Originally posted by: Quiksilver
Nice proof there showing how they are all doing the same action there.
Indeed.Originally posted by: Quiksilver
Nice proof there showing how they are all doing the same action there.
Believe me, I'm no fan of Winamp sucking down over 100 megs to open up an mp3. It's completely obscene. It seems no better to me than than I used it in '97 and I bet to heck it wasn't taking up that much then.Originally posted by: rivan
I'd call a media player using that much RAM a fail, but hey, what do I know.
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Believe me, I'm no fan of Winamp sucking down over 100 megs to open up an mp3. It's completely obscene. It seems no better to me than than I used it in '97 and I bet to heck it wasn't taking up that much then.Originally posted by: rivan
I'd call a media player using that much RAM a fail, but hey, what do I know.
I'm not sure if quicksilver was being sarcastic. I will assume no, so you're welcome
I'm on a different comp at the moment with chrome open and three tabs and 39 megs, woot.
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Try centrally deploying, managing, updating and configuring 1,000 instances of those three browsers in a domain, regardless of whether the users want to cooperate or not. Then report back on which two browsers suck, and which browser made it a total cakewalk (and has done so since version 5.01)![]()
Originally posted by: sourceninja
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Try centrally deploying, managing, updating and configuring 1,000 instances of those three browsers in a domain, regardless of whether the users want to cooperate or not. Then report back on which two browsers suck, and which browser made it a total cakewalk (and has done so since version 5.01)![]()
I pushed firefox to 600 users without any problem. MMM zenworks.
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Originally posted by: sourceninja
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Try centrally deploying, managing, updating and configuring 1,000 instances of those three browsers in a domain, regardless of whether the users want to cooperate or not. Then report back on which two browsers suck, and which browser made it a total cakewalk (and has done so since version 5.01)![]()
I pushed firefox to 600 users without any problem. MMM zenworks.
And Zenworks costs...?How do you mandate your security & privacy settings, regulate installation of browser add-ons/extensions, and centrally monitor the fleet for compliance?
Heck, I could probably repack a FireFox installer as a .MSI and deploy it using Group Policy, but it doesn't constitute central management. I'm really at a loss as to why Mozilla remains so uninterested in competing in the central-management arena, but whatever.
Originally posted by: Czar
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Originally posted by: sourceninja
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Try centrally deploying, managing, updating and configuring 1,000 instances of those three browsers in a domain, regardless of whether the users want to cooperate or not. Then report back on which two browsers suck, and which browser made it a total cakewalk (and has done so since version 5.01)![]()
I pushed firefox to 600 users without any problem. MMM zenworks.
And Zenworks costs...?How do you mandate your security & privacy settings, regulate installation of browser add-ons/extensions, and centrally monitor the fleet for compliance?
Heck, I could probably repack a FireFox installer as a .MSI and deploy it using Group Policy, but it doesn't constitute central management. I'm really at a loss as to why Mozilla remains so uninterested in competing in the central-management arena, but whatever.
VMware Thinapp solves your problem![]()
Try the Winamp Classic interface. I've got Winamp open now and it's using about 11MB. (v5.541)Originally posted by: Skoorb
Believe me, I'm no fan of Winamp sucking down over 100 megs to open up an mp3. It's completely obscene. It seems no better to me than than I used it in '97 and I bet to heck it wasn't taking up that much then.
I'm not sure if quicksilver was being sarcastic. I will assume no, so you're welcome
I'm on a different comp at the moment with chrome open and three tabs and 39 megs, woot.
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Originally posted by: sourceninja
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Try centrally deploying, managing, updating and configuring 1,000 instances of those three browsers in a domain, regardless of whether the users want to cooperate or not. Then report back on which two browsers suck, and which browser made it a total cakewalk (and has done so since version 5.01)![]()
I pushed firefox to 600 users without any problem. MMM zenworks.
And Zenworks costs...?How do you mandate your security & privacy settings, regulate installation of browser add-ons/extensions, and centrally monitor the fleet for compliance?
Heck, I could probably repack a FireFox installer as a .MSI and deploy it using Group Policy, but it doesn't constitute central management. I'm really at a loss as to why Mozilla remains so uninterested in competing in the central-management arena, but whatever.
Originally posted by: sourceninja
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Originally posted by: sourceninja
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Try centrally deploying, managing, updating and configuring 1,000 instances of those three browsers in a domain, regardless of whether the users want to cooperate or not. Then report back on which two browsers suck, and which browser made it a total cakewalk (and has done so since version 5.01)![]()
I pushed firefox to 600 users without any problem. MMM zenworks.
And Zenworks costs...?How do you mandate your security & privacy settings, regulate installation of browser add-ons/extensions, and centrally monitor the fleet for compliance?
Heck, I could probably repack a FireFox installer as a .MSI and deploy it using Group Policy, but it doesn't constitute central management. I'm really at a loss as to why Mozilla remains so uninterested in competing in the central-management arena, but whatever.
Just because you have some crazy needs to control everything your users do does not mean every business does.
We push out security updates. That is it. It's all we need. We manage security and privacy where it belongs, on the front end of our network.
On top of that, after recommending firefox to all students and staff and installing it on all machines that are outside of our direct control (loaner laptops, personal machines, machines where the user needs admin access and takes it home, etc) we have had a huge reduction in support work removing spyware and less alerts from our antivirus.
Originally posted by: sourceninja
If you really need security so bad you disallow jpegs from being viewed, I suggest you just move your office to linux where you have no fear of these threats.