Amie
Mac Convert for Life
Then we all must be dead.fryke said:Browsers are for weak people.
Then we all must be dead.fryke said:Browsers are for weak people.
Firefox's original default buttons are much better than Safari's, IMO. Still, I like the variation of themes. Which Safari doesn't even have.Lt Major Burns said:firefox doesn't have PithHelmet. firefox does have horrible buttons.
Themes! Themes!Veljo said:To be honest I don't really like Firefox. It isn't really built into the interface properly, and it feels sloppy and wrong.
Mikuro said:By the way: I just recently tried OmniWeb again. It really doesn't get the attention it deserves. Of course, that's probably because it's not freeware like every other popular browser. I recommend checking it out.
Amie said:I don't use any ad blocker (free or otherwise), because I don't see any ads, anyway. Explain that.
You know too much. LOLMikuro said:Themes can only change the look, though. If it were just the looks that bothered me, then...well, it wouldn't really bother me. The problem is that Firefox doesn't act or feel like a Mac program. And so far all the themes I've tried only make it even less Mac-like.
Just to give one example, look at the popup menus anywhere in Firefox (e.g., control-click, or use a menu in your personal toolbar). They're complete hacks, and don't look or act the way Mac menus should. Appearance-wise, I don't really care; I don't like OS X's menu transparency anyway. But working with these menus, especially when they have sub-menus, is a pain in the kiester, because it doesn't work the way every other program does. Using Firefox, I feel like I might as well be running Windows-in-a-Box. Applications should not invent their own basic UI controls. That's what we have OSes for.
Most other controls in Firefox have similar problems. It's a big turnoff.
Firefox also doesn't get some of OS X's goodies like the floating dictionary (Tiger only), built-in spell checker, etc.
I really want to like Firefox. It's so flexible, and it makes the geek in me happy. But it makes the Mac user in me very, very sad.
Firefox is still my second browser, though, and has earned a place in my Dock, right below Safari. It's by no means a bad browser. But it has an awful lot of rough edges.
By the way: I just recently tried OmniWeb again. It really doesn't get the attention it deserves. Of course, that's probably because it's not freeware like every other popular browser. I recommend checking it out.
B-o-r-i-n-g!fryke said:I like my browser _without_ visible interface besides a titlebar and scrollbar(s). OmniWeb therefore has been my default choice since the days of Rhapsody DR 2 and Mac OS X DP 4/Public Beta, back then because there _wasn't_ anything else (IE5 in Public Beta was s.l.o.w.!) and later on because it was simply too good.
And wow, Amie: You seem to be on a roll...
How did you know?!symphonix said:Err, you live under a rock in some sort of desert and post messages on the forums by passing them to a mysterious stranger who takes them to the Internet Cafe for you in exchange for your advice on religious matters?
Ah ... yes, OK. I see what you mean. I was thinking of pop-up ads. Gee, I don't even notice those ads in Google or Yahoo anymore. Been using them for so long, it doesn't even phase me. Truth be told, I don't mind 'em at all ... and sometimes ... I even read 'em.symphonix said:Seriously, Amie, I know Safari blocks pop-up ads. But AdBlock, SafariBlock and PithHelmet block *ALL* the ads on the pages themselves. With the GoogleExtensions and YahooExtensions tools, you won't even see Google or Yahoo text advertisements on the page, and when you run Google searches you'll only see results based on Page-Rank, and not sponsored links.
But ... but ... but ... I might want to read them sometime.Lt Major Burns said:it's only when they've gone do you realise just how subconciously irritating they were. pithhelmet forever baby.
'Cause clicking is fun. Animated tool bar icons are fun. And why spend all that finger work and keystroke combinations when you can accomplish the same thing with a single click of a mouse. Ah well. To each his own.fryke said:It's not boring. It's maximising screen real estate! Why spend 20-50 vertical pixels for buttons that can _all_ be controlled via the keyboard anyway? I mean: Why have back and forward buttons (of _whatever_ theme...) if you're going to hit Cmd-RightArrow/LeftArrow anyway... At least that's how it is for me. I don't like wasted space...
Mikuro said:Just to give one example, look at the popup menus anywhere in Firefox (e.g., control-click, or use a menu in your personal toolbar). They're complete hacks, and don't look or act the way Mac menus should. Appearance-wise, I don't really care; I don't like OS X's menu transparency anyway. But working with these menus, especially when they have sub-menus, is a pain in the kiester, because it doesn't work the way every other program does. Using Firefox, I feel like I might as well be running Windows-in-a-Box. Applications should not invent their own basic UI controls. That's what we have OSes for.
fryke said:t's not boring. It's maximising screen real estate! Why spend 20-50 vertical pixels for buttons that can _all_ be controlled via the keyboard anyway? I mean: Why have back and forward buttons (of _whatever_ theme...) if you're going to hit Cmd-RightArrow/LeftArrow anyway... At least that's how it is for me. I don't like wasted space...
Uhh...thanks?Amie said:You know too much. LOL
It's because Firefox is written with Carbon, whereas Safari uses Cocoa. Cocoa apps get a lot of things "for free", like spell checking. It might be possible to access these things from Carbon (I'm not sure), but it certainly takes work, whereas with Cocoa you'd have to go out of your way NOT to have these features. Most Carbon apps, like Firefox, AppleWorks, and even the Finder, don't have these features.Two features that I really do like in Safari that Firefox is lacking: 1) The check-spelling-as-you-type option. Not sure why FF developers left that out.
I've been looking around Firefox's extension page, and I found a gem called Tab Mix Plus. It gives you a close button on every tab, plus a lot more. With this, Firefox's tab system skyrockets past Safari's. Finally I have the option to have links that open in a new window open a new TAB instead! (A feature I've previously seen only in iCab.)The single tab close button for each individual tab.
umm, that's a standard feature in Firefox preferences, have a look.Mikuro said:Finally I have the option to have links that open in a new window open a new TAB instead! (A feature I've previously seen only in iCab.)