Jul 17, 2009, 04:18 AM // 04:18
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#21
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Lion's Arch Merchant
Join Date: Nov 2007
Guild: Illusion of skillz [Iz]
Profession: W/E
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Lets look at Three Browsers ad audited by Secunia PSI on my personal Machine
Bare in Mind PSI gives my Machine a Security Score of 100
Microsoft Internet Explorer 8.x (Assessment: Minimum 5 attack vectors exists when using this browser, see criticality rating below)
Mozilla Firefox 3.0.x (Assessment: Minimum 4 attack vectors exists when using this browser, see criticality rating below)
Opera 9.x (Assessment: Minimum 4 attack vectors exists when using this browser, see criticality rating below)
By the way Opera has been Cleener than the other two Brousers for months now
you want security use opera
but see for yourself
http://secunia.com/advisories/product/10615/
same auditors for Firefox
http://secunia.com/advisories/product/25800/
and IE 8
http://secunia.com/advisories/product/21625/
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Jul 17, 2009, 04:54 AM // 04:54
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#22
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Technician's Corner Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: The TARDIS
Guild: http://www.lunarsoft.net/ http://forums.lunarsoft.net/
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3.5.1 is already out, so this topic is pretty moot.
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Jul 17, 2009, 06:11 AM // 06:11
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#23
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Lion's Arch Merchant
Join Date: Mar 2007
Guild: Order of the Immortal [Vamp]
Profession: Rt/
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I use FireFox because it runs faster, loads faster, and parses HTML faster than IE on my computer. I also appreciate the fact that FireFox is Web Standards compliant unlike IE which has never been and doesn't ever plan to be. I'm a web designer and things like Web Standards in coding and scripting appeal to me, which is why IE will NEVER be an option for me as IE and Microsoft intend to kill any sort of standardization within HTML/Javascript.
Use IE if you don't mind a slow browser that doesn't support any sort of standard of programming other than it's own, and I'll stick to a well rounded, faster and standards compliant browser called FireFox.
ps, I know it said it "could" apply to older versions but I still use 3.0.11 as 3.5 has many bugs and problems that really annoy me.
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Jul 17, 2009, 06:43 AM // 06:43
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#24
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Core Guru
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IE has 80% (?) market share, it is the web/html standard, not Firefox, not Chrome, not WC3. A "standard" is what most people use, not some happy-go-lucky list of rules you conveniently make so your competition's browse isn't "compatible". Besides, I've been using IE since Windows 3.1 and I am still looking for just ONE page that doesn't display in IE. How many years of web browsing is that? And I still have yet to find ONE page that doesn't load for me. Jeez the way you FF fanboys spread lies, you'd think half the internet wouldn't load on IE.
Firefox does not load faster, run faster, or parse faster than IE. People design benchmarks to make IE lose, that's how badly they want FF or Chrome to look good. Show me a high speed camera test using non-cached pages that are loaded over the actual internet. AFAIK only Microsoft ever did such a test, and guess what it showed?! Yup, it showed the load times were so close together they had to measure them in milliseconds. Too bad no human can see that difference, it's just too tiny.
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Jul 17, 2009, 07:50 AM // 07:50
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#25
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Desert Nomad
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kuntz
Firefox does not load faster, run faster, or parse faster than IE.
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I find pages DO load faster in Firefox. But not plain vanilla Firefox - I use the adblock, flashblock, and noscript add-ons, and I think those are the reason: In other words, pages load faster because I'm not downloading or displaying all of the content in them. This is not a like-for-like comparison, and you're probably right that IE is generally just as fast as Firefox, if I actually loaded the full pages.
I did find that IE was faster on first startup... but that difference is now tiny, since I switched to a solid state drive. The thing is, I prefer Firefox, and I'll keep using it - until equivelents to adblock, noscript and flashblock are available for IE. Then I'll re-evaluate... I'm not blindly loyal to any browser - over the years, I've jumped ships several times, as various browsers have developed.
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Jul 17, 2009, 09:29 AM // 09:29
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#27
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Forge Runner
Join Date: Mar 2006
Guild: [ToA]
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kuntz
IE has 80% (?) market share, it is the web/html standard, not Firefox, not Chrome, not WC3. A "standard" is what most people use, not some happy-go-lucky list of rules you conveniently make so your competition's browse isn't "compatible".
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Just because more people use it doesn't mean it's better.
Quote:
Jeez the way you FF fanboys spread lies, you'd think half the internet wouldn't load on IE.
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Set crashie.com as your homepage and none of it will load
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Jul 17, 2009, 10:30 AM // 10:30
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#28
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rattus rattus
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: London, UK GMT±0 ±1hr DST
Guild: [GURU]GW [wiki]GW2
Profession: R/
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Tut, crashie hasn't worked since IE7.
My point about Win7 and choosing browsers is that Windows has always come with IE so the vast majority of people haven't needed or bothered to get an alternative browser.
Windows 7 is coming without IE, which will make people consider the alternatives at the very least.
__________________
Si non confectus, non reficiat
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Jul 17, 2009, 03:38 PM // 15:38
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#29
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Hell's Protector
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Canada
Guild: Brothers Disgruntled
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Quote:
IE has 80% (?) market share, it is the web/html standard, not Firefox, not Chrome, not WC3. A "standard" is what most people use, not some happy-go-lucky list of rules you conveniently make so your competition's browse isn't "compatible".
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A "standard" is NOT simply what "most people use". In the case of most technical standards - a standard would be a set of specifications which should be used, for among other things, to ensure compatibility.
For example, there is a "standard" design for the power outlets in your home. This is not a "standard" because everyone uses it - every one uses it because it is the standard.
In the case of web/html coding, there is "standard" laid out by some committee (forget which, atm), which is intended to be open to all to use and to enable all browser to display web pages properly. It is Microsoft who has continually deviated from this standard with some happy-go-lucky list of rules they conveniently make so their competition's browser, isn't "compatible".
Btw - All the links you posted are for Overclock.net. Are there other sites that support these findings? Who owns Overclock.net - MS?
Last edited by Quaker; Jul 17, 2009 at 04:02 PM // 16:02..
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Jul 17, 2009, 04:13 PM // 16:13
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#30
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Guest
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Snograt
Windows 7 is coming without IE, which will make people consider the alternatives at the very least.
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What browser is it packaged with then? If it doesn't have one, that will be very problematic at best. Also, it won't really cause people to consider alternatives, they'll just download IE and say "Screw it."
Also, just because I.E. has 65% of the market share doesn't make IT the standard, nor do people "Design" tests to make I.E. fail. Because it doesn't properly support CSS, XHTML, etc, who's standards are made by the people who DESIGNED the languages, it fails.
That's the equivalent of Microsoft saying
"Hey Steve, I don't like the way that C++ handles integers. This is the way I want it to handle integers."
"Hey Otherdude, you're right! Screw all coding conventions, code it your way, and because it'll be on 75% of all computers, they'll have to change the way that C++ handles integers just because of us! WE ROX!"
Yea, that's the way it works.
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Jul 17, 2009, 05:37 PM // 17:37
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#31
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Core Guru
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hissy
I find pages DO load faster in Firefox. But not plain vanilla Firefox - I use the adblock, flashblock, and noscript add-ons, and I think those are the reason: In other words, pages load faster because I'm not downloading or displaying all of the content in them. This is not a like-for-like comparison, and you're probably right that IE is generally just as fast as Firefox, if I actually loaded the full pages.
I did find that IE was faster on first startup... but that difference is now tiny, since I switched to a solid state drive. The thing is, I prefer Firefox, and I'll keep using it - until equivelents to adblock, noscript and flashblock are available for IE. Then I'll re-evaluate... I'm not blindly loyal to any browser - over the years, I've jumped ships several times, as various browsers have developed.
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www.ie7pro.com
Works for IE8 too, though they are still fixing a few bugs in it. You can block scripting/flash/ads within IE7/8 without any plugins needed.
Tools -> Options -> Security Tab
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Jul 17, 2009, 05:40 PM // 17:40
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#32
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Core Guru
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mesmer in Need
Just because more people use it doesn't mean it's better.
Set crashie.com as your homepage and none of it will load
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Nope:
http://img41.imageshack.us/img41/5361/oopst.png
Page loads fine.
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Jul 17, 2009, 05:50 PM // 17:50
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#33
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Core Guru
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Quaker
A "standard" is NOT simply what "most people use". In the case of most technical standards - a standard would be a set of specifications which should be used, for among other things, to ensure compatibility.
For example, there is a "standard" design for the power outlets in your home. This is not a "standard" because everyone uses it - every one uses it because it is the standard.
In the case of web/html coding, there is "standard" laid out by some committee (forget which, atm), which is intended to be open to all to use and to enable all browser to display web pages properly. It is Microsoft who has continually deviated from this standard with some happy-go-lucky list of rules they conveniently make so their competition's browser, isn't "compatible".
Btw - All the links you posted are for Overclock.net. Are there other sites that support these findings? Who owns Overclock.net - MS?
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But for the most part, IE and Netscape existed "first" and were the two most popular browsers by far back in the day. Aside from a few differences between them, they were the same. IE/MS supported some extra features to take advantage of extra features within Windows OS, but that was about it. Along came some more browsers and instead of adhering to the "standards" of IE, they chose to invent their own "standards" and complained when MS/IE didn't follow along with it. There will probably never be a web standard, because Microsoft has no reason to follow along with what other people do with their 80% market share, and everyone else doesn't want to go along with Microsoft's standard because they hate to admit it's correct. People would rather use/support broken software than admit Microsoft is right or best or whatever. If people truly wanted 1 web standard, then they'd go to Microsoft and ask them what they wanted and go along with it. Why should the 80% majority have to change for the 20% minority? It makes no sense.
Overclock.net just has links to the actual articles. The articles themselves are on various other websites. You can read quick quotes/overviews on OCN and/or then follow the links to read the full article if you feel the need.
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Jul 17, 2009, 11:06 PM // 23:06
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#34
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Guest
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kuntz
But for the most part, IE and Netscape existed "first" and were the two most popular browsers by far back in the day. Aside from a few differences between them, they were the same. IE/MS supported some extra features to take advantage of extra features within Windows OS, but that was about it. Along came some more browsers and instead of adhering to the "standards" of IE, they chose to invent their own "standards" and complained when MS/IE didn't follow along with it. There will probably never be a web standard, because Microsoft has no reason to follow along with what other people do with their 80% market share, and everyone else doesn't want to go along with Microsoft's standard because they hate to admit it's correct. People would rather use/support broken software than admit Microsoft is right or best or whatever. If people truly wanted 1 web standard, then they'd go to Microsoft and ask them what they wanted and go along with it. Why should the 80% majority have to change for the 20% minority? It makes no sense.
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Did you ignore my post or just not read it? I stated EXACTLY why this is BACKWARDS thinking.
Just because something is first, doesn't make it right.
Just because everyone does something, doesn't make it right. In the age old cleshe:
"If everyone else jumped off a cliff, would you do it too?"
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Jul 18, 2009, 12:06 AM // 00:06
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#35
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Jungle Guide
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Australia, what you want my home address?
Guild: [CAT]
Profession: Mo/
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kuntz
IE has 80% (?) market share, it is the web/html standard, not Firefox, not Chrome, not WC3. A "standard" is what most people use, not some happy-go-lucky list of rules you conveniently make so your competition's browse isn't "compatible".
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You clearly fail to understand what 'standards' are, and that international bodies are created for the sole purpose of creating and advancing 'standards' to ensure compatibility. IE is NOT the standard for HTML, IE has a long history of using non-standardized markup. THE HTML standard IS defined by the W3C.
It isn't a convenient list thrown together by Mozilla enthusiasts...
Misinformation is no way to evangelize your particular choice of software.
And, no... Mosaic was the web browser of choice 'back in the day', it is credited with popularizing the WWW. IE and Netscape were late comers to that field.
Last edited by Nerel; Jul 18, 2009 at 12:11 AM // 00:11..
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Jul 18, 2009, 12:19 AM // 00:19
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#36
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Jungle Guide
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Australia, what you want my home address?
Guild: [CAT]
Profession: Mo/
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kuntz
Along came some more browsers and instead of adhering to the "standards" of IE, they chose to invent their own "standards" and complained when MS/IE didn't follow along with it. There will probably never be a web standard, because Microsoft has no reason to follow along with what other people do with their 80% market share, and everyone else doesn't want to go along with Microsoft's standard because they hate to admit it's correct. People would rather use/support broken software than admit Microsoft is right or best or whatever.
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Microsoft is a part of the W3C, they've (almost) always had a say in defining what the current standards are. Microsoft WASN'T the standard, people didn't AND shouldn't have followed IE as a standard, simply put the earliest standards PREDATE any effort by Microsoft to create a web browser...
There will probably never be a web standard? There are lots of them, for the various protocols and mark up languages... I think you're misusing the word 'standard' to make it mean 'follow Microsoft'.
Edit: I'm amazed that you're so blithely rewriting HISTORY. Internet Explorer 1995. Mosaic 92/93...
Last edited by Nerel; Jul 18, 2009 at 12:36 AM // 00:36..
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Jul 18, 2009, 01:50 AM // 01:50
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#37
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Frost Gate Guardian
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: /wiki user:aro
Guild: DBU
Profession: E/
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Wonder how many browsers would run if one "flipped the switch" to turn off running code from 'memory allocated' addresses. How many exploits are partly based on the OS running the browser.
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Jul 18, 2009, 02:24 AM // 02:24
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#38
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Core Guru
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nerel
You clearly fail to understand what 'standards' are, and that international bodies are created for the sole purpose of creating and advancing 'standards' to ensure compatibility. IE is NOT the standard for HTML, IE has a long history of using non-standardized markup. THE HTML standard IS defined by the W3C.
It isn't a convenient list thrown together by Mozilla enthusiasts...
Misinformation is no way to evangelize your particular choice of software.
And, no... Mosaic was the web browser of choice 'back in the day', it is credited with popularizing the WWW. IE and Netscape were late comers to that field.
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I'm pretty sure I know what a standard is. I am pointing out that you can't just invent rules and then complain when nobody follows them. This is the WC3 "standard". I've been programming web pages since 1995ish, give or take a year. Never had an issue with web development, but maybe that's because instead of fighting for the 20% minority I always developed for the 80% majority.
I vaguely remember what browser I used back then, if it wasn't Netscape then it would have been Mosaic (on the old Macs). It's not like I wrote that tid-bit of info on a pad of paper so I would remember it 14 years later...
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Jul 18, 2009, 02:46 AM // 02:46
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#39
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Guest
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kuntz
I'm pretty sure I know what a standard is.
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By dictionary.com:
Quote:
something considered by an authority or by general consent as a basis of comparison; an approved model.
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Let's assume authority: Microsoft isn't the athority, W3 is. As given by every company, INCLUDING Microsoft.
Let's assume general consent: Microsoft is ONE entity. Now, general consent is majority, and I'm pretty sure that W3, Mozilla, and the creators of Opera, would also count. 3 > 1, so they have general consent. This isn't including every other browser that preforms to those standards.
Quote:
I am pointing out that you can't just invent rules and then complain when nobody follows them.
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Except that's EXACTLY what Microsoft did, and not just with web standards. Copyright laws anyone?
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Jul 18, 2009, 02:57 AM // 02:57
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#40
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Core Guru
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It's not what MS did. Microsoft invented the "rules" for it's browser, sure, but they don't care if you follow or them or not lol. They have so much market share they can do whatever they want to, and you can either fight it and lose, or just go along with it.
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