I agree – firefox just looks leaner…ShannonPersonally, I prefer Firefox. I dunno, Opera just seems to cluttered and eye-candy-ish.
I share your pain. Unfortunately, Opera does the same thing (and so does IE).Carl.There's one thing that bugs me down with Firefox and IE... when I load a page with a lot of images that are loading gradually, why isn't there any sort of simple code to make THAT FRIGGIN SCROLLBAR TO STAY IN ITS FRIGGIN PLACE!!!!!![]()
*breathes heavily*
I understand its size and location has to be updated, but it shouldn't be that hard to keep the page in a constant position so that I can at least read something without constantly fighting the stupid scrollbar while images are loading. Is Opera doing the same thing?
Haha, yes, this is very annoying!Carl.There's one thing that bugs me down with Firefox and IE... when I load a page with a lot of images that are loading gradually, why isn't there any sort of simple code to make THAT FRIGGIN SCROLLBAR TO STAY IN ITS FRIGGIN PLACE!!!!!![]()
*breathes heavily*
I understand its size and location has to be updated, but it shouldn't be that hard to keep the page in a constant position so that I can at least read something without constantly fighting the stupid scrollbar while images are loading. Is Opera doing the same thing?
nikyCould you share where you found this trick? My Firefox is starting to get a little boggy.![]()
Enabling filtering
Add this to the opera6.ini file to define the location of your filter file on Windows or UNIX:
[Adv User Prefs]
URL Filter File=filterfilename.ini
Add this to the "Opera 8 Preferences" file to define the location of your filter file on Mac OS X:
[Adv User Prefs]
URL Filter file=System Partition:Users:username:Library:Preferences:Opera Preferences:URL filter file.ini
Blocking local files, news, and images over ftp
The example below will exclude local files and news (because they are not included), and block loading of bmp, jpg and jpeg, gif, and png pictures over the file transfer protocol:
[include]
http://*
ftp://*
[exclude]
ftp://*.bmp
ftp://*.gif
ftp://*.jpg
ftp://*.jpeg
ftp://*.png
Allowing one site only
This example demonstrates how to give precedence to the [include] list, and set the kiosk up to allow surfing on one site only:
[prefs]
prioritize excludelist=0
[include]
http://???.opera.com/*
[exclude]
*
Shannon
h0ssI just can't get into Opera. I've tried a couple of times, but it just doesn't feel right to me.
Firefox is the browser of choice at my company, and at my home-- at least on the non-mac systems. On our macs, it's safari.![]()
MachOneFireFox is my little friend.
I tried it out first, but didn't like the GUI so went back to IE. Then I realized I was getting about 50 spyware items a day using IE. Switched to Firefox and problem solved. Haven't had ANY spyware since January 27th, 2005 which is when I started using FireFox again. Plus with Extensions, Themes, and the ability to Supercharge it, FireFox is so much more user friendly and expandable than IE. FireFox combines eye-candy while still remaining simple. It doesn't go overboard on the eye-candy like Opera, but it doesn't give you a completely bareback ugly browser either (IE). The options are MUCH more user-friendly and can be accessed by anybody. And I advise to never use Nutscrape *cough* "Netscape". It's the worst BS I've seen in a browser.
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