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October 24, 2006

Mozilla Ships Firefox 2.0 ... It's a Dud

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Today, Mozilla will officially unveil Firefox 2.0, the latest version of its Web browser and, increasingly, a credible challenger to Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE). Unfortunately, some of Firefox's more trend-setting features have been delayed to a later release, and the new release suffers as a result. What's left is pretty unimpressive.

Disclaimer: I've been a Firefox user and advocate for a long time--so long, in fact, that I used the browser when it was still called by its Phoenix code name. Although I'll likely provide a longer review on the SuperSite for Windows in the days ahead, I think it's relevant to supply a few first impressions here.

I don't like it. The new Firefox "visual refresh" replaces the previously clean Firefox UI with muddy and vague-looking icons. So, one of the first things I did was download a theme that returned the old Firefox 1.5 look and feel. The built-in phishing protection is truly third-rate. There are two antiphishing options: Mozilla's weak blacklist-based protection (yes, seriously) and Google's antiphishing technology, which is both poorly rated and a privacy nightmare. The new Options dialog box is a miasma of choices, some of which are hidden in embedded tab controls. It's ugly, confusing, and illogical.

Firefox doesn't offer many truly neat features. It does include improved tabbed-browsing functionality and puts a Close Tab button on each tab. The browser features inline spell checking, handy for blogging, and a session restore feature that helps users recover from browser or system crashes. The new Add-ons Manager is simple and effective. But honestly, that's about it.

Firefox 2.0 is free, but it's a woefully minor improvement over Firefox 1.5 that suffers from various incompatibility problems, especially with themes and other add-ons. I wouldn't recommend this new version, to be honest. I'll be sticking with Firefox 1.5 at least for now. I recommend you do the same, or switch to the surprisingly solid IE 7.0.

Although Mozilla hasn't yet changed its Web site to reflect the new release, you can find the final version in the company's FTP site. The US English version is available at
http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/

End of Article



Reader Comments
Agreed. A truly uncompelling upgrade. Yawn.

But it did just notify me that it thought "uncompelling" was not spelled correctly (a la MS Word).

mwrisner October 24, 2006 (Article Rating: )


I like it. Still prefer it over the interface and rendering disaster that is IE7.

Preseton October 24, 2006 (Article Rating: )


Preston has cited this website before,

http://www.theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=35293

I'll upgrade to FF2.0 at lunch and see whats up.

will84 October 24, 2006 (Article Rating: )


P.S. Apple has revealed a more developer details for Leopard:

http://developer.apple.com/leopard/overview/

Preseton October 24, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"correctly puts a Close Tab button on each tab. "

I don't want one on each tab, I like the one close at the far left, you can arrange your tabs, ones you want to keep on the left, ones you want to close on the right, then click the single "X" the appropriate number of times without having to constantly move your mouse.

will84 October 24, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"I don't want one on each tab, I like the one close at the far left, you can arrange your tabs, ones you want to keep on the left, ones you want to close on the right, then click the single "X" the appropriate number of times without having to constantly move your mouse."

You can still use the keyboard shortcuts, "Ctrl-Tab" and "Ctrl-F4" for this purpose. I somehow like the latest release of Firefox and am not able to go back to IE7. It appears to be faster than IE7, which in turn is faster (time to open and load a web page) than FF 1.5. Moreover, the "session restore manager" thing is pretty useful.

By the way, is it just me or has anyone else noticed that preseton is getting more and more vocal on this site?

shark47 October 24, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"P.S. Apple has revealed a more developer details for Leopard:"

Yawn! If your a developer who likes to starve, I highly recommend developing for the Mac.

anonymous October 24, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"Preston has cited this website before,
http://www.theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=35293"

Doesn't mean anything. It hasn't happened yet.

anonymous October 24, 2006 (Article Rating: )


@will84:

Ha, nice FUD article. "Symantec says a Mac virus could happen someday!" Yeah, meanwhile, it never happens, and Microsoft has to ship "Defender" software built-in to Vista just to protect it from itself.

@anonymous:

"Yawn! If your a developer who likes to starve, I highly recommend developing for the Mac."

On the contrary, the Mac has a thriving shareware market, unlike Windows (just ask Wil Shipley of Delicious Monster fame). So if you're an independent developer, Mac users will actually pay for your software, unlike Windows users who just run off to Bittorrent and pirate everything.

You also don't have to waste money on the very expensive Visual Studio, since Apple has shipped Xcode developer tools for free since 10.0 back in 2001, the very same tools Apple uses to develop OS X.

Preseton October 24, 2006 (Article Rating: )


Wait, now you're actually recommending switching from Firefox to IE?! Are you saying that the UI drawbacks and/or lack of features in Firefox 2.0 are so bad that we should switch back to old IE7 technology? Since when did usability outweigh security?

AnalogKid October 24, 2006 (Article Rating: )


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