What's the downside of Mozilla FireFox?
What's the downside of Mozilla FireFox?
What's the downside of Mozilla FireFox?
I've heard a lot of people talk about it to avoid viruses but is there some negatives?
I've heard a lot of people talk about it to avoid viruses but is there some negatives?
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- Samuel Dravis
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One of the little things that annoys me about Firefox is that it has the seperate box for doing a web search. While it's handy for some purposes, I miss being able to type the query into the address bar and just press down to search Google. This is what the main Mozilla suite does, but it's a feature missing in Firefox.
The main thing I don't like about mozilla (I use the full suite, have had no experience with plain firefox) is that it doesn't display online 3D viewers, and sometimes doesn't display tables properly. But again, that's a minor detail--the advantages are more than worth the minor detractors. If I want to see a 3D viewer or test a webpage table (yes I do a little web development) I can copy/paste the URL of the site I'm on into IE, and run it once--but for pure browsing, mozilla rocks.
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only thing i dont like, is sometimes when im on my fathers PC which has FireFox, i dont want it to remember my passwords and screen names, it will simply fail to enter any of the info when i click submit. it simply goes back to the previous page of being a guest to that website, and results in having to enter my member info 2 or 3 times to make it work.
Umm.. if you tell it not to remember info, it won't remember any info...AceCombat wrote:only thing i dont like, is sometimes when im on my fathers PC which has FireFox, i dont want it to remember my passwords and screen names, it will simply fail to enter any of the info when i click submit. it simply goes back to the previous page of being a guest to that website, and results in having to enter my member info 2 or 3 times to make it work.
its doing whats its supposed to do, fix yourself.
that's a plugin.STRESSTEST wrote:One thing I miss being an ex-Opera user is the ability to rightclick any text ans select "go to url" as an option. Wish Firefox had that even if it is petty
i'll come back here with it's name and a link. time me and use the time taken as a "feel the love" indicator.
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Theres always the View in IE extension. Very handy.Jeff250 wrote:One can't forget that small fraction of websites that just don't work properly on Firefox. It's sometimes fun to make fun of the web designer, but it still doesn't change the fact that there's data not easily accessible or inaccessible.
Thanks roid, I didnt know such an extension existed. (i lurb teh firefox)
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Go to www.spreadfirefox.com and get the standard email which asks web site designers not to ignore standards compliant browsers. Send it to the website owners whenever you find a site which doesn't work in Firefox. In the meantime, VIEW IN IE works. You can also get VIEW IN FIREFOX as a right click option for IE, just in case you opened the devil by mistake.Jeff250 wrote:One can't forget that small fraction of websites that just don't work properly on Firefox. It's sometimes fun to make fun of the web designer, but it still doesn't change the fact that there's data not easily accessible or inaccessible.
There ARE issues with firefox:
1) It's not as stable as IE.
2) JAVA disables the mousewheel to scroll with.
3) Sometimes a crash loses your FAVICONs
4) Some extensions (not called plugins) wreck performance on slower PCs (TBE is a case in point)
5) Some extensions disable functionality in other extensions. (TBE and easyGestures).
6) IE launches faster, and renders faster than Firefox. (Let's not get into an argument here - it's true.) That is, until you tweak the pipelining and render wait times.
Over all though, it's a small price to pay.
I use FireFox and IE side by side and there are 3 things that I don't like about FF:
1) Scrolling isn't as smooth.
2) There isn't an option to have links underline when mouseover.
3) The Slashdot render bug (supposedly fixed in versions after 1.0, but I still think it's amusing).
Other than that it's all positives, really.
1) Scrolling isn't as smooth.
2) There isn't an option to have links underline when mouseover.
3) The Slashdot render bug (supposedly fixed in versions after 1.0, but I still think it's amusing).
Other than that it's all positives, really.
turn off underline links, add the following to your user userContent.css file(default %APPDATA%\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\...\chrome)Tetrad wrote:2) There isn't an option to have links underline when mouseover.
a:hover{text-decoration:underline}
holy crap, does turning off underline anchors ever make a webpage empty.
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What's the downside of Mozilla Firefox? Compared to IE? Nothing, as far as I can tell.
Besides, that's what the uninstall button is there for. Why not just download it and try it yourself... it's only what.. 6 megs? And you can uninstall it if you don't like it, it's not like you're deciding where to go to college.
Besides, that's what the uninstall button is there for. Why not just download it and try it yourself... it's only what.. 6 megs? And you can uninstall it if you don't like it, it's not like you're deciding where to go to college.
That only changes mouse wheel scrolling. I'm talking about middle mouse scrolling.Mobius wrote:Someone isn't paying attention: CLICKY
fliptw wrote:
Umm.. if you tell it not to remember info, it won't remember any info...
its doing whats its supposed to do, fix yourself.
but isnt that supposed to just remember the login/password data for next time when you visit that webpage to autofill the data?
thats stupid, if you select "No" and it just ignores what you just entered.
If you click on the 'no' button, it doesn't store your login. If you click 'yes', it does.AceCombat wrote:fliptw wrote:
Umm.. if you tell it not to remember info, it won't remember any info...
its doing whats its supposed to do, fix yourself.
but isnt that supposed to just remember the login/password data for next time when you visit that webpage to autofill the data?
thats stupid, if you select "No" and it just ignores what you just entered.
fliptw wrote:I just tried it.
I click no, I log in.
the problem is on your end.
okay i just tested this, if you click yes.....its the exact same thing as IE6 if you click yes to remember a name and password. if you click no, it doesnt remember it. if you click never.....it never acknowledges any user info.
i dunno what my father did to his PC, but it has no problems on my machine, it only does this on his machine.