OmniWeb compliments this surprising performance with … its surprising performance! OmniWeb is FAST! Even on my PowerMac G5 Quad, equipped with an SSD boot/applications drive, TenFourFox is still somewhat slow to launch, taking two or three Dock bounces to get going. This means that OmniWeb has been exposed to a good cross section of the web, and performed admirably for me to date. OmniWeb has performed flawlessly on all of the web pages I have tried it on so far, and that has been no small number – I have tested it as my day to day browser for about a week now. My response would be, in a word (well, in two words actually!) “very well”. As we all know, the web is evolving at light speed, and so how well does a 2 ½ year old web browser stand up to the rigors of today’s online world? This makes OmniWeb fairly current, but nonetheless still a little over 2 ½ years old as I write this post. The last stable version of OmniWeb, sporting version number 5.11.2, was released on July 23 rd, 2012. OmniWeb takes us all one year farther down the road, to 2012. Those on Leopard made it a little bit further – 2011. Those of us on PowerPC Macs running Tiger were stranded by Safari in 2010. OmniWeb, of course, turns out to be a surprisingly current web browser, and better than that, one that still runs well under both Tiger and Leopard on PowerPC Macs. I was therefore more than just a little surprised when my search for Gopher clients turned up repeated references to a program called OmniWeb, a previously unknown (to me anyway!) web browser that still runs on PowerPC Macs and apparently still supports the Gopher protocol natively. Until my research on Gopher clients it had been my assumption that not only was TenFourFox the best choice for a PPC web browser capable of navigating today’s web, it was also the ONLY choice. TenFourFox, along with its email counterpart TenFourBird, are excellent offerings that together have kept my PowerPC based Macs completely relevant even in the incredibly feature laden world of today’s internet. Perhaps it did yours too, and so I am writing a brief post about it.įor some time now, the only game in town, where PowerPC Mac OS X web browsers are concerned, has been TenFourFox. Somehow, in the nearly nine years that I have been using Macs exclusively, this particular web browser has completely evaded my attention. NASA Space Physics Data Facility.While researching Gopher clients for my last two posts, I accidentally stumbled across a web browser for PowerPC Macs that I had not previously been aware of: OmniWeb. Parker Solar Probe (PSP) Merged Magnetic Field, Plasma, and Ephemeris, Hourly Data. Proton most probable thermal speed, radial component, from 1-dimensional maxwellian Fitting, only good qualityĬitation: Papitashvili, N.Total proton number density from 1-dimensional Maxwellian fitting, only good quality.Proton bulk velocity from 1-dimensional Maxwellian fitting, only good quality, in the inertial RTN frame.The original PSP magnetic field data comes from the PSP_FLD_L2_MAG_RTN_1MIN data product while the original plasma data comes from the PSP_SWP_SPC_元I data product by applying the following conditions: The PSP COHO file include data derived from the PSP FIELDS Fluxgate Magnetometer data as well as Densities, Vector Velocities, and Scalar Radial Component Temperatures of Solar Wind Protons measured by the PSP SWEAP Solar Probe Cup, SPC. The NSSDC Coordinated Heliospheric Observations Web, COHOWeb, hourly and daily Parker Solar Probe, PSP, data were made by using high resolution data from from CDAWeb.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |