bhaexpress
New member
Firefox has improved a lot over the last couple of releases, a lot of reviews and benchmarks have Firefox 5 at least comparable to Chrome in speed.
I'll try it !
Firefox has improved a lot over the last couple of releases, a lot of reviews and benchmarks have Firefox 5 at least comparable to Chrome in speed.
Chrome or Firefox they are both great. Microsoft had the opportunity years ago to start conforming with proper web standards, release up to date versions of their browser so they could be installed on Mac and Linux operating systems, but they decided to brush them aside and keeping everything as a closed shop.
I think mac did have IE 5 but it stopped there.
Firefox came along which worked across all platforms. And Chrome came along again works across all platforms. So if I am using Linux I can still use 99% of the plugins in Firefox like I can with Firefox in Windows.
Cross platform, people are happier when things work like this, are Microsoft aware of this? lol
Microsoft have gone down the same route with that stupid Silverlight. Alienating Linux users in the process.
Please correct me, but I don't see it as making any inroads or ever becoming as popular as flash. And now we have html5 which again works across all browsers everyone can use it regardless of operating system.
i wonder how that study stripped out the effects of those using the internet from PCs they have no control over what browser is used?
Firefox came along which worked across all platforms. And Chrome came along again works across all platforms. So if I am using Linux I can still use 99% of the plugins in Firefox like I can with Firefox in Windows.
Cross platform, people are happier when things work like this, are Microsoft aware of this? lol
Chrome or Firefox they are both great. Microsoft had the opportunity years ago to start conforming with proper web standards, release up to date versions of their browser so they could be installed on Mac and Linux operating systems, but they decided to brush them aside and keeping everything as a closed shop.
I think mac did have IE 5 but it stopped there.
Firefox came along which worked across all platforms. And Chrome came along again works across all platforms. So if I am using Linux I can still use 99% of the plugins in Firefox like I can with Firefox in Windows.
Cross platform, people are happier when things work like this, are Microsoft aware of this? lol
Microsoft have gone down the same route with that stupid Silverlight. Alienating Linux users in the process.
Please correct me, but I don't see it as making any inroads or ever becoming as popular as flash. And now we have html5 which again works across all browsers everyone can use it regardless of operating system.
Microsoft have gone down the same route with that stupid Silverlight. Alienating Linux users in the process.
Surely they are separately written programs, it is not one program that works on different OSs. Mozilla and Google have written them individually for each OS. Taking this on board, I guess Microsoft don't want/need to provide a Mac OS version any more, nothing to do with whether they can or not.
*oh, just realised, this is a Microsoft bashing exercise, carry on.
Bit out of date this, as IE9 is arguably the most standards compliant browser on the market.
Admittedly for the makers of Windows, Linux and Mac was never likely to be a focus area however.
Agree!!Anyone that uses Internet Explorer out of choice is an idiot. There, I said it.
"They've got IE6 users with an IQ of around eighty. That's borderline deficient, marginally able to cope with the adult world."
The reason for the popularity of Firefox is that it's almost identical graphically to IE. Most corporates use IE as a standard because all applications work with it. There are but a handful of applications that don't work with Firefox and the others. Amusingly there are a lot of legacy apps that won't work with IE 8 or 9. I've had this happen quite a lot recently and it's a factor as so many business applications are now web based. Some places do allow users to install an alternative browser and these days it tends to be Chrome rather than Firefox purely for it's speed.
I'm not a web developer but I know someone who is and he says that IE is the worst at complying to the web standards, whereas Chrome and FF are usually fine. So he writes his app once to work the way the standards say then has to f*** about with it to make it work with all the different version of Internet Exploder.