12 August, 2007

Browser Nostalgia ; or, Size Doesn't Matter

I am writing this in Firefox with a metric ton of plugins, and with all its functionality, it seems like the browser to me. I'm reminds me of around three years ago, when one of my friends, an open source geek, gave me the the a package for setting up Firefox (version 1.0!), which was only around 15 MB in size, whereas the huge, bloated IE installs used to be around 50-60 MB in size. 
 
At the time, my first thought was, "Hey, this thing is a lot smaller than IE, so probably not very functional – must be one of those barebones things written by a couple of coders in their collective basements".

Three years down the line, I almost never use IE. If I want a heavily functional browser, I use Firefox. For a basic, fast browser, Safari for Windows is more than sufficient. And I have learned to be properly respectful towards open source ideas developed by coders in basements.

Which brings me to this new idea for a Wikia search engine, propounded by Jimmy Wales, the founder of Wikipedia. It uses a fully open source algorithm for an Internet search where people, instead of machines, will actually rank pages, and things like Googlebombing will probably vanish.  Who knows, maybe three years from now, my homepage will be set to "http://wikiasari.com" (that being the likely name for the engine) for most major searches; and I will not cease to wonder.

1 comment:

Pranav Jawale said...

Keep it up. Keep writing. Can you keep your Darjeeling trip photos here?