Posted: 2008-03-28 08:05pm
FYI, that also works when you click and release the scroll wheel, then move the mouse. It works horizontally too.
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Try using the WMP plugin for Firefox; Safari should automatically pick it up.Tsyroc wrote:Could the problem be that there's a Microsoft Media Player for Mac and the Windows version and Safari just aren't gelling right because of that.
That worked.phongn wrote:Try using the WMP plugin for Firefox; Safari should automatically pick it up.Tsyroc wrote:Could the problem be that there's a Microsoft Media Player for Mac and the Windows version and Safari just aren't gelling right because of that.
On Windows (IIRC), Firefox will inform the user that they'll need the plugin and offer to go get it. I'm not sure if Apple can package said plugin, though.Darth Wong wrote:I've noticed hangs as well, also on multimedia. The Apple software developers should get on that, since the average no-effort user (ie- the sort of person that Apple primarily markets to) is not going to go looking for a WMP plugin to fix the problem. He's just going to say "this browser is crap" and go back to IE.
Definitely safer than IE- I don't have a count of vulnerabilities available, but the fact is that there are zero spyware or toolbars that target Safari (especially for Windows) and it doesn't support ActiveX- those two things right there ought to make it vastly safer.Mange wrote:From what I've seen the interface looks rather dull. From a security standpoint, is Safari less or more safe than FF and IE7?
It depends on what you mean by "safe". Microsoft put IE in a pretty Draconian sandbox in Vista. Even if it gets exploited, there damage that can be done is pretty minimal.Praxis wrote:Definitely safer than IE- I don't have a count of vulnerabilities available, but the fact is that there are zero spyware or toolbars that target Safari (especially for Windows) and it doesn't support ActiveX- those two things right there ought to make it vastly safer.Mange wrote:From what I've seen the interface looks rather dull. From a security standpoint, is Safari less or more safe than FF and IE7?
I'd say that IE on Vista is safer than both of them simply because it's sandboxed. Comparing Safari and Firefox directly is extremely difficult because neither one has a worse design than the other, in terms of security. And vulnerability counts (unless there's an order of magnitude-scale difference) don't really tell you much of anything.I have no idea how it compares to FireFox. I've seen a few publicized Safari vulnerabilities- but then a few for FireFox too. I'd suspect FireFox is safer just going by my gut but I have absolutely no evidence either way.
In my case Safari kept sending me to the MS site to download the latest Windows Media player. Unfortunately that didn't fix the problem.phongn wrote: On Windows (IIRC), Firefox will inform the user that they'll need the plugin and offer to go get it. I'm not sure if Apple can package said plugin, though.
I'm using it in XP and its appearance reminds me of how Quicktime looks. ITunes probably avoids that a bit because it has that menu on the side with colors in it.Jon wrote:In Vista it just looks... odd. I know Apple have a 'look', and it seems to work fine for iTunes on Windows but with Safari... nah, think I'll stick to firefox.
I seriously doubt it.Drooling Iguana wrote: However, getting alternative browsers on more systems will go a long way to making a standards-compliant web, so this might do more good than harm.
Which incident are you referring to? I know Netscape corrupted the standard with their own extensions before IE did, but I don't think you could call them "proprietary", since their behaviour was well-documented and not subject to trademark or copyright. The biggest problem with both Netscape and early IE was that they were just plain buggy as hell when implementing any of the more advanced codes, particularly CSS. Then there was the ActiveX vs Java thing, but isn't Java much more "open" than ActiveX?Durandal wrote:And Microsoft didn't pull a move like that with IE. (They sort of did with Samba.) What they did with IE was just bury the other guy's proprietary standards with theirs.
I don't recall that ActiveX was designed to fight off Java, but instead to compete with the Netscape plugin model. Microsoft's tricks with Java were of the "embrace and extend" variety.Darth Wong wrote:Then there was the ActiveX vs Java thing, but isn't Java much more "open" than ActiveX?
You're probably right. I should have said "custom" or something. It's kind of difficult to make a "proprietary" HTML tag, since you have to document its behavior for people to use it properly.Darth Wong wrote:Which incident are you referring to? I know Netscape corrupted the standard with their own extensions before IE did, but I don't think you could call them "proprietary", since their behaviour was well-documented and not subject to trademark or copyright.Durandal wrote:And Microsoft didn't pull a move like that with IE. (They sort of did with Samba.) What they did with IE was just bury the other guy's proprietary standards with theirs.
I don't know if they were buggy so much as eroded with extra garbage that made web site authors code to one browser instead of the standard. CSS support before this century was a joke. I think the first browser to actually implement the full CSS1 spec was Internet Explorer 5 for the Mac.The biggest problem with both Netscape and early IE was that they were just plain buggy as hell when implementing any of the more advanced codes, particularly CSS.
ActiveX was more of a competitor to the Netscape plug-in API, I think. Microsoft had other projects that were designed to push Java out of the picture, which I think eventually grew into .Net.Then there was the ActiveX vs Java thing, but isn't Java much more "open" than ActiveX?
They shouldn't. Ethically (and perhaps legally) they're in the wrong. However, in practical terms we might benefit from this, at least in the short-term. Plus, bundling a web browser with a music management program that you have to download yourself isn't quite the same as bundling it with the operating system that's going to be pre-installed on your computer whether you want it or not.Molyneux wrote:I seriously doubt it.Drooling Iguana wrote: However, getting alternative browsers on more systems will go a long way to making a standards-compliant web, so this might do more good than harm.
If we didn't like this bullshit when Microsoft pulls it, why the hell would Apple get a free pass?