The SeaMonkey project is a community effort to develop an all-in-one Internet application suite. It contains an Internet browser, email and newsgroup client with an included Web feed reader, HTML editor, IRC chat, and Web development tools, and is sure to appeal to advanced users, Web developers, and corporate users. It uses much of the Mozilla source code powering such successful siblings as Firefox, Thunderbird, Camino, Sunbird, and Miro.
Recent releases


Release Notes: OS X 10.6 is now the minimum supported Mac version. JavaScript Maps and Sets are now iterable. SVG FillPaint and StrokePaint have been implemented. The sandbox attribute has been implemented for iframes, enabling increased security. Plugins can be set to click-to-play (instead of blocked completely) automatically through the blocklist now.


Release Notes: JavaScript responsiveness has been improved through incremental garbage collection. CSS3 animations, transitions, transforms, and gradients have been unprefixed. MD5 is no longer supported as a hash algorithm in digital signatures. The Opus codec is now supported by default. The reverse CSS3 animation direction has been implemented. Per-tab reporting is now available in about:memory. Several stability issues have been fixed.


Release Notes: This release adds support for SPDY networking protocol v3. It implements WebGL enhancements, including compressed textures for better performance. Optimized memory usage for add-ons. Implements the CSS word-break property. Implements a high precision event timer. HTML5: native support has been added for the Opus audio codec. Support has been added for the source element media attribute. Support has been added for the audio element and video element played attribute. Several stability issues have been fixed.


Release Notes: Security fixes were made. Fixes were also made for a number of non-security-relevant crashes, increasing the stability of the whole platform and the Mail and Newsgroups part of SeaMonkey.


Release Notes: SeaMonkey has been rebuilt on top of the modern Mozilla platform, featuring world-class add-on management, among other things. In addition, it has been improved with feed support (including an RSS and Atom feed reader in the mail component), a modern look, restoration of browser tabs and windows after crashes or restarts, tabbed mail, automated updates, smart history search from the location bar, faster JavaScript, HTML5 features (e.g. video and downloadable fonts), and even support for the Lightning calendar add-on.
Recent comments
15 Jul 2004 18:43
Two years on and still some serious printing issues
I tried using mozilla to replace an office I became an admin for who were running InternetExplorer, however a lot of the desktops have gone back to using InternetExplorer because most web-sites just do not print correctly.
Click here to view the bug in bugzilla
I understand this bug has been open for just over two years, whats been going on? How can we find the people to fix the serious bugs that are stopping Mozilla from being "taken seriously", I tried posting this to slashdot but it seems like the opensource geeks just dont want to know about it and my article never made it to the site.
What does this say about the opensource community? they probably dont give a sh*t ? Maybe they should stop touting mozilla as the best thing since sliced bread.
dgtlmoon
25 Oct 2003 10:19
Just compiled Mozilla 1.5
I'd just like to say I think Mozilla is the best. People should use it on any system. I'm glad they added the Popup blocker in 1.4, and the spell check in 1.5 for composer, also it seems that 1.5 may be a little faster too. Great software!
06 Sep 2003 01:31
The Best Browser & Mail Client Ever!
Mozilla is Best Browser & Mail Client Ever!. Other software can 't beat it! Keep up working on it, because it rocks! ;-)
01 Jul 2003 04:59
Mozilla mirror in Ukraine
Just in case -- we have mozilla-1.x release binaries built by mozilla.org (mozilla.org/) and altlinux.org (altlinux.org/)/mozilla.ru (mozilla.ru/) mirrored at ftp.altlinux.org.ua (ftp.altlinux.org.ua/pu...) (which is Ukraine-only, but very fast here), and Ukrainian lang pack from mozilla.org.ua (mozilla.org.ua/) is mirrored when available too.
06 May 2003 14:44
PDF Conversions
Hi,
Why don't you add a webpage to pdf conversion into Mozilla? I have one which I will donate to the project if the tesm wants it. To see an example of how it works, look at www.2convert.com and convert a webpage.
Charles