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Posts Tagged ‘Firefox’

Experience with Xubuntu

February 7th, 2010 Dhaval Thakar No comments

In my previous post I have expressed my love to use Linux on my OLD COMPUTER, which is Celeron 1.1Ghz with 256 MB Ram.
For a long time I have used Fedora on this computer, but with the latest versions I have experienced limitation of my pc. Since I use Laptop at home for most of the time, I never cared to find better Linux OS for my old desktop and continued using SliTaz.
Using Slitaz / Puppy linux was always option but I was looking for a OS on which I can run latest version of Firefox & Google Chrome with ofcourse openoffice & torrent clients. With the other light weight version of Linux OS it is difficult to find latest softwares.
Till now I ignored using Xubuntu, as it being light version of Ubuntu I was under impression it will not perform on my old computer. Having free time I thought of giving try to Xubuntu. Unlike my expectation it runs fast enough to not letting me realize that I am using old computer.
Seems like it was worth trying Xubuntu, which eventually made me keep it installed.

Try it.

Minimum system requirements

You need 192 MB RAM to run the Live CD or 128 MB RAM to install. The Alternate Install CD only requires you to have 64 MB RAM at install time.
To install Xubuntu, you need 2.0 GB of free space on your hard disk.
Once installed, Xubuntu can run with starting from 192 (or even just 128) MB RAM, but it is strongly recommended to have at least 256 MB RAM.

Using TAR Package for latest Firefox Release / Pre-Release

December 15th, 2009 Dhaval Thakar 1 comment

For my normal web surfing I prefer to use pre-released firefox. I am not a developer, thus this is my way to contribute to firefox. While using I hardly face any problem but if there any crash I do send crash report.
Apart from this I always like pre-released firefox. This is when you can makeout performance / feature improvement.

If you wait for your favorite distro to release rpm / deb package, you might not get chance to use latest pre-release.
For mozilla products I prefer tar packages only, as in there is no installation required. All you have to do is to extract & run application.

Download firefox-3.7 latest built
Create Folder in your Home Directory e.g packages & Extract source package
Or
As a root, extract package in /usr/local/etc/ so that same will be accessible to other users on same computer. (recommended)

Add shortcut on panel (./firefox/firefox)
panel_shortcut

Start using it.
firefox37

You might need to install compat-libstdc++ / libstdc++ rpm. otherwise you’ll not be able to run application

This is not only limited to pre-released packages. You can also use it for stable release, thus you can start using latest release as made available by mozilla rather waiting for new rpm / deb

Firefox & Xmarks

May 9th, 2009 Dhaval Thakar No comments

firefoxxmarks-beta-v-125x122

I mostly use Office computer, as any other person I keep on updating bookmarks on the same. Often I need to access my bookmark sites from home, which is not possible unless both are synchronized.

I used Xmarks on Firefox on office & home PC to sync bookmarks.

Click here to download Xmarks.

After installation you will be asked to register account on xmarks.com

Sync Bookmarks.

While closing Firefox, it prompts for Bookmark sync.

screenshot-xmarks-status

Restore Bookmarks from server.

To restore Bookmarks goto advanced seeings of Xmarks & click on Download. This will overwrite your existing bookmarks.

screenshot-xmarks-settings

Firefox 3.0.10 Released

April 28th, 2009 Dhaval Thakar No comments

Latest version of Firefox is Released.

Download Now

You can find fixed security issues.

Mozilla ponders dropping Firefox support for Win2k, early XP

April 15th, 2009 Dhaval Thakar No comments

Some developers want to ditch older Microsoft OSs by mid-2010

Mozilla Corp. is considering dropping support for Windows 2000 and the earliest versions of XP when it ships the follow-up to Firefox 3.5 in 2010, online discussions show.

In a series of messages on the Mozilla.dev.planning forum, developers and Mozilla executives, including the company’s chief engineer and its director of Firefox, hashed out which Microsoft operating systems it should support with the 2010 edition of its browser.

“Raise the minimum requirements on Gecko 1.9.2 (and any versions of Firefox built on 1.9.2) for Windows builds to require Windows XP Service Pack 3 or higher,” said Michael Conner, one of the company’s software engineers, to start the discussion.

Mozilla is currently working on Gecko 1.9.1, the engine that powers Firefox 3.5, which is still under development. The company hopes to release that browser at some point in the second quarter. Gecko 1.9.2 and the successor to Firefox 3.5 built on it — which Mozilla has dubbed “Firefox.next” and code-named “Namoroka” — are slated to wrap up in “early-to-mid 2010,” according to the company’s current plans.

Conner based his proposal on the fact that Microsoft Corp. will end all support for Windows 2000 and Windows XP Service Pack 2 on July 13, 2010, and has already ditched support for Windows XP and XP SP1. After that July 2010 date, Microsoft will only support Windows XP SP3, the free upgrade it shipped in May 2008 after some initial compatibility snafus.

“As we intend to ship the next version of Firefox in early 2010, Firefox 3.5 will continue to be supported under our current support policy (six months after the next version) until after those OS versions are no longer supported,” reasoned Conner, “so users will continue to be supported by Mozilla at least as long as their OS is supported.”

Some, however, balked at the idea.

“Right now, the majority of our Windows users are still on XP, but I’m not sure it’s clear how many of those users have upgraded, or intend to upgrade, or in some cases are able to upgrade,” said Mike Beltzner, Mozilla’s director of Firefox. “And while I understand that the platform itself isn’t supported by Microsoft, I do think that keeping those XP users from being able to use Firefox will end up doing more harm (to them) than good, no matter what the intent.”

Others argued for even more drastic measures. “We can justify dropping [Windows 2000]/XP entirely better than setting the minimum to XP SP3 because there are many more new features in Vista that we could take advantage of,” said developer Rob Arnold. “I think we should see how Windows 7 pans out. If the result is good and users migrate from XP, then we should consider dropping XP. Of course, there will always be people who cling to old systems like Win2k and XP, and they will be vocal.”

Conner rebutted Arnold’s argument, noting — as did many of the others in the discussion — that XP is hale and hearty, and may remain so for years. “I don’t think completely dropping XP is feasible for [Gecko] 1.9.2 unless it ships in 2012, given that many machines, notably netbooks, are still shipping with XP Home,” Conner said.

Like many of the out-in-public discussions by Mozilla — which prides itself on the openness of its deliberations — there was no immediate decision made by the participants, who included not only Beltzner but also Mike Shaver, Mozilla’s vice president of engineering.

Currently, Firefox 3.08 supports Windows 2000, XP, Vista and Server 2003. Firefox 3.5, which will be updated to Beta 4 next week, supports the same versions.

Users of older Microsoft operating systems — notably Windows 98 and Windows NT — have been unable to upgrade from Firefox 2.0 to the Version 3.x line, a point that has irked many.

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