I use Safari but sometimes if I'm ripping a youtube video or something I have to use Firefox to download it directly.
Huh? I thought Safari was the easiest browser to use in this respect? Open your YouTube page, click on Window->Activity, find the video in the list (should be the only one in the MB range), and double-click it. Safari will then download the file.
Yup. It used to come bundled on all new Macs before Safari came out. Can't remember if there was any overlap. The last version was 5.2.3, it is PPC-only and still works under Rosetta on 10.4.10 for Intel.
it would be in your best interest to delete that one off the hard drive now. No one uses it and Microsoft doesn't support it.
I used Camino, but migrated to Firefox for the features (extentions), stability and speed. The only quibble would be the buttons not conforming to Aqua or whatever you call it now.
it would be in your best interest to delete that one off the hard drive now.
I think not. I still have some stuff saved in its scrapbook (excellent feature that it's a shame no-one has fully replicated). I don't ever use it for browsing - like I said I use OmniWeb.
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I use Safari but sometimes if I'm ripping a youtube video or something I have to use Firefox to download it directly.
Huh? I thought Safari was the easiest browser to use in this respect? Open your YouTube page, click on Window->Activity, find the video in the list (should be the only one in the MB range), and double-click it. Safari will then download the file.
How do you do it in Firefox?
But thanks for mentioning the Safari way. I wasn't aware that double-clicking something in the activity window starts a download.
Yup. It used to come bundled on all new Macs before Safari came out. Can't remember if there was any overlap. The last version was 5.2.3, it is PPC-only and still works under Rosetta on 10.4.10 for Intel.
it would be in your best interest to delete that one off the hard drive now. No one uses it and Microsoft doesn't support it.
I used Camino, but migrated to Firefox for the features (extentions), stability and speed. The only quibble would be the buttons not conforming to Aqua or whatever you call it now.
it would be in your best interest to delete that one off the hard drive now.
I think not. I still have some stuff saved in its scrapbook (excellent feature that it's a shame no-one has fully replicated). I don't ever use it for browsing - like I said I use OmniWeb.
Yeah, you know, that browser made by Microsoft.
Ya mean this one?
Let me ask you this: How much programming talent does it take to have an error in line 7?