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Subject: Another good reason not to use Internet Explorer


elizabyte ( ) posted Sat, 26 June 2004 at 11:57 AM · edited Fri, 22 November 2024 at 10:59 AM

Attached Link: http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1105_2-5247187.html

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=562&e=6&u=/ap/20040625/ap_on_hi_te/internet_infection

http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1105_2-5247187.html

http://www.winnetmag.com/Windows/Article/ArticleID/43088/Windows_43088.html

Message edited on: 06/26/2004 12:04

"When a man gives his opinion, he's a man. When a woman gives her opinion, she's a bitch." - Bette Davis


simdragon ( ) posted Sat, 26 June 2004 at 12:23 PM

I've already switched to Navigator!


Varian ( ) posted Sat, 26 June 2004 at 3:08 PM

Attached Link: http://www.opera.com

:)


takezo3001 ( ) posted Sat, 26 June 2004 at 3:40 PM

JAVA SUCKS! I use a proxy, and ALWAYS disable My CURSED Java whenever I visit ANY site! Be wary of avant browser as well it's an "ADDON" to Micro$oft's CRAPPY LIL Virus-browser! Go with Opera!



ShadowWind ( ) posted Sat, 26 June 2004 at 3:54 PM

Thanks for the heads up. I decided to try Firefox after seeing this message, and I like it pretty good actually, though it takes a little fiddling to get it working as IE does. Still not bad. I got it at www.mozilla.com.


Jumpstartme2 ( ) posted Sun, 27 June 2004 at 2:51 AM

Yup, I finally saw the light a couple weeks ago, and switched to Firefox...never will I use IE again. {and I think the little themes are cool to boot ;) }

~Jani

Renderosity Community Admin
---------------------------------------




elizabyte ( ) posted Sun, 27 June 2004 at 2:54 AM

JAVA SUCKS! You mean JavaScript. Java is a complete, object-oriented, cross-platform programming language. It can be used for web appications but it has far better uses. ;-) Javascript is basically just an extension of HTML (well, more or less), and that's what's used to carry out this exploit. bonni (sorry, it's just one of my "things" to point out that Java is not the same as Javascript ;-)

"When a man gives his opinion, he's a man. When a woman gives her opinion, she's a bitch." - Bette Davis


tafkat ( ) posted Sun, 27 June 2004 at 9:21 AM

IE is currently the most popular browser and this is why its security flaws are targetted by these malicious programs. If Netscape increases in popularity, they will target Netscape too, with exactly the same results. It has nothing to do with IE being unsecure and Netscape being in any way better (Netscape is more bugged than IE for rendering HTML) From the article:- "NetSec's Houlahan advocated drastic action. "I told my wife, unless it is absolutely necessary and unless you are going to a site like our banking site, stay off the Internet right now," he said. " This guy sounds nuts to me. I just hope nobody's listening to him...


scourge ( ) posted Sun, 27 June 2004 at 9:54 AM

I don't recommend Netscape because it's too big and clumsy nowadays. Opera is also going to the wrong direction in my opinion. I just like the simplicity of Firefox. The problem with IE is that it's part of the OS and you can't un-install it from Windows. Microsoft likes to embed programs to their OS. Several months ago the EU court fined MS for 500 000 000 and gave them 90 days to remove Media Player from Windows. I'm not sure if the same goes for IE as well, but I hope so. Of course MS complained about the decision and now the fight will take a few more years. "JAVA SUCKS!" LOL I agree... and I do know what Java is.


elizabyte ( ) posted Sun, 27 June 2004 at 10:45 AM

"JAVA SUCKS!" LOL I agree... and I do know what Java is. Well, that's fair enough. :-) I just have this weird little quirk about the Java != Javascript thing. ;-P bonni

"When a man gives his opinion, he's a man. When a woman gives her opinion, she's a bitch." - Bette Davis


scourge ( ) posted Sun, 27 June 2004 at 11:08 AM · edited Sun, 27 June 2004 at 11:12 AM

Same here about the Turbo Pascal/Delphi != Pascal thing
I made my first programs with Turbo Pascal and it annoyed me when people told me that Pascal is only a toy created for educational purposes and you can't do anything serious with it.

Message edited on: 06/27/2004 11:12


takezo3001 ( ) posted Sun, 27 June 2004 at 7:41 PM · edited Sun, 27 June 2004 at 7:42 PM

Well, that's fair enough. :-) I just have this weird little quirk about the Java != Javascript thing. ;-P
======================================================I Honor those with having the "SPECIFIC CONFERMATION" Gene! You always learn something new from them! BTW Java-script is the BASTARRRD-CHILD of Java, And Java even tried to put the wretch up for adoption..Especially after Her Divorce from Acitve-X! 8^D

Message edited on: 06/27/2004 19:42



elizabyte ( ) posted Sun, 27 June 2004 at 10:05 PM

This is from an article I wrote for an e-zine a couple years ago: Java is a complete object-oriented programming language developed by Sun Microsystems. It can be used to create complete, complex, independent programs and applications. To use it on your computer, you may need a Java interpreter (which is available for free from Sun Microsystems). On the web, Java is used in the form of an actual program that is downloaded from the server and executed through the browser. Java "applets" do need a Java-capable browser to run, and if you turn off Java in your browser, you won't see or be affected by embedded Java applets in a website. Java is supposed to work across platforms, and in theory, it does (there can be problems with it in practice, but that's way beyond the scope of this little article). JavaScript's correct name is ECMAScript. It was originally developed by Netscape some years ago, when Netscape was still an independent company. JavaScript is not a programming languge, but rather is an extension of HTML, a "scripting language". JavaScript primarily responds to events (usually mouse actions, but other events can also trigger JavaScript actions and behaviors). JavaScript exists as text within the page (or in an external but linked page). It is not a program, and it always requires a browser or other HTML-capable device (such as some mail programs). You can turn off JavaScript in your browser, and you won't be affected by or see any JavaScript effects (such as pop-ups, certain kinds of forms, rollovers, and other special effects). JavaScript is also not universal, and may or may not work properly in your particular browser. The only thing that Java and JavaScript have in common is that the actual code looks similar on a superficial level, and their names are frustratingly, maddeningly similar. ----------------- :-) bonni

"When a man gives his opinion, he's a man. When a woman gives her opinion, she's a bitch." - Bette Davis


Erlik ( ) posted Mon, 28 June 2004 at 12:13 AM · edited Mon, 28 June 2004 at 12:14 AM

IE is currently the most popular browser and this is why its security flaws are targetted by these malicious programs. If Netscape increases in popularity, they will target Netscape too, with exactly the same results.

Well, no. Netscape does have its bugs, but it's not the security hole IE is. Listen to what scourge says: IE is part of the OS. Its "popularity" has very little to do with its quality and very much with the fact that it comes with Windows. Read what Tim Bray has to say. And use a better browser.

It has nothing to do with IE being unsecure and Netscape being in any way better (Netscape is more bugged than IE for rendering HTML).

Well, no. Even Netscape 4, which was worth bugger all when it came to CSS, was mainly intolerant of sloppy HTML. The current Netscape, 7.1, is better than IE in rendering both CSS and HTML. Still: Opera or Firefox. They, in addition, have pop-up control, which IE will have only in Service Pack 2.

Opera is also going to the wrong direction in my opinion.

Well, I installed 7.50 and have to say that I don't exactly disagree. (Why the hell System Tray?!) But you can participate in the shaping of future versions and it's still better browser overall. So I'll keep it.

The only thing that Java and JavaScript have in common is that the actual code looks similar on a superficial level, and their names are frustratingly, maddeningly similar.

Oh, that's marketing. Java was hot at the time and they decided to give the name JavaScript to the thingy. Now it officially goes under the name of ECMAScript. :-)

Message edited on: 06/28/2004 00:14

-- erlik


elizabyte ( ) posted Mon, 28 June 2004 at 12:18 AM

Oh, that's marketing. Java was hot at the time and they decided to give the name JavaScript to the thingy. Now it officially goes under the name of ECMAScript. :-) I know, but it doesn't stop people from calling ECMAscript Java. ;-) Also, and unrelated to Java OR Javascript/ECMAScript, I've finally downloaded Firefox from mozilla.org and I'm giving it a good test run. Very nice, very smooth, nice interface, skinnable, so far it's worked perfectly, and it's got built in popup control and other interesting features. Well worth investigating, IMHO. bonni

"When a man gives his opinion, he's a man. When a woman gives her opinion, she's a bitch." - Bette Davis


pearce ( ) posted Mon, 28 June 2004 at 5:07 AM

I've been using the free Mozilla Firebird for months now and am VERY happy with it. Much snappier than IE. m.


judith ( ) posted Mon, 28 June 2004 at 6:25 AM

I downloaded it last night. So far, seems like a great little browser...

What we do in life, echoes in eternity.

E-mail | Renderosity Homepage | Renderosity Store | RDNA Store


tuttle ( ) posted Mon, 28 June 2004 at 7:42 AM

"Well, no. Netscape does have its bugs, but it's not the security hole IE is. Listen to what scourge says: IE is part of the OS. Its "popularity" has very little to do with its quality and very much with the fact that it comes with Windows. Read what Tim Bray has to say. And use a better browser." I never suggested IE was popular because of its quality. The fact remains that IE's security issues have only come about because of people targetting it, and that is a result of its popularity. I use IE about 5 hours a day, and develop on it too, and I've found no problems with it. Patch your OS and everything will work just fine. Why would I want a "better" browser? I don't subscribe to the "slag-off Microsoft and be cool" brigade. I judge as I see it, and don't go off what other people day. "The current Netscape, 7.1, is better than IE in rendering both CSS and HTML." As a web developer I find that IE is currently the best at both CSS and HTML rendering, although it isn't perfect. Nowadays I only use CSS for formatting (and pretty much everything) and Netscape has some blatant bugs that should IMO have been fixed by now.


tuttle ( ) posted Mon, 28 June 2004 at 7:43 AM

day=say (seeing as "edit" isn't working - looks like someone put the "replace" function in the wrong place!)


tuttle ( ) posted Mon, 28 June 2004 at 7:50 AM

And tafkat=tuttle BTW (damn all these aliases)


elizabyte ( ) posted Mon, 28 June 2004 at 7:58 AM · edited Mon, 28 June 2004 at 7:59 AM

Attached Link: http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/06/28/1088274658575.html?oneclick=true&oneclick=true

*Patch your OS and everything will work just fine.*

Except that this latest exploit has no patch, and it's happening on websites that ordinarily would be highly trusted, because they're running an insecure installation of Microsoft IIS.

By the way, I'm a web developer, too, and I tend to treat IE as "the lowest common denominator" as far as testing goes, but I don't develop "for" that browser, and I certainly don't use it myself (and haven't for years).

Naturally, your mileage may vary, and you're certainly welcome to use any browser you please. Personally, I don't like being just one of the crowd or part of the lowest common denominator... ;-)

That aside, the attached link is an interesting article I read today about Microsoft and their dodgy record in the area of computing security. It's a bit biased, but it's a good read if nothing else. (cut and paste the URL if it gets cut off by the forum software).

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/06/28/1088274658575.html?oneclick=true&oneclick=true

bonni Message edited on: 06/28/2004 07:59

"When a man gives his opinion, he's a man. When a woman gives her opinion, she's a bitch." - Bette Davis


scourge ( ) posted Mon, 28 June 2004 at 8:42 AM

Only a couple of weeks ago I switched from IE to Firefox, but not because of security issues. Though my hardware is up to date IE just was too slow and heavy. Apparently IE consists of parts scattered all over my C drive, which makes the damn browser respond slowly if the hd is a little fragmented. Also, the amount of RAM IE eats is horrible. I like to have multiple browser windows open simultaneously, which means multiple iexplore.exe applications running at the same time, reserving 17MB+ RAM each! Firefox on the other hand needs only one exe running. Too bad I only tested my personal web site with IE. When I switched to Firefox I noticed that the site doesn't look right with any other browser.


fretshredder ( ) posted Mon, 28 June 2004 at 9:31 AM

Attached Link: http://forums.garyzullo.com

I love tabbed browsing ;-)


elizabyte ( ) posted Mon, 28 June 2004 at 10:12 AM

I love tabbed browsing Ditto. Once you get used to tabs, you never go back. ;-0 bonni

"When a man gives his opinion, he's a man. When a woman gives her opinion, she's a bitch." - Bette Davis


takezo3001 ( ) posted Tue, 29 June 2004 at 4:46 PM

Ditto. Once you get used to tabs, you never go back. ;-0 bonni =============================================================== Just do Yourself a favour, and never give a multi-tabbed browser to a guy with A.D.D!! 8^D



pearce ( ) posted Tue, 29 June 2004 at 5:07 PM

But how do you import bookmarks, cookies etc. from Firebird to Firefox? The import function only finds IE (on my PC). You'd think it would find its own earlier incarnations as well. That said, it looks good :) m.


fretshredder ( ) posted Tue, 29 June 2004 at 5:36 PM

Attached Link: http://forums.garyzullo.com

What's best about firefox is the fact that it is open source. Find a bug? report it, and it gets fixed pretty fast. Or, if you're like me, you can become part of the developer team and check code out and fix bugs yourself. Now that's cool :) /gz/


elizabyte ( ) posted Tue, 29 June 2004 at 7:29 PM

But how do you import bookmarks, cookies etc. from Firebird to Firefox? When you install it does it for you. Tell it which browser to impoort from, and it does. Even most of my saved passwords (for sites and such) got converted. Totally painless. I was much impressed (and I've been on the net for ten years, so I don't impress easily ;-). I noticed that there's still no patch for that security flaw in IE... bonni

"When a man gives his opinion, he's a man. When a woman gives her opinion, she's a bitch." - Bette Davis


Jumpstartme2 ( ) posted Tue, 29 June 2004 at 9:01 PM

Great to hear ya like it Bonni and Judith :) Def. check out the little themes..I like the looks of 'SkyPilot Classic'....just looks so...clean :) {And I like the fact that you have the google search right there with the addy bar ;)}

~Jani

Renderosity Community Admin
---------------------------------------




Erlik ( ) posted Wed, 30 June 2004 at 1:52 AM

I use IE about 5 hours a day, and develop on it too, and I've found no problems with it. Patch your OS and everything will work just fine. Why would I want a "better" browser? I don't subscribe to the "slag-off Microsoft and be cool" brigade. I judge as I see it, and don't go off what other people day.

I'm not cool because I slag off Microsoft. :-) I use Opera for whatever page design and building I do. It's much less forgiving of errors.

As a web developer I find that IE is currently the best at both CSS and HTML rendering, although it isn't perfect. Nowadays I only use CSS for formatting (and pretty much everything) and Netscape has some blatant bugs that should IMO have been fixed by now.

Er, I've just did a small test of browsers and IE was the only one that had a blatant and glaring error with background-attachment: fixed. The others (Mozilla, Netscape, Firefox and Opera) had some problems with more obscure parts of CSS. Check richinstyle.com or meyerweb.com for CSS:edge.

PS Hey, where have you been? You don't come around Bryce forum anymore.

-- erlik


elizabyte ( ) posted Wed, 30 June 2004 at 2:44 AM

Attached Link: http://yayforgecko.net/article/3/ie7-and-the-box-model-hack

*I use Opera for whatever page design and building I do. It's much less forgiving of errors.* *makes a note* I do test sites/pages in Opera, but I wasn't using it to develop. I may switch now, though. An intolerent browser forces better coding. ;-) I believe that IE's box model is off, as well, but I can't remember off the top of my head where it was wrong (I've been concentrating on digital art rather than webdev lately and I'm slightly rusty on obscure facts and figures). I did know about the background-attachment: fixed thing, though. Very annoying. I believe that Firefox is actually CSS2 compatible, but I haven't done any serious testing. I just know that since I installed and have been using it, it's been very fast and very stable. So far I really like it. Attached link has some interesting information on IE's broken box model, FWIW. Apparently, IE7 has that fixed, but fat lot of good it does given how long it's going to take for the average person to dump IE6. People are still using generation 4 browsers, for pity's sake... Still no patch for that latest IE vulnerability/exploit... And no, I don't "hate" Microsoft. I just don't like poorly written software (which, of course, is why I use Poser, d'oh!!! ;-P ). bonni

"When a man gives his opinion, he's a man. When a woman gives her opinion, she's a bitch." - Bette Davis


tuttle ( ) posted Wed, 30 June 2004 at 6:57 AM

"PS Hey, where have you been? You don't come around Bryce forum anymore." Yeah, I know - been planning on doing a bit of Bryce recently but never seem to get the time. Just waiting for Bryce 6... :)))


Erlik ( ) posted Thu, 01 July 2004 at 1:38 AM

I don't think there's any browser that's really CSS2 compatible. They all do just a couple of features. But IE 7 will be out... who knows. The good thing is, Microsoft gave Explorer its own programming team back. Tuttle, now that Bryce was bouoght by DAZ, I think it's much closer than you think. And the forum is even livelier. :-) Just go to DAZ Bryce forum and see the wishlist. It's miles long. Even longer than the ones we had here.

-- erlik


pearce ( ) posted Thu, 01 July 2004 at 10:47 AM

" But how do you import bookmarks, cookies etc. from Firebird to Firefox? When you install it does it for you. Tell it which browser to impoort from, and it does.." Thanks bonni. I must have missed the crucial message when I installed, so I'll uninstall Firefox then re-install it. Mick ;)


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