Personal review of Firefox 1.0

After two years of using Firefox, I have never actually write a thorough review of this browser. Okay, I am not a tech specialist or journalist but somehow I feel like want to write something. I don't regard my previous blog posts about Firefox as my reviews. For the past few months, I wrote about pre-release Winstripe icons, Firefox interface's tiny glitches, Firefox tips and my little adventure in the process of updating the Phoenity theme for latest releases. This time, I'm going to write a review. My personal review.
I've installed Mozilla Firefox 1.0 on my machine. I notice that the size of the setup file is 4803Kb, a little bit larger than RC2 which is 4797Kb. Mind you, I am quite sensitive to small details. The installation process went smoothly and my Firefox profile is imported successfully. My Phoenity theme works well in this build, including most of the extensions installed.
This release features an improved logo. Jon Hicks has perfected the edges, brighten the colors and added some fine details. It's a beautiful artwork. On the other side, the toolbar and interface icons don't have much changes. Some of the old Winstripe 0.1 icons, such as Mail, Cut, Copy and Paste, are still there. Maybe Stephen and Kevin don't have ideas to improve them further? I have some, though. For me, every icon has its own story to tell.
Looking at the main window interface, I felt so proud of my toolbar items arrangement and interface customisations. I drag the location bar to a new toolbar because I want it to be as long as possible, so that I can read certain URLs. I browse through long web pages better, thanks to my Mac-alike scrollbar tweak. When in full screen mode, I can read URLs of hovered links on the statusbar, because I unhide the statusbar with this code:
statusbar[moz-collapsed="true"]{
visibility: visible !important;
}

I have a question in my mind, but I dare not ask other people. Yeah, I'm a little shy to ask potentially stupid questions. Here goes anyway. If the location bar and search bar are dragged away from the toolbars, obviously into the Customize window, what would happen to the and menu items? Basically, when you click these menu items, the location bar or search bar will be focused with a blinking caret. If these bars are gone, where would the caret be? Well, guess no more because I'm going to find it out myself. I press Ctrl + K, nothing happens. I press Ctrl + L, a dialog appears. Everyone, behold the mysterious 'Open Web Location' dialog. I guess most Firefox users have never seen this before, right?

Okay now, let's have a look at one of the coolest feature in Firefox, the find bar. It is an innovative feature, as a solution to provide an usable interface for Find As You Type. This neat feature was formerly known as 'Type Ahead Find', and now it's renamed to 'Find As You Type'. On the Firefox web page, it's also known as 'FastFind'. In the Options window, it's referred as 'Begin finding when you begin typing'. Confusing? Anyway, it's such a handy tool that I use it almost every day, especially when I read long documents or web pages such as the CSS3 Selectors working draft. Just simply type few keys, the Find bar pops up, and the typed characters on the page will be highlighted right away. F3 is the keyboard shortcut that I remember for sure, because it functions as both Ctrl + F and Ctrl + G together. I admit the Find bar interface is a bit weird, for example the left-positioned Close button. Kevin has proposed a much better solution, in my opinion. For your information, the Find bar not only works in the View Source window, but also the Help Contents window! To make things more complicated, it even works in the Print Preview window! Awesome, but it's actually a bug I found recently. Practically, you cannot find anything when print previewing web pages. Sigh.
I supposed this is all I have to say about Firefox 1.0, at least, for now. There are few tiny things that I haven't mention here, which are not quite worthwhile, yet. After all the beers and parties, let's move onward to Firefox 2.0!
Previous Posts
About
cheeaun.com is the site of a Malaysian web developer and designer, Lim Chee Aun. He loves to babble about life, computers, design, internet and oranges. Read more...
Sponsors
Archives
- June 2004
- July 2004
- August 2004
- September 2004
- October 2004
- November 2004
- December 2004
- January 2005
- February 2005
- March 2005
- April 2005
- May 2005
- June 2005
- July 2005
- August 2005
- September 2005
- October 2005
- November 2005
- December 2005
- January 2006
- April 2006
- May 2006
- June 2006
- July 2006
- August 2006
- September 2006
- October 2006
- November 2006
- December 2006
- January 2007
- February 2007
- March 2007
- April 2007
- May 2007
- June 2007
- September 2007
- October 2007
- November 2007
- December 2007
- January 2008
- February 2008
People
- Aaron Spuler
- Alex Choong
- Ang Kew Leok
- Angeline Tan
- Arvid Axelsson
- Asa Dotzler
- Benjamin Leow
- Bernie Zimmermann
- B.K. Ong
- Chan Lilian
- Chan Ming Shern
- Cheah Chu Yeow
- Ching Yonghan
- Chris Neale
- Chris Pirillo
- Danny Foo
- Dave Shea
- David Tenser
- Elizabeth Chin
- Eric Meyer
- Heng Kee Seng
- Ian Hickson
- James Ooi
- Jeffrey Zeldman
- Jinny Wong
- Joe Clark
- Jon Hicks
- Kamal Fariz
- Kah Soon
- Ken Lynch
- Kenny Lee Jian Siong
- Kevin Gerich
- Khai Lee
- Khoo Kah Peng
- Kong Chung Hwa
- Kuhan Venugopal
- Kwan Will Sen
- Lars Kleinschmidt
- Liew Cheon Fong
- Lim Chze Hong
- Lucia Lai
- Navin
- Neil Turner
- P.J.Kraaima
- Peh Tee Luun
- Peter Tan
- Regin Larson
- Ryan Lim
- Saw Kee Wooi
- Scott Jarkoff
- Soo Chooi Leang
- Steven Garrity
- Tantek Çelik
- Teoh Hock Lye
- Tim Yang
Powered By
Believe it or not, this blog is powered by Blogger. Nothing else.