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    <title>3 Stations East</title>
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    <category term="camino" scheme="http://paulmcaleer.vox.com/tags/camino/?_c=feed-atom-full" label="camino" /> 
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    <updated>2007-06-12T02:52:37Z</updated> 
    <author>
        <name>Paul</name>
        <uri>http://paulmcaleer.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full</uri>
    </author> 
    <id>tag:vox.com,2006:6p00c2251c214c604a/tags/camino/</id> 
    <subtitle>In which I say little and post even less.</subtitle>  
    
    <entry>
        <title>Building the Perfect OS X Browser</title>   
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        <published>2007-06-12T02:52:37Z</published>
        <updated>2007-06-12T02:52:37Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>Paul</name>
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        <p>So yeah, I played with Camino 1.5 for a week before I went crawling back to Firefox. And I&#39;ve been off-and-on with Safari 3.0 beta all day. It&#39;s frustrating because all three of these browsers come <em>very close</em> to what I want in a browser but none of them pegs it perfectly.</p><p>Thus, my review of the current state of OS X browserdom and which pieces would make the Perfect OS X Browser.</p><p><strong>Firefox 2.0.0.4<br /></strong>The best thing about Firefox: extensions. The second: cross-platform consistency. If I can make a site work in Firefox on the Mac, I know it&#39;ll look just dandy on the PC. Safari has matched that feature now, of course, but the extensions in FF are what bring me back. That, and the Undo The Tab I Just Closed By Accident command... it has saved me countless times.</p><p>However, it&#39;s a stupid memory hog. I don&#39;t care if it&#39;s the browser or the extensions I&#39;m running... it&#39;s a mess. I hate the spinning beachball. The interface, even with GrApple, is still kind of a mess.</p><p><strong>Camino 1.5</strong><br />Love it. Great, great stride forward. Feels fast and zippy. Fits in to OS X very well. Feels leaner than Firefox. I appreciate that it&#39;s the same rendering engine, too... no having to worry about CSS breaking a beautiful layout.</p><p>But I can&#39;t move tabs? And I can <strong>still</strong> only store one username/password per domain name? And it&#39;s nice that there&#39;s a Flash blocker included, as well as an ad blocker, but (like Safari) that&#39;s not too useful if I can&#39;t whitelist sites.</p><p>I really do like Camino, but those little things just bug me a lot. Maybe 1.6 will fix &#39;em.</p><p><strong>Safari 3 beta<br /></strong>Boy, does this look weird on a PC. I couldn&#39;t test it with a work app, which required an authenticated login - it crashed. On the Mac, it&#39;s very fast. Being able to move tabs? Great. The ability to move tabs off the tab bar into their own windows? Great! I still like the streamlined, clean interface. It&#39;s better at typography than Firefox and Camino.</p><p>But the new search? It kicks ass. It is easily the best search implementation I&#39;ve seen in an app since Coda. They&#39;re tied, in my mind. Safari will actually highlight all the matches on a page and pop them up a bit. Once you&#39;ve tried it, you&#39;ll think every other browser needs it too.</p><p>The cons? Uhm... hm. Other than what I&#39;ve grown used to with Firefox... there... aren&#39;t... any really. It&#39;s a beta. Oh, that&#39;s one! It&#39;s a beta.</p><p>I&#39;m going to stick it out with Safari 3 for a little while. But those Firefox extensions might be too much for me to miss.</p><p><strong>The Perfect OS X Browser</strong><br />It really is too bad that not any single browser has nailed everything perfectly. Firefox has a sucky UI; Camino&#39;s latest version just got outpaced by Safari; Safari&#39;s lacking expandability (to some degree.)</p><p>So for me, the perfect browser would include:</p><ul><li>Firefox extensions;</li><li>Both the Gecko and WebKit rendering engines;</li><li>Safari&#39;s tab implementation, in-page search, and bookmark management;</li><li>Firefox&#39;s DOM inspector;</li><li>Safari&#39;s UI;</li><li>Camino&#39;s slick-looking &quot;warning panels&quot; (for pop-ups, etc.).</li></ul><p>That&#39;s it. As you can see, things aren&#39;t too far off. Truly if Camino had extension support - the real deal - I think that would be the winner.</p><p>In any case I give Apple credit for their power play today, in making Safari the uber-platform for iPhone, Mac, and Windows web development. Well done!<br /></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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        </content> 
    <category term="apple" scheme="http://paulmcaleer.vox.com/tags/apple/" label="apple" /> 
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    <category term="camino" scheme="http://paulmcaleer.vox.com/tags/camino/" label="camino" /> 
    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>OS X Nicety</title>   
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        <published>2007-06-08T19:38:45Z</published>
        <updated>2007-06-14T16:28:20Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>Paul</name>
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        <p>I&#39;m sticking with Camino as my main browser for the time being. But oh, that shortcut to the search tool... I&#39;m so used to Firefox&#39;s Command-K that I want it to be the same in Camino.</p><p>No problem.</p><p>Called up System Preferences, Keyboard &amp; Mouse. Added Camino to the list of apps. Entered the menu item I wanted (&quot;Search the Web...&quot;), the keycombo I wanted, and restarted Camino. Done.</p><p>Fantastic. That&#39;s how it should be on any OS.<br /> </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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        </content> 
    <category term="os x" scheme="http://paulmcaleer.vox.com/tags/os+x/" label="os x" /> 
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    <category term="keyboard shortcuts" scheme="http://paulmcaleer.vox.com/tags/keyboard+shortcuts/" label="keyboard shortcuts" /> 
    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>Camino 1.5</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="Camino 1.5" href="http://paulmcaleer.vox.com/library/post/camino-15.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
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        <published>2007-06-06T05:30:10Z</published>
        <updated>2007-06-06T05:30:10Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>Paul</name>
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        <p>So far, this is a pretty sweet upgrade. About the only thing I miss, right off the bat, is the ability to move tabs around. But everything else I like in the Godzilla FoxFire appears to be here! Not shabby. </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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