Tuesday, June 17, 2008

 

Firefox 3.0 Final released!!

The long awaited Firefox web browser version 3 came out this afternoon (morning, if you live on west coast of US).

I just downloaded it.  I am very excited.  In addition so improvements designed to make it faster, less memory intensive, and stable - it reportedly was going to include an improved bookmark manager.




Download Day 2008

More details after I have had a chance to install it and check it out. In the meantime, grab your own copy.

The Mozilla guys are pushing to see how many people they can get to download and try it out in the first 24 hours. The clock started ticking today a little before or after noon today - depending on where in the US you live. If you live elsewhere, it probably came out around 10 AM PDT (GMT-7, considering daylight savings time is on now).

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

 

Firefox 3 Release Candidate 2 available

Firefox 3 RC 2 is out now.  Here are the release notes.

I am looking forward to the improvements this release brings.

A lot of web 2.0 stuff that has been worked out on web sites over the past half decade will soon be getting even more help from the web browser.

Web applications will become more powerful.  More possibilities for developers and users will be opened.  Firefox 3 will probably revolutionize web portals too.

The feature that makes this happen is web-based protocol-handlers.  Mark Finkle description of web-based protocol handlers has a pretty illuminating example of how the familiar mailto: protocol handler could be redefined for a particular web site.

We have already seen how AJAX has revolutionized web user interfaces.

I have a hunch that after Firefox 3 final is released we will see web frameworks be released for managing data.

Personally, I would love to see users be able to match the best user interface to the best data/action service.

This is something desktop application programmers have been able to develop for years when they write SQL database applications.

One catch:  for safety reasons, the web protocol handler must reside on the same server as the web page that uses it.

At first blush this sensible limitation will prevent decoupling UI+service that I claim will be possible.

However, in reality I think that operators of major portals will maintain some of the more popular free protocol handler enabled frameworks on their server.

Users will eventually be able to select which one to use for which applications - the native one, or one of the 3rd party ones.

These choices will wind up being just one more configuration item in the Settings page for web sites. 

There they will join themes, content selection options, filters, signatures, and so forth that web users already have among their personalization options.

More than one organization will be able to contribute to the richness of a web application.  This could really shake things up.

It could surprise a lot of people by expanding what web applications can do.

I predict when this happens, many folks will be impressed at how economically it can do these things from a software/design standpoint.

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Sunday, June 08, 2008

 

Installed Flock 1.2.1 this evening

I installed Flock 1.2.1 an hour or two ago. Finally upgraded from version 1 which came out about a year ago.

I have to say, I am pretty impressed.

The feel of this browser is very smooth now.

The only problem that sliightly detracted from its use was I got some long pauses. This happened especially when I hit the backspace key.

Other than that, Flock 1.2.1 is a very neat program. If you like having your online world at your fingertips - this is the browser to have. Social web stuff is its forté.

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