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A test drive of Firefox Bon Echo Alpha 2

The Bon Echo Alpha 2 release of the Firefox 2 web browser was announced this week. We looked at the alpha 1 release in March.

Bon Echo Alpha 2 is the second developer milestone on the path to Firefox 2. This milestone is focused on testing the core functionality provided by many of or new features and changes to the platform scheduled for Firefox 2.

New features in this version, which include some of the alpha 1 additions, are:

  • The default new window behavior opens a new tab, not a new window.
  • Each tab now has its own close button.
  • Text boxes now feature inline spell checking, errors are underlined in red.
  • The browsing session is automatically restored in the event of a crash.
  • The Google and Yahoo search boxes have automatic search suggestions.
  • Support for the Sherlock and OpenSearch engines has been added.
  • There is a new search plugin manager for configuring search engines.
  • Previewing and subscribing to web feeds has been improved.
  • There is a new Microsummaries feature for adding real-time information to bookmarks.
  • A new Add-Ons manager is available for managing extensions and themes.
  • Extension system updates improve security and extension localization.
  • SVG text on a path support has been added.
More details on this version are available in the release notes. [Firefox Bon Echo a2]

Your editor decided to give Bon Echo Alpha 2 a test drive in a real-world situation, working on this week's LWN edition.

Installing the browser involved downloading, uncompressing and extracting a tar file, then running ./firefox in the resulting Firefox directory. The older version of Firefox had to be shut down before Bon Echo A2 would start.

The first impression was that the default fonts were somewhat ugly. Font selection is a personal choice, and it was easy to use the usual Edit/Preferences window to select the more pleasing Bitstream Vera Sans font.

Editing an LWN article (see the screen shot) involves using several HTML text boxes, this activated the inline spell checking feature. The red underlining is not terribly hard on the eyes, and it shows up words that are suspect. Surprisingly, Firefox is not in the spelling dictionary. Many, but not all, html tags also show up as spelling errors. A useful addition would be the underlining of html code in another color.

An odd behavior was observed when typing characters into the smaller text box that is shown in the example screen shot. Using the left arrow key to move the cursor worked as expected, but pushing the right arrow key, or the up and down arrow keys caused the window to refresh, and focus was moved to the lower and larger text box. Sometimes, but not always, clicking the mouse in one box would also cause a similar refocus. Clearly, there is still a bug in the code, one should expect that with early releases.

On the other hand, earlier versions of Firefox have had problems involving the loss of text that was yanked into the mouse buffer, that behavior seems to have been improved.

The new search engine features seem to be handy on the first try, typing a word in the search engine field at the top right side of the screen causes a pop-up window with related search topics to show up. The search engine window also has a new arrow that activates the search engine configuration tool.

Despite a few odd behaviors, Bon Echo Alpha 2 was able to handle the exercise of editing and writing LWN articles for several hours without crashing. There are a few known issues with this release, and probably a few more which will show up now that the software is available for general testing. Nonetheless, some useful new capabilities are being added to Firefox. Firefox should hold its position as the default Linux browser for some time.


(Log in to post comments)

A test drive of Firefox Bon Echo Alpha 2

Posted May 18, 2006 4:44 UTC (Thu) by mgh (subscriber, #5696) [Link]

One feature that would be a cool addition to the exsiting search function would be a "search this site" button that would auto-magically add the current active tab/window domain "site:xxxx.yyy" to the search query (on google).

I often find that google is better than search engines on local sites. Also the results could optionally be opened in a sidebar so that the current page was not reloaded.

Yeah - ok, someone has already probably thought of this ;)

A test drive of Firefox Bon Echo Alpha 2

Posted May 18, 2006 13:04 UTC (Thu) by pointwood (subscriber, #2814) [Link]

I wouldn't be surprised if there was an extention that did that already :)

A test drive of Firefox Bon Echo Alpha 2

Posted May 18, 2006 8:49 UTC (Thu) by job (subscriber, #670) [Link]

They seem determined to go with the old-style close buttons instead of the newer Firefox-style. Weird. But at least a slight improvement from alpha 1, which did both.

A test drive of Firefox Bon Echo Alpha 2

Posted May 18, 2006 18:55 UTC (Thu) by proski (subscriber, #104) [Link]

If you want the single close button, use tab-no-x

Default Linux browser?

Posted May 18, 2006 17:22 UTC (Thu) by martinfick (subscriber, #4455) [Link]

Funny, I always thought that Firfox was the default alternative windows browser, and that Konqueror was the default linux browser. :)

Default Linux browser?

Posted May 18, 2006 18:16 UTC (Thu) by jonabbey (subscriber, #2736) [Link]

Well, Corbet probably has access to LWN user agent logs..

Default Linux browser?

Posted May 18, 2006 18:39 UTC (Thu) by martinfick (subscriber, #4455) [Link]

Right, and because of this general assumption, most Konqueror users have to use the nifty 'set user agent' feature and disguise themselves as other browsers so that stupid websites to not say "we do not support your browser... please use IE, Netscape or Mozilla", but yet they actually do support us if we masquerade! Please, do not trust those logs!!!

Default Linux browser?

Posted May 19, 2006 4:03 UTC (Fri) by jwb (guest, #15467) [Link]

This also gives Konqueror users a means to cloud the issue that their browser is used by,
statistically speaking, nobody. Whatever the most popular browser is, a finite slice of that must be
clandestine Konqueror users. It's a brilliant marketing strategy which I have long admired.

I'm not nobody!

Posted May 22, 2006 4:49 UTC (Mon) by xoddam (subscriber, #2322) [Link]

And nobody isn't me.

Nor do I care how statistically you speak!

Spell checker

Posted May 18, 2006 22:04 UTC (Thu) by proski (subscriber, #104) [Link]

The spell checker shouldn't be underrated. Sometimes an embarrassing typo in a public forum or in a message to the boss can be worse than losing the whole hard drive worth of data and leaking all credit card numbers to the scammers. That's why I'm switching to Bon Echo now, despite all warnings.

Well, on the other hand, Forecastfox is incompatible with Bon Echo, so people living in tornado prone areas should probably wait a little bit :-)

Spell checker

Posted May 19, 2006 16:07 UTC (Fri) by im14u2c (subscriber, #5246) [Link]

"Me spell chucker work grate. Need grandma chicken." -- yakkoj@netscape.net

Now if they could add lose/loose, their/they're/there, your/you're checking, that'd be something.

Does it protect the contents of text boxes?

Posted May 20, 2006 23:46 UTC (Sat) by fergal (subscriber, #602) [Link]

It's quite remarkable that Firefox 1.5 (and probably every other browser) will happily throw away several hours worth of typing with a single mis-click. Have they by any chanceadded an "Are you sure you want to close this tab/go back/clear the form and throw away your email/blog posting?" dialog?

As things stand Window's Notepad takes better care of users' hard work than browsers do.

Bug filed long ago but untouched so far.

Does it protect the contents of text boxes?

Posted May 25, 2006 9:36 UTC (Thu) by arcticwolf (guest, #8341) [Link]

There's an extension called undoclosetab that does just that and which will restore form contents, too. Saved my on more than one occasion, although I agree it would be nicer if the browser itself weren't so brain-dead about this...

A test drive of Firefox Bon Echo Alpha 2

Posted May 22, 2006 14:42 UTC (Mon) by Quazatron (subscriber, #4368) [Link]

> The browsing session is automatically restored in the event of a crash.

From all the apps I've used before that implement this behaviour, this is what I've learn: If your session crashes, and your app reloads the session, It'll just crash again. And again. And yet again.

I'm sure hope I'm wrong and they manage to get this right.

A test drive of Firefox Bon Echo Alpha 2

Posted May 26, 2006 17:57 UTC (Fri) by Cato (subscriber, #7643) [Link]

TabMix Plus on Firefox 1.5 does the right thing - it prompts you as to which saved session to open, and even tells you if that session crashed, so it's easy to open one that doesn't crash Firefox (although I've only rarely had that problem anyway).

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