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Comments on: Reg readers in Firefox 3 lovefest

I take it 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 01:11 GMT

Gates Horns

that you are banning all those that visited with IE.*?

Shut up, Webster. 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 01:13 GMT

You are a skipping record. Nobody wants to read it anymore.

Cool 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 01:15 GMT

Thumb Up

Who are the holdouts running IE5/FF1 though?

And I wonder... 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 01:17 GMT

I wonder how many of those who are classified as IE are actually using something like "user agent switcher" on Firefox, because of some rogue sites and all that...

Coding? 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 01:33 GMT

Gates Horns

"The Reg has no objection to readers using Internet Explorer. But we would welcome the death of IE6. Coding for IE6 is not enjoyable."

And its better for 7?

Who the fuck 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 01:41 GMT

Stop

is still using IE 5? It'll be 10 years old in under 6 months!

Linux + Firefox = Happiness 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 01:45 GMT

Alert

Linux distributions installs Firefox/Iceweasal by default, so this may have something to do with the high usage of the Gecko engine. Still I cant believe people are still using IE5,6 especially with such major exploits and bugs! Come on people, follow the crowd, join the revolution and install firefox today. Free yourself from the torment of IE.

Interesting 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 01:59 GMT

Thumb Up

At our suite of retail sites I see that we have a bit above normal FF usage for most of them, but our youth-oriented site sees over 40% FF traffic.

IE6 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 03:05 GMT

Stop

> Coding for IE6 is not enjoyable

Ummm you missed out IE7 as well here. Get rid of that as well.

Fail and you 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 03:24 GMT

Your site has all sorts of rendering glitches when viewed from linux+firefox. I had suspected you didn't care much, but if its 47% of your base, maybe you should put a bit of work into it....

Sudden Interstitial Assault 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 03:37 GMT

Unhappy

IE6 is mandatory where I work. Sorry.

What 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 03:44 GMT

Thumb Up

No Mosaic?

how about Elinks and 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 05:19 GMT

other text browsers? i use one regularly.

i use firefox1... 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 06:38 GMT

Stop

I tried ff2 when it came out, but getting rid of the 'close tab' button on the far right made it a chore to use.

So when i open a lot of tabs (like for a days worth of webcomics), i can read and close each tab without having to move the pointer (trackpad on lappy).

Hell, it would still work if the tabs stayed the same size, as the little X would be in the same place.

But no.

That would be too consistent.

@ i use firefox1... 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 08:05 GMT

use this extension

http://tmp.garyr.net/

it gives you lots of tab browsing extras, there is no need to live in the dark ages any more.

Close Tab Returned 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 08:44 GMT

Thumb Up

with FF3. At least I have it on mine.

Never use it though :)

Could be 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 09:01 GMT

Thumb Up

that Adblock is very good at removing irritating ads...

"Coding for IE6 is not enjoyable" 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 09:14 GMT

Stop

Then don't do it.

When you detect IE5.5 or 6 - Tell them.

@AC ff1 : ctrl+W anyone? 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 09:31 GMT

Stop

Heard of keyboard shortcuts? Or does ff1 predate the keyboard? No skating rink required!

Beating the obvious with an obvious stick 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 09:33 GMT

"But we would argue that Reg readers exhibit a certain technical savvy you won't find in the general population."

Er well this site ain't exactly Chat Magazine, Heat or Reloaded etc.

But it is reassuring to know that a good percentage of IT professionals are using the more secure browsing technology.

Now if the same survey were taken of sites such as The Sun, OK magazine and Nuts magazine I reckon IE will most certainly dominate. I have always believed that readers of such publications prefer to have their thinking done for them.

FF1 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 09:41 GMT

Jobs Horns

I use firefox 1 because I am stuck with that or safari on my work computer. At home, it is Ubuntu with FF3 for my browsing pleasures.

IE6 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 09:52 GMT

Unhappy

I'm sad to say I make up part of the 16% using IE6 because I have no choice at work.

The front page really doesn't work properly on it at all, lots of overlaps.

@Fail and you 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 10:07 GMT

Alert

Err, I've never seen this site show any rendering issues with Firefox on linux?

Unless you call those annoying Flash adverts rendering issues ...

IE6 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 10:18 GMT

The reason there will be quite a few with IE 6 is that in some places like libraries, they have a fixed set of software installed and in my local library, they use IE6, Adobe Acrobat Reader 5 and most have Office 2000. So places like libraries where they do not want to update software are stuck in a time warp.

The reason that I have IE6 installed (although unused) is that I need the WGA in order to upgrade from IE6 to IE7.

Compulsory Punishment 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 10:24 GMT

Unhappy

Much like anonymous from Mars I also browse from work where I am forced to suffer the iniquities of IE6.

At home it is anyone of FF3, Opera 9.5 or Chrome depending on my mood.

You forgot 8 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 10:46 GMT

Gates Horns

You also forgot IE 8, even compatability mode sucks. Microshaft should stop with the browser idea and concentrate on making an operating system that doesnt plain suck.

I hear winblows 7 might be better than the last attempt but im sceptical.

LONG LIVE FIREFOX!

old timer 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 10:46 GMT

Linux

Yupp I own up.

I'm the one running FF1

Mainly because it come with this Linux distro( Fedora 6) and I cant be bothered to spend all my life upgrading stuff, tweaking it , finally after 4 weeks customising and getting it running just right, having to do it all again because they've released another version.

And besides... I use Mozilla 1.5 when running in windoze mode

What I want to know 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 11:01 GMT

is, who the hell's still using IE5?

I for one 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 11:46 GMT

Coat

welcome our new reg-reading firefox-using overlords, although I still worship at the alter of Opera.

How many people would constitute the 3.6% enjoyed by Opera? I do hope that's not just me!

Opera wins over FF in terms of startup time and performance when browsing with 20+ tabs open, although its inventory of Widgets is not quite as impressive. FF is getting closer performance wise, so I'll just have to be satisfied with the knowledge the FF and IE steal everything from Opera anyway. Although got to give them the credit for pr0n mode.

About 85% of my company still uses IE6 and I'm with the Reg, it is a ba$tard to code for. IE7 isn't great either but it is nowhere near as bad.

I've just got to convince IT to force an IE7 upgrade (FF or Opera preferrably) but I will settle for IE7.

Mines the one with the memory stick in the pocket containing Opera 9.6.

IE*5*? 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 11:56 GMT

Jesus Aitch Ker-rist. That's like screaming "Pwn me" through a megaphone. Are those lusers still on Win98 too?

@ i use firefox1... 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 12:14 GMT

Firefox is configurable - http://kb.mozillazine.org/Browser.tabs.closeButtons

@ i use firefox1... 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 12:24 GMT

IT Angle

"Ctrl-W" closes tabs...

@ i use firefox1... 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 12:32 GMT

or alternatively use ctrl+w (command+w).

works for me.

Opera is better though

</websterbait>

Opera 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 12:56 GMT

Heart

I use opera. I have 29 tabs open in my general interest window(when I have more open it is hard for me to see the icons and remember what is which tab), and in windows for specific tasks I keep more tabs open that work. When I shut (volentary or not) I re-open opera nad all windows re-open with all tabs intact.This has been the norm for years. I only use FF2 for google docs and to run an addon that gives me mouse over translation of Japanese(not available for FF3 ). I use Safari for plugin testing. But then for me a browser is tool I don't want to spend hunderds of hours installing add-on and answering daily upgrade messages, I just want to use it.

And yes IE6 is eviler than most MS software.

IE7 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 12:58 GMT

Flame

"And its better for 7?"

Yes, actually. FF has a lot of rendering bugs you know, but because people have now been indoctrinated with "firefox is standards compliant", they believe it does it right and everyone else is wrong.

Sure, IE7 and firefox disagree sometimes... sometimes ff is right, other times it's wrong. Yes, it would be easier if every browser shared the same bugs, but then that would lead to crappy code that just happens to look right on everything.

I hate it when people bash IE just because they're in the church of firefox!

Now, I'd even be prepared to use FF more, if it behaved better and it was faster to start up! I tend to double click on it, look up the site in IE, then see if FF has started, continue browsing in IE, double check, etc, etc

Flame away

standards 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 13:02 GMT

Just program for web standards and be done with it. Screw any browsers that aren't compatible with web standards.

BTW, Firefox use is more like 23% in the U.S. and 30% or so in the U.K., but as always who knows what figures are really accurate, but something close to that seems to be the general consensus for many statistics sites. Maybe they just copy each other tho. ;)

@Anonymous Coward 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 13:06 GMT

Try about:config and changing browser.tabs.closeButtons.

http://kb.mozillazine.org/Browser.tabs.closeButtons

Well I would, but... 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 13:22 GMT

Firefox 3 crashes on me regularly, and it's the only app on by Intrepid install that does so it's nowt to do with the OS or the machine, just Firefox being unreliable.

Opera on the other hand is 100% reliable. So maybe your figures show that your readers prefer behaving like sheep to having a reliable browser.h

@ i use firefox1... 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 13:36 GMT

Or just use Ctrl W to close your current tab

I'd make a comment 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 13:45 GMT

about the low Opera share but I still can't post comments using Opera so I won't.

@ i use firefox1... 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 13:58 GMT

Boffin

Ctrl + F4.

Oops 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 14:07 GMT

Gates Horns

I was thinking "If The Reg has a techie skew to its figures, who the hell's using IE6?".

Then I remembered I occasionally visit The Reg at work while using the stupid "Frontpage in a browser" web-site editor monstosity that still doesn't have IE7 or Firefox compatability. Annoys the hell out of me that all my projects have to cater for IE6 as that's what's rolled out around the business.

Tabmix Plus 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 14:15 GMT

Thumb Up

is the name of the extension. It is the ability to extend FF & the huge range of extensions that make it so useful. Some of the extensions like Greasemonkey allow you to write your own webpage-enhancing script, increasing extensibility even further.

Adblock & NoScript need to be shouted about as well. My boss uses IE7 at work & when i see the garbage adverts splattered ll over his screen, and all the time & resources they take up - I have to laugh.

Yes I know IE7 has extensions, but you don't hear a lot about them do you? Last time I looked (a while ago i admit) most of them were *for sale* lol.

Firefox 3 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 14:19 GMT

I tried Firefox 3 and wasn't impressed, so I went back to version 2.

IE6 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 14:59 GMT

Alert

I have access to 2 different corporates networks for my current job. Both of them have IE6 as the standard browser and no immediate plans to change this :(

That's probably where a lot of the IE6 traffic is from, legacy setups in corporates :s

Re: O'Brien 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 15:21 GMT

Stop

"And its better for 7?"

7 at least has a semblance of understanding CSS, 6 is about as far off the beaten track as it's possible to go. We're considering an IE6 dedicated punchbag at work soon. I'm more in favour of the classic

if(IE6 == true)

{

alert("The eighties called and they want their web browser back. Now fuck off and update your shit, bozo");

}

We do still have a very large and well known client that has lots of IE6 users. Company laptops. Shameful

Coding 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 15:29 GMT

Thumb Up

Yes, coding for IE6 is a pain, and yes, coding for IE7 is better.

Coding for IE7 is very easy. Simply ensure that you have the XHTML doctype, and then when the page still doesn't render correctly, tell the user to get a functional browser.

IE Developer Hell & Opera Heaven 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 16:03 GMT

Thumb Up

Thanks, Cade, for mentioning the non-standard IE development hell for web developers. If that same line was mentioned in every browser article, IE would die much faster and free up all that developer time for more cool things.

@And I Wonder:

Yeah, was wondering about user-agent masking also, since Opera has used that as a defense for years to web sites that cripple Opera users with bad entry scripts. (MSNBC, are you listening?) Do these stats check for the Presto engine (in Opera) or is FF and IE getting their stats padded? To get an idea of the amount of work Opera has to do to deal with mangled sites, via Opera's browserJS:

http://www.opera.com/docs/browserjs/

And userJS is another tool for Opera users also:

http://www.opera.com/support/tutorials/userjs/

@I use firefox1:

Just use Opera v9.6 since all those advanced tab features that you want are already built-in, without add-ons. (And, has Opera Link to sync your bookmarks, Speed Dial, and search engines, plus WAY more -- yes, a granular adblocker) ;))

where do i fit in? 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 16:07 GMT

Joke

Surely atleast half of your traffic must be me browsing the reg on my mobile in order to distract myself from work/ the world around - i'm the one on operamini.

oh, i see... this is the traffic from all the other visitors who don't love you as much.

Re: How about Elinks 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 17:20 GMT

Thumb Up

Well, 5.1% "other" so I guess that covers it. I mainly use Firefox 3, but have to admit having used elinks a couple times; the register is actually pretty text-browser friendly. I also have my phone pointed to www.google.com as a WAP proxy and read the register through that (which probably shows some google user-agent string that'll also show as "other".

er what? 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 18:03 GMT

Thumb Down

"But we would argue that Reg readers exhibit a certain technical savvy you won’t find in the general population."

You can argue all you want, won't make it true. I argue that Red readers exhibit a certain gullability in believing marketing hype for technical items you won't find in the general populace. How else can you explain the support for that buggy and bloated browser... Firefox.

Which browser site distributed a trojan for months through their official add on site? Oh yeah, mozilla.

Which browser markets itself as 'safest' yet has still not patched all the exploits on its last version? Or for that matter, the current version according to secunia? Firefox!

Two browsers, covering versions from the same period of time. One has had 172 exploits, according to secunia, one has had 41. Guess which one's firefox (HINT start high!, comparing Firefox 2.x on, to opera 9.x on)

Really trying to think why people use firefox, beyond some intrinsic and unsubstantiatable point that 'open source is better' for some reason i've yet to work out, despite working on it for 3 years.

Me? I'll keep with my safer, faster, more secure and innovative opera.

IE5 - What did you do during the war? 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 18:44 GMT

Black Helicopters

Despite what you nerds might think, IE5 is still a consideration for any serious non-nerdy site.

There are lots of people out there who bought a computer within the last 10 years and it hasn't broken down so they're still using it. They can't see any problems with the pages they browse (whether there are indeed problems or not) so they don't see the point in spending a fortune on a new one. They don't run Windows update or bother with free upgrades because, again, they can't see the point of changing anything that doesn't need fixing.

These people are often middle aged or older, a bit clueless with technology at the best of times (You can replace their old site with a spangly new Web 2.0 site and the only thing that'll impress them is the fact that you changed the font or the colours) and unfortunately are either in charge or influential. So you can't afford to present them with a site that breaks when they try it, and then tell them it's *their* fault. They very rarely own a car or TV older than their computer too, and look at you like an idiot when you point that out in order to try and explain how out of date their software is.

I have Windows Media Player 9 and I don't want to upgrade to version 11. The damn think keeps pestering me to upgrade and there's no option to disable this warning. Why do MS think it's perfectly fine to pester the user over the program that plays their MP3s but not their web browser? If IE5 and 6 were popping up a message every week telling them to get an upgrade, I'm sure more people would have, and IE5 would be closer to being dead than it is right now.

Even if we could get the Windows 95 users onto IE5.5 and the 90 users onto 6.0 it would be better, but all my logs show that there are far more IE5.0 users than 5.5.

Also, major websites could help by providing 'incentives' to change browsers sooner. The BBC still lists IE5.0 as a supported browser. If the iPlayer didn't work in it, or too many news articles were unreadable people would soon upgrade. The same goes with every other major site around the world.

Ultimately, people only dropped NS4 in the end because too many sites broke. IE5.0 does dynamic rendering and AJAX so it's still more practicable to use hacks to get it working whereas with NS4 you were up against a dead wall. And how many posters here who make websites deliberately annoy IE5 users by inserting messages to upgrade on every page, or provide an alternative stylesheet that makes the site look more boring?

re: But we would argue that Reg readers 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 18:57 GMT

Flame

>> exhibit a certain technical savvy you won’t find in the general population

you'd argue this - even after seeing the standards of comments. :-p

@Grant 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 19:12 GMT

"gives me mouse over translation of Japanese(not available for FF3 )". Try perapera-kun, but youre talking about rikai-chan aren't you, works for me in ff3

Opera and me 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 20:10 GMT

I'd dearly love to use Operra, but they seem unable to make cookie-handling simple -- so I don't. There are a few interface things that always annoy me too -- but I could probably get used to them.

Until then -- Firefox all the way.

Perhaps most, if not all, of the people using IE5 and such are really using Opera and changing the user string? Would make more sense on a techy site than them being hold-outs.

Well... 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 20:16 GMT

Go

I use Firefox 2 at work as not all the plugins I need work on Firefox 3. I use a mixture at home depending on what I'm working on at the time; Firefox 3 on openSUSE or WXP, NetSurf or Oregano 1 if I'm on RISC OS.

Yeah, I still have IE6 but it's only there to do things that lazy coders or greedy corporates with sponsorships to consider refuse to code up properly (hello, Juniper!)

Need to use FF to turn off ads! 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 21:00 GMT

Using Mac Os, I tend to use Safari out of inertia, but if visit the Reg using Safari, CPU usage goes up to 100% instantly. I have to use FF with NoScript to save the battery and my legs. I seem to remember I saw the same with IE, but I now use FF exclusively on Windows.

Too much Flash may be bad for your click-through rates.

IE5 ? 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 21:10 GMT

Gates Halo

So who is using IE5 ? Me sometimes, my iPaq runs WM2003 and I'm pretty sure the mobile IE is based on IE 5, are all IE5 hits WinMo devices ?

Also to everyone complaining about Firefox 3 crashing, did you uninstall 2 reboot then install 3 ?

It can make a big difference.

Firefox usage. 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 21:25 GMT

Thumb Up

Sounds about right, looking at my web stats: http://www.paullee.com/computers/index.php

Really? 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 21:38 GMT

"Really trying to think why people use firefox, beyond some intrinsic and unsubstantiatable point that 'open source is better' for some reason i've yet to work out, despite working on it for 3 years."

What utter nonsense. NEway, the main reason is extension support, notably Adblock. It is possible to block ads in Opera but it's very messy and doesn't update automatically. Opera is a decent browser, and the Wand feature is great, but I've given it a serious try several times over the years and I always end up back with Firefox - whether it was Ctrl-Enter on addresses not working (now fixed), websites not working properly, the annoying download manager... there was always something that annoyed me.

I'm more interested in Chrome, which is already very promising. With extension support (currently being worked on) and more features, particularly regarding privacy (I don't want it remembering my visited websites but I don't want to use the Incognito mode all the time), I can see it going places. The interface is superior. The features are great. It's based on webkit, which is more standards compatible and updated constantly (unlike Firefox, which takes aeons to make very little progress). I use Firefox 3 at the moment... it's far from perfect but it's currently the best out there.

@Francis Boyle & Cameron Colley 

Posted Saturday 15th November 2008 22:52 GMT

Problems posting comments with Opera? No problem with it here on Linux or XP (home or work). So it sure ain't Opera that's the problem.

Likewise cookie handling. It's simple and straight forward.

Firefox? Baaaaah. Baaaaaah. Baaaaaaah.

Emacs 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 02:24 GMT

I'm often using GNU Emacs/W3M, personally, so that will be part of the 5% or so at the bottom of the list (I'm using it to post this comment).

If not, I'll probably be on Konqueror because my Desktop GUI is KDE.

I'm also another one hoping for the day when IE6 dies (please!!!).

Meanwhile on the other side of the internet 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 03:13 GMT

On my site, which admittedly a travel site rather than a technical one, the bias is very different. On there IE users outnumber FF 10:1.

Almost every visitor is running Windows (XP or Vista), but what's interesting is the XP:Vista ratio: XP now outnumbers Vista by just 2:1.

Windows overall outnumbers OSX by more than 100:1, and the Linux share is effectively non-existent. I have more search engine indexing visits than Linux visitors ;)

Oh, and for those in favour of making any site say "get a browser that works"; you're the main reason the general population dislikes Firefox. They don't care what they browse with, but they *do* care when someone prevents them from doing what they want to do. Putting the shoe on the other foot, how would you feel if someone set their website up to force you to "upgrade" from FF to IE? No, didn't think you'd be so keen on that ;)

further 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 03:32 GMT

If you try these browsers on an ASUS EEE PC, with a slow CPU and a flash drive, you'll see how much faster than IE Opera really is.

The interesting thing to me is not that Microsoft has been passed up by Opera and Firefox. It's that the gap is increasing. Microsoft has many brilliant people but is today a huge multi-headed bureaucracy.

It's Adblock Plus, silly... 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 04:34 GMT

Heart

Mayeb the higher than average Firefox counts are down to the availability of ABP + Filterset.G. Much as I love you, my dear El Reg, you are going a bit Ryanair lately, what with the bloody flash everywhere.

Tell them to bugger off 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 08:46 GMT

As soon as IE traffic drops below 25%, I'm guessing you can just put up a page saying "sorry, your browser is shite, get a better one" to any IE user. Just like so many websites did for so many years with regards to using Microsoft IE, where I got really tired of seeing the equivalent of "fuck off you non-Microsoft using pirate, we can't be bothered to create standards compliant websites and we're only coding for IE".

Turnabout would be SO sweet.

chrome 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 09:48 GMT

I use Chrome at the moment. It's not quite ideal, but I was getting a bit fed up with FF refusal to implement some kind of multi-threaded / process model. For some reason, at the time I was first trying out Chrome, something made my FF installation highly unreliable, so I've stuck with it.

I had FF tweaked very much how I like it. But it seemed to start a) crashing quite a bit on my system and b) saying stuff along the lines of 'oh hai, I've upgraded myself to version n+1e-6, and that means TabMixPlus won't work any more. kthxbye'. Chasing around fixing stuff like that is *dull* in the extreme.

Actually, Chrome has also had it's odd funny moment, with the interface not responding or the browser crashing.

Opera's a good browser. Maybe I should use that more. I used to be put off by not being able to replicate my FF setup, but I've trained myself to be less fussy now...

Firefox Portable 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 10:25 GMT

Go

If those at work cannot install software, consider portableapps.com for your needs.

Hopefully your nasty admins are not blocking your useragent at your outbound gateway.... ;)

@Ideala2 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 12:15 GMT

don't forget me, I'm at least 50% of that Opera Mini traffic

No problems posting from Opera. 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 13:20 GMT

Happy

nt

SeaMonkey Savvy 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 14:55 GMT

Linux

I've been using SeaMonkey for about a year now. It's basically a continuation of NetScape. Works fine for me, has only crashed once.

SeaMonkey 1.1.11 on Suse 10.3

http://www.seamonkey-project.org/

GO FF! 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 14:55 GMT

Go

good.

btw, i can second that last comment about "coding for IE6". i do basic web dev and i write to FF and fix to IE...and it's usually quite a bit of fixing.

if i didn't have to do this browser compatibilty dance each time i got a bit of work, i could possibly shave 5-10% off the workload! (ahem, but obviously would still charge the same!).

i would also like to point out that the "first 10 days in november" thing, is not so exclusive. these sorts of 40+% figures for FF are echoed at w3schools.com:

http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp

..which i also like because you can look back over the progression/regression of FF and various other browsers, including the steady decline of IE, which is always nice to see! ;)

cheers,

bill

p.s. stuff and nonsense: http://www.eupeople.net/forum

We're all using Opera in "Pretend you're something else" mode 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 14:57 GMT

operaoperaoperaoperaopera see

close tabs (numpties) 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 14:59 GMT

Alert

Control F4 will also close a tab...because...wait for it!

it's a "document" within an "application" window!

easy huh?!

got to love browser wars II 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 15:12 GMT

Gates Horns

If most people are using firefox, and if all of those use adblock plus then really why would el reg bother to put ads on the site? I use Ubunbtu + firefox3 + adblock plus. Out of interest, who else uses adblock or similar?

I too would welcome the death of IE6.

@ David Ackrill re: Firefox upgrade. 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 15:25 GMT

Like you I found the transition from 2 to 3 to be a bit of a culture shock, what with the truly awful 'Awesome' bar and the childish 'Most Visited' features indicating that there is too much Google cash swilling around Mozilla at the moment. Bling and Web 2ness are the playthings of the marketing boys and they seem to be running the show now.

Fortunately the original developers of Firefox made it highly configurable and extensible so that it is relatively easy to get rid of the crap and still enjoy the security benefits of an upgraded browser. Go for it.

Dumb and Dumber. 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 15:29 GMT

Thumb Down

FF has had me worried ever since Mozilla decided that when I type w into the address bar on my laptop it should:

www.show-clients

www.everything-in

www.my-browsinghistory

Awesome indeed.

I also now use -f switched shutdown after a beautiful example of taking time off work / coming back to find FF3 asking: 'Are you sure? Wouldn't you like your browser to keep you logged in to Windows and your encrypted volume of security systems, banking and accounting details?' Aye, I was sure.

But I'll put up with anything rather than go back to flash overlays covering what I'm reading like some insane clown and monkeys asking to be punched.

If you can't do decent markup... 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 15:35 GMT

Jobs Horns

It shouldn't matter what browser you use to surf the web, within reason. The issue at stake here is lazy and ineffective web developers.

Internet Explorer 6 - yes, it's a pain, but if you can't code your way around it's problems, then your pretty dumb.

Compared with 5.5, it's a godsend.

As for Internet Explorer 7, no problems. If you know what your doing, you can use the same markup for ie7 as you do for Gecko based browsers.

The moment a website relies on Javascript/Ajax to render information is the moment you effectively "break" the web, especially when it uses code that isn't standards compliant.

Bottom line, a website should be able to deliver the same basic information to a text based browser as it does to a GUI based modern browser. If your site falls apart without Javascript, to the point where no information is delivered, do us a favour and go home and shoot yourself.

IE5 suggestions 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 17:39 GMT

Version 5 was the final Internet Explorer for Mac OS, Mac OS X, Windows 3.1, Windows 95, Solaris and HP-UX. Maybe the aggregate of those users contributes something towards its surprisingly strong showing?

@yeah, right 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 18:57 GMT

Unhappy

Indeed it would be nice to tell IE users to get lost. The most annoying example of "IE-only" sites I came across was when Royal Bank of Scotland introduced internet banking. I went to have a look at it in Opera, only to be told "For security reasons, the only supported browser is Internet Explorer". After laughing for about half an hour, I started looking for a new bank. For a banking site to say you must use the least secure web browser on the market was a bit scary, really.

Opera 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 19:44 GMT

Happy

One of the 3.6% Opera users here, though I do use Firefox occasionally for the sake of a couple of plugins. As for IE 7, I only ever use it for a single solitary website whose Shockwave content just won't play nice with either Opera or Firefox.

The Reg stats made me take a look at the stats for a little website I run that averages around 12,000 unique visitors a month, and I found we'd had 53.3% Firefox, 31.5% IE, and 5.3% Safari (what?)...

Two-timer 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 20:20 GMT

Thumb Up

I use both firefox and Opera about evenly. The issue with firefox, where scrolling pages with fixed backgrounds is sooooo sloooow annoys me to hell - how come Opera can do it? Opera has annoying features too, eg why can't you right-click in the bookmarks menu and open a bookmark in a new tab/window like in Firefox? Horses for courses, I suppose.

Coding for IE6 is a chore 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 20:56 GMT

Boffin

Umm, shouldn't you be coding for a web standard (WC3 etc) instead of for a brand of browser?

Methinks your IT department needs a review of WBP (World's Best Practice) for web development...

What about IE4? 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 23:00 GMT

Paris Hilton

Seriously though, what with all this talk of ABP, all I can say is that I disable it when perusing El Reg - this journalism lark doesn't pay for itself you know?

And, before anyone says it, don't fucking tell me about the wonderful world of volunteer citizen journalism - I don't want to get my news from an ill-informed 14 year old with too much time on their hands because they got bored of wanking, I already get my encyclopaedia from them after all.

Paris because she could make use of Cock Block Plus but has instead chosen to disable it entirely.

ie6 

Posted Sunday 16th November 2008 23:23 GMT

I don't what brand of browser people use, the differance between IE7 and Firefox is negligable to Joe Sixpack who only wants to check their hotmail/ebay/facebook.

I do wish people would upgrade from IE6, its a buggy backwards browser and makes the jobs of web-developers like myself miserable as we have to hack away at perfectly valid HTML/CSS to get it to work in a depreciated browser that AFAIK hasn't had an update in naerly 5 years.

Sadly, if we're asked to accommodate the Mac users in the 1-2% range then it will be a long time before the IE6 mob still in the 20%+ range gets phased out.

@Two-timer 

Posted Monday 17th November 2008 02:30 GMT

Heart

Try the middle button. It works everywhere, including the bookmarks menu.

Yep, Opera here.

IE sux 

Posted Monday 17th November 2008 03:35 GMT

Thumb Down

Oh yes it does!

@Tim J 

Posted Monday 17th November 2008 04:36 GMT

Thumb Up

Might as well hide 'em, cos I sure as hell ain't gonna click 'em, sorry.

Companies (inc El Reg) know that a certain proportion of the readers will have ad blocking software and that some people just won't click obnoxious in your face ads, visible or not. They factor that into the positioning and amount of advertising to maximise the impact on the people left (a small percentage, I'd guess) that are likely to click.

Put simply, those of us who block ads ain't gonna bankrupt El Reg, so quit worrying.

OS breakdown 

Posted Monday 17th November 2008 08:06 GMT

Go

Whilst you're analysing the logs, how about an OS breakdown while you're there? I'm sure I'm not the only one who would love to know what percentage of the site's visitors are running Vista / XP /OSX / linux ....

IE6 hanging around for a loooooong time yet... 

Posted Monday 17th November 2008 09:41 GMT

Unhappy

The company where I work (~15,000 desktops) is only just starting to pilot IE7. On ~150 desktops. I think IE6 is going to be around for a veeeery long time yet.

Where I work 

Posted Monday 17th November 2008 12:50 GMT

Thumb Up

Firefox is the officially supported / recommended browser for my employer (IBM) and most of use update often. Also at least 30% of my office colleagues are using Linux as their main desktop Operating system (despite the fact that we do a fair amount of windows development - but thats what VM's are for).

Coding for IE / Opera / etc 

Posted Monday 17th November 2008 13:44 GMT

Thumb Up

Hmm having tried to code a page so it displayed correctly in IE / Opera 6( it was a long time ago) and netscape...

I can confirm coding for IE was and still is a PITA, God bless the "CSS hacks" that get around the major bugs in the rendering of items... Still using FF2 as well some of the addons I love using don't work in FF3 and well it basically fell over when i tried to install it seperatly - I think they need to seperate out the "plugins" folder...

I love browser wars, I need a laugh sometimes..

All your browsers are belong to me! 

Posted Monday 17th November 2008 15:06 GMT

Joke

I don't use a browser. I just think it and it appears on el reg.

posted using FF3 FTW

@IE installed at work crowd 

Posted Monday 17th November 2008 15:52 GMT

IT Angle

As Lee said in another post, look into FireFox Portable. As IT people, I'm sure you knew about this already, I'm sure it just slipped your mind.

http://portableapps.com/apps/internet/firefox_portable

@ Fail and you 

Posted Monday 17th November 2008 18:01 GMT

Coat

Considering that this page passes W3C validation (4 warnings), any rendering problems you might be having with it is the fault of a shoddy browser. I'll admit I haven't checked EVERY page, on el Reg. Also I have flash, JS, and java disabled (which is always the case unless I have a need for them (when I do Tim Berners-Lee smashes an open standard on the pavement, with a sledge-hammer... all Gallager-like))

Yes, mines the one running Opera for Solaris, thanks.

What about me? 

Posted Monday 17th November 2008 21:44 GMT

Joke

Where's my support for IE 4.0?

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