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Firefox ad hits NY Times

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  • K Offline
    K Offline
    Kant
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Firefox ad hits NY Times[^]
    :cool: Firefox Extension for Code Project
    This signature was created by "Code Project Quoter".

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    • K Kant

      Firefox ad hits NY Times[^]
      :cool: Firefox Extension for Code Project
      This signature was created by "Code Project Quoter".

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      P Offline
      Paul Watson
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      I was going to ask if anyone had their name in the FireFox ad? I did not contribute so my name is not in the ad. regards, Paul Watson South Africa The Code Project

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      • K Kant

        Firefox ad hits NY Times[^]
        :cool: Firefox Extension for Code Project
        This signature was created by "Code Project Quoter".

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        M Offline
        Michael Dunn
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        What is it they expect to gain from the ad? Firefox is free after all... :confused: --Mike-- LINKS~! Ericahist | 1ClickPicGrabber | CP SearchBar v2.0.2 | C++ Forum FAQ | You Are Dumb

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        • K Kant

          Firefox ad hits NY Times[^]
          :cool: Firefox Extension for Code Project
          This signature was created by "Code Project Quoter".

          M Offline
          M Offline
          Michael P Butler
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          Kant wrote: Firefox ad hits NY Times[^] but is this a good thing or a bad thing for Firefox? Is the app ready for Joe User yet. Personally I don't think so. It still needs some work, especially when it comes to configuration and finding the right plugins. It also needs to enable the app caching as default otherwise people will still think IE is faster to start. Of course if this ad get Microsoft off their butts and releases IE 7 then maybe it is a good thing. Michael CP Blog [^]

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          • M Michael Dunn

            What is it they expect to gain from the ad? Firefox is free after all... :confused: --Mike-- LINKS~! Ericahist | 1ClickPicGrabber | CP SearchBar v2.0.2 | C++ Forum FAQ | You Are Dumb

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            Chris Maunder
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            Credibility. cheers, Chris Maunder

            realJSOPR 1 Reply Last reply
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            • M Michael P Butler

              Kant wrote: Firefox ad hits NY Times[^] but is this a good thing or a bad thing for Firefox? Is the app ready for Joe User yet. Personally I don't think so. It still needs some work, especially when it comes to configuration and finding the right plugins. It also needs to enable the app caching as default otherwise people will still think IE is faster to start. Of course if this ad get Microsoft off their butts and releases IE 7 then maybe it is a good thing. Michael CP Blog [^]

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              Andy Brummer
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              I use Firefox for the plug-ins, but to my wife it's just a browser that works a little bit better then IE for most sites, and gets rid of popups. I think they are right on target for competing with IE. They don't compare to Avant and other browsers on features without the plug-ins, but they are competing against bare bones IE.


              I can imagine the sinking feeling one would have after ordering my book, only to find a laughably ridiculous theory with demented logic once the book arrives - Mark McCutcheon

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              • P Paul Watson

                I was going to ask if anyone had their name in the FireFox ad? I did not contribute so my name is not in the ad. regards, Paul Watson South Africa The Code Project

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                Matt Philmon
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                Yup, I'm there. :-D I actually went to the trouble of downloading the pdf, zooming in about 400%, and grabbing a snapshot of a zoomed in portion with my name around the middle (which I highlighted in Paint). Then I realized I had no way to show it. LOL :laugh:

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                • M Michael P Butler

                  Kant wrote: Firefox ad hits NY Times[^] but is this a good thing or a bad thing for Firefox? Is the app ready for Joe User yet. Personally I don't think so. It still needs some work, especially when it comes to configuration and finding the right plugins. It also needs to enable the app caching as default otherwise people will still think IE is faster to start. Of course if this ad get Microsoft off their butts and releases IE 7 then maybe it is a good thing. Michael CP Blog [^]

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                  M Offline
                  Member 96
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  Michael P Butler wrote: Of course if this ad get Microsoft off their butts and releases IE 7 then maybe it is a good thing Well thats one good thing I guess, but I honestly don't see what's wrong with IE, I have xp sp2 and it blocks more popups than Firefox and consistently works just fine. Other than for bashing Bill I don't see what the point is. It's just a lot of sound and fury signifying exactly nothing.

                  P realJSOPR 2 Replies Last reply
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                  • M Michael Dunn

                    What is it they expect to gain from the ad? Firefox is free after all... :confused: --Mike-- LINKS~! Ericahist | 1ClickPicGrabber | CP SearchBar v2.0.2 | C++ Forum FAQ | You Are Dumb

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                    Paul Watson
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    Marketing. regards, Paul Watson South Africa The Code Project

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                    • M Member 96

                      Michael P Butler wrote: Of course if this ad get Microsoft off their butts and releases IE 7 then maybe it is a good thing Well thats one good thing I guess, but I honestly don't see what's wrong with IE, I have xp sp2 and it blocks more popups than Firefox and consistently works just fine. Other than for bashing Bill I don't see what the point is. It's just a lot of sound and fury signifying exactly nothing.

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                      Paul Watson
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #10

                      You've got a real thing about FireFox eh. How long did you use it for as your main browser? regards, Paul Watson South Africa The Code Project

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                      • P Paul Watson

                        You've got a real thing about FireFox eh. How long did you use it for as your main browser? regards, Paul Watson South Africa The Code Project

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                        Gavin Greig
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #11

                        I think the problem is FireFox doesn't have a killer feature which would provoke the majority of real users to switch. Tabbed browsing is the only thing I hear about consistently as a feature a user would recognise, and my response is "meh". I don't care about it, and although I'm happy to accept that other people do, there'll be plenty who agree with me too. The other big FireFox advantage appears to be how well it handles standards, but that's a developer's concern, not a user's. Hoping FireFox will beat IE on those grounds is a bit like all those years I spent as a desktop developer hoping that there would be a popular rush from Win9x to the more expensive WinNT/2k so that it would be easier for me to develop Unicode applications for our international clients. Dream on! Maybe I'm missing something? Gavin Greig "Haw, you're no deid," girned Charon. "Get aff ma boat or ah'll report ye." Matthew Fitt - The Hoose O Haivers: The Twelve Trauchles O Heracles.

                        P realJSOPR 2 Replies Last reply
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                        • G Gavin Greig

                          I think the problem is FireFox doesn't have a killer feature which would provoke the majority of real users to switch. Tabbed browsing is the only thing I hear about consistently as a feature a user would recognise, and my response is "meh". I don't care about it, and although I'm happy to accept that other people do, there'll be plenty who agree with me too. The other big FireFox advantage appears to be how well it handles standards, but that's a developer's concern, not a user's. Hoping FireFox will beat IE on those grounds is a bit like all those years I spent as a desktop developer hoping that there would be a popular rush from Win9x to the more expensive WinNT/2k so that it would be easier for me to develop Unicode applications for our international clients. Dream on! Maybe I'm missing something? Gavin Greig "Haw, you're no deid," girned Charon. "Get aff ma boat or ah'll report ye." Matthew Fitt - The Hoose O Haivers: The Twelve Trauchles O Heracles.

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                          Paul Watson
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #12

                          No other browser have killer features to woo users so why are we picking on FireFox? And FireFox is gaining, 10million downloads in the first month and MS rejuvenating their disbanded IE team to, unofficially of course, counter the threat. It's a good browser. It's free. It's more secure out of the box than Internet Explorer (even with SP2). It's open, extensible and does no evil. Laugh at the last statement if you will but to many people that does matter. regards, Paul Watson South Africa The Code Project

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                          • P Paul Watson

                            No other browser have killer features to woo users so why are we picking on FireFox? And FireFox is gaining, 10million downloads in the first month and MS rejuvenating their disbanded IE team to, unofficially of course, counter the threat. It's a good browser. It's free. It's more secure out of the box than Internet Explorer (even with SP2). It's open, extensible and does no evil. Laugh at the last statement if you will but to many people that does matter. regards, Paul Watson South Africa The Code Project

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                            Gavin Greig
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #13

                            Paul Watson wrote: No other browser have killer features to woo users so why are we picking on FireFox? Because it's topical. I don't have anything against FireFox, and would apply the same arguments to any other browser hoping to make a big splash. I just don't find it especially exciting, interesting or reassuring - and it needs at least one of those, in the average user's mind, to be a big success. It's already a small success, no argument there. It might still make it to big success on the "reassuring" front, for the reasons you give, but my personal opinion is that it needs something more than it's already got in order to do that. Time will tell. Gavin Greig "Haw, you're no deid," girned Charon. "Get aff ma boat or ah'll report ye." Matthew Fitt - The Hoose O Haivers: The Twelve Trauchles O Heracles.

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                            • P Paul Watson

                              No other browser have killer features to woo users so why are we picking on FireFox? And FireFox is gaining, 10million downloads in the first month and MS rejuvenating their disbanded IE team to, unofficially of course, counter the threat. It's a good browser. It's free. It's more secure out of the box than Internet Explorer (even with SP2). It's open, extensible and does no evil. Laugh at the last statement if you will but to many people that does matter. regards, Paul Watson South Africa The Code Project

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                              Gavin Greig
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #14

                              I've just re-read my other message and it reads like I'm saying FireFox's security's no good. Sorry for expressing it so badly - that's not what I meant, I just meant that it's not yet a big selling point to Joe Punter. Gavin Greig "Haw, you're no deid," girned Charon. "Get aff ma boat or ah'll report ye." Matthew Fitt - The Hoose O Haivers: The Twelve Trauchles O Heracles.

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                              • P Paul Watson

                                No other browser have killer features to woo users so why are we picking on FireFox? And FireFox is gaining, 10million downloads in the first month and MS rejuvenating their disbanded IE team to, unofficially of course, counter the threat. It's a good browser. It's free. It's more secure out of the box than Internet Explorer (even with SP2). It's open, extensible and does no evil. Laugh at the last statement if you will but to many people that does matter. regards, Paul Watson South Africa The Code Project

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                                Uwe Keim
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #15

                                Paul Watson wrote: 10million downloads in the first month Hah! I can write you a script to do 20 million downloads for any software you like :-) -- Affordable Windows-based CMS: www.zeta-producer.com

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                                • C Chris Maunder

                                  Credibility. cheers, Chris Maunder

                                  realJSOPR Offline
                                  realJSOPR Offline
                                  realJSOP
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #16

                                  Looks to me like Firefox has more credibility than IE does... Eleven million downloads since 1.0 was released, and how many of those were installed on more than one system? I only downloaded it once, but installed it on five systems. I suspect the actual total is closer to 16 million installs of that version. ------- sig starts "I've heard some drivers saying, 'We're going too fast here...'. If you're not here to race, go the hell home - don't come here and grumble about going too fast. Why don't you tie a kerosene rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001

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                                  • M Michael P Butler

                                    Kant wrote: Firefox ad hits NY Times[^] but is this a good thing or a bad thing for Firefox? Is the app ready for Joe User yet. Personally I don't think so. It still needs some work, especially when it comes to configuration and finding the right plugins. It also needs to enable the app caching as default otherwise people will still think IE is faster to start. Of course if this ad get Microsoft off their butts and releases IE 7 then maybe it is a good thing. Michael CP Blog [^]

                                    realJSOPR Offline
                                    realJSOPR Offline
                                    realJSOP
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #17

                                    Of course if this ad get Microsoft off their butts and releases IE 7 then maybe it is a good thing. Microsoft is too busy patching fixing security issues int he current version to release a new one. ------- sig starts "I've heard some drivers saying, 'We're going too fast here...'. If you're not here to race, go the hell home - don't come here and grumble about going too fast. Why don't you tie a kerosene rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001

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                                    • M Member 96

                                      Michael P Butler wrote: Of course if this ad get Microsoft off their butts and releases IE 7 then maybe it is a good thing Well thats one good thing I guess, but I honestly don't see what's wrong with IE, I have xp sp2 and it blocks more popups than Firefox and consistently works just fine. Other than for bashing Bill I don't see what the point is. It's just a lot of sound and fury signifying exactly nothing.

                                      realJSOPR Offline
                                      realJSOPR Offline
                                      realJSOP
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #18

                                      Firefox blocks ALL popups in my experience. How can IE block more than that? More FUD from the future 51st state... ------- sig starts "I've heard some drivers saying, 'We're going too fast here...'. If you're not here to race, go the hell home - don't come here and grumble about going too fast. Why don't you tie a kerosene rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001

                                      M 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • G Gavin Greig

                                        I think the problem is FireFox doesn't have a killer feature which would provoke the majority of real users to switch. Tabbed browsing is the only thing I hear about consistently as a feature a user would recognise, and my response is "meh". I don't care about it, and although I'm happy to accept that other people do, there'll be plenty who agree with me too. The other big FireFox advantage appears to be how well it handles standards, but that's a developer's concern, not a user's. Hoping FireFox will beat IE on those grounds is a bit like all those years I spent as a desktop developer hoping that there would be a popular rush from Win9x to the more expensive WinNT/2k so that it would be easier for me to develop Unicode applications for our international clients. Dream on! Maybe I'm missing something? Gavin Greig "Haw, you're no deid," girned Charon. "Get aff ma boat or ah'll report ye." Matthew Fitt - The Hoose O Haivers: The Twelve Trauchles O Heracles.

                                        realJSOPR Offline
                                        realJSOPR Offline
                                        realJSOP
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #19

                                        Maybe I'm missing something? I think that's obvious. ------- sig starts "I've heard some drivers saying, 'We're going too fast here...'. If you're not here to race, go the hell home - don't come here and grumble about going too fast. Why don't you tie a kerosene rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001

                                        G 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • realJSOPR realJSOP

                                          Maybe I'm missing something? I think that's obvious. ------- sig starts "I've heard some drivers saying, 'We're going too fast here...'. If you're not here to race, go the hell home - don't come here and grumble about going too fast. Why don't you tie a kerosene rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001

                                          G Offline
                                          G Offline
                                          Gavin Greig
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #20

                                          :laugh: Gavin Greig "Haw, you're no deid," girned Charon. "Get aff ma boat or ah'll report ye." Matthew Fitt - The Hoose O Haivers: The Twelve Trauchles O Heracles.

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