Originally posted by: rh71
try and get IE to do this
Point is FF has memory issues. In practical use (open/close some more pages), FF will reveal itself as a pig. It has problems releasing used memory. IE in practical use has no such problems and is quite often under 100MB while FF is quite often over. Of course it has to do with Windows, but that's beside the point, literally.
Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
Yes, to me free means not encumbered.
Why can't you simply say that you prefer open source, rather than try to redefine every word in the English dictionary? If someone (say your grandma) gives you a free chocolate bar, would you demand that the recipe be made publically available before you consume it?
Ironically, if someone hands you only the source code, it would require you to compile the source code prior to usage. I.e. you'd waste your own time, your CPU's time and possibly disk space for the compiler (assuming you're not a developer) to get the thing running. Time is money (and so is disk space), hence the "free" source comes with strings of its own.
Don't get me wrong, having the source is a big plus, but the rest of the world refer to this as "having the source". It has no bearing on the definition of 'free'.
That said, Nothinman mentioned QT and didn't seem to like it much. Why? I ask because Borland makes one of the best IDEs on this planet (Kylix/Delphi), yet seemingly failed to sell many licenses for Linux.
I know Borland relied heavily upon QT for their Linux version, and I wonder if that has something to do with the lack of success? (or is it just because people using Linux are so cheap that they can't be bothered to pay for a good product?)
Originally posted by: Nothinman
Don't get me wrong, having the source is a big plus, but the rest of the world refer to this as "having the source". It has no bearing on the definition of 'free'.
Most of those places are driven that way becaue they don't want to be at the mercy of a US corporation, but who can blame them =)
Originally posted by: BikeDude
Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
Yes, to me free means not encumbered.
Why can't you simply say that you prefer open source, rather than try to redefine every word in the English dictionary? If someone (say your grandma) gives you a free chocolate bar, would you demand that the recipe be made publically available before you consume it?
Ironically, if someone hands you only the source code, it would require you to compile the source code prior to usage. I.e. you'd waste your own time, your CPU's time and possibly disk space for the compiler (assuming you're not a developer) to get the thing running. Time is money (and so is disk space), hence the "free" source comes with strings of its own.
Don't get me wrong, having the source is a big plus, but the rest of the world refer to this as "having the source". It has no bearing on the definition of 'free'.
Free software is a matter of freedom: people should be free to use software in all the ways that are socially useful. Software differs from material objects--such as chairs, sandwiches, and gasoline--in that it can be copied and changed much more easily. These possibilities make software as useful as it is; we believe software users should be able to make use of them.
Free software is a matter of the users' freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software. More precisely, it refers to four kinds of freedom, for the users of the software:
* The freedom to run the program, for any purpose (freedom 0).
* The freedom to study how the program works, and adapt it to your needs (freedom 1). Access to the source code is a precondition for this.
* The freedom to redistribute copies so you can help your neighbor (freedom 2).
* The freedom to improve the program, and release your improvements to the public, so that the whole community benefits (freedom 3). Access to the source code is a precondition for this.
no what happened was I opened a bunch of tabs (something like 20) in the background containing jpgs, saved and closed them all leaving the 1 page again... and that's what happened. Memory problem. After my downloads finished it was still consuming a lot of memory and it never got released until I closed/reopened FF. Memory problem.Originally posted by: rmrf
Originally posted by: rh71
try and get IE to do this
Point is FF has memory issues. In practical use (open/close some more pages), FF will reveal itself as a pig. It has problems releasing used memory. IE in practical use has no such problems and is quite often under 100MB while FF is quite often over. Of course it has to do with Windows, but that's beside the point, literally.
could that usage be related to the file you are downloading? I don't know how ff works, but I think it uses it's cache when downloading a file, therefore inflating memory usage stats. I'm curious to know how big that file was.
Opera is a Norwegian company. It isn't based in the United States.
Originally posted by: rh71
Why should I stick with FF ? Cause it's open source and I can proclaim myself to be part of a cult ? Please.
From my vantage point, some particular people are holding onto something, nitpicking on every detail and definition trying to justify why they should still feel special. Party animals, you must be in real life. Get down.
I'm not an elitist, I just have some minor usage requirements that Opera cannot fill. Hell, Mozilla and friends can't even fill them.
All browsers suck.
,hmm I think not,just some better then others.All browsers suck
They all suck, some just suck less.Originally posted by: Mem
,hmm I think not,just some better then others.All browsers suck
You think the average person wants to modify the source code to Opera?
Honestly, who gives a crap?
Besides, by having your source code out there, the hackers can find the exploits easy as pie. They either decide to be nice and fix it, or it just makes it more open to holes. There's living proof of it:
Originally posted by: xtknight
You think the average person wants to modify the source code to Opera? Honestly, who gives a crap? They actually seal up their holes by themselves. Besides, by having your source code out there, the hackers can find the exploits easy as pie. They either decide to be nice and fix it, or it just makes it more open to holes. There's living proof of it:
Opera 8.x: 0 out of 8 holes unpatched. http://secunia.com/product/4932/
Firefox 1.x: 3 out of 23 holes unpatched. http://secunia.com/product/4227/
Opera's holes also seemed less severe.
Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
Yeah, because Microsoft's closed source security track record is flawless. :roll:
No, but the average person doesn't want to pay $50 for a web browser either. Would you buy a car with the hood welded shut just because you don't want to do any labor on it yourself?
Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
And I don't care about the average person, I'm not average.
Originally posted by: xtknight
I didn't call you average. You can continue to use open-source FF for all I care. I just find Opera to be a much better all-around deal than FF. My question is, if all the holes are fixed, what are you going to do with the source anyway? Have you modified Firefox? If so, what did you do and did you make it public? Anyway, you and I wouldn't have many spyware using IE anyway. But the average user would, so that's why they want to target the average user.
I don't remember who was talking about OpenBSD support, but can you use FF on OpenBSD without a lot of trouble? I'm surprised Opera has a mobile version at all.
The source code to it was leaked quite a while ago too. We all know Microsoft's products are a security disaster.
You don't have to pay $50 for Opera
It turns out more people try to fix their cars than the source code of their PC's web browser
If Opera can handle the holes theirself (they have proven it), then I don't need or even want access to the code.
The source code is messy, and you can only have one modification at one time
If Opera Software fixes their holes and addon flexibility is damn good, I see no reason for it to be open source.
I always had the impression that their target user base was the commercial sector, largely the same group that uses Delphi. Targetting gpl developers with a system like that is silly; they've rebuilt an entire platform to have something free, why would they take a commercial ide?Originally posted by: Nothinman
I know Borland relied heavily upon QT for their Linux version, and I wonder if that has something to do with the lack of success? (or is it just because people using Linux are so cheap that they can't be bothered to pay for a good product?)
The problem is probably their target user base. Most Linux developers are already comfortable with emacs/vim, gcc, gdb, etc so why pay for a RAD environment? I'm sure GTK and libglade aren't as comprehensive as Kylix, but what Kylix offered wasn't enough to pull people away from what they know. I'm kinda surprised the KDE people didn't pick it up, but that's probably because they already had KDevelop.
I always had the impression that their target user base was the commercial sector, largely the same group that uses Delphi
Anyways, wouldn't the ability to keep Kylix and Delphi in sync have died when Borland moved into .NET? Do they actually still produce it? I think it'd be cool if Borland took a serious interest in mono though.
And on a side note, I saw a while ago, that some people are trying to do a free rad environment for pascal, largely immitating Delphi. Called lazarus or something like that I think.
heh sure sure it's as simple as that.Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
I'm not an elitist, I just have some minor usage requirements that Opera cannot fill. Hell, Mozilla and friends can't even fill them.
Originally posted by: rh71
heh sure sure it's as simple as that.Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
I'm not an elitist, I just have some minor usage requirements that Opera cannot fill. Hell, Mozilla and friends can't even fill them.
You've always been a stickler for open source this and that no matter what the product - we've had a disagreement over it before.
Someone says: here's a free browser for you - you don't have to pay money for it and instantly you're saying "where's the source code" ? I think it's quite clear what your position is - it's just not necessary to argue if it's actually "free" to the degree that you are. How many times have people said "who cares" ? Nobody but you and the rest of the (aforementioned linked word). That's where the problem lies. I see "free" speech is on your side though... have at it.
Originally posted by: rh71
^ not that I am looking for yet another argument but a thought crosses my mind. You created the incompatibility (or unavailability) problems for yourself when you chose not to use the easiest (most common) products - referring to "half your computers". Conforming just seems so incredibly hard for you... any particular reason for that ?
You created the incompatibility (or unavailability) problems for yourself when you chose not to use the easiest (most common) products - referring to "half your computers". Conforming just seems so incredibly hard for you... any particular reason for that ?
