Originally posted by serpicolugnut
Are you high? There's nothing wrong with the UI in Chimera. It's as standard as standard can be. It follows the Aqua guidelines, and really, it's still only 60% done.
Chimera in my usage, has proven to be infinitely more stable than IE, not to mention faster.
Say hello to "iBrowse"...
I guess you didn't point at me with what you've said. I would never say IE's UI is better than Chimera's. I'm an OmniWeb user.
OmniWeb has spoiled me with intuitive and innovative features that let me work faster on the web. The only point where Chimera is strong is its speed, and - compared to OmniWeb - standards support.
But the UI of Chimera _is_ lacking. While the outer boundaries of Chimera adhere to the Cocoa guidelines, this stops at the inner workings of Chimera. For example, the handling of text isn't very good. If you double click on a part of an URL, for example, OmniWeb behaves as a real Cocoa app should: It selects the part between the slashes. Try it on this/pretty/example by double-clicking on the word pretty.
I guess it's a matter of opinion. I use the web mainly for reading and writing, thus I'm not loading a new page every few seconds. Guess that's why I can bear the slower page rendering of OW - which in my opinion isn't that bad either.
Furthermore, OW's great shortcut feature saves me much more time, really. I'm no fan of bookmarks, as I would have a pretty long list of them that I don't want to browse just to find the exact URL of, say, InfoSync. I would probably mistype it, because I tend to forget that it's
www.infosync.no and not
www.infosync.com, but I do remember 'iw', which is all I have to type into the location field.
Even better shortcuts: I can type 'google word' to find Google's search results for 'word'. Similarly, I can enter 'vt software' to find software on Versiontracker's Mac OS X database. Same for 'movie title' to find information on a movie named 'title' on the Internet Movie Database (imdb.com).
Those are the real timesavers. A bit of wait while the browser renders a page is merely a minor inconvenience to me. I don't lose my chain of thought through that process. I might, though, if I have to either remember an URL or search my bookmarks for one. Or if I keep selecting the wrong parts of an important text, just because the text features of my browser wouldn't behave according to the interface guidelines.
I appreciate, though, that Chimera has shown all players in this market that it IS possible to create a fast webbrowser on Mac OS X. If any Mac enemy tells me browsing is slow on the Mac, I - of course! - tell them to try a build of Chimera.