Browsers: January 2008 Archives

Why I barely use Internet Explorer 7, even though I was a big fan of IE6

| | Comments (0) |

Let's get to it: I have one Web site that I work on infrequently that requires Internet Explorer, but since I barely have to do anything on it, I am free to use IE, or not.

And I waited at least a year to "upgrade" my IE6 to IE7 on the XP box at work. Yeah, it's an upgrade because now IE has tabbed browsing -- a feature Firefox has had for years, and which IE probably would've never added had FF not had it first.

I like IE6 because it was a fast program -- it opened fast and did the rest of its thing fast. And I could use it as an FTP client.

Now that I have IE7, sure there is tabbed browsing, and it looks a little better, but it's way slower than Firefox, and I pretty much only fire up IE for ONE Web site because it's at the top of my IE favorites and the bottom of my FF favorites.

IE loads more slowly, the favorites come up slower -- basically it gets beat by FF in performance by every measure. (I'm running a 3 GHz Pentium 4 with 512 MB of RAM.)

And I can run Firefox in Windows, Linux, BSD and Mac OS X ... and I do (though I'm partial to the Mozilla-derived Epiphany in the GNOME desktop, as well as the Seamonkey browser/e-mail client/HTML editor suite -- also based on Mozilla).

Truth be told, if it really bothered me, I'd try to roll the box back to IE6, if that indeed can be done. Since IE7 installs over your IE6, I think it might be a problem to "go back."

Note: While I can't get the same FTP functionality out of IE7, I have a Windows workaround: Open up My Computer from the Start menu, and type your FTP address in the search bar. The window functions pretty much like IE6 -- it's the same "Explorer"-like interface Windows uses to let you examine your own files, and it does FTP just like IE6. Thanks, Microsoft!

I used to think IE was the best browser for OS X, too -- that final version of IE5 for the Mac was a masterful, innovative application, and I'm sorry Microsoft abandoned it. Safari doesn't have enough critical mass to cut it -- many Web sites don't look so hot in it -- so Firefox is pretty much the browser of record for the Mac, too.

And Mozilla is making hand-over-fist money by getting a cut of the Google searches made through the browser. All it means is more money that Microsoft isn't making.

Hope you're happy, Microsoft!

Tech Talk column

Steven Rosenberg's weekly Tech Talk column, which appears Saturdays in the Los Angeles Daily News, is now available on the Daily News Technology page.

About this blog

Comments are back: Comments have returned to Click, but due to the thousands of spam comments clogging up the system each day, commenters must now log in. To comment, either create a Movable Type account when prompted, or create and use a Typekey account. Movable Type, as configured on this blog, allows commenters to create a Movable Type account, verify it via e-mail and then sign in to comment. Other methods of verification are OpenID, Live Journal and Vox.




Steven Rosenberg aims to learn what he does not know. He writes about it here.



About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Browsers category from January 2008.

Browsers: December 2007 is the previous archive.

Browsers: February 2008 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Recent Comments

Steven Rosenberg on My latest project: OpenBSD on the Toshiba Satellite 1100-S101: That's one of the coolest ones. A bit understated, which takes away fr ...

Morten Juhl-Johansen Zölde-Fejér on My latest project: OpenBSD on the Toshiba Satellite 1100-S101: Disturbing to see your comment about the OpenBSD t-shirt when I am wea ...

Morten Juhl-Johansen Zölde-Fejér on Think about giving and getting the One Laptop Per Child: But wasn't this just because Windows wouldn't fly with the earlier spe ...

seanlynch on Xubuntu and Ubuntu 8.04 LTS — Day 3: touchpad configuration help. Look into the command line utility tpcon ...

Steven Rosenberg on Xubuntu and Ubuntu 8.04 LTS — Day 3: @Captain Trav: I had the same idea as you. I hoped that 8.04 would wo ...

linuxcanuck.wordpress.com on Xubuntu and Ubuntu 8.04 LTS — Day 3: Thanks for the blog. It was good reading. I like XFCE and use it lots. ...

linuxcanuck.wordpress.com on Xubuntu and Ubuntu 8.04 LTS — Day 3: Captain Trav, This is fear mongering at its worst. Your experience, wh ...

Captain Trav on Xubuntu and Ubuntu 8.04 LTS — Day 3: Whatever you do, don't install Ubuntu 8.10 on a daily-use machine expe ...

Steven Rosenberg on Xubuntu 8.04 LTS — Day 1: More on GNOME vs. KDE. I suppose if I was a developer and really liked ...

Steven Rosenberg on Xubuntu 8.04 LTS — Day 1: I could've easily brought in the Kubuntu desktop, and KDE does run fai ...

Powered by Movable Type 4.21-en