FIrewall Safety and Related Issues

Hi everyone,

It seems that periodic problems plague all internet activity, even with popup blockers and Norton (or similar) firewalls.

One relatively easy fix – and one less costly than buying a Mac – is to replace Internet Explorer with another browser. Per the recommendation of Wall Street Journal technology columnish Walter Mossberg, my entire office has replaced Explorer with Mozilla’s Firefox, a free browser that not only offers some superior features but has far fewer vulnerabilities than Explorer, which hasn’t had a major upgrade in five years.

You can download the program at mozilla.com and will be glad you did, as firewall and popup problems will decrease, and your virus problems will virtually disappear. I strongly recommend switching to Firefox, or something similar.

Let me know if you have questions. I can also email you the technology column form the Journal, if that would be helpful.

Best,

Tom Baker

I’ve been using Firefox for a couple of weeks now. I haven’t had 1 pop up with it. I like the tab feature too. One glitch I’ve noticed with it, sometimes it won’t display videos.

Here is a summary of Walter Mossberg’s article from the WSJ on 12/30. I hope this is helpful.

-Tom

Security, Cool Features
Of Firefox Web Browser
Beat Microsoft’s IE
December 30, 2004; Page B1

Microsoft’s Internet Explorer Web browser is one of the most important, and most often used, programs on the world’s personal computers, relied upon by more than 90% of Windows users. But Microsoft hasn’t made any important functional improvements in Internet Explorer for years.

The software giant has folded IE into the Windows operating system, and the browser only receives updates as part of the “Windows update” process. In recent years, most upgrades to IE have been under-the-hood patches to plug the many security holes that have made IE a major conduit for hackers, virus writers and spyware purveyors. The only visible feature added to IE recently: a pop-up ad blocker, which arrived long after other browsers had one.

Meanwhile, other people have been building much better browsers, just as Microsoft itself did in the 1990s, when it challenged and eventually bested the then-dominant browser, Netscape Navigator. The most significant of these challengers is Firefox, a free product of an open-source organization called Mozilla, available for download at www.mozilla.org. Firefox is both more secure and more modern than IE, and it comes packed with user-friendly features the Microsoft browser can’t touch.

Firefox still has a tiny market share. But millions of people have downloaded it recently. I’ve been using it for months, and I recommended back in September that users switch to it from IE as a security measure. It’s available in nearly identical versions for Windows, the Apple Macintosh, and the Linux operating system.

There are some other browsers that put IE to shame. Apple’s elegant Safari browser, included free on every Mac, is one. But it isn’t available for Windows. The Opera browser is loaded with bells and wh

Firefox is v. nice alternative to IE, so is Opera - and Safari :wink:
Unfortunately, most Windows users won’t go to the trouble to get rid of IE and substitute it with another application.