On Wednesday, The Camino Project released version 1.0.4 of Camino, its free, open source web browser.
The new version added the following changes:
-Fixed several critical security and stability issues, including those fixed in version 1.8.0.10 of the Mozilla Gecko rendering engine.
-Sheets will now close as expected on Intel-based Macs.
-Upgraded the the bundled Java Embedding Plugin to version 0.9.6.
-Added support for importing iCab 3 bookmarks.
-Improved the handling of Internet Explorer .url shortcut files.
-The text of certain security dialogs now contains “Camino” instead of “(null)”.
-Camino will now make a backup copy of the bookmarks file when it launches if the file is not corrupt.
-Camino will automatically restore bookmarks from a backup when it launches if they are unreadable.
-Further improved ad-blocking.
Camino 1.0.4 is a 14.4 megabyte download for the stable and multilingual releases and requires Mac OS X 10.3 or later to run. The application is a universal binary and runs at native speeds on PowerPC and Intel-based hardware.
On Wednesday, The Camino Project released version 1.0.4 of Camino, its free, open source web browser.
The new version added the following changes:
-Fixed several critical security and stability issues, including those fixed in version 1.8.0.10 of the Mozilla Gecko rendering engine.
-Sheets will now close as expected on Intel-based Macs.
-Upgraded the the bundled Java Embedding Plugin to version 0.9.6.
-Added support for importing iCab 3 bookmarks.
-Improved the handling of Internet Explorer .url shortcut files.
-The text of certain security dialogs now contains “Camino” instead of “(null)”.
-Camino will now make a backup copy of the bookmarks file when it launches if the file is not corrupt.
-Camino will automatically restore bookmarks from a backup when it launches if they are unreadable.
-Further improved ad-blocking.
Camino 1.0.4 is a 14.4 megabyte download for the stable and multilingual releases and requires Mac OS X 10.3 or later to run. The application is a universal binary and runs at native speeds on PowerPC and Intel-based hardware.