nth-child Support in the Major Players

Posted on July 12th, 2008 | 2 Comments »

After reading an article over at the SiteCrafting Blah Blah Blog about different ways to alternate table row colors, it occurred to me that the nth-child approach was not mentioned.  Way back in 2004 I had implemented a ridiculous (hindsight is 20/20) proof-of-concept around implementing tables without using the <table> tag.  However ridiculous the prototype might have been, one touch I added was the use of the nth-child pseudo-class to display alternating table rows in a different color.  Here’s what I wrote about that at the time:

This rule is actually a part of the CSS3 selector set, and if your browser was capable of rendering it correctly (I’m willing to bet it isn’t, at least at the time of posting) you’d see alternate background colors on the table rows (alternating between white and light gray).

Remembering that old proof-of-concept today, I decided to have another look at it.  I was disappointed to find that even in the latest version of Firefox (version 3), over four years later, the alternating row colors were nowhere to be found.  I was happy to see, though, that the latest versions of Opera (9.51 at the time of writing) and Safari (3.1.2 at the time of writing) actually do display the alternating table row colors.  As one might guess, IE7 falls in the Firefox camp on this one.

It’s unfortunate that only half of the major players support this useful feature, but I’m guessing we’ll see support added in Firefox 3.1, of which there is a first alpha targeted for release at the end of this month, since that particular release is meant to include a slew of CSS support geared toward Acid3 compliance.  Furthermore, one can hope nth-child support will show up in IE8, but that may be the least likely scenario between the two.

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Opera Widget Keeps You Up-to-Date on Browser Security

Posted on July 12th, 2008 | 2 Comments »

An article titled Check the Security Status of Browsers with Opera Widget reads a bit like something coming directly out of the Opera marketing department.  The article covers an Opera widget called Stay Secure that refreshes based on the latest data from Secunia every hour to show you a graph like the following indicating the security levels of Internet Explorer, Firefox, Opera, Safari and Konqueror:

Example of Stay Secure Widget

I say the article reads a bit like a release from the Opera marketing department, because assuming Opera views Firefox as a competitor, the widget screenshot shown in the article and statements like “the test showed that Firefox 3 was [the] most vulnerable one and Opera the least” seem a little biased.  Was this actually a test, or did it happen to be the state of security at that moment the screenshot was taken?  For example, above it looks like Internet Explorer and Konqueror are the two most vulnerable.

Regardless, it seems like a neat little widget for those who like to follow web browser security closely, as long as you’re willing to use Opera to track it, since the widget is Opera-only at present.  For those like me who dabble among various browsers, this isn’t an issue.

Anyone know of similar features/extensions for other web browsers?

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Around the Browsersphere #11

Posted on July 11th, 2008 | 1 Comment »

Since my last installment of Around the Browsersphere was posted back toward the beginning of May, there’s simply way too much going on to get all caught up without breaking things up a bit.  Therefore, this eleventh edition will focus solely on the “minor players,” or the web browsers not named Firefox, Internet Explorer, Opera or Safari.

Avant

Flock

Konqueror

Maxthon

SeaMonkey

Others

I’m hoping to catch up on the major players soon, so stay tuned.

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Firefox 3.0.1 Beta (Build 1) Released

Posted on July 10th, 2008 | 6 Comments »

Apparently because I was downloading versions of Firefox 3 before it was officially released, I’ve been automatically enrolled in the Beta Testers Program.  Because of that, I was notified via a toaster notification tonight that Firefox 3.0.1 beta (build 1) is now available for testing.  I’m posting this from the new version, which identifies itself as follows:

Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.0.1) Gecko/2008070208 Firefox/3.0.1

If you aren’t a part of the Beta Testers Program you can download the new beta build, or if you’re just curious what it’s all about, you can head over to the mozilla.announce.prerelease newsgroup or take a look at the MozillaWiki page.  However, I’ve taken a look at both and I’m still not quite sure what the new release is all about.

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For Those Who Despise Firefox’s Awesomebar

Posted on July 9th, 2008 | No Comments »

A couple weeks ago I posted to Twitter about how my wife’s first impression of Firefox 3’s Awesomebar was that she hated it.  Tonight, I got a reply from the @awesomebarhate Twitter account letting me know that Awesomebar “hate feedback [is] welcome” over at Get Satisfaction.

I’m pretty sure my wife has adjusted at this point, but if you haven’t, now you know where you can go to vent some frustration or, better yet, take care of the problem.

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The Add-on Argument

Posted on July 9th, 2008 | 5 Comments »

In a few blog posts I’ve read recently, I’ve witnessed at least two backers of separate web browsers claiming that their respective browsers have an edge over Firefox because they don’t require all the add-ons Firefox does in order to behave the way a user expects them to.

First off, over at the Maxthon Blog last week, a Maxthon user was quoted as having said the following about Firefox 3:

I’m sure Firefox has add-ons that can compensate for its apparent lack of features but…my hard drive says it was nice knowing you but you have to go.

Given that the Maxthon Blog reminds me of a certain other source of information, I took the opinions there with a grain of salt.  However, I soon spotted a similar refrain at a much more trustworthy source.

Opera Watch has an article titled Guardian: Forget Firefox – I’m going back to Opera for browsing and email which quotes The Guardian columnist Andrew Brown as having said the following of Firefox 3:

With the release of Firefox 3, I mounted a private celebration: I went back to using Opera 9.5 as my main browser. This wasn’t just perversity. Firefox without its add-ons is clearly inferior to Opera. Firefox with enough add-ons to make it really useful is very much slower.

Although the reasoning behind Firefox’s add-on architecture has been well-publicized by Firefox spokesmen like Asa Dotzler and there are obviously those out there who appreciate that architecture, it appears that the latest approach by those supporting other web browsers is to suggest that the add-ons approach to feature support contributes to both a lackluster default set of features and excessive bloat once the desired features have been added.

So what’s your take?  Is Firefox’s add-on approach the right approach, or is it better to try and target a larger set of features out-of-the-box?

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Some IE Photos

Posted on July 8th, 2008 | 1 Comment »

The following is a picture of the cake the IE team sent over to the Mozilla folks when they shipped Firefox 3:

Cake Sent to Mozilla by the IE Team

And the following is a mashup of the IE logo and the acid code (presumably from the Acid3 test?) via Twitter:

IE on acid Logo on Flickr

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Digg Watch #4

Posted on June 22nd, 2008 | No Comments »

It’s that time again.  Since the last update, major versions of both Opera and Firefox have been released.  Only one of the two has been dominating in terms of Digg presence, though.

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Firefox 3 Released

Posted on June 17th, 2008 | 2 Comments »

Following a slight server hiccup, Firefox 3 was officially released today at 11:16 AM Pacific time.  That means “Download Day” has officially arrived.  You can track global downloads over at Spread Firefox.  At the time of writing, it appears that the United States, which is in the lead globally, is already nearing the half-million download mark just a couple hours after the official release.  Germany and Spain currently round out the top three countries downloading Firefox 3.

If you haven’t made your mark yet, regardless of where on the planet you might live, head on over to getfirefox.com and download Firefox 3.

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Flock 2.0 Beta 1 is Available

Posted on June 17th, 2008 | No Comments »

Hot on the heels of Firefox 3 potentially being released, I noticed (via Twitter again) that the Flock team has made Flock 2.0 Beta 1, which is based off of the Firefox 3 codebase, available for download.  The key advancements being touted with the beta release are performance, security, the user interface, favorites management and general feature enhancements.

I’ve yet to give Flock a try myself, but this may be the time to do it.  Flock 2.0 Beta 1 is available for download for Windows, Mac and Linux.

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