![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| |||||||
| Forums | Register | Groups | Awards | Arcade | Pets | T-Bucks / T-Store | Invite Your Friends | Blogs | Mark Forums Read |
| Computer and Technology Discussions about anything computer related, electronic or new technology |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools |
| | #1 (permalink) |
| Monkey Mouse ![]() | 5 Things You'll Love about Firefox 3 A couple of months ago, I downloaded a beta version of Firefox 3 just to look at the new ideas Mozilla was working on. My intention was to try it for a couple days, then switch back to Firefox 2. I wasn't worried about stability (it's a browser after all-- what's the worst that can happen?). But the beta wasn't compatible with lots of my favorite extensions and who wants to live without them? As it turns out, I'm still using a prerelease version of Firefox (they're at Release Candidate 1 now) and loving it, even without my beloved add-ons. The improvements Mozilla has made to the browser, while subtle, are so helpful that I didn't want to give them up. Here are five of my favorites. 1. Much Better Performance If you've used previous versions of Firefox you've likely had this experience, perhaps frequently: you're working away, but gradually become aware that something is horribly wrong with your PC. It's sluggish and apps take forever to load. You open up Task Manager and find that Firefox is chewing up 95 percent of your CPU cycles. Once you kill the browser and start over, you're running fine again. I can't remember the last time I've had that experience with the Firefox 3 betas. Mozilla developers borrowed some memory management tricks from the Free BSD operating system for the Windows and Linux versions of Firefox. (They say memory management on Macs already worked pretty well.) The effect is clear. The browser is much less likely to commandeer too many system resources. And Firefox's developers worked to make sure that add-ons, notorious memory thieves, don't cause problems either. They've rolled in cycle collectors that help prevent extensions from locking up RAM and not giving it back. They're also distributing tools to third-party developers that will help them build more abstemious add-ons. 2. The "Awesome Bar" Okay, so the official name is the Location Bar, the field where you enter URLs you want to visit. But beta testers have nicknamed it the Awesome Bar and it is, well, pretty awesome. Enter text in the Location Bar and a dropdown list appears of pages from your browsing history that include that text, not just in the URL, but in the page title or the page's tag (see #4 below). The list even includes Gmail messages that include that word in the subject line. If you've already visited a Web page, there's a good chance it's useful to you. The Location Bar lets you very quickly search that useful subset of the Web. 3. Can't Miss Warnings Lots of browsers have had phishing warnings before (including Firefox), but they've been wimpy. Usually they involve some part of the address bar changing color or some icon popping up near the URL. The problem is they're too easy to miss. I'm not looking at the address bar when I'm waiting for a page to load. I'm looking at the main well of the browser where the page will display. But there's no danger of missing one of Firefox's new warnings. When you enter the URL of a suspected attack site, Firefox brings up a full-page warning. With a click, you can see a detailed explanation of why the site was blocked. Or you can just click "Get me out of here," which takes you to Firefox's start page. If you really want to live dangerously, there's a small link that lets you ignore the warning and proceed to the suspect site. 4. Better Bookmarks If you like a page, you just click the star in the Location Bar and it's a favorite. A dropdown box lets you name it, choose a folder to put it in or add a tag to categorize it. Bookmarks (and your browsing history) are now stored in a database, which means you don't have to spend so much time organizing bookmark folders. You can perform detailed searches of your bookmarks, then save that search as a special folder. Any new bookmarked page that fits the criteria automatically goes in the folder. 5. Whole-page Zooming If your eyes aren't what they used to be, it's nice to bump up the size of text on Web pages, as Firefox 2 will do. But it only changes the text size-- the other elements remain the same size. That makes for pages that look like The Incredible Hulk, with words bursting through the boxs and tabs that are supposed to contain them. The new Firefox magnifies everything on the page equally. Everything remains in proportion, but becomes easier to read. And the next time you visit that page, it'll display at the same level of zoom. The Source
__________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ How May I Help You? ![]() PM me through this link if clicking on those banners doesn't help with your questions ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | |
| | #2 (permalink) |
| Daft. ![]() | Been using Firefox 3 beta (and now RC) for a while now and I like it. Haven't got my "foxytunes" extension that lets me control Winamp from Firefox yet but thats nowt major. Think I'll wait for Firefox 3 to go "gold" (3.0.0) then start upgrading sites to work better than with IE ![]()
__________________ ![]() |
| | |
| | #3 (permalink) |
| Monkey Mouse ![]() | This site used to work beautifully with Firefox and then just quit so I'm back to IE
__________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ How May I Help You? ![]() PM me through this link if clicking on those banners doesn't help with your questions ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | |
| | #4 (permalink) |
| Racy Ol' Lady ![]() | Good luck with it. I.E. has a lot of good things, but VISTA lurks in the background. I hope they get it right before their upgrades put it on my computer!
__________________ "... when two or three are gathered in my name ..." - Join us in prayer. All faiths welcome (Click below) http://www.trackpads.com/forum/group...iscussion.html Who steals my purse steals trash ... ... But who filches from me my good name Robs me of that which not riches him, And makes me poor indeed. ~Shakespeare Life's a banquet and most poor suckers are starving to death! |
| | |
| | #5 (permalink) |
| Monkey Mouse ![]() | Hopefully, Firefox will do something that makes it work for me again.
__________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ How May I Help You? ![]() PM me through this link if clicking on those banners doesn't help with your questions ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Tags |
| firefox, love, things |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| I Love You, but You Love Meat | Woodmonkey | News Articles | 0 | 02-13-2008 18:36 |
| Shoot me and I'm yours - love, sweet love | Woodmonkey | Point/Counterpoint | 24 | 11-18-2005 10:54 |
| One of the things I love most about Texas.... | cb88 | Chit-Chat | 15 | 04-26-2005 06:10 |
| mozilla firefox | gilbert | Web Design | 6 | 03-13-2005 11:00 |
| [News Feed] Love Me; Love My Jokes | Forum Mouse | News Articles | 0 | 02-14-2005 21:00 |
![]() | ![]() | ![]() |