Alex:

It always confused me that Camino and Firefox were basically the same 
thing, just two different teams working independently. It's weird, but 
Camino always seemed "sportier" while Firefox seemed more "sturdy." Like 
Camino was the Thoroughbred and Firefox was the Clydesdale. Two 
beautiful animals that were bred for different jobs. (Told you it seemed 
weird to me.)

Both browsers are based on the Mozilla platform and the "geck" engine, 
but since they are browsers only they don't suffer the bloat of having 
mail, chat, editors and browser all under one hood. Mozilla is still 
around for those people who want the ease of an all-in-one application.

Give it a try, it's an easy download that won't scramble any of your 
current information. Firefox offers tabbed browsing and a popup blocker. 
I'd be willing to bet it will work with Mail since that setting is a 
global setting in System Preferences.
I have also had no problem with online banking or any other bill-paying 
site.

Marta:
I don't recall an installer for Firefox. When you open the disk image 
you'll see a large icon. Just drag it to your Applications folder (or 
wherever). Same with Thunderbird.

Also, Firefox and Camino aren't your only options. You might want to try 
Opera or iCab. Bottom line on all of this: use the one you like best. I 
still use Navigator 4.8 at the office. It works fine and keeps me out of 
too much trouble. Like my own built-in speed bump.


rob

Alex Whitman wrote:

> I'm ready to try a new browser, but I'm confused. What is the 
> difference between Mozilla, Camino, and Firefox? I don't care about 
> IRC chat, and at this point I don't need HTML editing - both included 
> with Mozilla 1.7. I do need pop-up blocking, tabbed browsing, and it 
> would be nice if my new browser played well with Mail, AddressBook, 
> and synchronizing bookmarks between my 2 machines via iSync. Safari 
> 1.2.2 and IE 5.2 choke my bank's internet bill-paying (though they say 
> they won't support anything but IE on Windows, so I may be S.O.L. on 
> that no matter what browser I end up with), and I am having trouble 
> with some long pages with lots of highly-formatted text loading 
> correctly in Safari.
>
> I'm running 10.3.4 on both an iMac and an iBook.
>
> Thanks!
> Alex Whitman
>
>
> On Jul 4, 2004, at 5:40 AM, Robert Kersting wrote:
>
>



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