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Firefox 3 disappoints some Canadian users

Firefox 3 disappoints some Canadian users

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 18 Jun 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Mozilla has seen massive downloads (and a few technical glitches) this week, but some local observers aren't as impressed by the browser's latest version. Developers discuss their plug-in-plans

Kaitlyn McLachlan, a developer with Toronto-based Clear Sky Media Inc., built add-ons to the Firefox browser several months ago that she looks forward to enhancing with the latest version released by Mozilla Corp. this week.

McLachlan downloaded Firefox 3 the day after it became available and finds that it performs faster and comes with “great new features.” Users of Clear Sky Media’s sites are already asking for compatibility of the add-ons with the new browser version, she said.

Firefox 3, an open source browser, includes new functionality such as a new search tool, anti-hacking protection and revamped bookmarking.

Clear Sky Media offers users of its retail information site RedFlagDeals.com a Firefox add-on in the form of a tool bar that provides users with quick links to various sections of the site. Other functionality includes an alert for incoming private messages when users are not logged onto the site; the ability to troll the site’s pages for merchandise; and an easy view of new product deals as they appear throughout the site.

After just several months, the toolbar has garnered about 4,000 users and McLachlan hopes to further drive that number by leveraging the new features of Firefox 3.

The company’s other Firefox add-on, albeit simpler, is for users of the shopping comparison search engine PriceCanada.com site and allows visitors to highlight words on the page, right-click, and search the site for that item.

But Hugh Thompson, administrator and publisher of consumer technology discussion forum Digital Home Canada, has observed from visitor site comments that Firefox 3 is not as well-received as its predecessor, however, it is overall a welcome software release.

“From a rendering engine and improved performance point of view, it’s a great piece of software,” said Thompson, however, the user interface has met with mixed reviews.

But he noted that “very little of the newness of the product is above the covers” and to some extent, Firefox 3 was marketed as a revolutionary product, when it fact it’s an evolutionary one.

Basically, the response to the “leaps and bounds” functionality of Firefox 2 – which was enough, he said, to convert him to the open source browser – is comparatively muted with version 3.

But the lukewarm reaction to Firefox 3 won’t discourage developers from building browser add-ons, said Thompson, because the good news is browsers in general – Firefox, Opera, Internet Explorer – are “coming closer to rendering Web pages properly and doing it in a compliant Web standard kind of way.” And, historically that has not been the case.


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more
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