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Bytes and Bites
And no, that's not my computer. Not me either, but hey. Sometimes I learn
things that some folks might be interested in, sometimes I just run across a particularly interesting case, or make new
connections or observations that eventually wind up in the bottom of my ever growing pile of other soon-to-be moot bits
of data stored on my biological hard drive. Might call it a mental compost heap. Tech is sorta like a garden, if you
think about it. The veggies you live on, the flowers for fun, the weeds that come from nowhere and the bugs you hate.
The compost of the ancient stuff. (From, like, last year.)
Firefox
Recent events have reiterated to me the greatness of Firefox. What is Firefox, you ask? Well, I am sure out there is
some sort of track of the lifeline but I can't really find it anywhere. Not that I really looked all that hard, mind
you. But anyway, a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far, away, there was an operating system that didn't build in a web
browser. Yeah, I know, hard to believe, but it happened. And there were little programs like Pine that took care of
email if you could do without the graphical interface.
Then we only had 2400 baud modems, Compuserve and AOL. 3
miles to school, uphill both ways, you know the story. One day, this guy Marc Andreeson decided there needed to be a
web browser for the people, a VW for the internet. He developed and released Netscape. I actually paid for Netscape Gold
many moons ago, and I'm sure lots of others did, too, 'cause old Marc (I say old, he was a kid) became the wealthy
prince.
Well, the king of Computerland didn't like that so much so he made Internet Explorer, and it never worked
as well as Netscape, but more important, was less popular. Internet users already had a VW, they didn't need a Corvair.
The justice department hauled the king into court for antitrust over the way the king had tried to force IE into all the
machines in Computerland. The prince won and the king had to make substantial changes in his plans to rule the world. The
prince sold Netscape and went off to another land, a wealthy young man.
About the time it was sold, Netscape spawned
Mozilla, another train of thought about how web browsers ought to work. Mozilla allowed email to be a separate function for
several reasons, security and overhead being chief concerns, and Mozilla morphed into Firebird which was renamed Firefox.
Fast forward to now. (sound effect, the little whirring VCR noise, ready . . .?)
Web attacks . . . that was really
the point all along. Did you know that you don't have to do anything these days to end up infected? Browse the wrong web site,
that's it, go on I dare ya'. But only if you have Firefox. It is doing something against that kind of thing, building a
safebrowsing system that will warn you if a site is known to have been hacked. In researching problems, infections, and the
like, I inadvertently run into lurkers but I have not yet become a victim. Bottom line, even if you have only heard of it
recently, don't let that fool you, it's been out there longer than IE in some form or another. And I'm really glad.
DATE POSTED: 08.12.2010
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