October 16, 2003

Linux has hit men now?

A few days ago, Slashdot reported on a Forbes.com story entitled "Linux's Hit Men". This story touched a nerve in the linux community, and dozens of slashdot readers sent feedback to Forbes.com and the story's author, Daniel Lyons. I was one of those readers. Today, I received my reply:

"Due to the overwhelming amount of e-mail we have received regarding Dan Lyons' Oct 14th story, "Linux's Hit Men", it has become impossible to respond individually. Instead we have opened a special discussion board devoted to this story. Please go there to post your opinion. Dan has promised to weigh in on occasion. --Eds."

There are already over 200 comments up on the site, so go join the discussion! The author seems to think that any piece of software released for Linux must have it's source code disclosed, which isn't true. It is true in the case of Linksys, however, as they modified the Linux kernel directly for their 802.11g broadband routers.

Posted by Mike at 12:29 PM | Comments (0)

October 15, 2003

Bluetooth is dying, long live Bluetooth!

"Bluetooth, welcome, we've been expecting you. I believe you've already been introduced to Apple and BSD."

Let's see how accurate this is a year from now. While I agree that Bluetooth is likely to be overshadowed, the sudden push by Apple, Logitech, and Microsoft to release Bluetooth keyboards and mice seems surprising. Time will tell.

Posted by Mike at 11:39 PM | Comments (0)

October 01, 2003

Firebird 0.7 Release Candidate

Current UA: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.0; en-US; rv:1.5) Gecko/20030925 Firebird/0.7

I've downloaded Mozilla Firebird 0.7 Release Candidate, and I must say, I'm impressed. While I run nightlies on my linux machine at home, here at work I normally use .61. The differences even between my nightlies and this .7 RC are pretty noticeable.

For one thing, they have greatly cleaned up the preferences dialogs. The privacy tab is shown below; it looks excellent! Gone is that dreadful "XXXBen" message found in previous builds, although a new temporary message exists under the advanced section.

Firebird 0.7 RC Preferences Window, as seen on Windows 2000

0.7 now includes a built-in style-sheet switcher, which has very nicely been placed in the lower left corner of the browser. Browsing to Asa Dotzler's Weblog shows off this nifty feature, which is implemented excellently.

Firebird RC 0.7 Style Switcher!

Other enhancements include bundling the popular AutoScroll extension, which is turned on by default. AutoScroll emulates the middle-click-to-scroll functionality found in Microsoft IE and Office.

The advanced tab in the preferences showed up several nightlies ago, and let's you control a few things which previously required an extension or a visit to about:config. Of note is the option to keep the tabbar always open (available in about:config as browser.tabs.autoHide), and toggling automatic image resizing (in about:config as browser.enable_automatic_image_resizing)

Speaking of about:config, the filter functionality now works properly as well! Entries are filtered dynamically as you type, a feature that never properly worked for me in the .6 releases. It's a nice piece of XUL hackery, and it really helps control that huge list of prefs.

The last (but certainly not least) thing to mention here is the overall performance improvements. This is one thing I noticed immediately is that 0.7 seems to be much better about RAM usage. Right now, I'm writing this entry the 2nd of 3 open tabs. As you can see in the shot below, Firebird's RAM usage is far below the expected 19 or 20 megs. It's below 11 megs right now, which is how much IEXPLORE.EXE is taking up to display the same page I have open in Firebird's first tab! Impressive. Of course, since IE is loaded with the system, it's more difficult to get a true representation of how much RAM it's actually using, but Firebird is definitely holding it's own. Even staying below 17 megs is very good, and really shows how far Firebird has come in a split from the Seamonkey Mozilla releases, which would often gobble up 25-35 megs of RAM on this same system with only one or two tabs open.

sysresources.jpg

With these kinds of improvements, Firebird is going to go far. Things I still want to see improved though are the default throbber and application icon; the Firebird flame icon, while it looks cool in the about dialog, looks pretty bad on the Windows taskbar; it just doesn't scale well. Also, the throbber for the default theme (which is really the Qute theme) looks too much like a Quake icon, and I think should be changed.

Overall, I think 0.7 will be a really good release, and I'm looking forward to it. Go Firebird, Go!

Posted by Mike at 02:18 PM | Comments (2)