May 9 2003

I am a heavy user of the Galeon Web browser. IMHO, it is far and away the best browser avail­able for any plat­form. Tabs and ses­sion sup­port with crash recov­ery are bril­liant fea­tures. Not only has Galeon had them for longer than most other browsers, it imple­ments them in a super­ior way. Not only that, it is quite fast and stable as well. I keep Galeon open all the time with mul­tiple win­dows open (presently I have 7 open win­dows, which allow me to ‘cat­egor­ise’ my tabs), and each win­dow has many tabs (For example, I’ve got over 30 tabs in my ‘main’ win­dow, and over 50 in another). I like my tabs to run down the left side of my win­dow (AFAIK some­thing only Galeon can do), so that more can fit on the screen and I don’t have to scroll through them. It may sound nuts, but I like it that way. And yes, I also use book­marks: my book­mark col­lec­tion is extens­ive. If Galeon crashes (a rare occur­rance), or if I want to close it for some reason (another rare occur­rance), I can get all my win­dows and tabs back when I restart it.

As you can see, I am very attached to Galeon’s unique fea­ture set, which makes switch­ing to a new browser dif­fi­cult to say the least. Before I moved whole­sale to Galeon, I would sim­ul­tan­eously run Kon­queror and Opera, and some­times Nets­cape 4 as well. This was so I could lever­age the strengths of each indi­vidual browser.

I have been eye­ing Galeon2 for a while now, and I finally decided to try it out. If it’s good enough to be included in Man­drake Linux 9.1, then maybe it’s good enough for me. Galeon2 is still under­go­ing heavy devel­op­ment, so I wasn’t expect­ing too much. Since the Galeon team is pretty-​​much rewrit­ing the whole thing from scratch to take advant­age of the GNOME2 plat­form, it would be under­stand­able for it to take a while to reach matur­ity. My ver­dict? It is very close to meet­ing my needs. There are many extra set­tings hid­den in Gconf, and after tweak­ing these I was able to cre­ate a sim­ilar setup to what I had in Galeon1. How­ever, some things don’t work yet and a couple are missing.

I had a chat with some Galeon developers a few weeks ago, and they said that they are try­ing to reach a sim­ilar fea­ture set to Galeon1, the dif­fer­ence being that this time they are cod­ing for GNOME2 and its Human Inter­face Guidelines. Unlike the Galeon splinter pro­ject Epi­phany, they are not try­ing to cut out fea­tures on a sig­ni­fic­ant scale. A while ago there was much con­flict in the Galeon mail­ing lists (to which I am a sub­scriber) over whether Galeon should sim­plify its fea­ture set or con­tinue on its cur­rent course. The Galeon founder and main­tainer, Marco Pesenti Gritti, left the pro­ject, forked the code and used it to cre­ate Epi­phany. I per­son­ally like this dual-​​pronged approach from the GNOME folks. Most people don’t like unne­ces­sary com­plex­ity, and so Epi­phany gives a simple, Safari–like inter­face and exper­i­ence. For power-​​users such as myself, Galeon fits the bill brilliantly.

There are some pros to Galeon2 over Galeon1. For one thing, the UI is faster and more respons­ive. My favour­ite, though, is the default book­marks. There aren’t very many, but the ones that are there are great. In the GNU /​ Linux -> News sec­tion, for instance, there are only four entries:

  • Desktop Linux
  • OSNews
  • Pclinuxon­line
  • Slash­dot

Notice any­thing spe­cial in there? Of the four GNU/​Linux news sites chosen by the Galeon team, PCLinuxOn­line is one of them!

I for­got to men­tion one of my other favour­ite fea­tures in Galeon (1 and 2): smart book­marks. I like them so much that in early April I volun­teered to take charge of main­tain­ing the offi­cial smart book­mark dir­ect­ory. The Trans­late to Eng­lish smart bookmark/​bookmarklet in the default Galeon2 book­marks was made by myself. There are many other book­marks in the dir­ect­ory which I wrote myself, includ­ing some to search PCLinuxOn­line (in the News cat­egory). I know it’s not much but it’s nice to hear that oth­ers appre­ci­ate and use your work :)

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Galeon rocks! / 'Til All Are One by Sridhar Dhanapalan is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike Australia CC BY-SA AU licence.