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Firefox 3.5 ! Downloaded 5 million times in first 24 hours !

July 5th, 2009

Mozilla officially released Firefox 3.5 on Tuesday, 30th June 2009. The new version of the popular open source web browser has attracted considerable attention and is already seeing rapid adoption. It was downloaded over 5 million times during the first 24 hours. This falls short of the record-setting 8 million downloads that Firefox 3 had during its first day, but it still reflects the intense enthusiasm of the browser’s fans.

 

Firefox’s popularity has rapidly climbed over the past few years, bringing it up to between 20-30 percent of the global browser market, according to various Web analytics firms. Based on data collected from 850,000 web sites, tracking firm whos.amung.us says that Firefox 3.5 by itself now accounts for roughly 2.5 percent of the browser market, more than the total market share of rival Opera.

browsermarketshare

 

When Mozilla released Firefox 3 last year, the company planned an elaborate Download Day event, encouraging supporters to obtain the software on the day of the release. They aimed to set a new Guinness Record for the most user-initiated downloads of a software program in one day. The event was highly successful and resulted in 8 million downloads at launch, with the first million in only four hours.

The community’s grass-roots marketing efforts for the Firefox 3.5 launch were not as intensive or widely publicized, but still had a significant impact. Mozilla planned a social network campaign called the Shiretoko Shock, which instructed participants to promote the release on social networking sites such as Twitter and Facebook at 3:50 PM in their respective time zones. The idea was that the “shockwave” would ripple out from the core community of volunteer Firefox evangelists and spread virally as others re-tweeted and echoed the initial posts. This campaign and general widespread interest in the release propelled Firefox onto Twitter’s trending topics list.

The collective number of total Firefox downloads exceeded 500 million last year and is currently estimated at roughly 950 million. It could exceed one billion by the end of August.

Firefox 3.5 will be available for Windows, Mac and Linux users from Mozilla’s site, or existing Firefox users can click on the Help button and select “Check for Updates”. You can simply just click the following download links to get your Mozilla Firefox 3.5 right away!

Download Firefox - Free 3.5 for Windows English (US) (7.7MB)

Download Firefox - Free 3.5 for Mac OS English (US) (7.7MB)

Download Firefox - Free 3.5 for Linux English (US) (7.7MB)

 What’s the crazy thing in Firefox 3.5!

  • Firefox 3.5 is based on the Gecko 1.9.1 rendering platform, which has been under development for the past year. Firefox 3.5 offers many changes over the previous version, supporting new web technologies, improving performance and ease of use. Some of the notable features are:
  • Available in more than 70 languages.
  • Support for the HTML5 <video> and <audio> elements including native support for Ogg Theora encoded video and Vorbis encoded audio.
  • Improved tools for controlling your private data, including a Private Browsing Mode.
  • Better web application performance using the new TraceMonkey JavaScript engine.
  • The ability to share your location with websites using Location Aware Browsing.
  • Support for native JSON, and web worker threads.
  • Improvements to the Gecko layout engine, including speculative parsing for faster content rendering.
  • Support for new web technologies such as: downloadable fonts, CSS media queries, new transformations and properties, JavaScript query selectors, HTML5 local storage and offline application storage, <canvas> text, ICC profiles, and SVG transforms.

Refreshingly new and Improved Features!

Awesome Bar

A quick way to get to the sites you love—even the ones with addresses you only vaguely remember. Type in term into location bar (aka the Awesome Bar) and the auto complete function includes possible matching sites from your browsing history, as well as sites you’ve bookmarked and tagged in a drop down.

For example, you could enter the tag: “investments” to find “www.fool.com”. The Awesome Bar learns as you use it—over time, it adapts to your preferences and offers better fitting matches. New enhancements for Firefox 3.5 give you greater control over the Awesome Bar, and include privacy settings.

Super Speed

Fasten your seatbelt: Firefox 3.5 includes the TraceMonkey JavaScript engine, which gives the browser dramatically better performance than ever before. Firefox has always been fast, but this is the fastest Firefox ever (more than twice as fast as Firefox 3, and ten times as fast as Firefox 2), meaning Web applications like email, photo sites, online word processors and more will feel snappier and more responsive.
Instant Web Site ID

Want to be extra sure about a site’s legitimacy before you make a purchase? Click on a site favicon for an instant identity overview. Another click digs deeper: how many times have you visited? Are your passwords saved? Check up on suspicious sites, avoid Web forgeries and make sure a site is what it claims to be.

Location-Aware Browsing

Now Firefox can tell websites where you’re located so you can find info that’s more relevant and more useful (for example, getting directions or finding restaurants near you).

It’s all optional - Firefox doesn’t share your location without your permission - and is done with the utmost respect for your privacy.

Private Browsing

Need to use someone else’s computer? Switch on Private Browsing mode and nothing will be recorded about your session, including cookies, history, and any other potentially private information.
Better privacy controls

The Privacy preference pane has been completely redesigned to offer users more control over their private information. Users can choose to retain or discard anything including history information, cookies, downloads, and form field information.  In addition, users can specify whether or not to include history and/or bookmarks in the location bar’s automated suggestions, so you can keep private web addresses from popping up unexpectedly while typing in the location bar.


So when are you joining the band?

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Search..or Bing ? | Microsoft’s Search Engine Review

June 19th, 2009

Finally “Bing” beta is out !!! or is it really !!! Microsoft has been trying to capture the intenet market for quiet some time. In the begining with the MSN search and then with live search, and now with Bing.

There are scores of other internet search websites and portals, including Yahoo Search, ASK and other included, but none of them have been very successful in capturing the average internet user’s imagination. Everyone knows that the key to a great search is to get the results using the least possible keywords, and in the least possible time too. Who cares how many results we get when we try to search for Brad Pitt or Angelina Jolie? We want the first result to be the link to what we are searching for.

AdAge reports that 42 percent of all searches need to be refined after the first query. Furthermore, it has been found that 25 percent of all post-search clicks hit the back button instead of a Website link when looking at the search results page.The inability to find what you want on the first try may be where Bing has an edge…or at least, that is what Microsoft believes it will.

One of the prominent “blings” that Bing boasts about is the “related categories” feature. Well you might say that “other popular” search providers have it too. What is so great about Bing? Well I had the same question, so I did some searching of my own, using Bing of course.

A Simple search for the word Microsoft reveals the Microsoft is trying to see the obvious that others are catching up and they need to do so too.

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However searching for the word “Apple” gives us MTV Roadies battle Ground as the sponsored result. And Apple, like the fruit turns up sixth in the related searches. What exactly is the user trying to search for is what bing needs to look at.

One of the best things about Google is that one can find links to all of Google’s most used services right from Google’s home page. One-click access to Gmail, YouTube, and Orkut from Google.com is a great feature, and shows that Google knows how integrated all aspects of your digital life are. Yahoo is also a fan of one-click access to other Yahoo services, but have you ever tried to find a link to Hotmail on Live Search? You can’t, because the link to Hotmail doesn’t exist.  
 
 

If Microsoft wants searches to come its way and away from Google and Yahoo, Bing needs to integrate with other Microsoft services like Hotmail and MSN Messenger to name a few and not just the ones directly related to search. For example, Microsoft offers 25GB of free online photo storage. Without a Hotmail account you wouldn’t know about it, because there is no link to it on Microsoft’s two primary portals: MSN and Live Search. Microsoft needs to see that it’s not enough if you have the power, you need to let others know about it. People should see that you have it and they can use it, that’s when you can make some money out of it.

MSN Search first launched in the fall of 1998 and used search results from Inktomi. In early 1999, MSN Search launched a version which displayed listings from Looksmart blended with results from Inktomi except for a short time in 1999 when results from AltaVista were used instead. Since then Microsoft upgraded MSN Search to provide its own Microsoft-built search engine results (list of web addresses with samples of content that meet a user’s query), the index of which is updated weekly or even daily. The upgrade started as a beta program in November 2004 (based on several years of research), and came out of beta in February 2005. Image search was powered by a third party, Picsearch. The service also started providing its search results to other search engine portals in an effort to better compete in the market.

The first public beta of Windows Live Search was unveiled on March 8, 2006, with the final release on September 11, 2006 replacing MSN Search. Windows Live Search aimed to make its over 2.5 billion worldwide queries each month “more useful by providing consumers with improved access to information and more precise answers to their questions.” The new search engine offered users the ability to search for specific types of information using search tabs that include Web, news, images, music, desktop, local, and Microsoft Encarta.

In the roll-over from MSN Search to Windows Live Search, Microsoft stopped using Picsearch as their image search provider and started performing their own image search, powered by their own internal image search algorithms.

On March 21, 2007, it was announced that Microsoft would separate its search developments from the Windows Live services family, rebranding the service to Live Search.And now Bing is out.

That makes Bing the third rebranding in five years, and the fourth, overall, for Microsoft’s search service. Instead of focusing on constant renaming, hopefully, Microsoft has found its final search brand name in Bing.

No matter what Microsoft has planned for Bing, it will be judged against the search’s gold standard: Google.

So what do you think? Will you be Binging or is the Microsoft’s search effort bound to fail?

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