Wednesday, September 21, 2005

AdBlock for Firefox is back.

Or at least, I've found a build that works.
by AC - permalink


Finally stumbled across an old build of Adblock (0.5.2 build 050) that seems to work in Firefox 1.5 beta 1. You can find the download in this old post (July 29th). The AdBlock at UMO won't install properly in 1.5b1, and AdBlock Plus hasn't been updated since the first of August, so I guess this is what we'll be using for now. Unless, of course, you're using Firefox 1.0.7 and not testing the new branch. In that case, um, nevermind.

This brings my working extension list in 1.5b1 back up to eleven, with four not yet updated (I've added several since my extension round-up a few weeks ago). I'm not sure what the second 1.5 beta's numerical designation will be, and whether all these extensions will have to up their max version tags again (1.5b1 is designated "1.4"). I wouldn't think so. But they will have to be updated for the final 1.5 release. Hopefully, though, the new versions will all be added to UMO, so that Firefox's built-in update tool, which will be significantly more robust than that in the current branch, will automatically catch and update them all.

I've been using this new Windowblinds theme called Iyin Vista obsessively since it was posted last week. It's built on the theme that, so far, most accurately emulates Windows Vista, only the Iyin version hs figured out how to cheat the transparent window borders. It's not a perfect effect, and it's not the most polished theme, but I love how it looks.

Firefox security tightened down.

Fx 1.0.7 released, and Opera begins to get on my nerves.
by AC - permalink


Firefox 1.0.7 was posted yesterday. This is another security update, really just a patch for a couple of newly uncovered vulnerbilities. It also provides a couple of stability fixes. I imagine this will be the last update for this branch of Firefox before 1.5 goes final.

I've been having a couple of issues with Opera since I started using it regularly a few weeks ago. First, there's the continual pain of manually deleting tracking cookies. Opera has a cookie manager, but all it really does is list your cookies and allow you to delete them individually. Why is it not possible to create a blacklist, as in Firefox? Incredibly, Netscape Browser 8.0.3.3 has the same issue. For god's sake, it's based on Firefox 1.x, so someone actually went to the trouble of removing this feature. What the hell?

The other problem I'm having with Opera involves my feeds list. After adding an eleventh RSS feed (and then another), messages started showing up under the wrong feed. So, for example, new messages from the Google Sci/Tech feed will also be displayed as new messages from Ars Technica and even this blog. New Slashdot messages also tend to show up under the wrong feed. I have no idea what's causing this, but it wasn't fixed from 8.02 to 8.5.

Still have not had any problems with Firefox 1.5 beta 1, but I haven't really been using it much. About half of my extensions have not been updated yet, including AdBlock, Show Image, and Wizz RSS Reader. I imagine that a lot of extension authors are just waiting for 1.5 final. Lame.

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

Opera finally gets it.

Meanwhile, Netscape shoots itself if the foot. Again.
by AC - permalink

This morning Opera 8.5 was released, and it's free. They've removed the ad banners, the registration, and the licensing fee. While this is obviously the big news, there's also the software itself. The changelog shows four security fixes, some minor tweaking, and "multiple stability fixes." The browser JavaScript tool is now included and active by default. I uninstalled Opera 8.02 immediately before installing 8.5, and all bookmarks, history, skins, and UI customization was carried over intact.

The other day I finally got fed up with Opera's default toolbar layout (navigation controls and address bar below the tabs) and changed it. I activated the rarely never-used Main bar, which is below the menu bar and above the tabs, took everything off of it, and dragged all the URL bar contents there (nav buttons, address bar and Go button, search form, and toggles for the View bar, panels, and wand). Now Opera looks and acts like a normal browser. With the default layout, the URL bar changes when displaying a "custom" tab - bookmarks manager, history, feeds viewer, etc. Now, none of my controls will disappear when viewing a custom tab; they may be greyed out, but at least I can see them. It's just easier to deal with.

Apparently tired of hearing how abhorrently hideous their new browser is, Netscape has released a browser theme kit, as well as a theme download center called the Netscape Theme Park. This might be the first time ever that a simple skin can actually improve the usability of an application.

Unfortunately, although there are a whopping five themes listed at the theme park, you can't actually install any of them. Clicking on one will take you to a page with more details about that theme. The "Install Theme" button you will then see simply links to the page you're already looking at. Brilliant. So you're stuck with that green mess.
It's so hard to find anything in that awful, cluttered theme that it's actually easier to just exit the program and download a different browser.

Saturday, September 17, 2005

SeaMonkey has landed (sort of).

Not the best browser, but clearly it has the best name.
by AC - permalink

The first ever SeaMonkey alpha was released, um, two days ago. Guess I missed it. The changelog shows some nice feature additions and a ton of bug fixes over the Mozilla Suite it's based on. Once a beta is released, I'll have to give it a try. I'm using MozSuite less and less, so I might as well replace it with SeaMonkey (I think SM overwrites an existing Suite installation in the same way Firefox 1.5 beta replaces Fx 1.0.x).

And speaking of Firefox, a guy named Scott Berkun has posted his reasons for switching from IE to Firefox. This is notable because he was one of the head UI guys for IE1 through IE5. His reasons range from Fx's smooth and unobtrusive handling of security to "IE is a ghetto." He also does a little nitpicking of the Fx UI: I agree that the "Go" menu should either be nested or done away with entirely, but I don't know what he's talking about here:

With multiple tabs (I find) the back/forward behavior becomes complex and hard to predict. Strict UI logic would put the tab UI above the toolbars, not below, but that creates other problems.

Yes, like confusing the hell out of the average user. Opera does just what he's describing in his post, and it's my least favorite aspect of the browser. That, and the way it mysteriously axes nearly all of Blogger's Create Post features. I don't know what the hell that's about.

Anyway, I'm reading Berkun's post, and see that he was still working on IE through the release of IE5, and I'm thinking, "Well, he must have left pretty recently, right? I mean, IE is only on ver. 6 now." Wrong. He left Microsoft in 1999. I just love the numbers here. Internet Explorer, likely the most widely-used internet app on planet Earth, has seen only one major update in six years (no, I'm not counting IE5.5; it was a patch, at best). Wow.

Friday, September 16, 2005

The Revolution is Revolutionary

But can it really compete with PS3 and XB360?
by GarrettJD - permalink

Nintendo fans have been awaiting the Tokyo Game Show ever since Nintendo announced that they would be revealing more about thier next-gen system, the Revolution. Speculation has run rampant for a while now on how exactly the Nintendo Revolution would be, well, revolutionary. Well, now we know. IGN has some great coverage of everything so far, but, suffice it so say, Nintendo isn't trying to compete anymore with Sony or Microsoft. They've chosen to go their own direction.

The Revolution controller looks like a TV remote (and styled like the Ipod) with a large sensor on the end. Basically, the whole thing will work like a 3D mouse pointer thing, and enable new types of gaming and interaction. I can see how this type of controller could really change things, especially in the realm of FPS and adventure games. At the same time, Nintendo has basically forced third parties to innovate, since the Revolution probably won't be able to handle straight ports of more traditional style games. So, the question at this point is-- will the third parties like EA, Ubisoft, and others embrace this, or will they take the lazy route and simply drop support for Nintendo altogether? Only time will tell.

I'll withold judgement on the Revolution until I've had a chance to try it for myself, but I'm inrigued at the possibilities. Nintendo won me over with its innovations with the Nintendo DS, and Nintendo's grand experiment with a totally new type of control may work, if developers innovate and think outside the box.

CNET loves Firefox.

But not, apparently, Netscape.
by AC - permalink

Today CNET posted and article called The Power of 10, their top ten products of the past ten years (thanks to Asa for the link). They put Firefox at No. 5, ahead of the PalmPilot, the iMac, and The Sims, among others. That's pretty damn high praise. I'll go ahead and spoil the surprise by saying that the iPod, TiVo, Google, and Napster were the four products deemed more significant than Firefox since Sept. 1995.

At first blush, there's just one product I see that was badly overlooked. Netscape 2.0, released in 1996, was a turning point for the world wide web. The turning point, you could say. It was the first bit of software that could let virtually anyone find whatever they wanted to on the web. Netscape 1 was better than Mosaic and LYNX, but had virtually no distribution outside of academia. I can't recall ever even encountering IE 1. But Netscape 2 was user-friendly, and it was everywhere. It supported frames for god's sake! Frames!

Anyway. I went ahead and installed Firefox 1.5 beta 1. I know I said I wouldn't, but I was bored, so I did. It took the better part of an hour finding out which of my extensions had been updated to 1.5b and where to find the updated versions. Still no Adblock, but otherwise the transition has been smooth and easy. No crashes yet, and I haven't run into any incompatible sites. Once 1.5 goes final and the extension authors catch up, this is going to be a formidable browser.

Just finished re-reading Douglas Adams's Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency and its sequel, The Long, Dark Tea-Time of the Soul, which has the greatest title of any book ever, lifted from one of Adams's later Hitchhikers' Guide novels. I'm not sure what's next. I was thinking about re-reading The Living Planet by David Attenborough for the first time in years and years, because I know there's an old copy somewhere in this house.

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

Yahoo trumps Google. Wait, what?

And MS acknowledges Opera. What the hell is happening today?
by AC - permalink


If you haven't heard yet, Yahoo! has begun an invite-only beta test for a completely revamped Yahoo! Mail service. From the early reviews, it seems to be the first web-based email client that actually gives you as much control as a desktop client. As you can see in this monstrous pile of screenshots courtesy of Zilla Smash! (no more !'s in this post), the new Yahoo Mail gives you a standard 3-pane UI, like Outlook Express or, more accurately, Thunderbird.

And it makes Gmail look charmingly antiquated. Not all new features have been integrated into the beta, so final judgement is withheld. It would be nice if Yahoo finally started offering free POP3 access. There are ways around it, of course, but they should be unnecessary.

But here's the really interesting bit (to me, anyways): the new service works in all major browsers within Windows and, I believe, Linux. But according to Macworld, it's only supported on the Mac in Firefox. This may be a peculiarity of the beta, or more likely an inaccurate report, because Safari is actually more standards-compliant than Firefox, and if it works in Firefox, it should also, in theory, work in Camino.

Google, meanwhile, has launched a beta Blog Search tool. Not surprisingly, there are already search forms all over Blogger.com. I noticed a few days ago that we're now at least partially indexed by Google, and we show up in Blog Search as well. However, posts older that this past June have not been indexed. I'll stick with the Yahoo site search form for now.

Going back for a moment to wider acceptance of alternative browsers, BetaNews, among others, reported yesterday that Microsoft has finally opened up its download center (MSDN) to Firefox and Opera. Just those two for now, but it's a start. Of course, Windows Update is still off limits unless you're willing to open up Internet Explorer. God help you.

And finally, if you're hesitant to install Firefox 1.5 beta 1 for fear of it being incompatible with your extensions, you can follow Bugzilla Bug 307381. In the comments, active extension authors are reporting when their respective extensions have been updated to comply with the new branch. All it generally involves is changing the maxversion tag to 1.4 (I know, it's confusing), and crossing one's fingers that something in the new Fx code doesn't break it. In any case, it's a safe bet that these guys will also make sure their stuff will then work with the final build of 1.5.

Revenge is Imminent

Tommorrow will hopefully be the day I'm able to pick up Burnout: Revenge for the Xbox. I've been waiting for this game, as I'm a huge fan of the Burnout series. I've been playing the games since Burnout 1 on the Gamecube, and I was glad to see the series finally come into popularity and acclaim with last year's Burnout 3: Takedown. B3 was my second favorite game of last year (behind Halo 2) and reviews like this one from Gamespot have me looking forward to a crashing good time.

I did make one good pickup earlier in the week. Oddworld: Stranger's Wrath (which I scored for just $10) is a criminally underrated game. It's a FPS, sort of-- you've never seen enemies, characters, and weapons this creative-- well, not since the last Oddworld game. I wasn't too big on Munch's Odyssey, but I'm really enjoying this one.

I also picked up the newly-released DVD of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. I know a lot of die-hard Douglas Adams fans are split over the film, but I really dig it. Now that I've seen it three times (twice in theaters, once so far on DVD), the "missing" parts that so many people harp about don't really bother me. Repeated viewings of the film has allowed me to catch a lot of the little touches thrown in that you'd never get without being a fan. Overall, I think this film, more than anything else, does a great job in capturing the spirit of Douglas Adams' work. Hopefully, Disney/Touchstone will consider greenlighting a film version of The Restaurant at the End of the Universe, despite mediocre U.S. box office.

And if you're a die-hard Pixar fan like myself, you probably already picked up the new 10th Anniversary Edition of Toy Story. I have the single-disc version already, but I couldn't resist the new 2-disc version, which has an absolutely stunning transfer, much like the last couple of Pixar DVDs. It was nice to be able to go back and revisit the movie that started Pixar's rise to computer-animation dominance (I'll refrain from any more gushing about The Incredibles, my favorite film of 2004.) However, I'm really looking forward to December 26, when the new edition of Toy Story 2 goes on sale-- I consider it superior to the original, and it was my favorite Pixar film before The Incredibles.

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Another rant on betas and Opera.

If you're going to bash Firefox, at least know what you're talking about.
by AC - permalink


For whatever reason, nearly every unofficial Opera blog I see seems to think that bashing other browsers (specifically Firefox, even though IE is still dominating the market) is as good a way as any to promote their personal favorite. I just don't understand this. There's a blog called 30 Days to becoming an Opera8 Lover that I keep bookmarked for its fairly comprehensive rundown of Opera 8's features, and last Friday they took a misguided shot at Firefox 1.5 beta 1 for not yet being compatible with most 1.0.x extensions. Here's a tiny bit of it:

Well, Firefox was in “beta” for ages and of course “beta” is increasingly meaningless.

When talking about Firefox, “beta” means very little. Not as little as GMail, perhaps, but still, it has spent 90% of its life in beta.

If you want to go all the way back to the Phoenix/Firebird days, then sure, Firefox was in beta for a long while. But Phoenix was never meant to be a widely-used, mainstream browser, not until Firefox 1.0 was released last November. Since then, six finalized versions have been released to fix security flaws (this is a good thing). Because Fx is open-source software - and therefore a collaborative effort - all six were openly beta-tested, generally for about 48 hours. Firefox 1.5 is based on a new branch of the Gecko rendering engine, and has taken significantly longer to test.

But the point is, just because there's a beta of a new version of Fx being tested, it doesn't mean there isn't still a stable, official release available. There is, and there has been for ten months now.

I think the problem the die-hard Opera users are having comes from not fully understaning how open-source software like Firefox is created. Every single new build (and there's a new one literally every day) is made available to anyone who wants it. New versions aren't tested in-house for a while before a beta is made public, shortly followed by a final build.

This isn't Opera, it's OSS. If you're not beta-testing, don't use a beta. I don't know how I can say this more clearly.

And by the way, I'm not bashing Opera itself. I'm writing this post in Opera, and I use it almost daily. I think what the Firefox-bashing Opera users need to realize is that as one browser gets better, they all have to get better. Do you think it's a coincidence that Microsoft, after years of letting Internet Explorer stagnate, is suddenly crashing development of IE7 now that Mozilla has released a better browser and is steadily taking away market share a few ticks of a percent at a time? Opera's market share has not made as big a dent, but Opera, like Firefox, is vastly superior to IE, and that has to be another reason that IE7's target release date has been moved up by over a year.

So why don't we try to stop slamming each other's perferred browsers just to make our own look superior, and focus on the real enemies: terrorists, reality television, and J-Lo's self-branded mini marketing empire.

Monday, September 12, 2005

I'm not testing that.

Know what you're getting yourself into.
by AC -
permalink

As much as I like to help out the Mozilla Foundation by beta-testing their new releases, I've just had too many problems with Deer Park to install Firefox 1.5 beta 1. More than 5,000 bugs have already been squashed in this branch, and it looks like there are still some impressive ones hanging around. Thunderbird 1.5 beta 1 hasn't had as many problems, and I'll probably test the second beta.

I worry sometimes about the distribution of pre-final Firefox builds. I noticed that the candidate builds for 1.5 beta 1 were posted at the BetaNews FileForum. Unless you're actively involved in bug-squashing for Mozilla, keep in mind that you should steer clear of anything called a release candidate, a pre-beta, or an alpha. Mozilla final releases are as thoroughly vetted and tested as any software anywhere, and you should stick with those unless you're aware of the risks inherent to beta-testing.

Anyway. I finally got around to picking up a copy of Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon this weekend. I've never actually owned my own copy, and I've been meaning to finally get one since seeing them on perform for Live 8 from London. They were as good as they've ever been, which is astonishing. I also grabbed a two-disc compilation of Pearl Jam b-sides called Lost Dogs. All I really wanted was "Last Kiss" and "Hard to Imagine," and now I've got those plus 28 other slightly obscure, somewhat esoteric songs. "Bee Girl" is just plain weird. And "Sweet Lew" is about Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. If you're wondering why Pearl Jam recorded a song about Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, so am I. Can't imagine why it never made it onto an album.

Thursday, September 08, 2005

Microsoft doesn't like you.

But Blake does. And so does The Onion.
by AC - permalink


In an interview with Tom's Hardware posted yesterday, Firefox co-creator Blake Ross was asked what he thinks is the biggest difference between Firefox and Internet Explorer:

Microsoft is here to win. That's great if you're a shareholder, but how many users appreciated that attitude when spyware and pop-ups filled their screens four years ago, and Microsoft, having crushed Netscape, abandoned the market? The company is back now that competition has arisen, but where will it be in four more years?

The Mozilla Foundation isn't fighting a war on competition; it's fighting a war on complexity. Our users are our shareholders, and as long as the Internet is frustrating, we'll be here.

Ross also mentioned something interesting that I hadn't heard before. Seems the growing market share of all the standards-compliant web browsers (i.e. everything but IE) is starting to put a dent in the Explorer-only internet and intranet applications market:

We used to have a full evangelism team that worked with IE-only companies to support Web standards. Fortunately, we've reached the tipping point in terms of market share where companies are now forced to open up or risk losing 10% of their clientele. So while we still make evangelism efforts, these kinds of problems are beginning to disappear naturally.

The rest of the short interview isn't all that interesting, but may be worth a look.

Turning from Tom's Hardware to My Hardware, I installed a new hard drive in my PC this weekend. (Do not question my segueing abilities!) The 10GB Quantum HD in my mom's old Compaq started making nasty clicking noises, which pretty much means it's dead and gone forever. So I formatted the 30GB Western Digital I use as a backup from NTFS to FAT32 and stuck it in her PC, and installed Win98 SE on it. Then I replaced it in my box with a shiny, new (but cheap) Maxtor 100GB, 7800 RPM drive. I still only have a total of 140GB of storage here, but it's still more than I need. I don't even have a DVD burner or broadband, and it took me six months to effectively fill up the 70GB I had before.

Something else I've been meaning to post for a while now: The Onion has completely opened up its news archives. This is probably the biggest source of comedy on the damned web now, and I've been trolling through it for a few days. This goes along with a redesign of the front page and a total overhaul of The A.V. Club. Good times.

Oh, and I added Blogger's image/word verification feature to the comments. Hopefully this will stop the comment spambots that started to pop up here this week.

Wednesday, September 07, 2005

Opera 8.02 reviewed.

Opera 8.02 ranks among the browser elite, but is it better than Firefox?
by AC - permalink


It's been one week now since I got my greedy little fingers on a registered, ad-free edition of Opera 8.02. I've been splitting time between Opera, Firefox, and Avant Browser, and I've collected a few notes. First, the good news.

Lots of bugs appear to have been fixed since the Opera 8 beta I last tested. The browser hasn't crashed or locked once, though it did hang for nearly a minute once when I tried to close the Feeds tab while another site loaded in a background tab. No idea why. I've noticed a few other fixes here and there, like the Blogger preview function works now.

The overall UI still takes some getting used to. The navigation controls and URL bar are still tied into the currently active tab, so that closing all tabs leaves you with nothing but the Personal bar. It's a little weird. I had to do some customizing to the default layout. I removed the search fields from the Personal bar - they were both commercial, I believe - and dragged all my bookmark folders there instead. I left the Google search field on the Navigation bar, added a Panels toggle, and replaced the back and forward buttons with ones with drop-down arrows. I also had to lose the "fast-forward" and "rewind" buttons. This can all be done by drag-and-drop from the customize toolbars dialog, just like Firefox. There's also a Main bar, active by default, that seems totally useless in day-to-day browsing.

Page rendering in Opera is good, but can be a little wonky, mostly in the interpretation of font settings. The wrong one might be used, or it will be slightly too small or too large (as compared to the same site rendered by Gecko or Explorer). Big picture, though, Opera is just as standards-compliant as Firefox, and of course moreso than IE6.

In-dialog skins browsing via an Opera-hosted web server is much simpler than searching for themes across multiple sites, like virtually every other skinnable app ever. Unfortunately, Opera's servers have been wavering between slow-as-hell and completely-dead all day. Could be added traffic from the free-for-a-day promotion. In any case, there are some extremely good skins available, and they can be changed on-the-fly, unlike (to my knowledge) every Gecko-based browser.

The tab UI is generally good, a little slicker maybe than Firefox's, and provides a close button on each tab by default, something I love that can be done in Fx with an extention called Tab Mix Plus. Tab Mix also lets you reorder tabs by dragging them, another native Opera feature. But Opera's variable-width tabs based on length of the title of each web page is annoying.

Now for the not-great news. Opera has a useful array of sidebars, called panels, but to access them you need the Panels toolbar, which is a big fat vertical toolbar on the left edge of the screen. The Panels bar is just a list of the different panels, and can be moved, but the sidebar itself apparently cannot be displayed without it there, even though the sidebar's header contains a drop-down menu listing the panels. It's redundant UI that eats up screen space for no real reason.

Anyway, the panels include Bookmarks (lets you manage bookmarks in the sidebar, identical to Fx); Notes (really handy little widget that basically lets you keep a list of notes, displayed in the bottom half of the sidebar below the list); Transfers (the download manager, but it works best in its own tab, where it lives by default anyway). The History panel is a disappointment. The history is displayed as one massive list and seems almost useless compared to Firefox, which gives you five options for sorting the history. The Links panel is better, it simply collates all the links on the active page and lists 'em for you; haven't found a use for it yet, but someday I might. You also get a page Info panel.

If you've set up Opera's email client, you'll also get an email panel. I don't recommend it. The panel is simply Opera's mail client crammed into the sidebar. The problem, however, is the client itself. Opera calls it "revolutionary," and it's definitely small and fast. But it's also dated and lacking in features. Thunderbird is a far superior email client. Hell, I'd rather use webmail.

The other major problem is that Opera's RSS interface is tied into its mail client. Without an email account set up, the Feeds interface is actually pretty good. It's fast and intuitive and better than Fx's LiveBookmarks. You can set each feed to check for updates at a different interval, ranging from once every five minutes to once a week. Only basic content is shown in the feed viewer; it doesn't render the actual web page like Thunderbird, which is either good or bad, depending on personal taste, and you can always open the feed in a new tab with a click. You do have to delete the feeds yourself or they'll just keep piling up; they don't auto-update like with LiveBookmarks or the Wizz RSS reader Fx extension.

Unfortunately, with the mail client active, new RSS items are treated just like mail, and it becomes overly complicated dealing with more than just one or two feeds, especially if you get a lot of mail. This is probably the biggest problem I have with Opera's email client - it makes browsing RSS feeds a pain in the ass.

I also have a problem with the way Opera handles cookies. The default cookie manager is decent, better than many browsers. But there doesn't seem to a way to create a cookie blacklist, a killer Firefox feature. And I had another issue: I use an exclusion cookie when reading this blog, so that my hits don't register when I'm looking at the site traffic. The cookie works in Firefox and Avant, but Opera seems to be ignoring it.

The biggest deal-breaker for most of us, particularly Firefox users, is Opera's lack of adblocking. As Nitin Bhargava put it, "Where's my adblock?" AdBlock Plus is the essential Fx extension, and even little Avant Browser now has native adblocking, arguably even better than Fx's. Adblocking is actually possible in Opera. There are several methods, but the easiest is by creating a file called filter.ini in the profile directory, then altering opera6.ini to refer to it. If you have a long blacklist in AdBlock for Firefox, you can export the list to a textfile and just alter that. Unfortunately, there's a bug in Opera (or is it a feature?) that seems to make the browser arbitrarily ignore blacklisted URLs, so that many ads will appear anyway, and iframes always seem to get through.

There's also the little matter of the big, attention-grabbing ad banners at the top of the browser window itself in the free version of Opera. The reason I've been playing with Opera for as long as a week is that I was lucky enough to get a free registration code during the ten-year-anniversary promotion last week. But if you weren't so lucky, the big question is simple: Is Opera 8.02 good enough to use despite the annoying ads, or even good enough to drop $39 U.S. for a registered version? It might be, if you've got the disposable income. If you run at a high screen-res (1280 or above), you might be able to put up with the ad banners (though I never could). 8.02 is clearly the best Opera so far, much, much better than 7.x.

All I can really tell you is that I'm going to keep using it, probably more than I use Avant, K-Meleon, or the Mozilla Suite. But Firefox 1.0.6 will remain the default browser on my system, and it won't be replaced until Firefox 1.5 is released shortly. Firefox still offers the best total package in the best interface, with the best extendibility. But for registered users, Opera has claimed second-place.

Tuesday, September 06, 2005

Cheap Greatest Hits and In Event of An Emergency

No big deals in my shopping this weekend, but I did pick up a few of the new PS2 Greatest Hits games, which Circuit City has on sale this week 2 for $30. I picked up Sly 2: Band of Thieves, Ratchet and Clank: Up Your Arsenal, Jak 3, and Hot Shots Golf: Fore! Fortunately, I found them all in their original packaging, and not the ugly, red bar Greatest Hits packaging. I have to go back to work tomorrow after my nice long vacation, but that's all right. I had a nice rest, and I'm ready to get back to it.

To me, the scariest thing about what happened in New Orleans is the attempt by the federal government to shift the blame for the tragedy on the local authorities in New Orleans and Louisiana, and the realization that we can't rely on the federal government to help us out in the case of disaster. It's probably not well known outside of here, but here in Memphis we're sitting near the New Madrid fault line, which is, as any geologist would tell you, overdue for a major, 8.0 plus earthquake in the next several years. If that were to happen here, I hope the city of Memphis and Shelby County is prepared to handle all disaster relief and recovery efforts alone, because based on what we've seen in the last several days from FEMA, we can't rely on anyone else for help.

Friday, September 02, 2005

More Opera Soon, and an Update on New Orleans

I've been doing some pretty serious tinkering with Opera 8.02 for a few days now, and I'm sporadically compiling a fairly in-depth review of it. I've been typing in a few notes in the Notes field of Opera's panels bar, which is a nice little feature. There are quite a lot of things I need to say about it. Firefox 1.5 beta 1 is now a week away, but I won't be testing it; based on my experiences with Deer Park, it's probably going to be more trouble that it's worth for someone not directly involved with beta testing for the Mozilla Foundation. So I have plenty of time to kill writing up something decent on Opera.

In case you haven't seen it yet, there's an incredible blog being maintained from inside the hell that New Orleans has become called The Interdictor. It's run by the crisis manager for a company called DirecNIC. He and his crew are holding down a highrise and are making it a priority to make sure everyone knows what's going on down there. The most interesting thing is the right-turn in perspective they're giving us. If you're watching the news, you know already that every elected politician in the country seems to be doing everything they can to point out that things are not nearly as dire as the mainstream media are making it seem with their coverage. This guy, however, is pointing out that everyone he talks to is pissed as hell that the media is making things look much, much better than they actually are.

So a question organically appears here: Who has the incentive to lie, or to decieve themselves into believing one perspective or the other? The people on the ground dealing with the flooding, looting, crime, and lack of external support, or the VIPs who have to answer to the people in the voting booths?

Anyway, the blog is also worth checking out for this guy's masterful ability to come up with simple quotes that sum up an entire tragedy. "It takes a spectacular kind of asshole to set a fire in this environment." "It's hot as hell down there in the sun. Crime is absolutely rampant: rapes, murders, rape-murder combinations." "It is a zoo out there... it's the wild kingdom. It's Lord of the Flies. That doesn't mean there's murder on every street corner. But what it does mean is that the rule of law has collapsed, that there is no order... Anyone who is on the streets is in immediate danger of being robbed and killed. It's that bad."