Phoenix and Minotaur are the ideal models of their new development, as I understand their statements...
I've been using Phoenix since I came across it (was using Galeon, which I liked more than Mozilla, but I like Phoenix better for the most part), and it is great! The recovery feature of Galeon does not seem to be present, but I think it may be possible to configure Phoenix to do that too... It does not often crash on me, though, and I use a *lot* of tabs. If you haven't used tabbed-browsing yet, try it out. I think a new paradigm in web-browsing is (has been!) evolving, although I'm sure it will take a while for it to go "mainstream". Very powerful features, like bookmarking a whole set of tabs. Phoenix 0.5 is pretty cool, I've been using it on linux and winbloze too, and have also tried a couple nightly releases since 0.5 too; seems to be getting faster and cleaner. http://www.mozilla.org/projects/phoenix/ Go, gecko! Ben B PS - I also was scanning the following URL recently, some very interesting work has been done outside of the browser using the same set of development tools and libraries; this is awesome : ) http://www.mozdev.org/projects/active.html On Wed, 2003-04-02 at 16:56, Rob Hudson wrote: > Not sure when this happened, but Mozilla is heading in a new direction. > In summary, gone are the days of the all-in-one browser, mail client, > composer, chat client, calendar, etc., etc. > > (We already have Emacs for that! ;) > > http://www.mozilla.org/roadmap.html _______________________________________________ Eug-LUG mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mailman.efn.org/cgi-bin/listinfo/eug-lug
