OK:
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Tabbed browsing
Lets you display more than one site in a window using multiple tabs.
Crazy Browser quote:
Popup blocking
Block all those popup ads.
Crazy Browser quote:
Prevent scripts from doing various things
such as moving windows, closing them and setting cookies.
Or you could not visit those sites. Or you could turn JavaScript off altogether.
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Link toolbar
Displays content from the <link> tags provided by a document, allowing one to navigate to various parts of a site.
This is what I hate about Mozilla: they refuse to support useful IE tags, yet invent their own.
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Sidebar
The sidebar provides a number of tabs by default, and others can be added by the user.
Never had a use for them.
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Can add custom panels to sidebar
Custom sidebars can be implemented in HTML or XUL and can be installed from a remote site without much hassle.
XUL? What the hell is XUL? Some proprietary Mozilla "standard"?
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More control over text zooming
Can zoom text to any size. IE only supports five sizes
Only blind people would have a use for that. If you want things bigger, set your display to Large Fonts or lower your screen resolution.
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and has no shortcut keys that I could determine.
Control+Wheel
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Can zoom any text, even that with fixed pixel sizes
Can zoom text no matter what units were specified.
I care?
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Can select from multiple stylesheets provided by page
When a page provides multiple (or alternate) stylesheets,
None do.
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one can select between them by choosing from the View menu.
Another proprietary Mozilla "standard".
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Page info dialog
Provides additional information about encoding, MIME type, referrer and meta tags.
Ever heard of View Source?
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Detailed form/link/media info dialog
The page info dialog provides tabs which have lists of the form elements, links, images and other media in a page. You can even preview images and save the then from this window.
I could probably knock up something similar in IE. IE4 Power Toys already does links. (Or you could just View Source, you lazy git.)
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Save plugins
Mozilla saves plugins when saving a Web page as complete. You can also save them from the Page Info window.
Now what useful purpose could that possibly serve?
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Themes
Provides two themes by default (Classic and Modern), but others may be installed.
Both identical, and no one likes Times New Roman menus that take up way too much RAM.
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Bookmark etc.
Que?
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Cookie Manager
The cookie manager lets you view the cookies that have been set, their values and their expiry times.
C:\WINDOWS\Cookies
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Can delete cookies individually
The cookie manager lets you delete individual cookies without having to search around your file system.
C:\WINDOWS\Cookies
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Block images from third party sites
One can block images that come from a third party domain.
OK, that's one.
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Download Manager
The download manager provides a tabular view of all of the files that you have downloaded, allowing you to open them without having to search around on your file system.
So do all download accelerators. And IE saves files on the desktop by default.
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Prevents running of executables directly
Mozilla doesn't let you run executable files directly when downloading, which at least makes you think twice before opening them.
If you don't plan on running EXE files, don't download them.
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View Source
View the syntax coloured source of a page, without having to view it in Notepad.
Some people actually like Notepad.
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JavaScript Console
JavaScript Console displays script warnings
JavaScript Debugger
All the same thing. I had to
FIND the JavaScript console before I could figure out why a script on
my site wasn't working in Mozilla. Maybe if it popped up an error dialog like IE, I could have fixed it a lot sooner, and Mozilla's reputation might actually go up from 1 point to 2.
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DOM Inspector
View the structure of a document using a nifty tree view. Also lets you view script properties and style applied to each element.
Shouldn't this be in a separate program?
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DOM Inspector image capture
The DOM Inspector has a tool to capture an image of part of a page, although it doesn't seem to work all too well.
Print Screen
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Select text and perform search
Select some text, bring up the context menu, and choose 'Search' to search for the selected text.
Or you could just use Control+C and Control+V, you lazy git.
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Can select custom search engine
You can select any search engine you wish, not just one that has been chosen for you.
Or you could just type in the search engine's url manually, you lazy git.
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Can display search results in sidebar
When a search is performed, results can be parsed automatically and displayed in the sidebar. You can navigate each found item, without hiding the list.
OK, that's two.
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Supports any Sherlock search plugin
Supports the Macintosh Sherlock search format, so any search engine that supports it can be used.
What's the matter, Mozilla? Run out of ideas for your own "standards" and started using Apple's?
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Can manage saved passwords
Lets you view and delete stored login and passwords.
Or you could not store your passwords.
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Master password encrypts info
A single master password can be used to protect all of your other passwords
See previous answer.
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Can fill-in complete forms automatically
Stores complete forms which can be later be filled in automatically. This is useful if you want to register for something 600 times.
Now why would I want to register for something 600 times?
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Can disable tooltips
Not very exciting,
You said it!
That's enough for now, stay tuned for part two.
[ December 20, 2002: Message edited by: * Red Ranger Software * PC Commando ]