“The Mozilla project scuttled development for the legacy Mozilla Suite in 2005 after shifting focus to work on Firefox and Thunderbird. However, rather than abandoning the project entirely, the Mozilla Project provided the infrastructure to allow the community to continue development of the Mozilla Suite as SeaMonkey. SeaMonkey 1.0.4 was released recently, so I decided this would be a good time to check in on SeaMonkey to see where it stands. The suite holds up well, but it’s losing ground rapidly to Firefox and Thunderbird.”Here is some more Tech News from around the web:
- AMD perseveres with embedded push @ The Inquirer
- Play your own Xbox game @ CNET
- Is Your OS Spying On You? @ CoolTechZone
- Xandros Home Edition Premium Review @ OSWeekly
- OS X Mobile and Automotive Editions: Is It Possible? @ OSWeekly
- Motorola, Dolce&Gabbana Luxury RAZR V3i Roundup @ DailyCE
- Artificial Intelligence in Video Surveillance @ The TechZone
- A day with Survival Research Labs @ CNET
- BBcode editor: PHP – The sensible approach @ IceTeks
- Microsoft LifeCam VX3000 Web Cam @ Hardware Pacers
- Interview with Dave Orton (ATi CEO) @ DH
- Flash Player 9 out for Intel-based Macs @ CNET
- HyperKore X-Treme Gaming System Giveaway at Modders-Inc
Firefox’s older brother gets an update

Remember Mozilla, the predecessor to Firefox? The web browser suite is still alive, being maintained by fans of the extra functionality who call it Seamonkey. NewsForge has tried out the newest version to see what has changed, and how well it can compete with Firefox.