![]() The project uses a separate numbering scheme, with the first release being called SeaMonkey 1.0. The SeaMonkey Council has now trademarked the name with help from the Mozilla Foundation. Originally, the name "Seamonkey" was derived by Netscape management to replace "Buttmonkey", which their developers had chosen following an internal contest for the codename. "Seamonkey" (with a lowercase "m") refers to brine shrimp and had been used by Netscape and the Mozilla Foundation as a code name for the never-released "Netscape Communicator 5" and later the Mozilla Application Suite itself. After initial speculation by members of the community, a Jannouncement confirmed that SeaMonkey would officially become the name of the Internet suite superseding the Mozilla Application Suite. To avoid confusing organizations that still want to use the original Mozilla Application Suite, the new product needed a new name. This allows the user to extend SeaMonkey by modifying add-ons for Thunderbird or the add-ons that were formerly compatible with Firefox before the latter switched to WebExtensions. Ĭompared to Firefox, the SeaMonkey web browser keeps the more traditional-looking interface of Netscape and the Mozilla Application Suite, notably the XUL architecture. The new project-leading group is called the SeaMonkey Council. The development of SeaMonkey is community-driven, in contrast to the Mozilla Application Suite, which until its last released version (1.7.13) was governed by the Mozilla Foundation. SeaMonkey was created in 2005 after the Mozilla Foundation decided to focus on the standalone projects Firefox and Thunderbird. It is the continuation of the former Mozilla Application Suite, based on the same source code, which itself grew out of Netscape Communicator and formed the base of Netscape 6 and Netscape 7. SeaMonkey is a free and open-source Internet suite. However, the rest of the new SeaMonkey looks and feels quite pleasing.Belarusian, Catalan, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Dutch, English (US), English (British), Finnish, French, Galician, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Lithuanian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Polish, Portuguese (Portugal), Russian, Slovak, Spanish (Argentina), Spanish (Spain), Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian ![]() I didn't even find anything in the about:config. For every other size, activate it.Īnd if you don't linke that solution, at least think about an option for deactivating the filter. ![]() So how about that compromise: If the custom sizes are a multiple of the original size (Or the other way arround), deactivate the filter. Pixel artists use clever java scripts, which double their thumbnail's size.ĭouble sized Screenshots of old videogames get ruined by the filter as well. You know, most of the web designers, who use custom sizes for images, do this on purpose. ![]() ![]() In my opinion, this is just ugly, in others seemingly not, but at least there should be an option to deactivate this "feature"! If I encounter a homepage, that uses other sizes for their images, than the actual correct size, the picture gets automatically blurred by some kind of filter. First, Firefox 3 did it, then Opera, and now my favorite Browser does it, too! (Just downloaded 2.0b1pre) ![]()
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