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June 03, 2003

Call for Mozilla Switch

It’s the best time on switching from IE to Mozilla than ever before. Microsoft wrote a $750 millions check to AOL and settle the Antitrust case and browser war (reported here, here and here). And it will no longer making stand alone Internet Explorer. What does it mean? You could still use IE? Newer version of IE? That you got to upgrade your OS, which means, a newer Windows! Because IE is a component of the Operation System.

Let alone the settlement between Microsoft and AOL, if you are using Internet Explorer, that means you are missing a better Internet experience with missing Mozilla. What’s Mozilla? you ask.. you’re just using whatever come with Windows.…Well, with little effort to download and install an alternative browser (Mozilla), it’d make your life easier and improve the surfing experience.

Why switch?
You might already heard about Mozilla, and think it’s just a geek tool since lot of geek has switched to using it. Nope, with Mozilla, you could do things IE need extra effort (plugins, third-party tools) to achieve. It isn’t only benefit to computer geeks or web designers/developers (yeah, I know how you feel, who cares about standard compliant, CSS.blah blah). Here’s the top 6 reasons to switch, top 6 reasons for you as a normal browser users:

  1. Popup Blocking: you hate the annoying popup windows, aren’t you? Mozilla let users in control of how they want their tool behave. You could block popup windows at all or specify allowed sites to popup. In addition, you are in control of what Javascript could do to your browser, preventing those naughty jscript to resize your browser, lowering it.…etc.
  2. Block Image from: Even though you’ve been used to eye skipping the ad banners, you’re still suffering the unwanted images which occupied your 56K (modem) bandwidth. Mozilla let you block images from certain sites, for example you could block most images from certain heavy-ad sites.
  3. Tab Browsing: Multi-sites surfing in one windows, easy navigation by Ctrl-tab, raising new sites in bookmark to tab.….lots of tips to help you manage the windows appearing, thus saving space on your taskbar.
  4. Accessibility: Typing Ctrl-L, Alt-D quick access to location bar, Ctrl-K for Google bar, specify your favaorite search engine and access them directly from location bar. You could search any words in page by typing straight away.
  5. Password Management: Secured and helpful password manager, no more hassle to keep all sites’ password in somewhere else…it’s all here in Mozilla
  6. Faster, More responsive, and prettier: Mozilla load and render the page faster, you’d feel it’s more responsive in day in day out using it. At last, it did render the page more beautiful! By simpler UI and more space, it give you better viewing, especially in Windows XP (Is it just me? I got to admit this is my very personal experience).

It’s isn’t about Open Source, not better web standard support, Mozilla is just simply better.

In a rush to somewhere else, to be continued.

June 3, 2003 08:43 PM | Mozilla
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Comments/Trackback

A few interesting blogs on Mozilla recently: Call for Mozilla Switch and Part 2 cover 10 great reasons to switch

09:45 AM on June 4, 2003 · Trackback from adot's notblog* · #

After reading Joel Spolsky's and Jon Udell's posts on Mozilla Firebird I installed the browser this morning. After using on and off during the day it works great. The tabs alone make this much preferable to IE. It feels fast...

02:20 PM on June 4, 2003 · Trackback from Cook Computing · #

I use Firebird now for almost everything because, fo r the most part, it is a better browser. However, there are Add-ons like MyIE2 that use IE and provide functionality to IE that surpasses Opera, Mozilla, etc, in the "bells and whistles" departments above. I don't use pop-up blocking; I am personally against pop-up blocking for many reasons.
The reason I use Mozilla Firebird is because, unlike IE, it is a work in progress and has potential. IE is bad and isn't going to get any better. Adding more features (tabbed browsing, etc) is like giving more horsepower to a car that can't turn left.

11:52 PM on June 5, 2003 · comment by sirshannon · #

To be pedantic, IE is not an acronym, it's an abbreviation (except when it screws up, compelling its users to screech its name). Mozilla is neither an acronym nor an abbreviation, though I don't know how to get the effect you were going for while adhering to semantic propriety -- using a span with a title attribute is perfectly acceptable, but Mozilla won't render the title. Maybe something could be done with CSS or JavaScript, though that might have a net negative impact on accessibility?

03:49 PM on June 8, 2003 · comment by CDA · #

Not to be pedantic, but...

ac·ro·nym
A word formed from the initial letters of a name, such as WAC for Women's Army Corps, or by combining initial letters or parts of a series of words, such as radar for radio detecting and ranging.

ab·bre·vi·a·tion
A shortened form of a word or phrase used chiefly in writing to represent the complete form, such as Mass. for Massachusetts or USMC for United States Marine Corps.

So, in other words, IE is an acronym as well as an abbreviation, and in fact, all acronyms are abbreviations. So, you can just as well ignore the existance of the acronym tag and just use abbr. If you care about semantical correctness that is.

06:35 PM on June 8, 2003 · comment by Joeri Sebrechts · #

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