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Miscellaneous Ramblings
Web Browsers for OS X and the Classic Mac OS
Charles Moore - 2002.12.30 - Tip Jar
The Mac Night Owl, Gene Steinberg, has posted a couple of columns recently about his Web browser preferences. I find that people's taste in browsers tends to be idiosyncratic, and since 90-odd percent of Internet users choose - or more likely use by default - Microsoft's mediocre Internet Explorer, I guess there's no accounting for taste. Here are a few observations on my taste in browsers.
Personally, I pretty much ignore Internet explorer. I have it on my hard drive, residue of the Mac OS default install, but I all but never use it. I have iCab selected as by default browser in my Internet preferences, and there are a half-dozen or so other browsers I would start up before resorting to IE.
Like Gene Steinberg, I am smitten with the Open Source Chimera browser in OS X, which is lean, fast, very attractive, and supports tabbed browsing, which is the greatest browsing innovation in years. Chimera still has several shortcomings and missing features, but the speed will blow you away.
Unfortunately, when you save a Web page as plain text with Chimera, something I do a lot for research or later reading, it includes the HTML tags and ignores line breaks, which makes the resulting jumble of text pretty useless, so I can't use Chimera for a lot of my browsing needs.
As you might have guessed from my making it the default, the browser I most often turn to in both OS 9 and OS X when I need to get serious work done is iCab. This little German browser isn't the fastest, and it still has problems with some pages that demand JavaScript support, etc., but its stability, dependability, and solid basic feature set makes it the one I used most for Google searches, general research, posting articles to Applelinks, and software downloads.
I like iCab's Download Manager better than any other browser's download support, and I just generally like the way iCab works. As a practical, workhorse browser, iCab suits me best, and it has the advantage of supporting OS X, PowerPC Classic, and even 68K Classic, as well as being the smallest full-featured browser available. Unfortunately, no tabbed browsing yet.
The other browser I use a lot in both OS X and OS 9 it is Mozilla, which would likely be my choice for an all-round, Jack of all trades browser if I was obliged to settle for just one. Mozilla is also very fast - even slightly faster than Chimera (at least on my dial up connection) in some timed tests that I ran, although for some reason, Chimera feels faster. Mozilla also supports tabbed browsing, works on my banking websites, handles downloads satisfactorily, saves plain text properly, and is quite stable and dependable.
If one is so inclined, it also includes a Messenger email client and a Composer HTML authoring module. Its main deficiency is that it is huge, making it a formidable download over dial up connections. Unhappily, the Mozilla folks have announced that they will not be developing any more dedicated Classic versions of Mozilla, so the current version 1.2.1 is the last of the Mohicans for OS 9. [Sign the Mozilla for Mac OS Classic petition if you'd like to see this changed. dk]
Until the recent release of Netscape 7.0.1, most of what I just said about Mozilla could be applied to Netscape as well. Mozilla forms the base for Netscape 6 and later. I found Netscape 7.0 a very decent browser can both OS X and OS 9. However, I've been extremely disappointed with the 7.0.1 build, which is both buggy and ponderously slow. I suggest sticking with Mozilla, which seamlessly uses the same user configuration, bookmarks, etc., as Netscape.
There is also still old Netscape 4.8, a Classic Mac OS only browser, which I still use on my 200 MHz Umax S900 for the occasional pages that iCab can't handle. It really feels like a dinosaur browser these days, but it is reasonably capable, and at least it launches quickly.
As for other browsers, in OS X there is the Cocoa-based OmniWeb, which is the prettiest browser available - and which works very well, too, although it's not as fast as Chimera and Mozilla. OmniWeb has a following of tenaciously loyal fans, and it's worth checking out to see if you're potentially one of them.
Except for Internet Explorer, I have to say that my least favorite browser is Opera, which has some interesting features and is very customizable, but which has never clicked with me. However, some folks profess to really like Opera, and as with OmniWeb, it's worth checking this browser out to see if it appeals to you.
Charles Moore has been a freelance journalist since 1987 and began writing for Mac websites in May 1998. His The Road Warrior column is a regular feature on MacOpinion, and he is a news editor and columnist at Applelinks.com. If you find his articles helpful, please consider making a donation to his tip jar.
Recent Miscellaneous Ramblings
- WPA for Original AirPort, Stainless Browser, Multiple Input Bug Persists in Snow Leopard, and More, 03.11. Also kudos for Shiira, G3 vs. G4 upgrade for Pismo PowerBook, and 17" PowerBook still suffices.
- Shiira Browser Is Lightning Fast, 03.08. "...I'm finding myself not in any hurry to stop using Shiira 2.3 and go back to Safari 4 as my WebKit browser pick."
- The Mac-PC Divide, Apple vs. Smut, WiFi Troubleshooting, Planned Obsolescence, and Pismo Upgrades, 03.03. The differences between Mac and PC users, the 'latest and greatest' syndrome, clearing corrupt WiFi preferences, and more.
- Handshoe Mouse a Good Ergonomic Option, 03.02. "If you suffer from mousing pain, they should prove well worth the price."
- More in the Miscellaneous Ramblings index.
Links for the Day
- Mac of the Day: iMac Core Duo, Jan. 2006 - The first Intel-based iMacs ran at 1.83-2.0 GHz, came with 17" and 20" displays.
- Group of the Day: Vintage Macs is for all 680x0-based Macs, from the 128K through Quadras.
- March 16 in LEM history: 00: Cascading Style Sheets - 01: Passing of a free OS - Buying a used Mac - 06: Capture stills from DVDs - Intel unleashes OS X - Rivals can't match iPod system - 07: Pismo Spotlight woes solved - Flash-based MacBook mini speculation - Mac Pro could go 8-core
- Support Low End Mac
Recent Content on Low End Mac
- Why Run Leopard on Slow G4 Macs?, Simon Royal, Mac Spectrum, 03.15. Tiger has lower demands and runs more smoothly on low-end Macs, but Leopard gives you access to more up-to-date software.
- The Apple Patient, John Hatchett, Recycled Computing, 03.15. The used 12" PowerBook has a dead screen, missing key, damaged case, and minimal memory, but it does work.
- Consumer Reports Rates Apple Tops, Macs Cost Less to Manage than PCs, 6 Core Mac Pro Soon?, and More, Mac News Review, 03.12. Also dreaming of a Mac mini on steroids, focus on word processiong, Ubuntu ditches brown for more Mac-like appearance, and more.
- iPad Ships April 3, iPhone Stand Made from Cutlery, Apple's Draconian Developer Agreement, and More, iNews Review, 03.12. Also an open letter to Steve Jobs, Apple bans cell phone radiation app, wireless iPhone charging with Case-mate Hug, new apps, and more.
- Apple Tops in Laptop Support, Rise of Netbooks Charted, 1 TB Bus Powered Hard Drive, and More, The 'Book Review, 03.12. Also Apple files for patent on notebook cooling technology, the Mac user and his i7 laptop, HP's latest Vivienne Tan netbook, and more.
- OS X 10.4 Tiger Still Very Usable on a 500 MHz G3 Mac, Simon Royal, Mac Spectrum, 03.11. For writing and basic Internet access, a 500 MHz G3 provides sufficient power and Tiger provides fairly up-to-date software.
- iPad Gaming Potential, Dan Bashur, Apple, Tech, and Gaming, 03.11. Two years of developing games for the less powerful iPhone and iPod touch has prepared developers to unleash the iPad's potential.
- More links in our archive.
Recent Deals
- Best iPod classic Deals, 03.12. Used 20 GB, $119; 40 GB, $139; 60 GB, $159; 30 GB video, $129; 60 GB, $159; 80 GB, $169; refurb 120 GB, $189; new, $214; 160 GB, $228 shipped.
- Best G3 iBook and AirPort Card Deals, 03.12. 366 MHz 12" clamshell, $89; 466, $125; 500 white CD, $100; 600, $199; 800 Combo, $239; 14" 900, $225.
- Best Xserve Deals, 03.12. Used 1 GHz dual G4, $499; 2.0 dual G5, $599; 2.3, $749; refurb 2.26 4-core Nehalem, $2,499; new, $2,699; 8-core, $3,449; refurb 2.66, $4,299; new, $4,799; more.
- Best iPod touch Deals, 03.11. Refurb 8 GB, $149; 16 GB, $199; 32 GB, $249; 64 GB, $339; new 3G/8 GB, $184; close-out 2G/16 GB, $229; 3G/32, $270; 64, $355. Shipping included.
- Best 17" MacBook Pro Deals, 03.11. Used 2.33 GHz, $1,099; 2.5, $1,349; refurb 2.66, $1,949; 2.93, $2,199; new 2.8, $2,249 after rebate; 3.06, $2,749.
- Best Mac OS X 10.5 Deals, 03.11. "Leopard" one user, $180; upgrade from 10.4, $150; 5 users, $400; Server, 10 users, $493; unlimited users, $600.
- Best iPod nano Deals, 03.10. Refurb 4G/8 GB, $99; 16 GB, $119; 4G/8 GB, $129; 16 GB, $139; new 5G/8 GB, $134; 16 GB, $160. Shipping included.
- Best 15" PowerBook G4 Deals, 03.10. 1 GHz Combo, $400; 1.25 GHz, $460; 1.33 GHz SuperDrive, $539; 1.5 GHz, $550; 1.67 GHz, $589; hi-res, $800.
- Best iPod shuffle Deals, 03.10. New 3G/2 GB, pink, $53; other, $55, 4 GB, blue, $71; other, $73. Shipping included.
- More deals in our archive.
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