BRAVO!

psmith wrote:
>   You people are getting behind the curve... tabs are already totally 
> expected, for example.  If you want to pick up some new people, your 
> tabs will need to save themselves at exit and you should make the tabs 
> schedule reloads (so the user gets updates when HE wants) for serious 
> users of a browser for research and that will be part of raising the 
> status of Mozilla (Netscape) to being a browser for more refined tastes. 
> And it appears the feature you have for checking if there's changes on a 
> page does not work.  This isn't just a simple bug that can be fixed 
> sometime later.  And neither is the History feature which loses its sort 
> order every time it is closed.  These "harmless bugs" that can be easily 
> fixed later should be fixed now!  You are not endearing too many people, 
> and you need to do just that so that these people who are right now 
> testing your software can really have something to tell other people in 
> the general population about!  These type features are things that 
> people hold very personal and they want them working.  These days, if 
> something's going to become popular in the marketplace, it already does 
> amazing things that satisfy people before it even is being widely sold 
> or made available.
>   Certain web pages that have dhtml are going to have to scroll faster, 
> now.  Back and Forward are going to have to load pages already seen just 
> as fast as Internet Explorer.
>   And, in general, Mozilla programmers are really going to need to knock 
> themselves out to come up with that which other browsers will simply not 
> be able to do for a long time.  The commitment by talented individuals 
> is there for something really superior, but maybe some of these 
> realizations aren't materializing in your brains.  There is not a lot of 
> time to make this thing great and get it noticed.
> 



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