Linux Web Browsers Reviewed 251
juniorboy writes "This is an article reviewing 5 web-browsers that run on Linux.
" Really not a lot of surprises, but its itneresting that the number of reviews of this nature focusing on Linux are increasing.
browsers (Score:1)
Re:Shortest, most accurate linux web browser revie (Score:1)
HP-UX is spelled PH-UX, and is pronounced... (Score:1)
..."snake".
What part of "Gestalt" don't you understand?
Re:Disadvantage to Lynx (Score:1)
Re:lynx and w3m (Score:1)
Not everything:
* Table borders in Links give a very "dotted" impression, while they look fine in w3m.
* Links doesn't handle SSL, w3m does.
* Links doesn't seem to handle bookmarks or cookies, w3m and lynx do.
* w3m has mouse scroll support, Links doesn't.
* w3m handles frames, Links doesn't.
OTOH: Links (and lynx) does incremental loading. w3m doesn't.
minor correction.. (Score:1)
I just downloaded the very latest version (v 0.82) and it seems that Links does indeed have cookie support now.
I guess I should also clarify that by "doesn't handle frames", I meant that it handles them lynx-style, instead of rendering them.
Anyway, get Links at http://artax.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/~mikulas/links [mff.cuni.cz]/ [yamagata-u.ac.jp]
or get w3m at http://ei5nazha.yz.yamagata-u.ac.jp/~aito/w3m/eng
or check out a quick text browser comparison at http://www.zinescene.org/home/browser.ht ml [zinescene.org]
Re:Shortest, most accurate linux web browser revie (Score:1)
PH-UX (Which is the expletive of choice for anyone trying to compile anything on those stupid boxes. It almost makes AIX look standard.)
mozilla networking layer (Score:1)
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My opinions may have changed, but not the fact that I am right.
Re:mozilla networking layer (Score:1)
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My opinions may have changed, but not the fact that I am right.
Re:It's not clicking that makes the mouse slow... (Score:1)
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My opinions may have changed, but not the fact that I am right.
Optimization (Score:1)
personally, I think that the mozilla engineers will succeed.
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My opinions may have changed, but not the fact that I am right.
It's nice that Netscape's behaves the same, but... (Score:1)
Well, not quite. Expecially at higher resolutions, I can never find the help menu on the Linux version. Oh yeah... there it is: about as far away from the other menus as it can be, hidden up there in the right corner where I least expect it.
I'm sure more regular Linux users don't have a problem with it, but I felt the urge to say something.
Arachne? (Score:1)
Re:Have you tried w3m? (Score:1)
That is odd. For me W3M fired up emacs (actually my emacs wrapper) as set in $EDITOR. In the W3M config the editor is set to: [sensible-editor ] .
Re:Have you tried w3m? (Score:1)
Re:Large footprint? (Score:1)
Eh. I don't know if low memory consumption was one of the primary design goals, but if so they haven't reached it yet. I've compiled my own with sources from 4 days ago and it's distressingly worse than Netscape in terms of memory use.
And that was with --enable-optimize and --disable-debug arguments passed to configure. I desperately want to see Mozilla succeed, and I've no doubt it will be a worthy rival to IE, but I'm not sure if it will be suitable for low-memory machines.
On the other hand, I remember reading about it being adopted [netscape.com] for some low-cost "web appliances", which I have to assume won't be very memory-rich. So perhaps this is just pre-code optimization bloat. I sure hope so.
Steve 'Nephtes' Freeland | Okay, so maybe I'm a tiny itty
Re:More mouse vs keyboard (Score:1)
How do you type that way? That's gotta be slower.
Note, that I still prefer the mouse for web browsing, but a lot of time is in fact lost with moving the hand back and forth. You can't just leave your hand on the mouse unless you are just mindlessly clicking away.
/me notes that I reached to the mouse to post this...
Re:What GUI would they use? (Score:1)
stop arguing and start doing something real (Score:1)
Re:IE for Linux would be good... (Score:1)
What network is this on?
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Re:Lynx has no competition (Score:1)
Re:Shortest, most accurate linux web browser revie (Score:1)
IE on it's native platform (I used Win98) is flaming fast, about the same as netscape in the bugs department, and has full PNG suppport unlike netscape, which butchers the images or flings them off to an external viewer.
I hate to say it, but the Linux/netscape combination is less stable than IE and Win98.
M$ may be evil, and they may make a slow, buggy, single-user OS, but they have a very good web browser.
Re:Have you tried w3m? (Score:1)
The only thing I miss in links is (a) http authentication (coming soon, I guess) and (b) w3m-like navigation.. but oh well, can't have it all..
Re:Shortest, most accurate linux web browser revie (Score:1)
--thi
Re:Shortest, most accurate linux web browser revie (Score:1)
Re:What GUI would they use? (Score:1)
Multipule user interfaces do not keep video games, cell phones, etc, from being widely accepted. Windows may have a good user interface that even a monkey can use but how efficient is a monkey when it comes a user interface. More choices are better than one choice.
My vote is for Konqueror (Score:1)
It's already loaded with features: CSS1, Java, Javascript, plugins, embeddability (in KDE apps, or other apps in the browser), progressive page rendering (and pages actually look right!), a working font dialog (darn you, Netscape), drag-and-drop, and it's also a file manager. Oh, and its FTP mode is the best I've seen in _any_ Linux software, hands down.
I hope to switch most of my browsing to it when KDE2 comes out.
I don't have a lot of confidence in Mozilla, which has been big, slow, and non-functional since day 1 despite endless promises that "the nightly builds are way better, just wait for milestone n+1."
Have fun
try links (Score:1)
Re:StarOffice (Score:1)
Well, it is meant to be a replacement for MS Office
(Sorry, couldn't resist it!)
Tim
Re:lynx and w3m (Score:1)
Links, my favorite text browser, does everything w3m and Lynx do, but better. Links supports background downloading, colors, and renders stuff (even slashdot) much better than I've seen either Lynx or w3m do.
"If ignorance is bliss, may I never be happy.
Re:Lynx has no competition (Score:1)
Re:lynx and w3m (Score:1)
I wish Lynx and w3m combined their forces and made a single, console based, browser.
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GroundAndPound.com [groundandpound.com] News and info for martial artists of all styles.
Ummm, no. (Score:1)
And that's really what it is. It's not here yet, by a loooong shot.
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- Sean
Re:Question (Score:1)
Hate to break it to you, bud, but these particular functions happen to be open and well-documented.
I've used them myself on a couple of occasions to embed rudimentary browsing ability into some of my Windows Apps.
It's called the Microsoft Internet Transfer Control, it exists as both standard (DLL) and ActiveX (OCX) libraries and is well supported and documented.
Sorry, but you stuck out on that one. Learn what you're speaking about next time!
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- Sean
Konqueror vs Mozilla: timelines (Score:1)
Also, in a more generic sense of the same issue, K is "farming out" a lot of its capabilities to bits of KDE that already do it (image rendering, for example), while Moz has to do everything "in-house," as it can make no assumptions about the system it is running on -- it may be on a barebones X with Gtk, for all the developers know.
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- Sean
Re:Web browsing for the blind (Score:1)
Font issues. (Score:1)
A concrete example of what I'm talking about is trying to display classical Greek fonts. There do indeed exist Adobe-encoded classical Greek fonts and I can install them, use them, good example being Ismnin.pfa. I can go to edit->pref->fonts and select the installed font which I've preview with xfontsel. Now, I go to a nice online database of classical greek texts with morphological analyses and links, the Perseus Project and look at some work by Aeschinus [tufts.edu]. They have the option of displaying actual, greek text using the Ismini font if one uses the "Change Greek display" button at the top of the page and select the Ismini font. Does it work on Linux? No.
It works on Macintosh damn well though.
These worthy people (it's a great project) point out that they can't support everything, and indeed they do support several different Netscape versions on WinXX and Mac and several different IE versions.
They claim in their Font Help section that there are fundamental problems with Netscape displaying different fonts.
Anyone have any take on this? At the very least it would discourage anyone trying to use current tools used in Classics from using Linux and Netscape. A damn shame.
Re:Just a thought... (Score:1)
Re:Have you tried w3m? (Score:1)
Hmmm, you seemed so happy with it I decided to try it too... Pretty cool stuf indeed. I'm sticking with w3m in text mode too.... One slight minus is that it ignores $EDITOR, and starts vi for editing textfields... I'm typing this in vi now, and what to get back to my jed. If you're reading this,
Hmmm, that just saved... Well, I can try
Re:Have you tried w3m? (Score:1)
More mouse vs keyboard (Score:1)
Having to take your hand away from the keyboard, and all the way over to the mouse.
Again: Leave your hand on the mouse. Use one hand for keyboarding, and one for mousing, and you'll find your browsing experience is much improved. If you refuse to do that, well, don't complain when the hammer makes a lousy screw driver.
Having to physically move the mouse.
Turn up your acceleration. I can cover the entire screen area of my 1600x1200 pixel desktop with small wrist movements. You're not using the mouse correctly; no wonder you have trouble with it.
I'd like to see how long it would have taken you to write that post of yours if you'd had to click each letter on some onscreen keyboard with your beloved mouse.
You're big on this whole "using a screwdriver to hammer in nails" technique, aren't you?
Re:Shortest, most accurate linux web browser revie (Score:1)
Honestly, while I love Linux to death, its ability to do web browsing is still somewhat restricted. NS 4.x has been probelmatic for most people I know, the only people I know who use lynx are masochists (j/k! calm dowm
Does anyone think that MS is even thinking of porting IE to Linux?
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Re:lynx and w3m (Score:1)
w3m does support vi-styled movement
w3m has gpm support (you can click on links). People who like to copy/paste strings may be annoyed by this, however.
Re:Have you tried w3m? (Score:1)
Re:IE for Linux would be good... (Score:2)
review ignores reliability (Score:2)
If you want a feature-obsessed culture, you know where you can get it. And you know what problems come along with it. Java is a big deal. Rendering all pages readably is a big deal. Mayby plugins matter, too. But none of this is as important as a browser that doesn't crash and can view the simplest pages in a readable way.
Netscape is legendary, on all platforms but especially on Linux, for crashing, for freezing sometimes just briefly but obnoxiously and others for several minutes, and for displaying text in an unreadable 4pt font that's locked down becuase their font size dialog box is broken. I don't care if I'm reading ACM articles or Slashdot or porn--problems like this make a browser simply unuseable. My technophobic neighbors stop by on occasion and ask to use ``the Internet,'' and literally half the time they end up writing these four-page-long gushing letters to their girlfriend in Hotmail, and Netscape bunges it up, crashes, and loses their email. I find myself using Lynx (and now w3m) not because my machine is too slow, but because it doesn't crash and the text in an xterm is big enough to read. Frankly I think that's exactly why a lot of people use Lynx. This is an absurd situation, and the review all but ignores it.
I'd like to see a review that dealt more with stability than rendering quality in obscure situations.
3 browser fixes: junkbuster, squid, and gat (Score:2)
I love the Web. I hate the Web. I love information, interactivity, communication. I hate banner ads, slow loads, and animated gifs. I've conquered most of these with three tools which work under Linux/xBSD and even legacy OSs:
I feel like my browser is mine again. Or, as the ads say: the Web is once again your friend.
What part of "Gestalt" don't you understand?
Re:Text-based vs. graphics-based (Score:2)
Crossreferencing is far more important to the spread of the web than graphics, IMHO. With crossreferencing, adding something to the web increases the value of all the web, not just your site. Instead of the web being just someplace where you can put content to make it public, the web is a whole system. That, and the web came to be around the time when people started to be able to access it in large numbers.
Graphics aren't unimportant, but they weren't even much of an option when gopher was around, and they weren't very exciting when the web was starting either.
IE under Linux (Score:2)
If you want to use IE under Linux, I've managed to run IE 3.0 for 16-bit Windows under Wine (the colors are fixed now, yay!). I can't manage to install IE 4.0 or 5.0 yet--they seem to require a network install.
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pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate [152.7.41.11].
Re:Just a thought... (Score:2)
The only real problem with w3m is that it's sometimes unstable and/or has odd/inconsistent responses..mainly due to the fact that it's still in development. But most of these are minor annoyances (for example, the context menu is entirely broken) and don't interfere with browsing.
Daniel
Plugin Reviews (Score:2)
Re:hey you forgot the *REALLY* important ones! :) (Score:2)
Text-based vs. graphics-based (Score:2)
Slashdot readers talk, on one hand, about e-commerce and how it's revolutionizing our lives and how it'll be great when we have this perfect 'Netcentric society. On the other hand, they, they say, "Woe is me, the 'Net's changed so much since I was using back in the day!" Why do companies put graphics on their web page? Because it helps to make the web site more appealing graphically. Most Companies are defined by their corporate image. That's a visual representation. Microsoft in text and Microsoft in logo are two very different things. I would hate to go to a web site of a company that I use and not see their logo, because as a consumer, it's comforting to know that I have the right site, and that image confirms that. I'd hate to go to a friend's web site and read about how great his trip to Spain was and not be able to immediately pull up the images he's talking about. I can do that because of the power of graphics. I miss out on something when I use w3m or similar text-based graphics. A picture is worth a 1000 words, and who knows how many a moving picture can be.
If a Shockwave plugin means I get a presentation explaining a something to me in less bits than a similar animated GIF, great. If an animation shows me what the product looks like more clearly, that's great, too. If someone decides to simply scan their brochue and upload it, then yes, that sucks. But do not look down on Shockwave and GIFs and similar changes in the way that the Web is used. It's revolutionizing the world, and I for one am glad that people are making it at least a little nicer to look at.
Except for this guy [somethingawful.com]. That's just awful, both in terms of images and in terms of text.
Correction (Score:2)
I can do without the extra infringement on my OS and the tendency for it to crash after rebooting from Windows Update.
Re:Text-based vs. graphics-based (Score:2)
There were illustrations in books before the 15th century, and they were done by monks for religious texts. Two reasons: show the glory of God; explain the illiterate exactly what the page was about. And there's the famous hand-done first-letters; incredibly difficult and time-consuming for the effect of simply making the first letter of the paragraph look a little nicer.
Re:Lynx has no competition (Score:2)
I use w3m and emacs/w3 everyday at work(e/w3 for at least 5 yrs). I am really impressed with w3m. IMHO, it blows lynx out of the water. While emacs/w3 is slower, I spend most of my time in emacs, so the integration is nice and I have been able to configure it to work with my company's proxy. I've tried to get w3m to work, and for some reason it doesn't.
I also believe that emacs/w3 will display images with XEmacs, but I'm not sure if it does with GNU Emacs. William Perry has done a great job!
Re:Lynx has no competition (Score:2)
Re:Lynx has no competition (Score:2)
Re:Still needs better plugin support (Score:2)
A site whose only options are a 30K flash or a 100K animated GIF is not a well-designed site.
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Lynx has no competition (Score:2)
Browsing still sucks in Linux (Score:2)
What Linux needs is a real browser. Right now it looks likes Modzilla and Opera are the two up and coming browsers. I wish IE would be ported, but that ain't never going to happen.
Re:IE for Linux would be good... (Score:2)
Re:IE for Linux would be good... (Score:2)
Re:IE for Linux would be good... (Score:2)
The load is faster than Netscape on Windoze. The crashing problems I had were with the glibc version, which appears to be really buggy (perhaps a problem with threads?)
Switching to the libc5 version cleared up a lot.
(I have Caldera 2.2, which uses glibc 2.1)
Incidentally I'm posting from Mozilla M12. Its come a long way, but still has a long way to go. Perhaps there will be a stable version by the end of the year (guessing, don't really know)
Re:Just a thought... (Score:2)
Re:Web browsing for the blind (Score:2)
I've several blind friends who prefer IE over any other web browser, including Lynx. A speech program like "Jaws" works quite well with IE. Besides images, the hardest things are frames and forms. Navigating frames is quite difficult in Lynx, but much less in IE. And while forms remain difficult, they suck less in IE then on another browser.
-- Abigail
Hands over mouse (Score:2)
You: How do you type that way? That's gotta be slower.
Sure. But you see, most of my browsing isn't typing. I'm in input mode, sucking up information from the web. For the occasional keystroke during browsing, one-handed typing is just fine.
Sure. But that isn't browsing. That's entering a comment. When I switch tasks from browsing to typing, I put both hands back on the keyboard. Isn't that hard. The occasional task switch from mouse to keyboard and back again isn't significant, compared to the benefits you get from browsing with the mouse.
Of course, I really would prefer to have three arms, but until cyberbioengineering gets a lot more advanced, I'll have to live with it this way.
Chewing gum and bailing wire for Netscape (Score:2)
Here are a few tips I have for Linux+Netscape users who have these problems:
* Download Netscape Navigator only -- not Communicator. The extra functions of Composer and Messenger appear to significantly decrease stability. I'm not saying I never have a crash, but it happens pretty infrequently. The Navigator-only version also has a smaller memory footprint.
* Close windows with the "File -> Close" menu command or the [ALT]+[W] keystroke combination. For some reason, using the standard window frame decoration "Close" icon seems to be more likely to cause a crash.
* If you are using Red Hat, make sure your fonts are sane. Your font catalogue in
Make sure you have the appropriate RPM packages installed, that your font server is running, and that your XFree FontPath is pointed at your font server. This smoothes out some things, especially Java.
* Consider disabling the Java Virtual Machine (not JavaScript (well, you can disable it if you want to, but you don't have to)). Netscape's JVM still has trouble.
I agree that you shouldn't have to do this, but doing so has significantly improved stability for me. As the subject line suggests, it functions as a stopgap measure until a better Linux browser is available.
(BTW: I read your white paper. I've seen pre-caching software available for MS Windows. It isn't as smart as your system, but it is there. You might be able to coax something like a caching proxy server into doing what you want. Run HTTP through your proxy. Write a small program to accept a Netscape link via DND, and tell the proxy to fetch it ahead of time. Klunky, but it might work.)
Can somebody actually verify this? (Score:2)
The more I hear this the more shallow it seems. I mean what use is debugging code when the debugging code is that intrusive in the program? Alpha or not, most software starts small then increases as features are added. Or is my impression wrong and software is bloated shortly after development begins and then gets trimmed of 20% by beta?
I would really like someone to verify that Mozilla is as bloated as it has been because of the debugging code. I would also ask why would that much debugging code be needed?
**Or is Mozilla very large and resource hungary without debugging code as well.**
I am sorry but I have many doubts. I really hope I am wrong. But I fear there is less substance in the "debugging code" scapegoat than a hopeful myth.
Please someone put me in the know.
Re:Text-based vs. graphics-based (Score:2)
I can't wait until XML becomes ubiquitious so that two-thirds of the web designers learn what the difference between content and presentations is. Then maybe I can force my own stylesheet to the web.
One can dream.
Layout and structure, XML (Score:2)
I hope website designers (at least of those sites that I care about
Re:lynx and w3m (Score:2)
lynx has this big advantage, also, that it can make something sensible out of Unicode. Netscape is just fscking worthless in this respect: it doesn't even understand — (the em-dash character). Unfortunately, I use — regularly in my web documents (no bugware!), so they're about unreadable with Netscape. Same for “ (the English-style open quotes) and so on (though I tend to compromise and use `` instead of “ or possibly the French double quotes ).
lynx run in an xterm with wide chars enabled and a fixed-width Unicode font is so far the best solution I've found to viewing Unicode characters correctly.
(Note: Unicode is not just useful in foreign languages. Some punctuation signs like the ellipsis, or, as I mentioned above, the em-dash and the quotes, are to be found in Unicode. As a matter of fact, Unicode is more useful for English than for French, because nearly all the French characters are in ISO-8859-1, and the French-style quotes are there, whereas the English-style quotes are far away in Unicode tables.)
lynx has its irritating features, though. It can't render tables, and that's a pain. w3m at least does that correctly. Also, lynx displays <i> as underline: that's stupid, <i> is italics, not emphasis (emphasis is <em>), and if it can't do italics, it should do nothing and ignore the tag. And it doesn't understand <dfn> (now that should probably be underlined).
And lynx completely ignores CSS. Agreed, in text mode, there isn't much you can get from CSS, but at least the margin definitions wouldn't be too hard to implement, and that would be useful.
hey you forgot the important ones! :) (Score:2)
don't you use telnet to browse the web?
$ telnet some.host.com 80
GET
HTTP 1.1 [you know the rest]
...
$
And heck! The telnet-way of browsing is the easiest of all to install! its in netbase!
#include <signal.h> \ #include <stdlib.h> \ int main(void){signal(ABRT,SIGIGN);while(1){abort(-1)
Re:hey you forgot the *REALLY* important ones! :) (Score:2)
"Every program written at MIT expands until it can read email"
to
"Every program written at MIT expands until it can browse the Web"
???
s/MIT/GNU/g if you like.
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Web browsing for the blind (Score:2)
Re:Still needs better plugin support (Score:2)
That's your experience versus my experience. I've found quite bit of Director based content in my time. For example, Adam Sandler released a Director based movie called "The Peeper", which I qute enjoyed. There were quite a few amusing little Director games on mediadome when it was still around.
The whole thing is a matter of YYMV, though. My original point wasn't that these things are necessary for everyone, but the lack of plugins does make surfing under linux not as good as under Win32. In an age where more and more applications are being moved onto web servers, a factor in OS domination will be the Web browsing experience.
As an aside, this is why reviews like this one are important to linux. It tells people that linux has decent browsers. After a win32 person reads such a review, they may say to themselves "Hey, all I really do is web surf on my computer, maybe I should try out linux as my OS".
As for not being part of the standard, the HTML 4 loose DTD [awpa.asn.au] has object [awpa.asn.au] as part of the standard. Thus embedding objects is part of the standard. Shunning a site because they embed a Director movie is like shunning a site because they link to a PDF.
Re:Text-based vs. graphics-based (Score:2)
It's odd how people forget that gopher was the web without graphics. Gopher never took off nearly to the extent that the web did, and gohperspace a pretty much ignored subset of webspace now. Yeah, it might because http understans MIME, but IMO it's because of the graphical nature of the web that it's doing so much better.
BTW, I think you meant to link here [somethingawful.com], and I agree: aweful.
Re:Web browsing for the blind (Score:2)
OpenText [www.opentext.com] used to have a blind developer (as in programmer) working for them. He may even still be there. Basically, he had a VT like terminal that would speak to him. It doesn't surprise me that there are blind websurfers, especially because of the lawsuit against AOL for ADA Non-Complience [slashdot.org]
Re:Still needs better plugin support (Score:2)
Re:Shortest, most accurate linux web browser revie (Score:2)
"Linux will never be the most popular desktop OS until it has the best browser."
I personally don't think Linux stands much more than a snowball's chance in hell at becoming the most popular desktop OS (in anything resembling its present form), but your point is well taken. Browsing The Web has been the biggest source of computer sales ever, and Linux is without a decent browser. All I was suggesting is that (a) IE is worse than Netscape (which it definitely is, in my experience), (b) MS isn't likely to port it, and (c) in the time it would take to do so, Mozilla and Opera will both be available.
So yeah, the browser situation for linux sucks, but porting IE isn't going to help anything.
Re:Shortest, most accurate linux web browser revie (Score:2)
1) On any computer I've used IE on (usually NT-based, I'll admit) the browser has frozen up for 10 seconds to two minutes at a time. Worse, it locks up the ENTIRE COMPUTER! Netscape has never done that to me.
2) Netscape crashes far less for me than IE. This seems to be a case of, 'your mileage may vary.'
3) Fonts? I don't have any problems with fonts. They look the same in both browsers.
4) IE5 may have finally started following some standards. IE4, in its day, was the single worst browser available for the W3C and CSS standards. Regardless, the latest version of both are pretty weak. MS was, last time I checked, trying harder than Netscape to push its own non-standard HTML extensions as well.
But it's all splitting hairs. Both are poor, bloated, slow browsers. Opera and Mozilla can't come fast enough for me.
Interesting that /. finds this interesting (Score:2)
Given the success of Linux over the last 12 months why does /. still seem amazed whenever it appears in the mainstream press? Is success that difficult to cope with? :)
Psike.
Shortest, most accurate linux web browser review! (Score:2)
Ok, now let's work on making a real browser. Maybe we could outsource the IE team, I heard they are worried about their stock these days.
StarOffice (Score:2)
Konqueror is making good progress... (Score:2)
Just a thought... (Score:2)
Re:Shortest, most accurate linux web browser revie (Score:2)
For Fear of offending myself? (Score:2)
Well, then, collaborate. If you can't/wont contribute (code) to the solution, quit bitching. If you don't like a particular browser, write yourself a new one or contribute to a project like Mozilla.
I personally found the article interesting. Was it perfect? Nope. Was the guy wrong about some things? Maybe. Some things said were opinions *gasp*.
-FP
E-commerce, text, and graphics (Score:3)
The power of the web is its ubiquity -- access from anywhere, anytime, without a requirement for proprietary solutions -- hardware or software -- at either the sending or receiving end of the channel. While high-speed access is going to build its way into the fixed-site (and even some limited-range wireless) nodes, universal access from anywhere has to deal with the limited bandwidth and channel space of wireless.
Smart design is simple design.
What part of "Gestalt" don't you understand?
Answer (Score:3)
Does that help?
Large footprint? (Score:3)
Mozilla is looking particularly exciting, although it has a foot-print that may be simply too large for some users.
Is this true? I haven't tried Mozilla in some time (although I will once it's in official beta), but I thought the point to Mozilla is that it was going to have a *smaller* footprint than, say, Netscape.
Re:StarOffice (Score:3)
Question (Score:3)
-Nathan Whitehead
Keyboard vs mouse - that old thing again? (Score:3)
Oh, come on. That old argument again? One might as well say that a screw driver in inherently faster then a hammer.
Go to a page with dozens of links on it [slashdot.org], pick a link at random, and compare the navigation between Lynx and Navigator:
Navigator
1. Point with a minor wrist movement.
2. Click once.
Lynx
1. Down arrow.
2. Down arrow.
3. Down arrow.
... [edited for brevity]
31. Down arrow.
32. Down arrow.
33. Press [ENTER].
Even if you turn on the link numbers, I find a simple point-and-click is just as fast as entering in a two or three digit number and pressing [ENTER]. Not to mention a lot easier. To say nothing of those interfaces which cannot easily be accomplished in text mode [mapquest.com].
Since I'm here, let me also say...
1. download - hit d, Enter.
Click.
2. save rendered page to disk - hit p, enter, enter
[ALT]+[S]. Two in Navigator compared to three for Lynx.
3. add current doc to bookmark - a, d, enter
[ALT]+[K]. Again, Navigator wins.
4. add current link to bookmark file - a, l, enter
Press. Point. Release.
show source - \
[ALT]+[U]. Lynx wins by a mere keypress here.
6. Next page - space
Ditto.
revious page - b
[PGUP]
first page ctrl-A
last page ctrl-E
Here you score a few points. These two work flawlessly with [CTRL]+[HOME] and [CTRL]+[END] under Windoze. For some reason known only to Netscape, Navigator on Linux ignores those keystrokes. Grrrrr.
reload is ctrl-R
[ALT]+[R] here, close enough.
redraw is ctrl-L
Not applicable.
quit is Q
[ALT]+[Q] to quit Navigator. I usually have it open all the time, so I don't do it much.
What's the keystroke to open a new window in Lynx? Oh yes, I forgot -- Lynx limits you to one window at a time.
I *can* use Netscape but it feels like a huge slow down to reach for a mouse every now and then.
Well, here's a tip -- stop using that screw driver to hammer in nails. Put one hand on the mouse, and keep it there.
Lynx is a fine browser, and has a lot of things going for it, but let's not by silly, here.
'Tis not the browser -- 'tis the ISVs (Score:3)
This is, in no way, shape, or form, a browser issue. This is an issue with ISV (Independent Software Vendor) support. ISVs are not supporting Linux, so you don't get your plugin.
Don't complain about the browser -- go gripe to those ISVs. You like their plugins so much, but when you ask them to support your platform of choice, they say, "F**k off". Personally, any company that does that to me, doesn't get my business. Maybe you like being told that, but I don't.
Blaming this on the browser is like blaming your car maker that the local gas station's service sucks.
(For the less-informed: Netscape on Linux supports that sort of "You don't have XYZ, but you need it, get it?" dialog, and has for quite some time.)
Re:Shortest, most accurate linux web browser revie (Score:3)
IE for Linux would be good... (Score:4)
Netscape in a Windows environment is easier to use, although I still prefer IE. I know I would boot into Linux much more often if it had a reasonable browser. (end rant)
lynx and w3m (Score:4)
1. download - hit d, Enter.
2. save rendered page to disk - hit p, enter, enter
3. add current doc to bookmark - a, d, enter
4. add current link to bookmark file - a, l, enter
5. show source - \
6. Next page - space, previous page - b, first page ctrl-A, last page ctrl-E.
7. You can set option to display a number in front of every link - so that when you want to jump to a certain link in the middle of the page, you simply type in that number and hit enter. Works faster than mouse, to be sure.
few misc things - reload is ctrl-R, redraw is ctrl-L, quit is Q.
w3m doesn't display page while loading, and misses some other things like vi style navigation (which can be easily hacked in the code), but can display tables/frames. Note that both have ssl (in lynx you have to apply a patch, that'll take ~5 mins).
How important is all this? Well, now that I use lynx daily, I *can* use Netscape but it feels like a huge slowdown to reach for a mouse every now and then.
Still needs better plugin support (Score:4)
Have you tried w3m? (Score:5)
Check out Greg's Bridge Page!