Friday, July 13, 2007

Flock jumps a fraction.

Too bad about the site, though.
by AC - permalink

You'll have to forgive me for not delivering the promised Avant Browser 11.5 review, because Flock was updated the day of my last post, and frankly, it's better. The last stable Flock release was 0.7, but apparently the new version was close enough to the target for 1.0 that a skip in version nomenclature was warranted. The beta, 0.8.99, had some notable bugs, most of which have been ironed out for the Flock 0.9 release.

From what I can see, the new release appears to be based on Firefox 2, giving it a number of new features its Firefox 1.5-based predecessor didn't have. The new theme is the most obvious improvement, along with much more comprehensive customization options. In addition, you can now place folders on the bookmarks toolbar, an old Firefox feature that was oddly missing in Flock until now. The range of toolbar buttons has expanded and encompasses all of Flock's custom features, but isn't completely overwhelming as in Netscape. The default toolbar layout is fairly cluttered, though. Click the image below for the slightly modified layout I've settled on.


The integrated blog editor is much better now. I've only used it in conjunction with this Blgger account, so mileage may vary and all, but in my case it now features nearly every Blogger posting feature, including images, tags, and most formatting options (no justify options, though), as well as source editing and preview functions. The new Web Clipboard is similar to Opera's, but with more functionality, and it's directly accessible within the blog editor window.

Bookmark management is also vastly improved, this time using Firefox 2's native UI, much better than the previous Flock's overly complicated and somewhat unintuitive in-tab manager. The RSS viewer, already the best in-browser feed reader I've ever used, is slightly better as well. A major new feature is My World, a browser-generated portal, intended as a homepage, that lists new RSS articles, media subscriptions, and recently accessed bookmarks, along with a search bar and some feature quicklinks. Looking closely into it, the My World page is ultimately redundant, and it doesn't help that it takes a curiously long time for the feed list to fill out.

A few other things still need to be addressed before 1.0. In less than a week's worth of use, I've come across a few bugs that should be fixed ASAP, including a couple from the beta that I didn't think could possibly persist to the stable release. There's still only one theme available, and there are only a handful of extensions. A new official site was launched along with 0.9, and unfortunately it's ugly and weird compared to the old one. Flock is still an open-source project, but you'll have to dig around for a while to find any sort of information about getting involved in its development, or to even find the source at all.

Still, the positives dominate the problems with the new release, and of all the major browsers on the market, Flock may well be at the top of the list now. Not bad for a product that hasn't even hit version 1.

Blogged with Flock

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