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Aug 1st, 2002, 06:32 PM
#1
Thread Starter
Member
browsers
Im fed up with constant errors popping up with Internet Explorer, is there a way to fix this or another free alternative
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Aug 1st, 2002, 09:11 PM
#2
Frenzied Member
Reinstall, or update to the latest one.
Or get Mozilla. From a site designer's standpoint I don't like it nearly as much as IE but it's still good.
I'm bringing geeky back...
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Aug 2nd, 2002, 04:54 AM
#3
Frenzied Member
Mozilla in my opinion is much, much better than IE, and it supports the standards properly. There is also Opera which is small and fast, but it doesn't support all the DHTML type things. Both are good. I use opera mainly, but mozilla almost as much, try them both
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Aug 2nd, 2002, 06:16 AM
#4
PowerPoster
Of course theres Netscape......
Does AOL have its own browser?
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Aug 2nd, 2002, 07:47 AM
#5
Frenzied Member
Rick Bull: IE supports the standards too, and supports them a lot more than Opera does. Besides, like 95% of the population uses IE anyway. Opera usually screws up all my tables, and Mozilla's still got problems with some mouseovers (admittedly I haven't tried 1.1 yet but 1.0 was very very nice, but not flawless).
PC Madness: AOL is using the IE engine, but there is rumour of them switching to the Netscape (Gecko) engine.
Last edited by JungleMan; Aug 2nd, 2002 at 07:50 AM.
I'm bringing geeky back...
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Aug 2nd, 2002, 10:39 AM
#6
Frenzied Member
Well IE does support most standards, it's just that it has a habbit of doing things not quite right, which makes it hard to code correctly. The problem you're having with table - do your pages validate?
I think it's almost definate that AOL are switching to Mozilla seeing as they are paying for it's development They're supposed to be switching to red hat too from Win 2000.
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Aug 2nd, 2002, 11:14 AM
#7
Black Cat
I like Mozilla, too. IE for Windows doesn't support the standards as well as people seem to think it does, and has certain things it plain out does wrong (HTML button tags, CSS scrollbar coloring). Mozilla works better than IE or Opera for me when coding. IE6 was a big improvement, but based on their Mac versions MS can still do better.
Also, when Mozilla crashes, it dies cleanly. When IE crashes, it locks up and I have to use task manager to kill it.
Also, one version of IE and multiple versions of Mozilla and Opera can co-exist nicely on your PC. Forget about Netscape - Mozilla is equivalent to it, just without the AOL ads and junk.
Josh
Get these: Mozilla Opera OpenBSD
I have books for sale: "MCSD in a Nutshell" and "VB Distributed Exam Cram" - PM me for details. Will also trade for a decent ATX Pentium 2 MB/CPU/RAM combo.
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Aug 2nd, 2002, 11:43 AM
#8
PowerPoster
Mozilla looks like bloody NS Communicator 4
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Aug 2nd, 2002, 12:41 PM
#9
Frenzied Member
Originally posted by JoshT
I like Mozilla, too. IE for Windows doesn't support the standards as well as people seem to think it does, and has certain things it plain out does wrong (HTML button tags, CSS scrollbar coloring). Mozilla works better than IE or Opera for me when coding. IE6 was a big improvement, but based on their Mac versions MS can still do better.
Also, when Mozilla crashes, it dies cleanly. When IE crashes, it locks up and I have to use task manager to kill it.
Also, one version of IE and multiple versions of Mozilla and Opera can co-exist nicely on your PC. Forget about Netscape - Mozilla is equivalent to it, just without the AOL ads and junk.
What's wrong with CSS scrollbar coloring? It's an added feature. It doesn't screw up non-compliant browsers and it looks cool on browsers that support it. I've done a few cool CSS/JavaScript tricks with layers and Opera just plain wouldn't budge, and IE worked yeah, maybe some of my coding was proprietary, but hey it's not like everyone follows the book 
IE supports standards, admittedly not as well as Mozilla, but Mozilla needs work (although as I've said, it's very good). And choosing between the two...well honestly more people use IE so I'll go with that...
Oh yeah, Netscape sucks
I'm bringing geeky back...
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Aug 2nd, 2002, 01:55 PM
#10
Black Cat
What's wrong with CSS scrollbar coloring? It's an added feature. It doesn't screw up non-compliant browsers and it looks cool on browsers that support it.
Per the CSS specs, it's not marked as proprietary, it's invalid CSS. In order for IE to meet the spec, it's required to ignore the invalid tags. See the following:
http://www.w3.org/Style/Examples/007/scrollbars.html
Note that the colored scrollbars don't even work for IE on Mac ( or so I've been told, I don't use a Mac anymore and if I did I wouldn't use IE anyway.)
Josh
Get these: Mozilla Opera OpenBSD
I have books for sale: "MCSD in a Nutshell" and "VB Distributed Exam Cram" - PM me for details. Will also trade for a decent ATX Pentium 2 MB/CPU/RAM combo.
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Aug 2nd, 2002, 11:08 PM
#11
Frenzied Member
W3C codebooks aside, who the heck cares? It's not hurting anyone. 
Those standards boys are really eccentric, I swear...no offense, just speakin my peace..
I'm bringing geeky back...
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Aug 2nd, 2002, 11:34 PM
#12
Good Ol' Platypus
Good god! Stop them! What's next? They've gone too far letting us have coloured scrollbars! Who's with me?!
All contents of the above post that aren't somebody elses are mine, not the property of some media corporation. 
(Just a heads-up)
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 05:05 AM
#13
Frenzied Member
Originally posted by chrisjk
Mozilla looks like bloody NS Communicator 4
You know you can change the way it looks from the View menu (I think).
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 11:34 AM
#14
Good Ol' Platypus
Mozilla IS based around Netscape's Gecko engine. I think it's a load of bullocks.
All contents of the above post that aren't somebody elses are mine, not the property of some media corporation. 
(Just a heads-up)
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 12:28 PM
#15
PowerPoster
Originally posted by Rick Bull
You know you can change the way it looks from the View menu (I think).
There's a choice between old Netscape and new Netscape looks 
It may be based around the same engine but that doesn't mean it has to be almost identical does it?! Everything is the same, menu structure, modal form design. *** is up with that?!
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 12:41 PM
#16
PowerPoster
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 01:05 PM
#17
Fanatic Member
Mozilla has alot of cool features, its the second best browser IMO
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 02:59 PM
#18
Lively Member
Well, my browser of choice is Mozilla. Look at that image chrisjk posted. That top checkbox, "Open unrequested windows" is a very useful feature. It prevents popups from showing except in cases where you actually want them. (edit: I just noticed that that's exactly what chrisjk was trying to point out in his post)
Once I found out that there's an addon for Mozilla to make it support mouse gestures, I switched over from Opera to Mozilla.
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 03:25 PM
#19
Monday Morning Lunatic
I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
-- Linus Torvalds
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 03:28 PM
#20
PowerPoster
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 03:32 PM
#21
PowerPoster
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 03:59 PM
#22
Lively Member
It's not as forgiving with the gestures as Opera is, though. You'll see what I mean.
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 04:52 PM
#23
PowerPoster
If like me you don't like the {Build ID: 0000000000} thing in the title bar, do this:
Those with Windows:
Close Mozilla and copy/paste en-US.jar to make a backup
You'll most likely have Winzip. Use that to open the en-US.jar file
Extract all the files to their relatives paths (use the Extract button in Winzip, don't drag & drop into a folder!)
Find the navigator-title.dtd file in \locale\en-US\navigator and edit it with notepad.
Remove both occurences of "{&buildId.label;}" and click File -> Save
Go back to the folder above locale (wherever you unpackaged en-US.jar). Right-click the locale folder and select Add To Zip
Make new zip archive from locale folder and it's subfolders
Winzip will probably make a file called locale.zip, rename it to en-US.jar in Explorer (having deleted original en-US.jar first)
Open Mozilla...Build ID no longer appears in title bar
You can see that here (in the User Comments section)
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 04:58 PM
#24
Monday Morning Lunatic
A good demonstration of one of the nice things about Mozilla....you can customise it to death (more flexibly than the IE "branding").
I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
-- Linus Torvalds
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 05:01 PM
#25
PowerPoster
IE's title bar branding is in the registry I think...that's easier than all that gubbins
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 05:05 PM
#26
Monday Morning Lunatic
Easier, yes, but it's all you can do...
I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
-- Linus Torvalds
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Aug 3rd, 2002, 05:10 PM
#27
PowerPoster
True that, and you have to get IEAK and agree to a licence thing to be allowed to mess with IE
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Aug 5th, 2002, 01:49 AM
#28
PowerPoster
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Aug 5th, 2002, 06:57 AM
#29
Frenzied Member
You couldn't pay me to use Netscape.
What ARE mouse gestures exactly? All I know is I'm keepin me IE, because it works and I have Popup Stopper Pro so the window killer is not a worry for me.
I'm bringing geeky back...
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Aug 5th, 2002, 08:47 AM
#30
PowerPoster
You move the mouse around in certain patterns and it performs actions, like opening another window, refreshing page and the like

You wouldn't need popup stopper if you used Mozilla
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