Archive for the ‘Tech’ Category

Not all browsers suck

Sunday, April 9th, 2006

Back in January I wrote about my browser problems and I loudly proclaimed that they all sucked. I have to take that back though because I’ve been using a browser that totally doesn’t suck. That browser is Flock. I don’t think Flock is such a great name for a browser but a rose by any other name eh? Actually, the name is fine, I’m just being difficult.

Flock was built (from what I can determine, your mileage may vary…) with someone just like me in mind. The Flickr integration is awesome and I can post to my multiple blogs all from within the browser without having to log in to my host server. Flock is built off of Firefox but seems to run much snappier on my G4 than Firefox ever did. I don’t experience browser crashes anymore and so far I haven’t been locked out of any sites. There are a few things that seem to work…strangeley, sometimes, but since the browser is still in beta (I think) I can live with that. I can’t think of any specific quirks right now but there have been a couple of times that something happened that was unexpected, nothing life-altering though. My brother had suggested that I try Camino but I’ve been having so much fun with Flock that I don’t know when or if I’ll ever get around to testing Camino out. Way to go Flock team, y’all have a fine product.

All Browsers Suck

Monday, January 23rd, 2006

Screw Firefox. Safari Sucks. Internet Explorer is dangerous. Opera can kiss my ass. Why isn’t there just a damn browser that works? I’ve used many browsers over the years and I’ve come to the conclusion that I don’t like any one of them. None. They can all burninate as far as I’m concerned.

Firefox fan-boys are already composing vitriol in their stupid text editors, I can hear them now, angrily typing and mouse-gesturing at me. I don’t care.

I won’t use the tired cliche of “How come we can put a man on the moon…” because any jerk can put a man on the moon these days. Hell, it’s a freakin’ tourist industry now. So screw that. Instead I’ll go with, “How come we can build a technology that allows us to communicate with the rest of the world at nearly real-time speeds without using wires and we still don’t have a piece of software that allows me to browse the internet the way I want to without choking up and dying on the spot?”

I used Internet Explorer for years (maybe a couple anyway) because that’s what we had on the computers at work, eh, this was back in the days when regular people couldn’t afford computers of their own. IE worked okay. Nothing special about it (I think it was version 3.0 that we were using first…might have been 2, who knows…) but you could go to a website and find out some information so I guess it was doing it’s job. Eventually it was time to upgrade and version 4 was installed, then 5, then 5.5…and I think that’s when I stopped using IE. I was tired of bullshit worms and viruses and whatnot (freezes, crashes, punching the monkey…) and sought out other ways with which to enjoy and participate in the online world.

I had used Netscape on occasion (rich friend’s house, etc.) but I didn’t see anything about it that I liked. It seemed to run awfully slow. I didn’t know about such things as “bloat” or whatever back then but I think that maybe the version of Netscape that I was using was terribly bloated and hogged all of the available system resources (version 4.7??). I think this is when I switched to “Mozilla.”

Mozilla was different but I don’t know if it was better. I liked the idea of open-source (Mozilla was a Netscape project that was built with the open-source process and much of the code and architecture was different from Netscape) and wanted to worship the product but for some reason it seemed like the browser never worked for me…sometimes it was just too slow or I couldn’t access content or it would just shut down altogether. Yes, I know, it was my own fault for using beta software. Whatever, I can live with that. Thing is, it didn’t work the way I wanted it to.

A new project from Mozilla came along, something called “Phoenix” I believe. Phoenix became Firebird which later became Firefox. Some people forget this or don’t know about it but it’s true. Anyway, Phoenix was okay, faster than Mozilla for sure but it always seemed sort of…I dunno, half-baked. Things didn’t work all the time for me and I found myself having to go back to IE pretty frequently. Firebird worked okay most of the time but it gave me problems as well. Nothing seemed to work as well as IE and I found that to be extremely funny (and frustrating). Here everyone was bad-mouthing (with good reason) a browser yet all of the alternatives sucked and didn’t work either. I actually started using a text-only browser again (which I hadn’t done since about third grade), the wonderful-yet-not-the-full-experience-of-the-web-that-you-want known as Lynx.

Lynx is a fine browser but since it is text-only you miss out on a lot of the things that make the web, well, The Web. That’s really all I can say about it. I still use it for certain sites because of it’s lightning-fast load times but I can’t use it for most of the tasks that I need to perform daily. So it goes into a pile all by itself.

Sooner or later, those that seek out alternative browsers will find Opera and I was no different. “The fastest browser in the world” and “Waaay better than Firefox” and “Customizable like no other” are some of the phrases I’d either heard or read so it seemed natural for me to try it. It IS fast. Damn fast. Highly customizable also. Switching the user-agent is very easy to do although it doesn’t seem that helpful to me when I need it. User-agent? That’s what identifies your browser to a web server. Why would I want to switch that? Well, sometimes a site requires IE (by the way, this is the stupidest way to build a web site and you suck if you do this) but I don’t want to actually use IE so I switch the user-agent to sort of fool the web server into thinking that I’m using IE. Since it almost never works I don’t see why they bother having it there but it’s there…mostly though, Opera is too different for me. The interface just doesn’t seem as intuitive as it is for Firefox or Safari or, God help me, Internet Explorer. The browser works fine, doesn’t crash very much and renders pages super-fast so you’d think it would be a champ but I just don’t like it. Strange things happen when I use Opera and I can never quite figure out what the hell is going on.

I’ve been using Firefox again lately but it’s still not all that. Random crashes, random freezes, terrible resource hog, pages incorrectly rendered, and other weird shit as well. It’s probably the best one out there to use right now but that’s not saying much and will actually hurt users later as web n’er-do-wells focus their attacks on Firefox instead of IE. Firefox is fine I guess but there’s a learning curve in it that I think prevents a lot of users from switching. Most people don’t want to dick around with extensions and stuff like that. It will be interesting to see what happens to Firefox in the next couple of years.

Safari. Yeah, I know about Safari. I currently use a Mac and am pretty familiar with Safari. I have the same complaints with Safari that I have with Firefox, namely that I can’t get access to the content that I want on certain sites. Random crashes. Resource hog. Weirdly rendered pages.

OK, I know that the browser isn’t entirely to blame, being on a Mac has its disadvantages. I am locked out of A LOT of sites because of this. This is where I think browsers are failing. As the world moves away from the traditional computer desktop and more into the virtual desktop it seems to me that the browser becomes the OS and it shouldn’t matter what platform it is being run on. Why is it that Friendster sucks for me? It’s because I’m locked out of using an “advanced” feature because of my browser and/or operating system. It’s true. No matter what browser I access the page with (IE for Mac, Safari, Firefox, Opera) a little pop-up tells me that I’m SOL. This should not happen. While it sucks that people build sites only accessible to certain operating systems and/or browsers I think it is the job of the browser to handle that request for me and do whatever is necessary to tell the server on the other end to serve me up the damn page.

It’s not like I’m asking for a binary built for the Intel architecture to run the same on a Motorola-built architecture. I’m asking that HTML be read as HTML, the platform isn’t supposed to matter. Isn’t that why we have HTML in the first place?

Here’s why I think browsers suck: They don’t work the way they are supposed to. They are bitches of the web servers out there and get smacked around. A real web browser would be like John Wayne and not take any shit from anybody. It would handle requests for pages and serve them regardless of what the server tried to demand.

Picture the web server as a guy with a moustache asking you to borrow some fishing gear before you go take a look (for free) at the Grand Canyon. If you had the gear and really wanted to see the Grand Canyon it probably wouldn’t be an issue and you could pick up your gear when you were finished. If you didn’t have the gear though you should still be allowed to see the Grand Canyon, everyone else has been able to see it for free just because they were suckers and packed all of that gear with them. This is when your John Wayne browser would stomp the guy with the moustache so far into the ground that he would never bother you again and you could return as often as you like to look at what is free all the time for others. Instead, our browsers cower like puppies in the rain. They can be kicked around and locked outside so they don’t get the furniture wet.

Browsers will continue to suck until the people that make them begin to listen to the people that use them. They will continue to suck because web standards aren’t enforced and jackasses are allowed to write whatever damn code they please. Mostly I think they’ll always suck because the web kind of sucks. Sure, there’s useful information, if you can find it, but it’s terribly polluted with advertising and porno and fake sites and pop-ups and pop-unders and spyware and adware and scammers and such. It just doesn’t seem very useful to me anymore and I can hardly blame the developers of browsers for that.


BadAzz Firefox plugins

Friday, December 2nd, 2005

First up we have foXpose. For those of you that are using a Mac you might be familiar with Expose (it’s weird how many people don’t know about this feature), a nice eye-candy thing that displays all of your current windows and lets you choose which one to bring in focus. foXpose does the same sort of thing for your tabs in Firefox. Wow. Just click the little icon in the lower left corner of your Firefox window. Tabbed browsing never looked so good.


The other plugin is Tabbed Preview. Just hover on a tab and get a preview. It sounds pointless but it’s actually quite handy. I can’t quite explain why but just try it out.

I’ve been hit and miss with Firefox since 2002 when it was Phoenix but since version 1.5 came out I’ve been quite happy with it. I’m not going to uninstall Opera yet but once again Firefox is my default browser and these new plugins demonstrate why Firefox is so cool in the first place. Rawk \m/

via [boingboing]

BART Goes Wireless

Sunday, November 20th, 2005

Awesome. The underground transit system in San Francisco, aka BART, is going wireless. I love riding the train but I don’t do it very often these days since I’m not working downtown anymore but I may start riding it again just for the hell of going to Pittsburg/Baypoint and back because wireless makes everything bearable. Having a wireless signal is great, I can take my new Sidekick II with me and sit on the train all day, surfing the interwebs or IM’ing (the way our language is evolving is scary to me but I’ll save that for another time) with people and sending email to the grandparents. Rawk \m/

Sitting on a train all day and watching people and writing is fun by itself but throw in a wireless signal and suddenly you’re *working* and getting things done and not just sitting at home and getting fat. No, instead you can sit on a train and get fat (as long as they don’t bust you for eating your lunch I guess) and look cool while doing so. The article says that downtown is covered and the stop near my apartment is scheduled so it’ll probably still be a little while before I’m posting to DMDN from the train but hopefully it won’t be that long of a wait.

Link via [Slashdot]

I Support Bloggers’ Rights

Thursday, November 17th, 2005

If you are on the Interwebs or World Wide Net and are not a member of the EFF then shame on you. If you are feeling guilty about your lack of membership then feel guilt no more, you can join the EFF by clicking on the little graphic in my sidebar under the heading of “organizations.” I’m not getting paid to put that graphic there, I feel that the EFF is absolutely necessary in defending the future of technology and digital rights and I feel lucky that they are around. Your mother supports EFF, shouldn’t you?

If you are too lazy to scroll down a bit and search for the flashing graphic then just click here to join the EFF.

Friendster is the Suckster

Friday, November 4th, 2005

Yes, I have MySpace. And Friendster. And Tribe.net. And Orkut. I’m tired of them all. I don’t even know why I bother having space at these places because they cause me nothing but frustration. I’m going to stick with regular “old” email and instant messaging to keep in touch with all of my friends. Honestly, do people actually keep in contact with the 478 “friends” that they have listed in their friendster profile? I have definitely signed out of Friendster for the last time, well, I didn’t really sign out but it crashed my web browser for the last time. Good riddance. While I “get” the idea of what Friendster is trying to do I really don’t feel a need to show the world how cool I am by the amount of friends listed in my profile.

I get tired of logging in to one of these sites only to have garganutan pop-ups cover my content. This is with pop-up blocking enabled so don’t email me back with things like “Dude, you need to switch to Firefox.” Firefox is great and all but it’s not my default browser anymore and I don’t see it becoming that anytime in the near future. I absolutely recommend (and install) Firefox for home users that are using Windows but it doesn’t work nearly as well on my ibook as Safari does. So there. Weird, I just had a feeling…I felt a thousand mouse-gestures were suddenly silenced as their owners hands gripped keyboards and banged out useless words of bile that told me I should be more L337 and use Firefox…words like “Noob” and “Crapple” and “Pokemon” were sprinkled liberally throughout these messages…

My point was, I’m tired of these so-called social networks so I’m going to quit visiting them as of today. If you have a burning desire to know how cool I am then you can send me an email and I’ll tell you.

Coolmax Hard Disk Enclosures Aren’t Even Pretty to Look At

Friday, October 21st, 2005

After a productive appointment with my acupuncturist I went to my favorite computer store in San Francisco, the always lovely Central Computer, and picked up a hard disk enclosure for a drive from my old laptop. The idea was to have a small backup drive (12 gigs seemed REALLY large back then) and maybe some tools on it that I could use when doing computer-stuff for people. Instead, I ended up with a little aluminum box that can’t even prop the door open.

The Coolmax HD-211 Hard Disk Enclosure (these bastards don’t deserve a link from me) claimed support for Mac OS 8.6 or higher on the package. I can’t speak for it’s support of 8.6 because I’m running 10.3 (Panther runs like a cheetah on crack on my ibook so my Tiger upgrade disc sits lonely and forgotten) but it certainly doesn’t work on OS X. It might run on the operating system but I don’t know because I got rid of that steaming pile of donkey dung as soon as I could.

Yes, I RTFM. I pored through local help files. I searched Apple’s site. I used the ubiquitous search engine. I even searched Usenet. All to no avail. I don’t care that it was only eighteen bucks, it’s the principle of the thing. I now have to leave the house again, a very painful process for me because of my spinal condition, and waste another three hours of my life returning it. In fact, it’s going to end up costing me because I’ll have to purchase a BART ticket to get to and from there.

Coolmax, you’ve burned me once. It won’t happen again. If I have one small part in bringing you down then I’ll go to my grave a happy man. Coolmax is dead, long live Elvis.