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-Jeff
http://blog.zemote.com
Jeff, I like it a lot. It renders standards-based sites better than IE 6, is far safer than IE 6, has tabs, and warns me when I'm being Phished.
I like Firefox too, mostly for extensions that help me blog.
IE 7 is gonna be the browser I load on most "normal people's" machines.
I'm going to download it soon, and give it a whirl. I've played with it at some conferences, but now i'll download it on my PC.
I'll be doing more of a review later.
Looks like a non-starter to me.
Customers choose google over MSN search by a factor of 6 to 1, and MSN search marketshare is declining.
Microsoft would be doing its customers a favor by using google as a default search tool in IE 7 - and doing its shareholders a favor by ceasing to leverage the Windows monopoly to gain a distributional advantage for MSN search in violation of antitrust law.
Would you include "Windows Messenger" in that category?. Talk about annoying. That is one impossible to get rid off - in your face - program.
:-p
Hash
I agree with your view that people are choosing google over MSN (I am one of them!). Why? Just because Google rocks. But i am very surprised that the same is encouraging intruding pop ups that are totally against there ethics and principles. Which is indeed monopoly...trying to influence a user. Dont you agree? Especially when IE7 already had them as the default search engine (Kudos to MS!)..MS atleast moved away from monopoly to some extent.
"***** always want credit for some shit they're supposed to do. They'll brag about stuff a normal man just does. They'll say something like, “Yeah, well I take care of my kids.” You're supposed to, you dumb *****. “I ain't never been to jail.” Whaddya want? A cookie? You're not supposed to go to jail, you low-expectation-having *****!"
I hope you asked them about performance issues, user reaction to advertising (negative), and finally firefox and alternative browser support.
Well, then, Robert... :) What pisses me off about IE 7 is that when displaying an RSS feed, IE automatically tramples upon any existing XML stylesheet and replaces it with its own.
I'm 100% in favor of the new RSS support included in IE 7. Make that 110%. But I think this trampling needs to be reserved for raw feeds.
The main reason I use FeedBurner to host my feed is the nice user-friendly style sheets that help the new user locate the aggregator *of their choice*. By removing the FeedBurner style sheet and replacing it with the MS one, IE7 is in effect eliminating choice.
1. Remove the text "about:blank" from the web site address. This is really odd text. It's arcane. It's confusing. (Why do you need to know about the blankness?)
2. Change the tab caption to not flash as often. Sometimes it first shows "Blank Page" then switches to "Loading..." and then switches back to "Blank Page" and then finally switches to the title of the target page. It shouldn't be showing the "Blank Page" title after it shows "Loading..."
3. Add an "ad block" feature. Firefox has an extension for blocking ads, which is the main reason that I am going to stick with Firefox.
4. The find dialog still does not work properly. If I press Ctrl+F and start typing immediately, not everything I type will always appear in the find dialog.
5. Opening a new tab is slow--it takes half a second. Firefox, by comparison, is instant.
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> parties to celebrate shipping a beta.
I think Eric Meyer put it best:
"Think about it. Would you work on a project that was the legal and administrative equivalent of a toxic cloud? Internet Explorer is the focal point of dozens of lawsuits, antitrust litigation, and more. It’s a project straitjacketed by its own success (however rightly or wrongly that success was achieved). I don’t have any direct knowledge of this, but the IE team has probably become the Marie Celeste of Microsoft, a doomed wanderer of the bureaucratic seas, staffed by a few trapped souls and the subject of whispered tales of horror among the engineers."
http://meyerweb.com/eric/thoughts/2005/03/21/
Given this, I think the IE7 team really do, in Beta2, have something to celebrate.