Just a quick note in case it's not too late. Mozilla is doing some quality tests for Firefox 1.1. It sounds like a simultaneous thing they're going to do, co-ordinated over IRC. It's only a couple hours from now by my watch. Have a look at the Mozilla QA blog for details.
I've always thought the way Windows uses ellipses in the middle of a long string was quaint. It's great except for the fact that sometimes it trims out the important bits. Here's a little php function that I wrote to trim out the middle part of a string. I suppose you could use it to trim out important bits, too.
SSD is a term coined a long time ago for a device that acts like a hard drive but with no moving parts. According to Wikipedia, they've been in use since about 1970. I don't know how the term "Solid State" came to refer to this, but I remember televisions and electronics when I was very young that had the term emblazoned on them like a badge of excellence. I'd look at it and imagine perhaps liquid or gaseous TV sets. SSDs are being proposed again as a main storage device for computers with a couple recent news articles. BetaNews published a story last month about a product announcement from Samsung. Now Slashdot points to an article speculating the Samsung SSD might show up in Apple products.
Read on for my observations
I picked up Grand Theft Auto: Vice City and Jak II for Playstation 2 a while ago, but it took me a week before I had time to play. I was up late last night so I thought it'd be a good chance to unwind. I was surprised by how much the two games had in common. Read on for my opinion on these games and the trends that I fabricate from a couple hours of play time.
Jeff has his results up from testing the Opera native SVG Tiny rendering on Windows XP. He also points to similar testing with different results from Antoine Quint over at SVG.org. I'd guess that maybe they're using different operating systems, otherwise I'll have to finally go get Opera and cast a tie-breaker vote ;-) .
I'd planned to put together a big table of all my test results from Firefox, and I have that. Just it's in a spreadsheet, not a web page. If anyone really wants to see that, just ask and I'll send it along. I've decided that I'd rather summarize my findings here. I think that's a lot more useful than just another table of red and green - especially since that would imply something far more official than I intend to. So today I'll talk a little about my subjective results of looking at all the tests in the SVG test suite with Firefox Deer Park Alpha 1.1. I looked at features that should be supported according to the Mozilla SVG status page and features that are clearly documented as not supported.
Why bother looking at unsupported features? Failure mode analysis. It's one thing to say that a feature is not supported and it's another to know what will happen when that feature is requested anyways. I know this is bound to change before the final release of 1.1, but alpha builds are for testing, right?
Anyhow, the test suite prefixes and the modules described in the Mozilla SVG implementation status page don't clearly line up all the time, so I just made my best guess at where each test fits in terms of the primary features being tested and what Mozilla supports. The ones that should be supported are the ones I'll talk about first (and file bugs if it makes sense), the ones that shouldn't be supported I'll give some attention to another day if it's warranted.I just got my dinner: a slice of raspberry-lemon loaf and a "grande no bovine-growth-hormone mocha" (the barrista's words, not mine). I'm settling down to try and deal with the fact that I'd better get to work on my next little project.
Maybe it's motivated by guilt from my persisent preference for the Adobe SVG viewer, but I decided to take the new Firefox Deer Park Alpha 1.1 through the W3C SVG test suite and see how it does. That way I can do what you're supposed to do with Alpha builds: find bugs and report them.
So, as I was saying yesterday, I wrote a simple Firefox extension that just turns the about:config preference for svg.enabled on or off.
Read on to download it.
I tried out the alpha build of Firefox 1.1, codenamed Deer Park. It looks pretty nice. The big deal for me is that it has built-in SVG rendering. Built-in incomplete SVG rendering.
To be frank, I've been putting off writing this post because I don't want to come off sounding negative, and I'm not sure how to approach it. I just like Adobe SVG Viewer better.
Read on, it can only get better ...