confessions of a web developer
Friday, January 8th, 2010
I have loved FireFox for years, but lately I have strayed. Google recently released Google Chrome for Mac (Beta) and as a good web developer I downloaded it for testing purposes. I quickly found myself loving the speed and simplistic approach of Google Chrome and wishing that it could be my everyday browser.
The affair with Chrome has left me shaky and unsettled. I thought I loved FireFox and that just about nothing they could do would make me leave them. After some thought, I realized it’s not so much what FireFox was doing that was causing the affair, but what Chrome is doing for me that FireFox has yet to do.
Integrated address bar & search bar is my favorite feature and seems so intuitive. I think the only reason that this has not changed on all browsers is the fear that people won’t understand that they can search or type an address into the same field. While I understand the possible worry, I think the fear is unfounded and that people would adapt. I’d love to see this feature in FireFox 4.
Tabs on the top is a beautiful way to get your tabs out of your way. This was my favorite feature of the Safari 4 Beta, but when Safari 4 was officially launched, this feature was removed. I can’t think of too many useful advantages of having the tabs on the top versus below the address bar, but I just seemed to like it and wish this was an option on all my browsers.
Speed, speed, and more speed is what Chrome is all about. Like Tom Cruise in Top Gun, I feel the need for speed and can’t get enough of it. When I first heard that Chrome was so much faster then FireFox, I didn’t really believe it. After all, how fast can a browser really be? Apparently, very fast!
I found Chrome to be much faster at loading pages, especially pages that have a lot of JavaScript on them. My FireFox use to really slow down if I was jumping through more then 100 unread items in Google Reader, but Chrome doesn’t even hiccup. I have also seen vast speed improvments in Gmail and labeling and moving email around is faster then ever.
Lack of extensions is my biggest problem with Chrome. As I web developer I depend largely on browser testing and getting all my applications and websites to function correctly as quickly as possible. Tools like FireBug and Web Developer Toolbar on FireFox help me track down bugs and work with fixes much quicker then I could ever do if I had to refresh a webpage every time I made a change.
While Chrome has added extension support on the PC and Linux versions, it is still only for the beta releases, and they have yet to add extension support for the Mac version. Once Google has added extensions to all versions of the browser, I need some big extension developers to jump aboard before I can fully move.
The Bookmark Manager in Google Chrome is either horrible (like on the PC version) or non-existent (like on the Mac version). One of the things I hate the most about Safari has carried over to Chrome. The bookmark manager doesn’t allow me to manage my bookmarks in a very quick and orderly fashion, like I’m use to doing in FireFox. Plus, how can the Mac version not have a bookmark manager at all? I simply can’t believe they left that out, and I can’t understand why that wouldn’t have been such a trivial thing to add.
While I did have a very fun time with Google Chrome, FireFox just does stuff for me that Google Chrome can’t yet do. However, I think FireFox and I must seek some counseling very quickly, because at the rate Chrome is improving, I think I may stray again in the future.
I don’t want to leave FireFox, I love FireFox. I love what the entire Mozilla foundation has done to support alternative browsers and to help move web standards forward. This post confession wasn’t about how great Google Chrome is becoming, it was about how I would like FireFox to become.
Tags: Browsers, Chrome, Extensions, FireFox, Google, Web Development
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Saturday, February 9th, 2008
WebsiteGrader.com is a new web tool that grades your website based on the marketing effectiveness of your site. I’ve been playing with the site over the last couple of days and it seems to do a pretty good job on grading websites and informing websites owners on what they need to change. The web tool is made by HubSpot, who I am sure are using it as a promotional tool for their business. I can’t say I blame them and I believe that tools like this are a great way to promote your business.
The site is very well laid out and doesn’t waste your time with too many options or clicks. As soon as you get to the home screen you are presented with a form that has you put in your website URL. There are three optional fields that follow and that can help improve your report quality. Entering keywords will provide the basis of your site report and on how well your site ranks for the listed terms. The second field allows you to put in the competitors website so your report will display a competitive analysis of your competitors sites. The final field is for putting in your email address if you want to receive updates and/or have the report emailed to you.
The report itself is extremely well laid out and easy to read. The report is broken down into On-Page SEO, Off-Page SEO, Blog Analysis, Social Networking popularity, and your competitive analysis. The sub-sections are broken down very well. The report lists number of header tags, duplicates of H1 tags as warnings, image alt tag analysis, Google PageRank, and so much more than I could go into here.
The site seems to be slow to update it’s grades of a website. One site I tested scored a 83% and the Website Grader made some recommendations to improve. I made the recommendations and went back to the Website Grader page to try out the new changes. The changes did not appear on the resubmissions which leads me to believe that the website indexes the sites that have been “graded” and takes a while to refresh them. This is a problem for people who are trying to tweak their site on the fly and I hope HubSpot will fix this problem shortly.
Website Grader is an excellent tool for anyone who has created a website and needs to check how their site appeals to a search engine. The site is tailored more towards beginners to intermediate users. I would love to see this service expanded into a professional offering with more features and advanced reporting. Overall I think this is a great initial launch and I have to congratulate HubSpot on a job well done.
Tags: Reviews, SEO, Tools, Web Development, Websites
Posted in Website Reviews | No Comments »