New Year, New Firefox Version

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So, it’s a New Year. Cool. What am I looking forward to in the next year? What new Geekdom goodness am I drooling over? Lots of interesting movies, TV shows, and music to think about. Plenty of new techie things being announced that are pretty exciting. Some may happen, some sound like corporate hype (the hack-proof Vista, anyone?). The one that I think will definitely happen, and will probably live up to it’s hype, is the new version of Firefox scheduled for this year.

Well, Mozilla says that Firefox won’t be released officially until the end of 2007, but I am still looking forward to it. The Alpha version was released in early December. The people that are developing it “hope that it will be a major step toward making Web applications indistinguishable from programs that are installed on the desktop.”

This, to me, sounds like the missing piece in Web2.0 development. Programmers that are creating applications for the web are sometimes limited by browser specifications. Now that a browser is looking to make Web2.0 a reality, I think we will see even better online applications.

I found out over the holidays that some people are afraid of Web2.0 concepts, especially the thought of storing documents or projects that they are creating online. What if you internet connection goes down? What if the website crashes? well, those are always a possibility. But creating anything comes with risks. If you create a Word document and store it on a hard drive – what happens when your drive crashes? Zip drive back-ups can get lost, CD-R backups can get drop and broken, etc. There is always a risk of loss. Even printed copies can get lost, accidentally thrown away, etc. We’ve just gotten over the fears in existing project creations. I think we are just going to have to wait until people get over fears of Web2.0 technology, too.

Obligatory Firefox 2.0 Post

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Today, I felt particularly band-wagonish, so I decided to post about the new version of Firefox browser. You’ve probably read a million blogs about the new Firefox 2.0. If not, you should catch up with the rest of the cool people in the world and get it. Internet Explorer is so 2001. Come be indie snobbish cool like the rest of us. And then join us for some chai and whiney-boo-hoo band music at Star(ting-to-get-all-of-my) Bucks.

Wait, wait, wait! Before you get hacked at me and decide to go see if you have gotten any MySpace comments since your last 2 minute check-in – I am just kidding! I love Firefox, funky caffenated drinks, and Seattle’s most successful missionary effort. Just feeling playful and all.

So, anyway – all I have to say about Firefox is tabs and extensions! They all get better in 2.0. But since there about 2 billion extensions to choose from, I decided to add my favorites here:

  • FoxyTunes
    Control your iTunes, Media Player, etc from in browser.
  • IE Tab
    Let’s you switch a tab to see what a page looks like in IE
  • JSView
    View the source code of external JS and CSS files
  • HTMLValidator
    Quick visual clue if you are XHTML Transitional compliant. Gives you a detailed list of where the errors are.
  • Web Developer
    A whole bunch of web design tools that I haven’t had time to explore – but I like what I see.
  • FireBug
    “FireBug lets you explore the inner workings of Web pages. All of the tools you need to debug and perfect your JavaScript, CSS, HTML, and Ajax are brought together into one seamless experience, including HTML and CSS inspectors, a debugger, error console, and command line.” Wow.
  • GreaseMonkey
    “Greasemonkey allows you to customize Web pages by adding “user scripts,” which are small JavaScript files, to change their style. Now you can easily control any aspect of a Web page’s design or interaction.”
  • FireFTP
    FireFox + FTP. Nice.
  • Zotero
    Extension for research needs. Allows you to take notes in-browser and collect and store materials (PDF, images, webpages, etc).

Yeah – a lot of those were definitely tech-geeky. Sorry to the non-tech geeks out there. But, for the music fans – Foxy Tunes does rock.