Firefox Updates
Saturday, September 24th, 2005There are some new critical updates now available for Firefox so if your browser isn’t telling you that already perhaps it’s time to head over to the Firefox homepage and grab them for yourself.
There are some new critical updates now available for Firefox so if your browser isn’t telling you that already perhaps it’s time to head over to the Firefox homepage and grab them for yourself.
Earlier this week I had a big rant about Firefox and mentioned that I thought I might return to Internet Explorer. Well I haven’t done that just yet but I noticed today that I was spending a whole lot more time using than I was using Firefox.
And now maybe I might try something else instead of returning totally to IE. I’ve just read over on Home Office Voice that Opera is now free.
I tried Opera a year or so ago and found that I quite liked it but I couldn’t handle the advertising. You see if you wanted the free version you had to put up with advertising and if you wanted to be free of that you had to shell out $39.00. That’s not a big amount I know but … well … like most people I’m always drawn to anything that’s free.
Anyway Opera is now free and you can find it right here
Thanks for the pointer Martin.
It still appals me just how many people have absolutely no idea about how to protect their computers. I’m not talking about protecting them from theft but about the damage that comes from inadvertently downloading trojans or viruses.
Quite often when we’re down at our friend’s computer shop we see at several peoplen come in with their computer tucked under their arm to have it fixed. It might be running slow or they can no longer connect to the net and sometimes if they can connect they find that their browser has been hijacked and they can’t get to the sites that they want to see.
Invariably a quick scan of the machine turns up some virus or trojan and the owner of the computer is completely mystified as to how it might have got there. They instantly throw up their hands and say that they have never been to a site that might have downloaded something like that to their machine.
It’s quite obvious that they are trying to say that they have never been to an adult site because they are the only ones that could possibly do such terrible things to their machines - or so they think. And sometimes they are genuine, they really haven’t been visiting any naughty sites but that doesn’t matter one little bit.
It’s not just adult sites that can drop those nasty things on your machines. There are quite a few mainstream marketing sites and even just general sites that will do exactly the same thing. Quite often you will pick up garbage like that when you respond to some free offer for smilies or similar things and at other times all you have to do is just click on a link.
Quite often the computer owners will declare that they have Nortons or this or that anti-virus software installed and they just don’t know how something like that could have got through.
Well the fact of the matter is that most anti-virus software is not half as good as you might think it is. There is a lot of hype and hoop-la used to sell anti-virus software and most of it is little more than smoke and mirrors.
Right now the very best anti-virus software that is available is called Kaspersky. You can find it at http://www.kaspersky.com.
You can do a free online scan of your machine (although that does take some time) or you can download a trial version that will last for a month. After that you will have to pay a very reasonable amount for a year’s subscription.
Kaspersky will scan your machine and your incoming email and it will also update itself three times a day so it is far more current and up to date than most of the junk that people think will keep them protected.
We use it on all of our machines and surf a wide variety of sites every day of the week. We have had only one minor problem since we installed it. And at the time we first installed it and it ran its initial scan it found a virus in an attachment that had come in an email three years before and was archived on one of the machines.
Several other anti virus programmes that people often recommend had missed that attachment but not Kaspersky.
The latest edition of Australian Computer Magazine is suggesting that Microsoft “has effectively conceded that a pirated copy of Windows is as good as the real thing” and anyone silly enough to use a pirated copy can now come in from the cold.
It is going to cost you of course but for $238 Microsoft will now sell you a serial number for Windows XP Pro. It seems that the purchase option is offered when someone using a pirated copy goes to Microsoft to download updates.
Everybody loves to hate Microsoft but just lately I have been slowly moving towards appreciating Microsoft more and more.
This strange transition started not long after I downloaded and installed Firefox as my browser of choice. I have to say that at first I loved Firefox - it has some fantastic features that make life very easy for someone who makes his living from working on the Internet. And those features were missing from IE.
However, it also had one or two quirky little problems that I was learning to live with. For example, if you went to a site to stream a movie Firefox could not do it. The best you could hope for was to download the movie to your own machine and watch it from there.
But that was ok until just recently when I, and others, began to notice that Firefox was becoming even more buggy with each update. For example, when you are looking at this page in IE it will look very different to what you would see in Firefox. In Firefox the text would be bigger and the link colors would be darker.
If I try to make the text bigger for IE viewers then it becomes so big in Firefox that it can display in very bizarre ways that I won’t bore you with here.
And then came this morning. I went to a blog to download a podcast and found that the blog owner had provided several links so that I could either stream the podcast direct from his site or download it - as I wanted to do. So in Firefox I clicked on the download link … and found that it began streaming. And when I clicked on the streaming link … you guessed it. It began to download.
Ok, maybe the blog owner got the links wrong so I checked it in IE and in IE the download link downloaded and the streaming link streamed.
That may not seem like such a big problem but when you have a tool that you use for business then you want that tool to work the way it is supposed to do. It’s a productivity thing - time is money etc. etc.
Internet Explorer may not have all the bells and whistles that Firefox has but at least it works the way it’s supposed to work so maybe it’s time to go back to the tried and tested tools. Just because they carry the Microsoft brand doesn’t mean they don’t work.