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  • Matt Rogowski 16:41 on March 28, 2009 Permalink | Reply
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    Which browser?? Part 1 

    Right now there’s 5 main browsers available. Chrome, Opera, FireFox, Safari, and IE8. They all (well, most ;) ) have their good points, and they have their bad points too.

    Google Chrome 2

    Good Points

    Well, I think this is the best looking browser there is. It’s so simple. The tabs are in the window bar, along with the minimize/maximize/close buttons, to save space, and there’s just one toolbar, being the address bar. There’s no other menus for settings, everything you need is in two small buttons on the right had side of the address bar. This means that Chrome gives a huge viewing space, bigger than any other browser. The settings themselves are very simple too. The general design is good too, the graphics are simple and fresh looking, and the colour scheme is pleasant. Bookmarks bar is nice, I like the page that shows when you open a new tab, and it’s very fast to load pages. When you type in the address bar, it automatically fills in what it thinks you want to go to. I can usually just type one letter and hit ‘Enter’, as the rest of it is filled in. There’s also a feature where you can press ‘Tab’ and search a site right from the address bar, without even visiting the site. Some people say it’s bad because you can’t add toolbars, but why do you need to?? Everything that is in a toolbar, specifically the Google one, is inbuilt into Chrome. Also has an ‘Incognito’ mode, where it won’t save your browsing history or save cookies, which can be useful. Seems to do quite well in Acic3 too. And how long has it been around?? Not long at all.

    Bad Points

    Erm… sometimes a tab detaches from the main browser when I don’t want it to. And… the codepress in the templates editor in MyBB doesn’t work in Chrome. Uhh… oh, you can’t customise the 9 sites that show when you open a new tab. That’s about it.

    Opera 10

    Good Points

    Opera is underrated. I think it looks nice, especially with a nice theme. Is fast, and has inbuilt IRC (maybe that’s only on Opera 9, can’t find it on 10), a mail feature, and mouse gestures. You can also customise the ’speed dial’ page, which shows when you open a new tab, similar to Chrome, except with Opera, you can add what you want. I also like the sidebar, that’s quite cool. Does very well in Acid3 too. It’s also available on phones and even a Wii.

    Bad Points

    Another difficult one. Not really much to complain about here. It’s a very accomplished browser. Don’t think it has an equivalent to Chrome’s ‘Incognito’ mode, though.

    FireFox 3

    Good Points

    Well, this is probably the most common browser for people who know what a heap of crap IE is. It has a load of themes and plugins available, which I don’t really have a use for, but I can clearly see why it appeals to so many people. The default theme, with changed buttons (which is how I set it up), does look quite nice. It’s quite fast too, and scores well in Acid3.

    Bad points

    It crashes. Quite a lot. And it seems to make things run slower when it’s running, too. Also, ‘Speed Dial’ is an add-on, whereas Opera and Chrome have this built in. Still a good browser but not the one I’d use as my first choice.

    Safari 4

    Good Points

    I’ll make it clear now that I did not like Safari 3. It looked good on a Mac, but on Windows, it looked ugly, just a but grey block at the top and it didn’t display very well. So I wasn’t expecting much with Safari 4. Downloaded it anyway, as I like to have the latest version of a browser, and I was very impressed straight away. An immense improvement. It just looks so much nicer now. Like Chrome, the tabs are in the window bar. Also, again like Chrome, there’s just one toolbar, the address bar, with buttons on the right, which look extremely similar to Chrome’s. Not that that’s bad, I really like it, plus you can turn on/off the ’standard’ menu bar, if the 2 buttons next to the address bad aren’t right for you. I also love how the ‘Top Sites’ is set out, along with the bookmarks and history. I like the Google search box, too. It has private browsing like Chrome, too. Again, does well in Acid 3, too.

    Bad Points

    This is what disappointed me about Safari 4. You can’t click the middle mouse button to close a tab, you have to click a very small cross. You can’t drag a tab from anywhere, it has to be from one specific corner. When you close it down, and open it again, the tabs you had open aren’t there, like the are in Chrome. When you middle click to open a new tab, it goes to the end of the tabs, not after the one you’re on. Plus, you can’t customise the ‘Top Sites’ page. This browser was seriously making me consider switching from Chrome but those 4 tab issues put me off within 20 minutes. A real shame, actually. It is in beta though so who know, maybe it’ll be changed.

    Internet Explorer 8

    Good Points

    Erm… is it OK if I leave this bit blank?? Na, I may as well try… hmm… well, it’s better than IE7, I’ll give it that. Not as many websites break now, and it looks a little bit nicer. Plus it has ‘InPrivate’ browsing. OK, that’s enough. All I can think of.

    Bad Points

    Well, where to start?? It takes ages to load up. It takes ages to load a page. It takes ages to open a tab. Why should opening a tab, whether it’s a blank one or opening a link in a new tab, take ~5 seconds?? It’s ridiculous. Plus some websites are still broken, and it fails epically at Acid3. 20/100. Not as bad as IE7 with 14/100. Plus there’s the big thick tab bar up at the top of the window, meaning the viewing area is the lowest of all the other browsers. Please, Microsoft, do away with it.

    So, which is best??

    5th – IE8 – 3/10 – It just fails.

    4th – Safari 4 – 6/10 – I like it, but the tabs spoil it for me completely.

    3rd – FireFox 3 – 7/10 – If it wouldn’t crash so much, it’d be higher up.

    2nd – Opera 10 – 8/10 – Very good, underrated by many.

    1st – Google Chrome – 9/10 – I love it, but, just like everything, there is always room for improvement.

    So, there you go. Of course, which browser you use is up to you, but for me, Chrome is the winner. Well done Google.

     
    • Christopher 05:42 on July 8, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      You definitely underrated Firefox here. There is so much more you can do with it. Also, the crashing is not a common problem. It can and should be fixed. To report the problem, you can get support from Firefox’s live chat. http://www.tinyurl.com/mozlivechat

      (you can follow @mozillalivechat on Twitter for updates when live chat is open and not)

      When reporting the crashes, though, be sure to go to about:crashes in Firefox.

      –Christopher
      (a.k.a. cl58)
      Mozilla Live Chat Helper

    • Matt Rogowski 21:23 on July 8, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      Well, it seemed to crash a lot when I briefly used it, sometimes when I wasn’t even physically using it at that time, it was just open, and would suddenly crash. Saying that… I used it at college for quite a while (it was either that or IE7 :P ), with many tabs open and it didn’t crash once, so it may have been something with my laptop; that sounds like quite a reasonable explanation actually, it isn’t the fastest or most powerful laptop available…

      I’m currently downloading Firefox 3.5 and I’ll give it another go. I won’t switch from Chrome but I can see the appeal of Firefox, the level of customisation is unbelievable, and I’m not saying it’s necessarily a bad browser, just not right for me. There are some very useful plugins for Firefox which I wish Chrome had, such as Ad Blocker, Firebug, Refresh Every X Minutes and Speed Dial (Chrome has something similar but it isn’t customisable like this plugin is (Opera has this feature built in, fully customisable)) but I wouldn’t switch to benefit from those.

  • Matt Rogowski 15:12 on March 28, 2009 Permalink | Reply
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    Well, the’ve followed it up 

    Yep, turns out there was film in the camera, and they’ve sent a letter to my insructor (it was his car). Bollocks. He’s going to write a letter and I hope they let me off it. Getting points this early on for something like this would just suck.

     
  • Matt Rogowski 21:21 on March 15, 2009 Permalink | Reply
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    Got caught speeding… bah 

    OK, so I passed my test in December 08. Haven’t driven again until today, 15th March. I was doing my pass plus today, basically a small course where you do more advanced stuff that you don’t do in the standard test, and then you get a bit of money off the insurance as well as more experience. All went fine despite the fact I hadn’t driven for 3 months, actually seemed like I’d been driving every day, was a bit surprised, and when we got to the half way point, to turn back, I was quite happy. Half way back it started to get dark, but I’ve done loads of night driving before so that was fine. Then, we hit a 50 mph limit. This went on for at least 15 minutes, along a quiet road, at the same steady speed, but it was slowly getting darker. Eventually it was very dark and could only really see what the lights showed me. Going along quite nicely, and my instructor suddenly says ‘It’s 40 along here!”.

    *slams on the brakes*

    *Flash*

    *Flash*

    Shit.

    So yeah, there’s me, first time driving for 3 months, doing 50 in a 40. But it’s total shit really. For one, the 50 limit had been there for ages, and there was no real reason at all for it to be a 40 at that point. About 100 metres after the camera, it went back to a 50, there just seemed to be this random 40 mph limit in the middle of the 50. Plus, there was only one small sign saying the change of speed, which I didn’t see, there weren’t any markings on the road to indicate the change, and the camera was extremely close to the start of the 40 zone. Now, you may think that I should have seen the sign and braked. Well, yes, if there was any light, I’d have seen the sign, and would have slowed down. But there wasn’t any light. Even if I did see the sign, I wouldn’t have had enough time to slow down from 50 after seeing it to be going slow enough for the camera because it was so close to the sign. The guy behind me was going just as fast, he couldn’t see the sign either, he only knew about it because it flashed for me.

    Now, there’s every chance the camera had no film in it. That’s what I’m hoping for. If not, when they send the letter to ask who was driving, my instructor will obviously say it was me, but he’ll also write a letter trying to get me off it. I do everything else fine, very careful, take note of speed limits, but in this case, the signs were very unclear. Plus we were talking about stuff to watch out for when it’s dark, which is kinda ironic.

    I guess I’ll have to see what happens. If they do follow it through, I’m quite certain they’ll let me off but I’m not looking forward to finding out.

     
    • TomL 23:06 on March 15, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      Yeah, that’s definitely some bullshit bro. I don’t have my permit or license yet, but there’s those cameras everywhere around here, like you aid, right after the sign. Which is like, you can’t immediately drop 10mph in like .6 seconds, it’s ridiculous:P Good luck, though!

    • Imad 00:33 on March 20, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      I usually go 5MPH over the speed limit unless I’m passing a vehicle or sort. Not too sure if the cameras even monitor our speeds, at least I haven’t seen anything yet. :P

  • Matt Rogowski 20:47 on March 5, 2009 Permalink | Reply
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    BMW E28 M5, originally uploaded by Matt Rogowski.

    These days, all the major manufacturers make a super-fast version of a normal saloon, by sticking a bigger engine in it, but this is the first, the one that influenced the rest. The M5 is the best super-saloon, and this, the original E28, is the best of the best. Only 187 RHD models were produced.

     
  • Matt Rogowski 20:23 on March 5, 2009 Permalink | Reply
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    The rear is just as nice, still looks smooth and sleek.

     
  • Matt Rogowski 20:23 on March 5, 2009 Permalink | Reply
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    I had this as my wallpaper for ages, you can probably see why, this is a beautiful shot.

     
  • Matt Rogowski 20:22 on March 5, 2009 Permalink | Reply
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    Like this shot, everything about this car is so smooth and fluid, and the wheels are great too.

     
  • Matt Rogowski 23:02 on March 4, 2009 Permalink | Reply
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    Aston Martin One-77 2, originally uploaded by Matt Rogowski.

    They’ve taken the rear lights concept from the latest Astons and made it even better, plus you can see just how wide it is at the back.

     
  • Matt Rogowski 23:00 on March 4, 2009 Permalink | Reply
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    Aston Martin One-77 

     

    Aston Martin One-77 1, originally uploaded by Matt Rogowski.

    I love those air intakes on the front, and how wide are those rear tyres… woah.

     
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