Which browser do you usually use?
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Which browser do you usually use?
Our tracking systems tell us that 63% of visitors are using IE, and 25% are using Netscape Navigator, with Opera at 4.2% and unknown at 6%. Mozilla Firefox is not specifically accounted for because it is too new. Hence this poll.
We're also interested in finding out how many browser windows or tabs you keep open while visiting SPCR. Please see the next poll.
We're also interested in finding out how many browser windows or tabs you keep open while visiting SPCR. Please see the next poll.
Last edited by MikeC on Fri Apr 29, 2005 10:00 am, edited 1 time in total.
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I love mouse gestures and tabbed browsing. Can't go back.york wrote:I use opera, love the send to tray, irc, and mouse gestures options.
I leave open 3 tabs.
When I last used Opera as my main browser (about 18 months ago), it was faster and slicker than Firefox is even now. The banner ads annoyed me though.
However, I use Firefox because of the extensions - you can get your mouse gestures, minimize-to-tray (is that "send to tray"?) etc.., and anything else you are likely to want by way of downloadable extensions.
The only Opera feature I really miss is decent page zooming. You can zoom either text or images in Firefox, but not both linked together.
I suspect this poll will be skewed by the fact that IE users don't care enough to vote, and Firefox etc. enthusiasts do...
yeah I ended up buying the program to kill the banner and tapping the 0 key to zoom in is great for looking at case layouts images or small text people use on forums...jimmyfergus wrote:The banner ads annoyed me though.york wrote:I use opera, love the send to tray, irc, and mouse gestures options.
I leave open 3 tabs.
The only Opera feature I really miss is decent page zooming. You can zoom either text or images in Firefox, but not both linked together.
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The zooming of text is built in, with a few accessors - my favourite is ctrl plus the mouse wheel.sthayashi wrote:Whoa, how do you do that in Firefox?jimmyfergus wrote:You can zoom either text or images in Firefox, but not both linked together.
I do zooming of images with the ImageZoom extension http://www.yellowgorilla.net/imagezoom/, which seems to no longer be available through the normal mozilla.org extensions area... Perhaps there's a better extension that has replaced it. Anyway, it gives a submenu off the right-mouse menu to allow you to zoom any individual image to your heart's content. Unfortunately, doesn't do any nice interpolation, so you get jaggies.
Cool. Yeah, it works. So does Ctrl-+ and Ctrl-- (I just saw view->Text Size).jimmyfergus wrote:The zooming of text is built in, with a few accessors - my favourite is ctrl plus the mouse wheel.sthayashi wrote:Whoa, how do you do that in Firefox?jimmyfergus wrote:You can zoom either text or images in Firefox, but not both linked together.
Now I have to re-evaluate the need to have Opera be my browser of choice for my HTPC. I used Opera because it could zoom text, which is useful for viewing the occasional webpage.
In my experience this has been due to a dud extension (gestures) I had installed and not realised it was causing the problem. After removing it the problem went away. Of course your mileage may vary, but choice is the most important thing we have thank goodness! (and I note you're almost certainly using linux too )mathias wrote:Too bad there's no way to change your vote, I've just gotten fed up with firefox crashing(all firefox windows simultaneously disappearing)
I use Opera since 4.0 Beta. It's still feels faster than the fox and it has a great deal of customizing as well. For dialups the "use cached images only" is priceless. And the "quick preferences" are very cool, too.
Two things are annoying me at the moment:
1. no flashblock - except through blocking all plugins
2. since 7.0 a strange cycling behaviour when you close a tab - basically you always go back to an already read tab, but I'd rather want to read the unread ones!
Two things are annoying me at the moment:
1. no flashblock - except through blocking all plugins
2. since 7.0 a strange cycling behaviour when you close a tab - basically you always go back to an already read tab, but I'd rather want to read the unread ones!
although opera is noticeably faster at rendering many of the pages i frequent (ocforums.com is brutal when opening 4 or so forums simultaneously), i can't live without firefox's extensions.
my dream browser would be gecko with a polished native win32 frontend (k-meleon is on its way..), one-thread-per-tab/window with the foreground window given higher priority than background windows (when i load multiple tabs, the tab i'm looking at should be responsive at the expense of rendering other non-visible tabs slower) and an extension system similar to firefox. i guess it's just a matter of time.
my dream browser would be gecko with a polished native win32 frontend (k-meleon is on its way..), one-thread-per-tab/window with the foreground window given higher priority than background windows (when i load multiple tabs, the tab i'm looking at should be responsive at the expense of rendering other non-visible tabs slower) and an extension system similar to firefox. i guess it's just a matter of time.
Opera, Firefox, and IE in that order. at most times, I'll have all three open but I use the Opera 8 Beta for the majority of my browsing.
As a former Netscape employee, I'm a wee bit picky about my browser functionality. Besides, it's only a matter of time before someone starts tailoring badness for Mozilla.
As a former Netscape employee, I'm a wee bit picky about my browser functionality. Besides, it's only a matter of time before someone starts tailoring badness for Mozilla.
I use regular Mozilla as well (1.7.x), but unlike ilh I'll assume that since they share the same rendering engine and lots of other code that a vote for FF is a vote for Moz.
MikeC, I'm surprised- any half-decent server log analyzer, much less tracking software, ought to allow for simple user-agent stats, which are quite sufficient for identifying any browser which does not spoof its user-agent string.
MikeC, I'm surprised- any half-decent server log analyzer, much less tracking software, ought to allow for simple user-agent stats, which are quite sufficient for identifying any browser which does not spoof its user-agent string.
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I have a feeling you're right, Klaatu, but I still use firefox for now (2-3 tabs on average). Although I don't know how much more market share Firefox can garner, than the ~7% it has right now....the vast majority of "average joe" computer users will always use IE, just because it's already there...even if they install something else, they'll be back on IE as soon as the first "Internet Explorer is not your current browser. Would you like to correct this?" dialog box pops up. they have to click yes, of course, for fear that Bill Gates will come to their house and shave their cats and have his way with their women.