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Flailing Wildly
Too much straw, not enough camel.

Camino has left the building

by Ryan Parman • February 20, 2006 • Apple, Browsers • 3 comments

I’m a creature of habit. I haven’t lost my keys in years, simply because I always put them in the same place when I get home. I never have to fumble around in my pockets to find something, because I already know what’s there: wallet and phone in my right pocket; keys, chapstick, pen, and loose change in my left. I’m also a perfectionist, and I find myself driven by and towards excellence. That’s why although I use both systems everyday, I prefer my Mac over my PC. That’s why I haven’t used Internet Explorer in years. And that why I wanted to give Camino a try as my default browser for a week.

If I’m interested in some new software whereby using it I’d have to change my habits (such as changing browsers, or text editors, or mail clients), I’ll install the new software and promise to use it for a week. If after that week I decide that I like it better than what I’m currently using, I’ll make the switch. I figure a week is a good chunk of time to try something out because any irritations and possible solutions for those irritations will have surfaced by the end of the week. I have faith in this system for myself, because this is how I found Mozilla 0.99, Firebird (later Firefox), Adium, Transmit, FlashFXP, Topstyle, and other constantly-used bits of software.

I’ve had my eye on Camino for a while, but I wanted to wait until it hit 1.0 (which happened last week) before I tried it out. Having a browser with the rendering engine of Firefox, but had an Aquafied UI was very tempting to me. Instead of switching between Safari (my default browser on my Mac) and Firefox (which I use for viewing the source of RSS feeds), I could switch between Camino and Safari; Two browsers that feel Mac-like. Unfortunately, I ended up finding more things about Camino that I don’t like, so Camino has now been uninstalled. Here’s why:

  1. No support for extensions. You mean, no Firebug? No Gmail Notifier? No Greasemonkey? No Reveal? I might as well be using Internet Explorer then.
  2. No DOM Inspector. If it’s there, I couldn’t find it. For someone who does as much development as I do, I need to have my DOM inpector and my JavaScript console… especially if I can’t run Firebug.
  3. No live bookmarks. This is one of my most used features of Firefox, and to a certain extent Safari. I need to be able to have 1-click access to certain feeds from within my browser. Or at least the ability to detect them.

There are some things, however, that I really did like about it.

  1. It’s crazy fast. A Gecko-based browser that’s as fast as Safari? Camino’s right there.
  2. Favicons in the bookmarks bar. Mmmm… favicons….
  3. Something else. I’m sure there was something else, but I just can’t think of it right now.

If you don’t care about any of these things, then I suppose Camino is as good a browser as any other. But it seems like Camino is roughly on par with Firebird 0.6. It can render pages just fine, and it’s got some speed to it, but it simply does not yet have the feature set to make it a viable alternative for web developers. Maybe Camino 2.0 will have the features it needs to compete, but Camino 1.0 simply isn’t there yet.

Ryan Parman

Ryan Parman is an entrepreneur, open source evangelist and passionate usability advocate currently living in Seattle. He is the founder and visionary behind SimplePie and CloudFusion, co-founder of WarpShare, member of the RSS Advisory Board, and is currently with Amazon. Ryan's aptly-named blog, Flailing Wildly, is where he writes about ideas longer than 140 characters.

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Discussion

Feaverish

February 20, 2006

There are some nifty plugins for Camino, but nothing that’ll replace Firefox or Safari for web development. Most of the Camino plugins are available here: http://www.nadamac.de/ and here: http://forums.mozillazine.org/viewtopic.php?t=239270

Have you tried Safari’s new Inspector? It’s available in the nightly WebKit builds, and it’s really a pleasure to use. For a while I was using the excellend WebDevAdditions plugin for Safari (http://www.laszlo.com.pl/webdev/), but since Cultured Code’s XyleScope (http://www.culturedcode.com/xyle/) left beta, it’s pretty much replaced every other development tool on my Mac.

Joe

February 20, 2006

Doesn’t Firefox have favicons in the bookmarks menu. What is Firebug?

Matthew Steiner

February 21, 2006

You and I are very similiar. I’m the same way with my keys and wallet, etc. Although, I drove my wife’s car for the first time in a long time and locked the keys in the car! I get furious when I lose keys or can’t find my wallet because I’m so meticulous about where I put it.

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