disputed the charges and said that it had made only "modest" contributions to the organization.

Entire contents, Copyright © 2004 The New York Times. All rights reserved.
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08-27-2004 07:27 AM
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