
> I must admit that I have installed this latest update, but I am beginning to feel a little concerned that FireFox is losing the hearts and minds battle.
Well, clearly Mozilla have used the general hype / hysteria over security bugs in IE to garner some support for Firefox during its lifetime.
But, whilst they, or at least some of their advocates, can be criticised for those, frankly, moronic statements, that's about as far as any "hearts and minds" thing can go.
Any other browser. Any of them. Yes, including that one. Or, for that matter, any other piece of non-trivial software will have the same issues with respect to bugs, security ones and otherwise. That's to say, they'll be riddled with both.
There is no alternative in that respect.
If you want to feel more secure, there are some browsers, as you suggest, that, at a particular time, have better hype. At one time that was Mozilla as you note, but that's all it is. Hot air. To pick the hot air from someone else instead to "feel more secure" would be daft.
That said, in nearly 3 decades of using computers I've never been exploited by one of these bugs.
Which is something else the hype and hysteria that often follows security-related stuff around fails to consider [and some of it is absolutely farcical, especially when it is things like "number of machines in botnets"]
So, although I wouldn't adopt a blasé attitude towards security, I'm not going to panic about a new version of a browser being released.
I wish they'd fix Firefox on windows under a non-admin account, so that, even if the relatively trivial task of using "runas" and doing the update is too much for their wits, they could at least prompt / nag that an update is available.