Thursday, April 17, 2008

Updated Web Browsers: Which One Works Best?

I remember the first time I opened a web browser. It was Dec 1996 as soon as I took my college entrance exam. My web browser was Netscape Navigator 2.04.
After 11 years, frankly speaking I do not use more specific function of IE7 compare to Netscape Navigator 2.04. Well, I might have not recognized convenient options so far however now I am accustomed to using IE7 so I am not sure wheher I change my web browser or not but it is worthwhile to look over below introduced web browsers.


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Back when the earliest programs for viewing Web content simply browsed flat pages of images and text, the name browser truly fit the software.
But yesterday's amateur pages have evolved into dynamic, content-rich portals and powerful online programs. For many online habitués, the do-it-all browser has become a PC's single most important program.
Recognizing that fact, Apple's Safari, Microsoft's Internet Explorer, and Mozilla's Firefox are battling to win the nod as your browser of choice. So which one should you use--Safari 3.1, Firefox 3, or Internet Explorer 8?
Apple's latest offering, Safari 3.1, preserves the company's signature focus on clean design and smooth usability, but it lacks any phishing or malware filters.
For its part, Mozilla should have applied the finishing touches to Firefox 3 by the time you read this (I tested the feature-complete beta 5 release). From under-the-hood memory improvements to a major reworking for bookmarks, version 3 represents a big step forward.
Whereas the new Firefox and Safari browsers are ready to roll, Microsoft's early beta of Internet Explorer 8 remains a work in progress. Bugs and rough edges are to be expected in a first beta intended for developers and testers. But IE 8 beta 1 provides a glimpse of new features such as WebSlices (which let sites create widgety snippets of information that you can view by clicking a bookmark button) and Activities (which add right-click menu options for looking up selected text and pages on map, translation and other sites) that will distinguish the browser Microsoft eventually releases.
Firefox, IE, and Safari are the three most popular browsers, according to Internet usage statistics, but they aren't the only ones available. So I also took a separate look at two worthwhile, free programs--Flock and Opera.

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,144338/article.html

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