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Des fureteurs, avez-vous dit?



Question fureteurs pour Linux, il paraît que je ne suis pas au courant
des dernières nouvelles:

Nimble browsers

Open-source software invites developers to dive in to address
weaknesses. Browsers such as Galeon and SkipStone have jettisoned the
mail-reading and page-making cruft in favor of smaller and faster
browsers that still have most of Mozilla's browsing strengths.
Rounding out this category of speedy browsers we have the Opera
browser, now free, and the Links browser (not to be confused with its
predecessor Lynx), one of ZDNet's most popular open source downloads.

Desktop integration
In the open source space, Microsoft's practice of integrating Web
services tightly into the desktop environment, rather than just
sitting on top of it, has more appeal than many would like to admit. I
suspect the most popular model to be adopted in the open source world
will -- horror! -- follow in Microsoft's path. Two examples of this
model, which I'll cover more closely in a future piece, are KDE's
Konqueror and Eazel's Nautilus. These apps have the potential to make
separate third-party Web browsers as redundant in the open source
world as they already are in the Windows world. 

http://www.zdnet.com/enterprise/stories/main/0,10228,2662481,00.html

------

Voici quelques problèmes reconnus avec le plus célèbre des petits
fureteurs:

Here's what Opera for Linux doesn't do yet:

Plug-ins 
Java 
Printing 
Some preferences don't work 

Some known bugs:

Inline frames (iframe) don't always look good 
Zooming with frames doesn't work well 
Fixed elements / background scrolling is somewhat slow and ugly 
File transfer problems

Pris sur le site d'Opera.

GP
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