Firefox
Firefox Portable: Circumvent IE6 in corporations
Aug 25th
Microsoft Internet Explorer 6 is the extremely antiquated web browser that up till today still manages to ascertain a significant chunk of browser usage share. Even though this browser is incompatible with a plethora of modern-day web applications and is holding the Internet back as a whole, a lot of big corporations still use it as their primary web browser.
IE6 is truly entrenched in corporate life and will most likely remain to uphold this position for quite some time to come. At least for now, many companies still use Windows XP with IE6 on most of their workstations, because they are convinced it is a proven technology. Additionally, it has been around for so long that every experienced IT-professional is comfortable with the management tools that come along with it.
Additionally, many in-house, custom-made software and web applications for corporations was built explicitly for IE6 and haven’t been brought up to date to be more web standards compliant and all-round more contemporary.
Thus, IE6’s usage continues to make up a significant chunk of the overall share. In most cases, the employees who still use IE6 in such companies are forced to do so because computers in such environments are extremely locked down. It is often the case that nothing additional can be installed to these systems. IT guys usually have their reasons [as stated above] to keep maintaining ancient software like IE6, but in this case it’s time for everyone to move on. Perhaps they will make the jump to Windows 7 when it reaches the SP1 milestone somewhere next year. Let’s hope so.
Install Firefox 3.5 without ‘installing’ it
Yes, you read that right and it’s actually very simple to accomplish. To achieve this, I grabbed the portable version of Firefox at portableapps.com/apps/internet/firefox_portable. Portable Apps is a suite of software retrofitted to run directly from a USB thumbdrive. They don’t require installation at all: simply run the executable to extracts its contents to a folder of your choosing.
Naturally, portable apps don’t necessarily have to run from a USB key. They can just as well be run from an arbitrary directory on your Windows desktop. And I decided to go for that route, since many corporations are now also disabling the use of outside thumbdrives because they carry in computer viruses and worms.
While Portable Apps can be downloaded as a suite consisting of numerous applications, you can also pick and choose. And thank the heavens, Firefox is in the suite and is being kept current on par with Mozilla’s release schedule.
Note: Be sure to unpack the portable app to a location on the computer’s hard drive, avoid placing it on corporate network location because it will slow Firefox down. Moreover, extracting it locally has the benefit of IT-personnel not being able to peek inside its contents. You can easily permanently delete Portable Firefox’ folder without leaving traces on the corporate network – this way – too.
A quick how to
- Grab the latest portable release of Firefox at http://portableapps.com/apps/internet/firefox_portable.
- Run the .paf-file you just downloaded and specify the path for decompression.
- Navigate into the folder you just specified and run the Firefox executable.
In a corporate environment it may interesting to delve into Firefox’ preference panes to make sure Firefox doesn’t keep track of your browsing history. You can easily set it to ‘Never’, so it will operate in ‘Private Browsing Mode’ permanently, evidently wiping your tracks as you go and as you quit your browsing session. Don’t forget to check this option if you want to prevent your boss from finding out you have been wasting precious office-time on Facebook or YouTube.
Note: Many corporations intercept your traffic on its way out. If this is the case in your company, private browsing will not obscure your traffic data.
Getting Firefox to work behind a corporate firewall
Corporations usually have airtight IT-infrastructure in place, enforced by exceptionally stringent firewall policies. Internet Explorer 6 will usually be pre-configured to play nicely with the aforementioned setup, but Firefox most likely won’t be. It is oftentimes easy to do, however, so don’t despair (just yet).
Frequently, corporate workstations are behind a proxy-server, which is set up in one of the settings screens in IE6. A proxy-server is a server within the company’s IT infrastructure that intercepts every workstation’s internet traffic on the way out (and in) and consequentially relays all traffic. Companies primarily do this so they can monitor and control their employees’ traffic, possibly even blocking certain sites or services, or prioritizing traffic in favor of internal sites and servers.
All you need to do, in most cases, is enter this proxy server’s address into Firefox’ connection settings and you’re off. In a nutshell:
- Fire up good old IE6
- Go to ‘Tools’ > ‘Internet Options’ > Tab: ‘Connections’
- In the section ‘Local Area Network (LAN) Settings’ click the button ‘LAN Settings’
- In the section ‘Proxy Server’, make note of or copy to the clipboard the information listed there.
The address-field is usually filled out with something similar to ‘proxy.companyname.com’ and the port number is usually 80. - Next, open Firefox
- Go to ‘Tools’ > ‘Options’ > Icon: ‘Advanced’ > Tab: ‘Network’
- In the section ‘Connections’ click the button ‘Settings’
- Select the radio button ‘Manual configuration’
- Fill out the fields ‘HTTP Proxy’ and ‘Port’
- Most of the time you need to check the box ‘Use this proxy for all protocols’ to use the same proxy for all web protocols outside of regular protocols like SSL-enabled (secure) sites.
To find out whether you should tick the box in step 10 you can click the ‘Advanced’-button in the IE6’s ‘LAN Settings’ window. This isn’t usually necessary, but in case you need those settings, they’re right there.
Note: You can make an extra attempt eavesdrop-proof your connections to the outside world by using SSL. Make sure you use secure connections (SSL) whenever you can. Sites that contain your sensitive/personal information usually offer this ability. Make sure you make use of it by prefixing your URLs with https:// instead of the usual http://. Some sites will automatically switch you over to https if you don’t explicitly ask them to. Others only go secure for the log-on process, after which everything else is transmitted in the clear. Beware.
For example:
- Go to https://mail.google.com instead of http://mail.google.com to make sure you’re always using a secure SSL-enabled (Secure Sockets Layer) connection.
These few steps should do the trick. The full Internet will once more be at your disposal
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Ushering Total Ad-Silence with Firefox
Aug 17th
Display-ads are the money makers of the world wide web. While I encourage everyone to support his or her favorite website by allowing ads and perhaps even clicking on them if interesting enough, online advertisements are often over-used with the clear intent of baiting visitors. If you’re also the type to easily get annoyed with online ads constantly prodding at you wherever you go, there is a non-laborious way to make them a thing of the past.
You may have guessed it: Firefox can infer ad-silence if loaded up with the right extensions. In this post I would like to discuss two of my most beloved ad fighters: AdBlock Plus and FlashBlock. And interestingly, they will work in tandem to eliminate ~90% of ads encountered on the web so you can surf clutter-free.
AdBlock Plus
AdBlock Plus on addons.mozilla.org
AdBlock Plus has to be my favorite extension. It’s probably one of the most popular add-ons for Firefox, too. Nonetheless, it still pays off to discuss some of its most important features that help combat unwanted Internet ads.
Upon installation and after the compulsory Firefox reboot you’re presented with a dialog urging you to make a selection from of the list of available blocking-filters. I generally pick the first one off the top of the list, because I don’t believe it makes a substantial difference which one you pick.
AdBlock Plus blocks ads based on a set of filters which are pulled from the list you’ve just chosen. Because it’s list-based, it has to be maintained by someone, so be aware of the fact that it isn’t always up-to-date. As a result, ads sometimes crop up on websites anyway from time to time. Although the aforementioned event is an oddity, you’re able to add additional filters by simply right-clicking the trespassing ad and selecting ‘AdBlock Plus: Block Image’. From then on the disturbance won’t be able to pierce through AdBlock’s armor any longer.
FlashBlock
FlashBlock at addons.mozilla.org
Most unsurprisingly, there are ways for advertisers to get around add-ons like AdBlock Plus (of which they’re undoubtedly very aware ). One of the most popular ways of doing this is to make use of Flash animations instead of conventional HTML and/or images.
To counteract Flash, FlashBlock was born. When run in conjunction with AdBlock it stomps on advertisers specifically circumventing browser-based blocking mechanisms like AdBlock by employing Flash. Additionally, Adobe Flash has become a serious security-threat and with Adobe’s track-record in this field there’s little hope for change in the near future.
FlashBlock’s original use wasn’t necessarily to block Flash-based ads, in fact, it was designed to block all Flash-content in a convenient way. Coincidentally, it can also be applied to the disposing of ads.
When activated, Flash content will be replaced by a placeholder graphic featuring a familiar play-button. Pressing this button will evidently load up the animation of your choosing. This does away with flashy animations (no pun intended
) and disturbing music starting at will upon visiting a website. I’m sure you’ll receive the silence well, as did I.
Blacklisting vs. whitelisting
There’s a fundamental operational difference between the extensions I just talked about: AdBlock relies on blacklisting, while FlashBlock opts for explicit whitelisting. In the case of FlashBlock, all Flash is expelled, except for the exemptions you enter into the whitelist by using the pull-down menu, incorporated in the toolbar button installed into Firefox along with the add-on.
Adversely, AdBlock Plus can be configured to whitelist a site you’d like to see ads on. You can easily do so by selecting ‘Disable on www.somesite.com’ – once more by using the drop-down in the toolbar.
Closing Note
FlashBlock and AdBlock Plus are great tools for getting rid of most of the unwanted advertising that plague the Internet and its users. That said, I’d like to add a little disclaimer to this article:
It’s not because I wrote this article that I condemn all forms of online advertising.
Quite to the contrary, I feel it is our duty as good netizens to support the sites/blogs we really like by disabling these tools selectively. You’ll be doing the site/person in question a favor, in most cases, since this is how people monetize their sites. This, in turn, keeps them running.
So if you particularly like an online venue, please allow ads, by all means. And while you’re at it, you may want to consider whitelisting mine
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* Promo image courtesy of Steve Rhodes on Flickr. Creative Commons License applies: Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.0 Generic
Firefox Addon Tip: Easy Drag-to-Go
Jun 26th
Easy Drag-to-Go is a Firefox plug-in that will decidedly make you more productive by implementing mouse gestures when handling hyperlinks and text on web pages.
- Find this add-on here [Free].
Web browsing, to me – and I gather this goes for many people nowadays – has become something of a second nature. Not a day goes by without me surfing the web for something or other. It has just become a part of my life [style].
Everyone has different habits when it comes to the use of a computer, but generally – as I see it – there are two types of people. Firstly, there are keyboard-people who try to accomplish as much as they can using solely the keyboard by taking advantage of the multitude of keyboard shortcuts most operating systems and applications carry with them.
On the other end of the spectrum, there are mouse-people, who evidently accomplish most of their work by virtue of the mouse. I assume this group of people is far greater in size since it was the one that ignited the whole GUI-movement in software interfaces.
Web browsers are applications that require a hybrid interaction style, though, combining extensive keyboard use with mouse movements and clicks. While surfing the web, I personally like to keep one hand on the keyboard and the other on the mouse. This way I can easily open new tabs using the various keyboard shortcuts (CTRL+T, Cmd+T) and move between tabs quickly (CTRL-TAB).
A big part of my web routine involves open links, obviously, and I prefer opening links in new tabs. This usually requires me to hold down the CTRL or CMD button while clicking a link (Windows-based browsers often allow the middle-mouse-click to achieve the same effect). While this is behavior I can easily get used to, I found a great Firefox Addon that handles all of my link opening and text searching by use of mouse gestures, which have increased my productivity exponentially.
‘Gesturing’ your way through
Easy Drag-to-Go is not your usual mouse gesture-enabling add-on. While traditional
gestures usually employ the right mouse-button to open new tabs, to go to the next/previous
tab and to close the current tab, Easy Drag-to-Go has a different take on gestures. Here’s how it works by default:

Opening links
To open a new tab you can simply do the following:
- Drag a link up to open the link in a new foreground tab
- Drag a link down to open the link in a new background tab
This dismisses the need to hold down a keyboard button to insure that a link opens in a new tab, and, you have to the choice to open something in the background in case you decide you want to deal with something later on.
Searching
Saw a word on a page you’d like to Google Search (or Bing Search!)? No need to retype it or copy-paste it into that search box! Just go ahead and select it. Once it’s selected:
- Drag the selected text up to search in a new foreground tab
- Drag the selected text down to search in a new background tab
This functionality is especially handy when researching stuff for your blog (or anything else).
Images: You can also assign the add-on to save dragged images to a default location on your hard drive.
Recommended!
How To: Tweak Firefox' look to fit into Vista/Windows 7
Apr 21st
One of the many features of Firefox 3 was native UI-integration on Windows XP, Vista, Mac and Linux. While Firefox’ Mac-version does look rather native, Mozilla completely dropped their efforts to take advantage of Windows Vista’s (or 7’s) Aero Glass effects.
Because Firefox has such a vibrant addon-community, you can achieve the effect below by using 1 custom theme and 2 add-ons:
The stuff you’ll need to achieve this look:
- The Theme: Strata Reloaded which you can find here.
Just hit the ‘Add to Firefox’-button, accept it and let it churn away. You may want to deny the restart, since we’re not done installing add-ons yet.
- Add-on 1: Glasser, download here.
While the theme above introduce prettier icons and the colored bar, Glasser makes Firefox’ chrome transparent like (Internet) Explorer windows. The latest version of Glasser is only compatible with the latest Firefox 3.1 beta. If you click the older version link, you can select the version that’s compatible with the latest stable version of Firefox.
- Add-on 2: Menu Mod, here.
You can hide the menu bar as Internet Explorer does by default by installing the Menu Mod add-on. Once installed, press F2 on the keyboard to toggle the menu bar’s visibility.
“Et voila, c’est tout” as the French say. It’s a pity Mozilla didn’t make this look the default one, it’s much nicer and certainly more native.
Many thanks to the respective theme/add-on developers.
Use Google's "I'm feeling lucky" from Firefox' address bar [OpenDNS]
Jul 23rd
This trick enables you to regain the ability to use Google’s “I’m feeling lucky”-functionality on the fly from Firefox 3’s address bar, as was natively possible in Firefox 2. To accommodate this, we’ll use OpenDNS’ network shortcuts. Once configured, you’ll be able to type stuff like “goto drupal” and be taken to drupal.org right away.
Note: As advertised, you need to be using OpenDNS for this hack to work. If you don’t know what OpenDNS is, you may want to read up on it, since it’s a great thing to have.
Firefox 3 and 3.1 Coming Soon
May 21st
UPDATE: Mozilla has recently decided to roll out one more Release Candidate. While this wasn’t planned, they’re doing so to make sure the final release is extremely solid. With RC2, 40 additional bugs will have been fixed. The final release date will be pushed back with approx. 5 days, though. Better safe than buggy I guess.
Firefox has been all over the news today. This is probably mostly due to the latest Release Candidate Mozilla pushed a few days ago. The third iteration of Mozilla’s flagship web browser is due no later than next month, contrary to earlier reports. It doesn’t seem likely the Firefox team will be releasing another RC build, though. But never say never, of course.
Performance boost
I’ve been using Firefox 3 since beta three and I’m having mixed feelings about it. I love the way it doesn’t gobble down hundreds of megabytes of RAM anymore. And, it’s great to see they’ve finally made the rendering engine snappier. Now, in comparison to FF3 RC1, it becomes apparent that Firefox 2’s performance was taking a snail trail beneath its baggage of (amongst others) poorly supported Javascript processing and page rendering. In addition, the numerous leaking addons made using FF2 a rather crash-prone experience.
Mozilla, in my opinion, [still] under-delivers on its promise to give Firefox a native look on every platform. There were humongous plans for a Mac version (which made its debut a couple of betas ago), a Linux version and a Vista version. As most of us know, Mozilla threw out the latter to retain Firefox’ image and online presence. Instead, they slapped out a regurgitated iteration of Firefox’ former self, i.e. Firefox 2. A big mistake.
Enhancements
An other addition worth mentioning is the dramatically improved address-bar. Much like the Spotlight on the Mac, or Instant Search in Vista, Firefox searches for previously queried or bookmarked sites as you type. If you’re the type to frequently visit certain sites, but don’t want to go through the hassle that is bookmarking (yes it is), this is a great productivity booster.
The download manager finally allows for pausing downloads. And, closing the browser won’t flush them out either. They’ll just pop right back the next instance you open your trusty browser. This feature greatly obsoletes the need for addons like ‘DownThemAll’, though the aforementioned provides more that just download management.
Protecting the young’uns
Dumb and uninitiated web surfers are now protected against the dark side of the net. Clearer certificate pages and anti-phishing/scamming warnings are in place to wane off ignorant eyes.
One of the annoyances of running an ‘unfinished’ version of Firefox – like software is ever finished – is that support for addons is completely broken. Only a few are capable of keeping up with Mozilla’s beta/RC cycle. That, and the revised addons’ underpinnings usually render the addons-window empty. While there are methods at present to get incompatible addons running again, this is not advised, since many contain deprecated and insecure code. The solution is simple, just sit it out, or plainly revert back to Firefox 2 for the time being.
Firefox 3.1 in the running
Word goes round that Mozilla has already started planning the next major update to Firefox, i.e. version 3.1. It will reportedly incorporate features that were cut from the RC1 build because they weren’t yet on par with the rest of the feature set. Most of them were nearly finished, but just didn’t meet the quality bar for broad release.
The XMLHttpRequest (XHR) API is an example of this. The RC1 release notes note that the specifications for this technology aren’t stable, nor secure enough [yet].
With Firefox 3.1, it will be the first time Mozilla rolls out two major updates to the Firefox franchise in the same year. Interesting.
Get the RC
For those interested on living on the bleeding edge (cough), Firefox 3 RC1 is available from Mozilla’s website right here. In keeping with its good tradition, this download is available in all its multi-language/platform splendor.
Firefox 3 Beta 3 Released
Feb 13th
The third beta release of the eminent Firefox 3 web browser has been released today, boasting approx. 1300 incremental improvements over previous betas. Improved in Beta 3:
- Stability
- Performance
- Memory usage
- Platform-specific enhancements
- UI improvements
Word goes around that there will be one more beta-release, before Mozilla will be issuing Release Candidate versions. It looking like FF is finally nearing completion. This development cycle has been the longest iteration since 1.0.
Screenshots courtesy of ArsTechnica:
Firefox Addon: TinyUrl Creator
Nov 28th
TinyUrl.com is a website that takes long URLs and transforms them into cute little buggers like http://tinyurl.com/2uhxg4. It’s useful when one would like to send on, um, long links or when one is interested in social networking sites like Twitter where typing space is fairly limited. The service has been turned into a handy-dandy Firefox addon, which will create a TinyUrl for you on-the-fly and immediately copy it to your clipboard. All you need to do is CTRL+V it.
With this installed you can add a new item to your toolbar which flops out a menu holding common commands. You can also right-click on any webpage to accomplish the same effect. The only thing that’s amiss right now is a keyboard shortcut.



