Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Camino


Related Topics
OAV

In the News (Wed 30 May 12)

  
  Camino - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Despite this setback, a skeleton crew of QA and developers released Camino 0.7 on March 3, 2003.
In February 2005, Josh Aas, one of the lead developers of Camino, was employed by the Mozilla Foundation to improve support for Mac OS X in projects such as Firefox, Thunderbird and the Mozilla toolkit.
Camino 1.0, released on February 14th of 2006, was the first browser of the Mozilla family to appear as a universal binary, thanks largely to the efforts of Mark Mentovai, another of the Camino developers.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Camino_(browser)   (687 words)

  
 Camino - Mozilla power, Mac style.
Camino 1.0 is a universal binary and runs natively on both PowerPC- and Intel-based Macs.
Camino® is based on Mozilla® technology and is released under version 1.1 of the MPL; for more information on licensing, consult the Mozilla licensing information.
Camino®, Mozilla®, mozilla.org®, and their logos are trademarks of the Mozilla Foundation and used with permission.
www.caminobrowser.org   (412 words)

  
 NewsForge | Camino 1.0: Mozilla it is, Firefox it is not
Camino 1.0: Mozilla it is, Firefox it is not
Another oft-repeated claim is that Camino's dependence on OS X core toolkits such as Aqua and Cocoa result not only in a smaller application, but also in a more stable one.
Camino's speed improvement is substantial, and for the comparatively "light" usage of browsing alone, the convenience far outweighs the absence of extensions.
internet.newsforge.com /internet/06/03/20/1438230.shtml?tid=144   (1491 words)

  
 El Camino Real - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Camino Real Marketplace is a marketplace located in Storke Road, Goleta, Santa Barbara County, California, USA.
The Episcopal Diocese of El Camino Real of the Episcopal Church is named for the California road.
El Camino Real High School is noted for their Academic Decathlon success.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Camino_Real   (255 words)

  
 What Is Camino   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The Camino experience evolved from the Cursillo movement, which originated in Majorca, Spain, in the 1940s as a means for reviving Christian commitment.
Camino is not a substitution for the church...
Camino is not intended as a therapy for mental problems, nor as a cure for personal problems, including marital difficulties...
camino.truepath.com /Main/Forms/Camino.htm   (587 words)

  
 Camino FAQ. Please read before asking questions re: Camino - MozillaZine Forums   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Camino is spanish, as in "el Camino." It means "way" or "path" and is an extension to the original idea of "Navigator" from which this project sprang.
Camino does not have extensions per se but there are 3rd party add-ons made specifically for Camino that serve similar purposes to Firefox extensions although they are not as comprehensive at the moment.
Camino 1.0 is a branch from the trunk.
forums.mozillazine.org /viewtopic.php?t=262411   (2522 words)

  
 www.myspace.com/camino
Camino’s members have been playing together and separately in various projects in the Houston and surrounding areas for the past 7(+) years.
Camino has a laid-back style and energetic stage presence along with true to life lyrics help to form their unique alternative acoustic-rock sound.
Camino’s music can go from light hearted to songs about the wonders of life to the harsh and direct realty that can hit you smack in the face making you look into your soul.
www.myspace.com /camino   (1104 words)

  
 Boom Swagger Boom: Camino for x86 Macs   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Camino is not a fork of Firefox (and preceded[1] Firefox on Mac OS X[2],[3]); you could argue that Camino and Firefox are both "forks" of the Mozilla 1.x application if you wanted to stretch things.
Posted by: Mark Mentovai at August 1, 2005 06:03 PM I was referring to Camino as a fork from Mozilla, not Firefox, and yes, I may still be grossly misusing the term "fork' and have not the faintest idea about any roadmap.
Camino doesn't 'pick up' anything from Firefox--core code is shared live, as it is developed, and unshared code is just that, so there is no 'picking up'.
weblogs.mozillazine.org /josh/archives/2005/07/camino_for_x86.html   (690 words)

  
 Pollock Pines & Camino Houses and Homes For Sale as Real Estate El Dorado County
Camino features farm and orchard landscapes and magnificent Crystal Ranges can be seen in both towns.
Camino offers single-family homes starting in the low $400,000s and ranging up to $1,000,000 and more for large ranch style homes with acreage real estate.
Pollock Pines and Camino are located on the incline of Highway 50 as it begins its climb from Placerville to South Lake Tahoe.
www.pollock-pines-real-estate-and-homes.com   (700 words)

  
 About Us - Camino Medical Group
The physicians of Camino Medical Group have been part of the Silicon Valley community for many years, focusing closely on the lifestyles, interests and needs of our patients.
Camino Medical Group is a recognized leader in providing Silicon Valley residents with a broad range of quality medical services.
Camino Medical Group's tradition of excellence began in 1954 when six physicians decided that if they worked together and shared ideas and resources, they could take better care of their patients.
www.caminomedical.org /about   (369 words)

  
 Camino Reviews. Software Reviews by CNET.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Camino (formerly known as Chimera), is an open-source, OS X-only browser from Mozilla.org.
Camino also offers the best implementation of tabbed browsing, one that is elegant and more straightforward than Safari's.
Camino is still missing the autofilling of address forms, but it does support autofilling of usernames and passwords, storing them in Mac OS X's Keychain.
reviews.cnet.com /Camino/4505-3513_7-30460799-2.html   (540 words)

  
 A week with Camino : Journal : Mark Boulton
I've used Camino a few times over the months, mostly when it was in early alpha stage, but ended up ditching it for Firefox.
Camino does indeed rock because of the way it is so lightweight.
Camino is very fast, which is really nice but it would be cool if there were a few add ons for it such as the omniweb style tags, I’m assuming there aren’t any like that around?
www.markboulton.co.uk /journal/comments/a_week_with_camino   (1921 words)

  
 Metro Features | El Camino Hospital
We, the community directors of Camino Healthcare, have received the January 10, 1996 letter written by Dr. Paul Hoar (Chairman of the Board of El Camino Hospital District) in which serious allegations are made against Camino Healthcare.
We, the Board of Camino Healthcare, never negotiated or influenced the 1992 agreements‹those agreements were unilaterally imposed on Camino Healthcare by the District.
Although $100 million was transferred to Camino Healthcare from the District, Camino Healthcare had borrowed $32 million from a bank, and transferred that money to the District (at the same time it received the $100 million from the District) so the District could pay off its tax-exempt bonds.
www.metroactive.com /papers/metro/02.22.96/elcamino4-9608.html   (3837 words)

  
 The 1972 El Camino 400 Custom Project   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The El Camino is often thought of as being light in the rear end.
The 396 were first offered in the El Camino in 1966, two years before the first SS El Camino was built.
Exactly 5,190 1968 SS El Caminos were built.
www.elcaminoplace.com /72elky/72_beginnings.html   (754 words)

  
 California Highways (www.cahighways.org): El Camino Real
Over time, the original El Camino Real routing was replaced by modern highways, primarily US, overtime, has also been replaced in portions by I-5, Route 72, Route 82, and I-280.
In June of 1998, the California State Dept. of Transportation and the Mexican National Institute of Anthropology and History, in conjuction with CFWC and The Knights of Columbus, dedicated a bell on the international border at the San Ysidro/Tijuana crossing.
El Camino Real de los Tejas and variations in the primary route were used for more than 150 years as the principal route between Mexico City, Saltillo, Monclova, and respective presidios, and the missions near the present Guerrero, Coahuila, Mexico, on the Rio Grande and Los Adaes in what is now northwestern Louisiana.
www.cahighways.org /elcamino.html   (1249 words)

  
 Camino 1.0.1 - MacUpdate
Camino (formerly known as Chimera) is a web browser for Mac OS X that has a Cocoa user interface, and embeds the Gecko layout engine.
It is intended to be a simple, small and fast browser for Mac OS X. Considered one of the fastest Web browsers on Mac OS X, Camino also integrates tightly with the platform, adopting the refined style, user-focused interface, and cutting-edge technologies that are hallmarks of the Macintosh experience.
With Camino 1.0 and now with 1.0.1, I'm STILL experiencing a total browser lock up when clicking download links on web pages that are slow to connect to a server.
www.macupdate.com /info.php/id/7548   (484 words)

  
 Camino : Home Page
Camino 1.0.1 contains various security and stability updates to Camino 1.0.
Since Microsoft has discontinued WMP on Mac OS X, Camino no longer supports the use of the WMP plugin; instead, all users should download the free Flip4Mac (F4M) plugin, version 2.0.2 or higher, from flip4mac.com.
Camino erroneously claims that the default Japanese and Traditional Chinese fonts are “missing” when they are actually installed; this is due to a mismatch between Carbon and Cocoa font names.
www.mozilla.org /projects/camino/homepage.html   (503 words)

  
 Mike Davidson: Camino: Supermodel of a Browser?
Think of Camino as younger sister Nicky — much cuter, a bit more refined, and up until now in the shadow of her sister.
Camino might be the new girl in town, but you'll go back to Safari in no time.
Camino was my browser of choice when I moved back to a mac in the 10.1-2 era.
www.mikeindustries.com /blog/archive/2006/02/camino   (4608 words)

  
 MacDevCenter.com -- Camino and Safari Compared
Now that time has come: Camino is the new name, and version 0.7 was released recently to an expectant audience, effectively taking the place of Chimera 0.7.
That said, Camino works somewhat faster than Chimera 0.6, and the performance boost in that regard is a useful one.
And now, if you start typing in the address bar before Camino has finished downloading a page, your text will no longer be replaced with the page URL when the download is completed.
www.macdevcenter.com /pub/a/mac/2003/03/25/safari.html   (843 words)

  
 Camino : Community : News
In continuation of my previous article on the history of the camino interface I thought it would be interesting to write a bit about the application icon.
Camino 0.8.5, the last maintenance release for Mac OS X 10.1 users, is now available also in its multilingual version, containing: Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Danish, Dutch, French, German, German (Schweizer), Italian, Japanese, Lithuanian, Norwegian bokmal, Norwegian nynorsk, Portuguese, Slovak, Spanish (Castellano), Swedish.
The Camino projet has released an updated version of Camino, version 0.8.5, which brings the same security fixes that Firefox 1.0.8 bought to non mac users.
blogs.caminobrowser.org   (4022 words)

  
 Camino Dream Homes, Real Estate and estates.
Camino is located in El Dorado County just east of Placerville on U.S. Highway 50 at the beginning of the Sierra Nevada Mountains.
Camino offers pastoral farm and orchard scenes and boast views of the majestic Crystal Range.
Camino's elevation ranges from 3,000 to 3,400 feet.
www.caminodreamhomes.com   (350 words)

  
 Macworld: Editors' Notes: Make room for Camino
The Camino FAQ explains all of this in much more detail.
What this means, though, is that Camino really looks and acts like a standard OS X Macintosh application, which Firefox (despite very good efforts on their part) still does not.
Camino is put together by a very small team, and they’ve done a great job.
www.macworld.com /weblogs/editors/2006/02/camino10/index.php?lsrc=mwrss   (936 words)

  
 El Camino Del Diablo, pictures and adventure in Southern Arizona
Much writing about the region of El Camino del Diablo carries on concerning the formidable and dangerous land since so many people died travelling the road in attempt to join the Gold Rush.
All traces of the road are sometimes erased by the high winds sweeping the unstable soil before them, but death has strewn a continuous line of bleached bones and withered carcasses of horses and cattle, as monuments to mark the way...
And N. Scott Momaday said it well with this: "The breeze was very faint, and it bore the scent of earth and grain; and for a moment everything was all right with him.
www.markdstephens.com /el_camino_del_diablo   (805 words)

  
 Secunia - Vulnerability Report - Camino 0.x
A seven year old vulnerability has been re-introduced in Camino, which can be exploited by malicious people to spoof the contents of web sites.
A vulnerability has been discovered in Camino, which can be exploited by malicious people to gain knowledge of potentially sensitive information.
Eric Johanson has reported a security issue in Mozilla / Firefox / Camino / Thunderbird, which can be exploited by a malicious web site to spoof the URL displayed in the address bar, SSL certificate, and status bar.
secunia.com /product/3804   (786 words)

  
 Ultreya e suseya - Camino de Santiago on the net
The Spanish Road to Santiago de Compostela - a sensible map of the Camino.
At www.caminosantiago.com you shall find one of the richest sites about the camino: plenty of information, detailed maps, historical notes and practical advice for those who want to make the pilgrimage on foot, bike or even on horseback.
The Junta de Castilla y León manages a site that describes (in spanish) the Camino through Castilla y León; there is historical and touristic information, with a hypertextual organisation that allows you to visit their pages either by following the Camino or by focusing on specific themes (gastronomia, museos, Semana Santa, camping).
www.geocities.com /Athens/Acropolis/5398   (983 words)

  
 Webmonkey Mailbox: Camino
Safari was the first browser to pass acid2, and there are few others that match it.
I've had the 0.x version [of Camino] around for a long time and it was a very viable substitute for Netscape testing.
Camino imports bookmarks from Safari, and it even preserves the bookmark bar.
www.webmonkey.com /06/08/index1a.html   (542 words)

  
 Tao Chen's page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
My program CAMINO (Cardinal's Advanced Mesh INnovation with Octree) is a 3D/2D meshing program using a generalized octree/quadtree approach.
However, there is a major difference between CAMINO and other octree/quadtree or 2-4-8 tree programs.
CAMINO automatically tracks the geometry and decide which directions to refine to best fit to birdsbeak.
www-tcad.stanford.edu /tcad/bios/tchen.html   (501 words)

  
 Camino 1.0.1 – Mac OS X – VersionTracker   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Camino is a web browser optimized for Mac OS X with a Cocoa user interface, and powerful Gecko layout engine.
It's the simple, secure, and fast browser for Mac OS X. Camino practices the art of simplicity with an uncluttered user interface but with the features you expect from a modern browser like tabbed browsing and pop-up blocking settings.
The power behind Camino is the Gecko rendering engine, built and tested by thousands of volunteers, incorporating the absolute cutting edge in web innovations.
www.versiontracker.com /dyn/moreinfo/macosx/14326   (407 words)

  
 Camino turns 1.0 - The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)
Camino, the wonderful Mac OS X-ified Mozilla browser that could (and does), has turned 1.0.
Camino is awesome, but I do like RSS within Safari.
Camino, on the other hand is just right.
www.tuaw.com /2006/02/14/camino-turns-1-0   (1244 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.