Is mozilla really a good/the best browser?

Please post any bugs you have found
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lostdog
Posts: 105
Joined: Wed 05 Oct 2005, 16:56

#21 Post by lostdog »

Leon, Thanks. Guess I just don't have a good grasp on the comments in linux. Your last post here helped me get the fonts large enough for me to read. Thanks again.

I'm not known as lostdog for nothing ya know :lol:
The truth is out there.

Leon
Posts: 265
Joined: Wed 22 Jun 2005, 21:33

#22 Post by Leon »

lostdog wrote:Guess I just don't have a good grasp on the comments in linux.
Or it could be that my instructions at:
http://www.murga.org/~puppy/viewtopic.php?t=6722
was not clear enough.
I updated my instructions and suggested adding menu font settings at the end of userChrome.css file.
lostdog wrote:I'm not known as lostdog for nothing ya know
lostdog's experiences could be very useful for other lostdogs.

I am glad that you solved the problem.

reasonit
Posts: 55
Joined: Sat 25 Mar 2006, 21:39

#23 Post by reasonit »

my support goes to Opera here.
Though I respect whoever wants mozilla to be default, but incase you ppl don't know, a few thinsg about Opera:
1. full featured- plennnnty of features
2. very very Light and fast. just try all 3 browsers on a PIII ubuntu
3. Download manager included resume supprt
4. Irc client
5. email client
6. rss reader.
7. Looks 1000x better
8. smaller than firefox or mozilla.

Seriously just by using Opera instead of mozilla, rss, a seperate irc client you could easily save 5-10mb , i think.

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peppyy
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Joined: Mon 27 Jun 2005, 23:49
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Speed tests.

#24 Post by peppyy »

I am sure it depends greatly on the actuall connection and the sites you are viewing but I ran a couple tests on the same server at different times of day with 3 browsers.

Strangely enough, Mozilla cameout on the bottom consistantly with Opera only slightly faster and Firefox was a clear winner each time. The tests were run with all 3 browsers open full screen on the same server with cache cleared. This test includes a very large text doccument and a large compressed JPG image. The averages for each browser in 5 tests were within about 10%. these were download only tests with no java.

I have a high speed DSL connection and am currently running 2.0.1 on a 900mhz t22 thinkpad with 512mb ram and a harddrive install.

I have been using Opera for over a week and love it for certain sites but I have decided that there are several issues that they have to work out before I would make it my main browser. My main objection is that it does not play well with yahoo, my primary email and it causes too many repetive tasks that can be automated in firefox. Each of these fine browsers has their place and I am hard pressed to find a replacement for mozilla composer.

For now I remain a Firefox Fan.
Here are my results.
Attachments
speed.jpg
Browser speed tests
(64.3 KiB) Downloaded 836 times
Puppy Linux...
It just works!

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rarsa
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#25 Post by rarsa »

Great stats. Although there is another measure that it's more difficult to get but sometimes more important.

Perceived speed: When does the page gives enough detail for the user to start working with it.
[url]http://rarsa.blogspot.com[/url] Covering my eclectic thoughts
[url]http://www.kwlug.org/blog/48[/url] Covering my Linux How-to

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Lobster
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#26 Post by Lobster »

:) Very good point Rarsa

Opera may (according to some test singers) be the fastest but having to work it out (it used to be simpler) slows it.
Flock (in beta) is an effort to work out but has integrated blog tools and Flickr image tools
Firefox is simplest (of the major browsers) nothing to learn
HV3 - not much to go wrong - so simple (still in development)
Seamonkey - easy enough when you are used to it (like anything)
. . . also composer, email and address book is fast

People prefer Firefox (or GNU IceWeasel) therefore it is fast enough.

A second here or there is geek speak. Most people put up with IE - which I hear is improving. I tried it recently on a Vista beta - did not feel simple, so it was slow to use. Usability was poor.

On my 1Gig Keydrive (really cheap now guys), I have Firefox portable app. On a Windows computer I can open a secure Firefox with my bookmarks. That is sweet and feels fast.
http://portableapps.com/

My most strange experience was coming to this forum from a Puppy command line browser (sorry forget name) I got here and posted. Never again! It was not slow - just the page display output was so weird . . .

"Perceivied speed" - too right.

Right now using Seamonkey
Puppy Raspup 8.2Final 8)
Puppy Links Page http://www.smokey01.com/bruceb/puppy.html :D

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peppyy
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#27 Post by peppyy »

I am sure that these browsers all operate differently on a dialup connection. I have no modem at the moment in this machine totest with although I do also have dialup access. I may be able to do some testing on another machine sometime in the future (When I am snowed in) :) At the kmoment I am looking to build in the best possible wireless I can and an external antenna jack for long range, maybe a 200mw prism minipci.

I first switched to firefox in win98 on a dialup connection because it was about 30% faster in that situation. I have been a fan ever since. I really wish that they would come up with firefox composer and then I would have a favorite web utility but for now I don't mind having several.
Puppy Linux...
It just works!

vern72023
Posts: 158
Joined: Mon 26 Dec 2005, 05:15
Location: Jacksonville Fl

Perceived Speed

#28 Post by vern72023 »

I wondered what it would be like to compare loading puppylinux.org with images and without so i tried both and surprisingly got the following result
with images 9sec
w/out 16secs
with 18secs
w/out 9secs
with 10secs
with 16secs
with 7secs
with 15secs

all within the space of 10minutes
The problem with tests is the second by second changes in the largest single variable - network traffic - so establishing real baseline is not possible without having at least 2 or more seperate machines runnning at regularly timed intervals over at least a 72hours

The main delimiter as I see it given Puppy's stated taget is the size of the programs that are contained within the pup file

and on that basis I think SeaMonkey at 16MB for Browser/Mail/Composer combine has the samllest effective footprint.

Sure Firefox or Opera are smaller as browsers but add in the other functionality and added libs required and they are nowhere near the size, or the bang for the buck

George
george

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Nathan F
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#29 Post by Nathan F »

Even after adding QT Opera still comes in smaller than Seamonkey and only leaves out the html editor. I edit html using Bluefish so that doesn't bother me. One smaller issue is that Gasim depends on Mozilla ssl libs to work with MSN. Again, I don't use MSN so it doesn't bother me. Now since there are other programs I use that depend on having QT installed (Scribus) it becomes an even bigger bargain. So if I had to choose only one browser, based on size to utility, it would definately be Opera.

My main complaint, and I'm not alone here, is that Opera is not open source. I've been sitting the fence on dropping it out of Grafpup for that reason. There are some unresolved issues that may very well have been fixed by now if the code were released. So in the future you may see me using Gnuzilla.

Another plus for Seamonkey and Mozilla is the ability to use different profiles, so on a single user system different people could have their own email, bookmarks, extensions, etc. I used this feature for a while so each family member could have things separate, before getting a true multi-user environment up and running in Grafpup.

One thing I would like to see Puppy incorporate in the future is a text only browser for the console environment. Elinks and Links are both stable and full featured, and Netrik is looking interesting if development gets a bit further along. It's just very handy to look things up quickly without having to start up the big slow graphical browser or deal with all kinds of garbage content on the net like Flash, audio, and huge background images. I get a lot more work done when I can get in and out quickly with just the text I wen looking for.

Nathan
Bring on the locusts ...

vern72023
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Joined: Mon 26 Dec 2005, 05:15
Location: Jacksonville Fl

#30 Post by vern72023 »

I would have too second that Nathan
-- only trouble is that a lot of users would not recognise a browser as a vrowser if it was text only :-)

ah the joys of old age and memories of 2400 modems

George
george

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