Research Browsers
Grok Headline matches for Research Browsers
V2N21 May 24, 2004 Current Awareness
Happenings on the Internet: Research
Browsers Updates
V2N21 May 24, 2004 Current Awareness
Happenings on the Internet: Research
Browsers Updates
05/24/2004 08:58 AMThis edition of Current Awareness Happenings on the Internet by
Marcus P. Zillman, M.S.,
A.M.H.A. May 24, 2004 V2N21 discusses the latest updates to the
Research Browsers posting. Click on the below audio posting to hear an
audio by Marcus P. Zillman on this latest update. View the original
Research Browser posting with the latest updates at:
Research Browser Posting with Updateshttp://zillman.blogspot.com/2003_09_01_zillman_archive
.html#106241931557183353
RESEARCH AND CONSULTING FIRMS MERGE
Telecom Research Institute (TRI) to
Merge into Dittberner Associates Inc.
Next Generation OSS/BSS Research Program
RESEARCH AND CONSULTING FIRMS MERGE
Telecom Research Institute (TRI) to
Merge into Dittberner Associates Inc.
Next Generation OSS/BSS Research Program
09/18/2004 03:29 AMRESEARCH AND CONSULTING FIRMS MERGE Telecom Research Institute (TRI)
to Merge into Dittberner Associates Inc. Next Generation OSS/BSS
Research Program [PRWEB Sep 18, 2004]
Howlett Research Corp. Publishes
Research Report on Raser Technologies,
Inc. (OTC BB: RSTG)
Howlett Research Corp. Publishes
Research Report on Raser Technologies,
Inc. (OTC BB: RSTG)
07/02/2004 03:36 AMRaser is a research and development company focused on developing
advanced motor technology for broad applications, including the
growing electric hybrid vehicle market. It has developed several
innovations in electric motors and controllers that increase torque
and power, allowing reduced manufacturing costs and providing enhanced
performance. Applications span virtually the entire universe of
electric motors, including industry, the military, as well as the
automotive sector. [PRWEB Jul 2, 2004]
Axogenic and University of Sydney
Collaboration Supported by Australian
Research Council Grant for Biotechnology
Research in Genetics
Axogenic and University of Sydney
Collaboration Supported by Australian
Research Council Grant for Biotechnology
Research in Genetics
12/19/2004 03:17 PMAXOGENIC and U. of Sydney collaboration is intended to result in the
discovery of new technologies for human interaction with complex data
structures arising from the analysis of DNA microarray data. The new
technologies will take the form of 2D and 3D interactive
visualisations which, when later integrated into Axogenic's product
line, will help speed discovery in genetic and proteomic research,
with applications across a broad range of life sciences. [PRWEB Dec 3,
2004]
The Power-Aware Systems Department of
the Austin Research Lab invites
applications for Research Staff Member
positions.
The Power-Aware Systems Department of
the Austin Research Lab invites
applications for Research Staff Member
positions.
01/22/2004 07:32 PMAre you obsessed with power?
The Power-Aware Systems Department of
the Austin Research Lab invites applications for Research Staff Member
positions. If full system simulation is more your thing,
we've got that, too.
Primary Research Group has released a
new study: Licensing and Copyright
Management: Best Practices of College,
Special and Research Libraries.
Primary Research Group has released a
new study: Licensing and Copyright
Management: Best Practices of College,
Special and Research Libraries.
08/20/2004 02:28 AM [PRWEB Aug 20, 2004]
Browsers That Aren't Browsers
Browsers That Aren't Browsers
09/08/2004 04:52 AMThanks to the WebKit technology built into Mac OS X Panther, it's
become much easier for software developers to create applications that
are web-savvy. In this article, we thought we'd take a look at a few
of them. By Giles Turnbull, O'Reilly Network (via MyAppleMenu)
Browsers? Yes, browsers
Browsers? Yes, browsers
06/16/2004 08:28 AMDon't just bitch and moan about the
Microsoft
monoculture -- do something about it! Ditch your
no-improvements-since-before-the-dotcom-boom Internet Explorer Web
browser. You'll be affected by fewer viruses and you'll discover that
software didn't
have to stop dead in its tracks in 1997.
I've always been partial to
Opera, a great little browser out of
Scandinavia, available in free (ad-supported) or paid versions. But if
you're allergic to ads and don't feel like paying a paltry sum for the
piece of software you probably use the most, there is also an
entirely free browser that is much, much better than IE: the
open-source
Mozilla
Firefox has just released its "0.9" version.
The numbering suggests it's not "done" yet, but the Mozilla people are
just hugely conservative with their labeling. Firefox is ready for
prime time, from what I can tell, and it's super: fast, compact and
full of features you just can't get from Microsoft. It's also
available on all the major platforms (Windows, Linux, OSX).
New Browsers
New Browsers
02/10/2004 02:49 AMThe Omni Group released
OmniWeb 5.0b1. Apple released
Safari 1.2.
When Browsers Grow Up
When Browsers Grow Up
01/02/2005 09:25 PMFor 25 years, I've preached the superiority of the PC as an
application platform, but times change and reconsideration is in
order. The web browser and the infrastructure of the World Wide Web is
on the cusp of bettering its aging cousin, the desktop-based graphical
user interface for common PC...
Three LDAP Browsers for the Asking
Three LDAP Browsers for the Asking
06/01/2004 09:47 PMInternet.com Jun 2 2004 2:29AM GMT
MS to Change XP to Allow Other Browsers
MS to Change XP to Allow Other Browsers
01/23/2004 02:26 PM"Microsoft agreed to a government demand that it eliminate a feature
of its Windows XP operating system that overrides competitors' Web
browsers, the Justice Department said."
Browsers fight it out
Browsers fight it out
07/13/2004 12:24 AMNews.bbc.co.uk - Mon Jul 12, 06:29 pm GMT
Stem cell research research
Stem cell research research
07/27/2004 11:13 AM Three links from Bill Koslosky, MD, about stem cell research. I'm
running to the Convention and haven't had a chance to actually look at
the links, but Bill particularly recommends this one, which "discloses
the fact that stem cell research is really not expected to be used as
a therapy for Alzheimer's." Also a map and an explanation......
75% of Network Connections Not From
Browsers
75% of Network Connections Not From
Browsers
01/02/2004 01:13 AMMy Computer: Alternative Browsers
My Computer: Alternative Browsers
08/01/2004 12:25 AMG4 Tech TV Aug 1 2004 5:09AM GMT
Tab to select menus in Mac browsers
Tab to select menus in Mac browsers
06/05/2005 11:57 PM
I have repeatedly finding myself turning to the otherwise unused
Windows box on my desktop for filling in online forms. The primary
reason has been the Tab behaviour in Web forms: on Windows, you can
tab between text fields, menus, radio buttons, et al; on
Safari/Firefox on Mac, you skip the menus entirely and have to reach
for the mouse and click. And this contextual switch is costly.
Now apparently this is "fixed" by enabling System Preferences >
Keyboard & Mouse > Full keyboard access: "In windows and
dialogs, press Tab to move the keyboard focus between: "Text boxes and
lists only." Mea culpa.
I thought I'd clicked that long ago to no effect and a double-check
finds that I was right. Despite the label "...and lists," it's only
when you select "All controls" that tabbing to menus actually works in
web forms.
Mea culpa. Label culpa.
Start-up looks to add pluck to browsers
Start-up looks to add pluck to browsers
05/24/2004 10:51 AMYet another back/forward key for some
browsers
Yet another back/forward key for some
browsers
05/03/2004 10:44 AMWhen you have an internet browser open and you hit a backspace key on
keyboard, it will go back one page (hit twice - two pages etc.). It
seems to work at least with Safari, IE and Opera under 10.3.3.
[robg adds: I thought w...
Load XML in Gecko browsers
Load XML in Gecko browsers
07/15/2004 05:32 AMCNET Jul 15 2004 10:13AM GMT
Pressure SAP to support other browsers
Pressure SAP to support other browsers
07/07/2004 09:00 PMIf you're an SAP customer, partner or supplier, it's time to put the
pressure on SAP to support browsers other than Internet Explorer.
Details here....
XML Error Handling in Web Browsers
XML Error Handling in Web Browsers
01/19/2004 12:39 AMI've been following the topic of XML error handling on Mark Pilgrim's blog with great
interest. Go read
this blog entry. Done? Good. Now go read this
blog entry.
Safari has draconian XML error handling. If the file isn't
well-formed, Safari won't display it. Mozilla does the same, which
should come as no surprise, since the two browsers use the same
open-source XML parser (expat).
I fall squarely into the draconian camp and agree with Tim Bray. Fully half of the bugs
I receive in WebCore are not bugs at all, but are essentially
differences in error handling and error recovery between Safari and
the dominant Web browser, WinIE. None of these issues occur with XML.
If we lived in a world where browsers could refuse to display
malformed content (with useful error notification of course so that
authors could easily repair their content), then all of these "bugs"
would simply disappear. I could focus my efforts on real DOM and CSS
bugs, and not have to waste my time emulating the behavior of
WinIE.
Relaxing restrictions on well-formedness is a slippery slope, and
where does it end? Consider all the "helpful" rules that exist in
HTML today thanks to early versions of Netscape and WinIE. Did you
know that any h1-h6 tag can close any other h1-h6 tag? Try it. Open
an h1, type some text and then put in a close h2. It will close up
the h1 in WinIE and Mozilla. (I haven't yet fixed this "bug" in
Safari.) Try specifying a close tag for a paragraph by itself.
You'll get an empty paragraph in Safari, Mozilla, and WinIE.
Of course the most complicated error recovery problem is residual
style, which I have blogged about at length. This "helpful feature" (note the
sarcasm) allows you to accidentally mis-nest style tags like the
italic and bold tags and basically treat HTML more like a stream of
"on/off" states than an actual tree structure. This feature is more a
by-product of primitive browsers from the 90s that didn't have true
DOMs than an actual intended error recovery system.
There's also the missing quotes problem, e.g., leaving a close
quote off a link href. Browsers employ complicated heuristics to try
to match up unclosed quotes that depend on the number of quotes in the
document, their positions, and other factors. Safari doesn't really
handle this problem that well yet, and it shouldn't have to.
The whole reason nearly all Web pages on the Internet are malformed
is because browsers let Web page authors get away with it. As long as
browsers are permissive in their error handling and recovery, Web
authors will continue to produce invalid Web pages, because they won't
even have any idea the pages they are authoring are invalid!
People in the error recovery camp then suggest ideas like icons in
the status bar, or error messages dumped to some obscure console, but
the average Web designer isn't going to know or care about validation
as long as WinIE displays the Web site adequately. The only way you
can make the average Web designer care is to get in his face with the
obvious errors. The browser has to make a face and refuse to eat the
swill that is being force-fed to it, or the average designer is simply
going to shrug and say, "Well, close enough."
The crux of the problem with implementing true error recovery is
that it must be unambiguous. Every Web browser has to recover from
malformed content in precisely the same way. This means that in order
for browsers to be tolerant of malformed content, there would have to
be a specification regarding how to handle all possible malformations.
This is virtually impossible to specify, so why waste time and energy
on it when creating well-formed XML files is so ridiculously
simple?
I think people who don't work on Web browsers for a living have no
concept of just how malformed the Web really is, so let me state this
as clearly as I can:
The #1 reason that HTML pages render incorrectly in alternate
browsers is because of differences in error handling and
recovery.
Flash Plugin for Browsers 7.0.25
Flash Plugin for Browsers 7.0.25
05/29/2004 06:16 AMMacromedia Flash plugin for Mozilla, Firefox, Opera, and Konqueror.
Mozilla Browsers Gains on IE
Mozilla Browsers Gains on IE
07/10/2004 09:25 PMIE accounts for 95% of browsers - survey
IE accounts for 95% of browsers - survey
12/17/2002 12:43 PMNineteen out of 20 surfers use IE as a browser, with Netscape a very
distant second, and alternative browsers restricted to use among a
small tech savvy niche, according to Web analytics outfit OneStat.com.
"zeldman.doc"
XSLT, Browsers, and JavaScript
XSLT, Browsers, and JavaScript
02/05/2003 07:24 PMBob DuCharme, in this month's Transforming XML column, shows us how to
include JavaScript in the HTML result tree of XSLT transformations.
Loading XML into Gecko-based browsers
Loading XML into Gecko-based browsers
04/26/2004 10:09 AMCNET Apr 26 2004 1:52PM GMT
Mozilla updates browsers after bug hunt
Mozilla updates browsers after bug hunt
09/15/2004 05:09 PMPatch cycle
OmniWeb, Opera update Web browsers
OmniWeb, Opera update Web browsers
05/12/2004 11:12 AMThe Omni Group and Opera Software have both provided updates to their
respective Web browsers on Wednesday.
OmniWeb 5.0 beta
6.1 simply updates the beta expiration date, although OmniWeb 5.0
includes many new features over its predecessor.
Opera 7.5 adds Opera Mail,
news and newsfeed features; Opera IRC chat; and Mac OS X integration
with keychain, Safari bookmark importing, stored passwords and more.
Browsers Get Ready for Graphics Boost
Browsers Get Ready for Graphics Boost
04/12/2005 01:47 PMSince first becoming a Web standard nearly four years ago, SVG has
lagged in adoption as developers waited for broader support for
next-generation Web graphics. But upcoming plans from two Web browser
makers to natively support the XML-based graphics language could give
Scalable Vector Graphics the boost it needs to begin remaking the look
and feel of the Web.
Opera Software ASA is the furthest along in building SVG support into
its namesake browser. Opera last month became the first major browser
with built-in SVG support when it released its latest beta of the
next Opera browser version, which is due for a
full launch within the next few weeks. Meanwhile, the open-source
Mozilla Firefox browser is incorporating SVG support in Version 1.1,
which is expected to be released in June.

News source:
eWeekRead full story...Pray for the web porn browsers (Reuters)
Pray for the web porn browsers (Reuters)
01/22/2004 02:10 AMReuters - An Israeli rabbi has composed a prayer to help devout Jews
overcome guilt after
visiting porn web sites while browsing the Internet.
Webseecon 2.0 works with all major
browsers, more
Webseecon 2.0 works with all major
browsers, more
02/01/2005 09:53 PMAstoundit Software on Tuesday released Webseecon 2.0, the latest
version of its utility that turns Internet shortcuts into custom icons
approximating the actual Web sites. This upgrade ensures that
Webseecon works with Safari, Firefox, Netscape, Camino and OmniWeb, in
addition to support for Internet Explorer's .url shortcuts. It also
features a redesigned interface, compatibility with the latest
versions of Mac OS X v10.3, faster icon creation, support for dragging
and dropping multiple shortcuts and more. Registration is US$9;
Astoundit doesn't note upgrade pricing, if any, on its Web site. Mac
OS X v10.2 is required.
Pop-up vulnerability found in major
browsers
Pop-up vulnerability found in major
browsers
06/24/2005 08:30 PMBrowsers Preferred by Webl0g Readers
Browsers Preferred by Webl0g Readers
12/22/2004 12:59 AMNow that the famous Firefox advertisement has run in the New York
Times, I've seen several folks publishing figures for the browser mix
hitting their weblogs. Tim Bray Tim Bray (of Sun Microsystems) updates
his chart roughly every weekend. On his site, Safari struggles to hit
10%, while the Mozilla family of browsers (including Firefox) and
Microsoft Internet Explorer are battling for first place. BoingBoing
The folks at BoingBoing have posted about this recently and even make
their full stats...
OS X Security Flaw Plagues Web Browsers
OS X Security Flaw Plagues Web Browsers
05/20/2004 09:55 AMIn an exclusive interview, "lixlpixel," the person who discovered the
flaw said that after waiting on Apple's reply, he finally posted the
advisory to a Swiss Macintosh Web site. "This is how Secunia picked up
on the vulnerability," lixlpixel said. By Blane Warrene, MacNewsWorld
(via MyAppleMenu)
Google Prefetching for Mozilla Browsers
Google Prefetching for Mozilla Browsers
03/31/2005 12:28 PMFatal attraction--browsers and the
beguiled
Fatal attraction--browsers and the
beguiled
04/13/2004 11:30 AMZDNet Apr 13 2004 3:20PM GMT
View Illustrator files in web browsers
View Illustrator files in web browsers
06/21/2004 10:46 AMThis may be totally useless but ... I accidently drag and dropped an
Illustrator (.ai) file into an open Safari window and, after a long
pause, it opened it with Schubert's PDF plugin. This also worked in
Firefox.
This works...
Designing Web content for mobile
browsers
Designing Web content for mobile
browsers
03/31/2005 10:56 PMGrok Description matches for Research Browsers
GrokA matches for Research Browsers
Research Browsers