Chrome? Rather use firefox.
Windows 10 feedback: 'Microsoft, please do a deal with Google to use its browser'
When Microsoft announced the preview of Windows 10, it emphasised the “opportunity to influence product development decisions through the new Windows Feedback app directly within the product". Users can not only give feedback, but also see — and vote on — the feedback of others, giving all of us a chance to assess what users …
COMMENTS
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 11:29 GMT Charlie Clark
Re: It would actually be a smart business move for Ms
@Frankee I think it would be cheaper, too. All they'd have to do is stop the Mozilla people from working on pet projects instead.
But I can't see anything like that happening until they start losing share in their corporate customers, many of whom still depend upon IE 6 compatibility. :-(
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 20:39 GMT shiftnumlock
Re: It would actually be a smart business move for Ms
Not to mention IE period. We've got many business related web portals for financial that require IE. At the same time we've got absolutely none that require other browsers. As an enterprise we'd rather IE was maintained as the default indefinitely.
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 11:32 GMT Hellcat
Re: It would actually be a smart business move for Ms
For home users perhaps, Firefix and Chrome are tinned worms for the enterprise due to the number of weird and wonderful business critical web apps* we have to support and often bork at every increase in version.
I'd be happier if they bundled some sort of browser for reading local html files(read me's/help files) - but accessing something outside of localhost would prompt to choose an internet browser. Something like you can open docs in wordpad, but it's likely you're going to use open office/MS office/libre office/a.n.other to do any writing in real anger.
*Not our choice to run them - and the dev team probably no longer exist!
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 13:28 GMT Anonymous Bullard
Re: It would actually be a smart business move for Ms
A quick test shows 100/100 for IE 11 on the Acid 3 test...
Welcome to the 2010's!
Shame it only scores 376/555 on the HTML5 test, though. Still the bane of any web app developer's life.
(credit where it's due: it's better than it was a few years ago)
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 15:36 GMT Ken Hagan
"Actually, I don't care as long as it reduces the number of browsers and permutations we have to support in the ecosystem. Pick a damned standard and stick to it, not 95% of a standard and 5% of undocumented fluff!"
Well, make up your mind. Do you want a reduced number of players, which favours de facto standards of the "whatever the market leader does is the correct behaviour, so reverse engineer what that is and code to it", or do you want to pick a damned standard and stick to it, which is best policed by having at least three or four independent implementations (or interpretations, if the standard is not clear).
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Friday 10th October 2014 15:47 GMT Michael Wojcik
Actually, I don't care as long as it reduces the number of browsers and permutations we have to support in the ecosystem
Yes, because the browser monoculture worked so fucking well for us before.
Browsers are far more standards-compliant, and significantly more secure, now because of competition. Reducing the number of major players will not help.
I hate IE (and Chrome; I merely dislike Firefox, with Classic Theme Restorer fighting back the Idiotic UI tide), but I don't want it to go away. Three major players is the bare minimum required to keep them on their toes.
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 12:50 GMT iranu
Classic Theme Restorer Add-on
I refused to 'upgrade' for the same reason so was stuck on v28.0. Then something weird happened and FF upgraded to v32.03 even though I didn't have it set to. I hate the UI so went about trying to change it. This add-on put everything back just as I had it - it's brilliant.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/classicthemerestorer/
None of that australis nonsense for me.
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This post has been deleted by its author
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Thursday 9th October 2014 06:18 GMT Purple-Stater
Re: ?
I cannot put my tab bar at the bottom any longer (directly above the web page I'm viewing). Also, even using the add-ons to restore the Add-On bar, the Add-Ons that relied on it are not supported since v.28, so the functionality since Australis has been irreparably diminished.
Knowing Australis was coming, I locked my FireFox version at 28, and downloaded the .exe "just in case". But mostly I've started using PaleMoon, where all the old stuff works just fine.
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Monday 27th October 2014 11:37 GMT Hans 1
Yeah, I know ... Could someone please execute all ui designers who think that big ugly buttons are it? They only ever make sense with a touchscreen that gets some use ... and I have yet to see people use a touchscreen on anything other than a tablet/phone. Waste of screen real-estate for the rest of us.
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 11:51 GMT Voland's right hand
Re: Chrome is a resource hogging abomination
Yes and no.
Chrome is a resource hogging abomination on a terminal server (regardless of the terminal protocol). The reason for this (and one of the reasons for its perceived "fastness" on normal hardware) is that it does most of the rendering on a canvas internally and updates the whole canvas at a time. Compared to that Firefox uses much more graphic prmitives from the underlying graphic subsystem. This allows remote access protocol implementations to optimize redraw and do a lot of ops locally. They do not get that chance with Chrome.
As a result of this, Chrome when compared to Firefox (or MSFT offering for Windows T Server) sucks royally in a thin client environment.
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 14:29 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: JavaScript performance
"Better than doing a deal to use Chrome would be one to use V8, its JavaScript engine. That's much faster than IE's."
The last 3 major releases of IE (9, 10, 11) have all been faster than the current version of Chrome at the time on the SunSpider JavaScript performance test...
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 14:52 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: JavaScript performance
The last 3 major releases of IE (9, 10, 11) have all been faster than the current version of Chrome at the time on the SunSpider JavaScript performance test...
And that's what could happen if your browser is deeply baked into the OS. An interesting benchmark would be to see what state the rest of your system is in while performing the JS tests...
It's a shame their JS engine will never be able run on my computer... actually, no it's not.
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 17:07 GMT Thought About IT
Re: JavaScript performance
"The last 3 major releases of IE (9, 10, 11) have all been faster than the current version of Chrome at the time on the SunSpider JavaScript performance test..."
Here are the scores for the Octane benchmark on my 64-bit Windows 7 PC:
IE 11: 7,400
FF 32: 12,400
Chrome 38: 14,300
The V8 JavaScript engine makes Chrome nearly twice as fast as IE, but I'll stick with FF as I don't consider that to be spyware.
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 12:43 GMT big_D
Chrome or Firefox? On an Atom Windows 8 tablet, give me IE every time. It is fast and touch optimised. Firefox is slow and doesn't have any touch functionality and Chrome is porky not touch friendly.
On a "proper" desktop with Core iN processor Firefox is great, but on a low powered tablet, you just can't beat IE at the moment.
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Thursday 9th October 2014 12:36 GMT Avatar of They
Re: WTF?
Really? MS isn't recording every move with messenger, Skype, One drive and office 365 all being part of PRISM? You think Bing and IE isn't doing exactly the same???????
The only difference is Google make money from spying (and probably report on the spying), and MS is just openly one of the creepy brigade.
I like the feedback idea, but should be proven to work. Has any of the feedback been taken up I wonder. I mean what good is the tiles on the start menu if it doesn't actually allow personalisation.
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 11:21 GMT cambsukguy
Video keeps freezing on chrome
On my Win7 at least, can be very annoying, affecting all pop-ups launched from one master, requires a Reload in each affected window to fix.
And, how does one make Chrome have the search/address and the tabs on one line to save screen space (almost never need to see the address anyway) - it is trivial in IE and I can't see anything in the settings, clicking around the tabs and address bar was fruitless too.
And, the Alt key doesn't make a menu system appear like it does on IE. I have to learn the Ctrl key shortcuts, is this CUA-compliant?
And, for the record, who starts a new IE?, run it once and just start a new tab, which is quick enough on my old Core i5, even at 1100 MHz. A restart is not unknown but rare enough to not give a shit about start-up times.
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 13:01 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Video keeps freezing on chrome
I've got Chrome on OS X 10.9 and OS X 10.10 beta. Both will play video in YouTube fine from YouTube.com, but if someone has embedded a video in a webpage there is just a gap where the video should be. Open the same page in incognito mode and the videos magically appear.
Can't figure it out since it works in incognito and the issue happens on two different OSes. Tried clearing cache, but to no avail. Seriously tempted to switch back to Firefox to be honest..
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 11:22 GMT Steve Davies 3
A 'No tiles mode' please
And when I set windows explorer to display 'Details' I want it everywhere. Not revert to ICONS when I go to the Recycle Bin. 99.999999% of the files in there don't have an Icon.
Finally, give me some easy way to remove the 20x20 ICON that when you drag a file to another directory opens up. Can someone please explain what 'extra' it btings to the operations.
Preferably we need a 'Uber Ultra Geek' setting that just gets rid of all the crap once and for all. Then we can get on with using the OS for real work rather than consuming music/media etc. Most of us have other devivces for that. Continued emphais on consumption is IMHO, a sure loser in this world of Phablets that will do the job just as well.
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Wednesday 8th October 2014 11:23 GMT Phil_Evans
Given the Borg-like logic of Microsoft, merely the mention of Chrome will relegate the comment to the bin. IE precedes Bing by many many years yet it still goes on like a Celine Dion performance at Vegas. People tried Bing, hated it, laughted at it and these days largely ignore it. but with IE, MSFT is in some weird self-inflicting Monkey trap. Chrome is just sooooo much nicer and faster to use for so many people.
I expect though, that ceding to a foreign browser somehow makes people less tied in the desktop flavour underneath. And there lies the rub. Expect IE to continue to contribute strongly to the demise of the (consumer) Windows Desktop and the infanticide of Surface and it's siblings.