Mozilla hits back at critics with Phoenix

"Phoenix is not your father's Mozilla browser." Who said it was?

By Stephanie Olsen, 25 September 2002 09:26

NEWS The Mozilla development project has introduced a new web browser, called Phoenix, to smooth over some of the speed bumps of its previous navigation tool. The latest browser, which is based on much of the Mozilla code, includes a customizable toolbar, new design, improved bookmark manager and loads in nearly half the time of Mozilla 1.1.
Mozilla 1.1 was introduced in August to mixed reviews. "Phoenix is not your father's Mozilla browser. It's a lean and fast browser that doesn't skimp on features," according to the project page on the Mozilla development home page. Mozilla is an open source project initiated by Netscape, now part of AOL Time Warner, to foster volunteer interest in its browser technology. Mozilla's features and its Gecko rendering engine are now used in the Netscape 7 commercial software from AOL Time Warner. Like its predecessor, Phoenix comes with some bugs, however. The browser doesn't allow people running Linux to tab through forms, for example. The development group is already working on a successor to Phoenix, which will include an updated wallet feature and download manager, among other improvements. "Phoenix was designed with performance as a primary goal," reads the site. "The XUL experts built a browser that starts in nearly half the time of Mozilla and its commercial derivatives. New windows also snap into existence almost twice as fast as Mozilla and commercial derivatives." Stefanie Olsen writes for News.com

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