What You Will/Won’t Get with Stainless
Earlier today, I started to evaluate Stainless. In this post, it’s my intention to dig a little deeper by sharing more of what you will and won’t get with Stainless.
What you will get:
- Private Browsing – On selecting “File \ New Private Browsing Window”, the Stainless browser that appears makes use of WebKit‘s private browsing mode. In this mode, global history, page caching and storing of AutoFill information are disabled. Spawned tabs and windows inherit the private-browsing mode.
- Single-Point-of-Entry – Obviously you can type in a URL. However, you can also type in a text string (e.g., “Google Chrome”) to initiate a search via Google. In fact, via Stainless’ “Preferences”, you can choose to make use of Google, Yahoo!, Live Search, AOL or Ask.
- Process Management – I alluded to the multiprocess capability of Stainless in the previous post. I’ve just realized that by selecting “Window \ Process Manager” you can monitor and even terminate processes via a simple GUI. Very nice!
What you (likely) won’t get:
- Downloading Capability – I tried to download from a few sites … and all attempts FAILED!! I am shocked and amazed. I saw a Page loading error: Frame load interrupted message appear in the status bar each time … This is disappointing and will hopefully be fixed in version 0.2.
- History – Via Stainless’ “Back” button, there is some notion of history, but that’s it.
- URL Caching/Auto-Completion – URL caching and auto-completion are unavailable.
- An Open Source Version – There’s a significant Open Source aspect to Chrome. Based on proprietary technology developed by Mesa Dynamics for their Hypercube personal-widgetsphere offering, Stainless and Open Source seem unlikely to resonate.
- Cross-Platform Support – Stainless is available for Mac OS X Leopard. Will this offering will be broadened? Unknown.
- Extensibility – This killer functionality is a core competence of Mozilla Firefox. It appears that Chrome will sport something analogous. Stainless? Unknown?
- Offline Mode – I’m thinking of something along the lines of Google Gears … but I don’t see it arriving soon … I installed Gears for Safari. Unfortunately, Stainless gives me the impression that I have Gears support, but in reality (during an offline situation) it’s clear that I don’t. Misleading.
Despite the negatives, I expect to continue to make use of Stainless, and encourage you to do the same.
Feel free to chime in with your impressions.
NATS 1780 Twitter
- Thousands of Invisibility Cloaks Trap Rainbow scientificcomputing.com/news-DS-Thousa… Tweeted: 1 day ago
- Icy Penitents by Moonlight on Chajnantor scientificcomputing.com/news-DS-Icy-Pe… Tweeted: 1 day ago
- IDV User Experience: Tornado Tracks over 56 years! uxblog.idvsolutions.com/2012/05/tornad… via @JohnNelsonIDV Tweeted: 3 days ago
Top Posts
- sync blackberry contacts with gmail: Problem Solved!
- Microsoft Word: A Tool for Annotation
- sync blackberry contacts with gmail
- Annozilla: A Firefox Plug-in for Annotation
- Teens: A Surprising Market Segment for the iPhone
- The MFA is the New MBA: Illustrations by Steve Jobs and Apple
- IBM Lotus Notes 8.5 Beta for Mac OS X: Same Look, Better Feel
- GMail on Your BlackBerry: Latest Client Offers Significant Featur
- BlackBerry vs. iPhone: It's All About Market Segments
- Google Docs: A Tool for Annotation
Recent Posts
- Google: From Grad School to $150 Billion Company
- Synthetic Life and Evolution of Earth’s Second Atmosphere
- 2011 in review
- Foraging for Resources in the Multicore Present and Future
- Advances in Storm Chasing
- Early Win Required for Partner-Friendly, Post-Acquisition Platform Computing
- RTM for Android: Significant Update Indeed!
- From Unity to GNOME to LXDE: A Journey of (Personal) Discovery
- IBM-Acquired Platform: Plan for Sustained, Partner-Friendly HPC Innovation Required
- Triple and Quadruple Rainbows: Theory Meets Practice
Category Cloud
AJAX Annotation Apple Apple iPhone Atmospheric Science Blackberry Blogs and Blogging Books Campus Networks Canada Canadian Market coding Commercial Software Conferences Creative Process Cyberinfrastructure Data Representation Disruptive Innovations Distributed Computing Earth Science Informatics Education eMail Enterprise Networks Formal Ontologies Global Geophysics GMail Google Google Apps Google Docs & Spreadsheets Google Notebook Google vs. Microsoft GRDDL Grid Computing High Performance Computing (HPC) hosting Informatics Information Technology Innovation Internet iPhone IT J2ME Java JavaScript Knowledge Management Knowledge Representation Knowledge Worker Linux Mac OS X Marketing Microsoft Mobile Computing Mobility Mobility Solutions National Networks Network-Enabled Platforms networking Next-Generation Internet Online Learning Ontario Ontologies Ontology Development Ontology Integration Open Source operating systems OWL Parallel Computing Parsing Personal Publications Quantitative Classification RDF Regional Networking Research RIM Semantic Web Service Oriented Architecture Standards Textbooks Thought process Toronto Uncategorized virtualization Virtual Ontologies Virtual Organizations Voice Processing Web Web 2.0 Web 3.0 Web Applications Web Browsers Web Development Web Ontology Language Web Services wireless wireless networks writing xml XPointer York University
Archives
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- April 2011
- January 2011
- February 2010
- January 2010
- November 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- February 2009
- December 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
- September 2006
- August 2006
- July 2006
- June 2006
- May 2006
- April 2006
- March 2006
Blog Stats
- 257,342 hits

