Chief Lizard Wrangler axed 213
Kalak writes: "MozillaQuest is reporting that Mitchell Baker was laid off by Netscape back on August 23. True to form, there are also discussions on this on bug #96747." She spoke at OSCON and I was pretty impressed. She seemed legitimately committed to the mozilla project being a successful open source project. Not sure how this bodes for Moz itself, but it sure is unfortunate.
Accurate information here (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Accurate information here (Score:2, Interesting)
somehow the MozillaQuestQuest link doesn't render at _ALL_ using IE 5.5. i then opened it in mozilla, and it displays just fine... hummm.. :)
wonder why that is
Re:Accurate information here (Score:3, Informative)
Gerv
Re:Accurate information here (Score:2)
Re:Accurate information here (Score:2)
The reason the browser should know it's XHTML is that it has the XHTML namespace attached to the root element (html). Therefore, it should render it as XHTML, with the styles proposed both in the Link: header and also in the link tag in the body.
That's how I understand it, anyway. See here [mozilla.org] for the lowdown.
Gerv
Re:Accurate information here (Score:2)
If it was XML it should have a
So it's invalid in both
Re:Accurate information here (Score:2)
If it was XML it should have a
<?XML tag
If it was XHTML it should have a doctype
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transit
So it's invalid in both
(Damnit this anti-flooding stuff is annoying)
Re:Accurate information here (Score:2)
As I understand it, the general recommendation is to use the +xml suffix when creating new MIME types - e.g. application/xhtml+xml (which, I believe, is currently going through the approval process as a MIME type). But it's also fine to send any sort of XML to a browser and expect it to style it using the style sheet you provide.
Gerv
Re:Accurate information here (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Accurate information here (Score:2)
Of course, given
Re:Accurate information here (Score:2)
Mike Angelo (who writes all the articles ) doesn't appear to know or understand what's going on in the project at all well.
One recent gem was where he accused Netscape of stealing Mozilla code for Netscape 6.1 and the coincidental release of Mozilla 0.9.2.1! What a dolt!
Re:Accurate information here (Score:3, Insightful)
As far as I can tell, MozillaQuest's only crime is in pointing out facts about the late, buggy, and ugly Mozilla project that its small remaining core of advocates would rather see suppressed.
Tim
Re:Accurate information here (Score:1)
Again, please refer to mozillazine archives for in depth discussion.
Re:Accurate information here (Score:2)
I've read all of them carefully. So far, not one has documented an objective error. The responses are always along the lines of, "so what that we didn't fix a lot of the bugs for this milestone that were marked to be fixed? What does that matter? The project is still getting better, isn't it? How can he say it's buggy? Mike Angelo is such an idiot!"
misconstruing the meaning of projected release dates,
Very similar issue. He points out that a new milestone means a slip in the 1.0 release date, and the responses all say "so what that 1.0 will be a few months later? We're not a commercial project! We don't have a schedule! Who cares when we ship? Mike Angelo is such an idiot!" Again, no factual errors in his analysis are demonstrated. He's reporting things that are true, but taboo on the advocacy site.
and a uniformly unequivically negative opinion of everything mozilla.
Yes, but I was asking for examples of objective factual errors on the site. You don't like his opinions, fine, but that doesn't make him an unreliable source. He broke this story. People at MozillaZine knew about the story for a week and a half and tried to keep it secret. Who's the better news source on this story? MozillaQuest 1, MozillaZine 0. Sorry, but it's a fact.
Tim
Re:Accurate information here (Score:2)
This is part of the normal bug triaging process. Mangelo seems to find it very strange that we should prioritise bugs and decide which ones to fix now and which ones can wait.
a new milestone means a slip in the 1.0 release date,
This is another thing he keeps saying which is not true. It does not mean a slip in the release date, because we have no release date. New milestones get added to Bugzilla and the roadmap whenever we run out of the ones we've got. This action does not say anything about any dates.
People at MozillaZine knew about the story for a week and a half and tried to keep it secret.
They didn't try and keep it secret. It's not a secret - Mitchell's post to the public newsgroups shows that.
If you want a classic example of how mangelo writes untruths, how about "Netscape denies Netscape 6.1 is based on Mozilla source code"?
Gerv
Re:Accurate information here (Score:4, Informative)
So called "delays" are often clarifications in the time-line (where no dates were previously available). This may or may not be an inaccuracy, depending on how you look at it, but is clearly a misrepresentation of the state of Mozilla development.
Mozilla is, for the record, the browser/mail agent that I've been using as my sole browser for the last six months. So far, I've had less crashes than IE, and far fewer bug-related complaints than with NS4. And yet, according to MozillaQuest, Mozilla is still too buggy for anyone to use....
Re:Accurate information here (Score:2)
what a troll (Score:1)
If you don't like the way it looks, then use a different theme; if you think it's buggy, help find and squash bugs. There's just no excuse to complain with a project of this nature, other than you actually being one of those people who engage in "personal attacks devoid of content". Which doesn't seem to be the case!
As for MozillaQuest's journalistic integrity, what they initially strike me as, is one of those sites whose reporting style is aggressive and inflamatory, which is good, because it leads to heated and interesting discussion and generates more traffic for them (hate to see another
Re:what a troll (Score:2)
Inaccurate information there (Score:2, Insightful)
I've reported dozens of bugs in bugzilla - just because I reported them doesn't make it buggier than before I reported them, but by his measures it does, even though many of them have been fixed.
mangelo simply wants to find ways to present Mozilla in the worst light possible, and will root around until he finds "proof" of his assertion. Lies, damn lies, and statistics, after all, can be used to "prove" anything.
Does he lie? Maybeso, but probably not. He certainly does see everything through colored glasses, and either misinterprets things, or purposely misleads (take your pick). He's decided he doesn't like something about it, and he's going to do his best to make sure everyone else doesn't like it either. Obviously you decided long ago also ("late, buggy, and ugly", etc), and so anything posted by someone who says "it's getting pretty good" will be discounted as "flaming by the mozilla faithful".
Unlike either you or mangelo, I actually try to make things better. And it is AMAZINGLY less buggy than the NS6.0 release, and is pretty darn solid. Perfect - hardly; and nor is IE. But it's gotten pretty darn good and stable, and keeps getting better.
Re:Accurate information here (Score:1)
Where is she going? (Score:2)
Re:Where is she going? (Score:4, Redundant)
Re:Where is she going? (Score:1)
"We sent an e-mail inquiry to AOL-Time-Warner's Netscape division spokesperson, Catherine Corre about the lay-offs..."
Oh no, the big media dinosaur ate the puny mozilla lizard!
Applying the laws of discrete mathematics, this would imply that the story is redundant and mozilla was never really free software after all...
Hey, she can still work on it (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Hey, she can still work on it (Score:2)
Which is one of the obvious strengths of the open source system. Although It sort of depends on what her severance package was, etc....
You can spend an awful lot of time working on a project, and find that it drained time away from you looking for a job.
- - -
Radio Free Nation [radiofreenation.com]
an alternate news site using Slash Code
"If You have a Story, We have a Soap Box"
Re:Hey, she can still work on it (Score:1)
She probably will try to find out someone who will pay the same for the same work. She didn't worked for free.
She worked on a free project but not for free.
MozillaQuest not to be trusted (Score:5, Informative)
Anyway, if you want real information about what's going on why not ask the folks actually involved. Mitchell Baker (still chief lizard wrangler) had this [google.com] to say in the mozilla news groups.
Please don't link to bugzilla from the front page! (Score:5, Insightful)
Please don't link directly to a bugzilla bug ever again, at least not from the front page. The system is under constant use by bug reporters, triagers, and developers, who are all working hard to make the 0.9.4 milestone happen as fast as possible.
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:1)
The ultimative cyber-war weapon of the future.
Do we require in futurue also the personal apporoval of the president for a
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:1, Flamebait)
Or maybe you give Bugzilla users an alternate forum rather putting that crap in the bug database?
Cure the disease, rather than bitch about the symptoms.
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:2)
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:2, Flamebait)
Oh, they do think about it, trust me. In case you haven't noticed from the self-satisfied braying around here every time it happens (which is about five to ten times a day), "slashdotting" serves as a handy penis substitute for the hordes of socially malformed idiots that this place calls its audience...and its "editors."
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:1)
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:2)
Well, I would certainly hope so.
As a side note, I don't think I've ever been happier with the moderation on one of my posts here. "+4 Troll" is about exactly perfect for this one.
Oh no, they /.-ed bugzilla! (Score:1)
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:1)
Life is bigger than a day. Link to whomever you please.
-Water Paradox
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:1)
In the meantime, perhaps you can find a way to filter out any messages that are linked FROM slashdot.org and family. I know that there's scripts and such that can tell where you're coming from -- maybe incorporate that somehow. Beats me if it's really possible/feasible/a solution though -- just thought I'd try to help.
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.necrosys.net/mirrors/bug_96747.html [necrosys.net]
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:1)
So you got slashdotted. Take a break. Go for a walk, enjoy the sunlight a little.
Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.
-Water Paradox
Umm... there are tons of ppl there. (Score:1)
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:1)
Cryptnotic
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:1)
The real problem is the users who blindly click on any link without regard to the possibility that they might be taking part in a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack.
Cryptnotic
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:3, Insightful)
But I think a better solution would be to create a forum for such discussions, not within the bug discussions themselves.
Re:Please don't link to bugzilla from the front pa (Score:1)
New hire, I presume?
Re:Mozilla release date has remained the same (Score:2)
"Yeah, I'll pay that bill - when I'm ready."
Uh-huh. No definite release date is a bad thing. This reduces the acceptability of open source to business.
Mozilla needs to catch up and fast. Netscape, IE, and/or Konqueror will crush them if they don't
Layoffs! (Score:1)
Layoffs are unfortunate, but normal business (Score:2, Insightful)
The nice thing about an open source project, however, is that someone can move between companies and still contribute. They can even take a break from a project and then come back.
Since when? (Score:1)
Since when did this become true?
I can see how some economists would claim this, and some would even suggest that this is a Good Thing(tm), but call me skeptical, I don't see it.
I suppose that grossly inflated share prices compared to earnings is a normal part of the business cycle too...
Re:Since when? (Score:2)
What, do you want the government to set share prices?
Part of the fun of a free market economy is that there is nothing stopping idiots from spending too much money for the goods and services they receive. Yes, sometimes that means that people will foolishly invest in companies that have no chance of ever having the kinds of profits that would justify their share price, but the alternative is far worse.
Free Market ecnomics certainly has its ups and downs, but it beats central planning of the economy all hollow. And if you are careful and stay away from people promising huge riches with little work you will find that you can avoid investing in companies that have no chance of ever justifying their sky high price.
Re:Layoffs are unfortunate, but normal business (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll vote for a different business cycle. Tough to qualify for a mortgage (HA! right...) when you're between jobs three months out of every nine.
It's also mind-bogglingly expensive for companies to replace their staff every 18 months.
(Notice how everything is measured in months now? Remember long-term planning? Or is that part of the old economy?)
Freedom (was re: Layoffs are unfortunate, but...) (Score:1)
How does that follow? I somehow expect that someone with experience working on a high-profile project like Mozilla will have little difficulty finding a new position. Whether she chooses to continue working on Mozilla is up to her. Whether her new employer decides to pay her to work on Mozilla is up to them.
Freedom does not mean that you can expect somebody else to pay for you to work on things you find interesting. You have to be able to make a case to your employer that your work benefits the employer. Otherwise, it's just a hobby (not that there is anything wrong with hobbies).
Don't Look At Bugzilla! (Score:5, Interesting)
Gerv
How this bodes for the Mozilla project (Score:3, Interesting)
Large scale projects like Mozilla, and Apache could probably withstand a complete changing of the guard, but how many smaller prjects could handle such a change and still continue to produce quality software?
Does anyone have a mechanism to quantify the critical mass of an OSS project?
--CTH
Re:How this bodes for the Mozilla project (Score:2)
I don't know that there's any machanism to qualify the critical mass of an OSS project... I guess it would just be "how many people are using it?" and "if it went away, how would this affect the computing world?"
The Answer, from a trusted source (Score:2)
Your comment violated the postercomment compression filter. Comment aborted
Re:How this bodes for the Mozilla project (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:How this bodes for the Mozilla project (Score:2)
I'd argue the opposite. Successful projects, both open source and commerical, tend to be organized by a single person, or a very small team, with a definate goal. You can have hundreds of players as long as they all know who the leader is. If you have a very large committee running things, then the project will become bogged down with disputes over ownership, direction, and responsibilities. If you don't have a definate goal, then you'll end up deciding to re-invent wheels which are perfectly round, because they're not the right shade of blue.
Not Netscape - AOL (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm starting to sound like JWZ...
Not AOL - AOL/TW (Score:2)
Re:Not Netscape - AOL (Score:1)
Please stop clicking that bug link! (Score:2, Interesting)
--Asa
Re:Please stop clicking that bug link! (Score:1)
That would be my suggestion.
MozillaQuest? (Score:2, Insightful)
Please, please. Don't feed the trolls.
Re:MozillaQuest? (Score:3, Informative)
Development servers are typically sized for the load that they will normally receive. They aren't expected to have to stand up to the kind of pounding that a high traffic server would have. It is not kind to abuse them in this way.
godd*mit! (Score:2, Redundant)
There's nothing relevant or terribly useful at all at the link, and SomeOfUsAreTryingToWORK!
(calming down a little)
Revise the story, please!!!!!!
Some more info (Score:3, Informative)
From an Asa article [mozillazine.org] at mozillazine.org: " Mitchell Baker's post on her current situation involving Netscape and mozilla.org [google.com]"
To all the mozilla people: continue the great work, all you rock!
Best regards
Uriel
Re:Some more info (Score:1)
*sigh*
Well, he deserve the karma, and his post is really informative, not like mine
/me thinks of poor Asa's wife...
Asa, don't work so much!
Take care
Uriel
AOL Deathblow? (Score:3, Interesting)
The motive? Who knows. Recently, though, AOL and Microsoft were engaged in intense negotiations regarding the inclusion of AOL in Windows XP.
Re:AOL Deathblow? (Score:2)
it exists as a open source project now, and even if they said, "Our servers and sourcecode... mine mine ! you all go away (which is exactly how software companies act... like 3 year olds fighting over a ball)" it is still out there, many many still have the sourcecode, and it will continue.
AOL cannot stop it, netscape cant stop it.
It's a moot point and will only speed it up if they try to stop it.
Re:AOL Deathblow? (Score:4, Insightful)
No, no, no.
The conspiracy theory is about half right.
AOL wants to keep Mozilla waiting in the wings as a potential threatening poker chip in its negotiations with MS about desktop icon placement, default MSN services, whether AOL will pursue the legal complaints that Netscape originally filed, etc.
These negotiations pivot about various points, such as whether AOL will use IE or Netscape, whose streaming media format they will support, etc. As such, the poker chips in this game can be quite important and valuable because the game is for such very high stakes.
The Netscape/Mozilla browser represents a bugaboo to MS for two reasons.
The upshot is that Mozilla is an excellent poker chip where it stands now, getting preened but not quite ready for prime time. It serves AOL's purpose well in keeping the beast of Redmond at bay.
If the Mozilla poker chip were actually played, either releasing it for general widespread use or using its legal status to beat up MS in the courts, then a lot of blood and fur would fly. Not a business decision that they want or need right now.
Kind of like the book and movie Shogun, if you recall the end, where Lord Toranaga keeps Anjin-san building dangerous ships to keep his adversaries at bay, but secretly Lord Toranaga burns the ships when they are in danger of becoming a full fledged reality.
Re:AOL Deathblow? (Score:1)
Not that I don't appreciate a good conspiracy theory (-:
is AOL that stupid? (Score:2)
MozillaQuest (Score:1)
I'm so tired of this. All the major geek news sites like this one keeps posting new references to this very misinforming site.
Please boycott it. I know I will.
Re:MozillaQuest (Score:1)
Thanks for keeping us from working. (Score:2, Informative)
-Fabian.
The fallout begins???? (Score:1)
I can see the new MozillaQuest headlines now (Score:5, Funny)
In related news, from the bugzilla 2.5.1 Changelog:
* Added a slashdot effect filter, if HTTP_REFER = '*slashdot.org', show a 404 page.
Yes, referer is what I also was thinking. (Score:1)
Re:Yes, referer is what I also was thinking. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I can see the new MozillaQuest headlines now (Score:1)
"It seems that three hours later, the slashdotting was over, and all the people who were frustrated went back to their lives of frustration with no audience."
Gadzooks, you make it sound like a slashdotting is comparable to a rolling blackout. Get over it. Life is too short to complain about things which are over in a few hours.
Re:I can see the new MozillaQuest headlines now (Score:2)
You mean things like a joke in a
Re:I can see the new MozillaQuest headlines now (Score:2)
I'm personally a fan of using some sort of caching algorithm, but how to do that without fubaring security on Bugzilla is still in questions.
I'm just the documenter for the project, though. I can count the number of lines of source code I've contributed to Bugzilla on the fingers of both hands.
Re:I can see the new MozillaQuest headlines now (Score:2)
Bugzilla Mirror - Use this instead. (Score:3, Informative)
Don't kill bugzilla.mozilla
no good for slashdot (Score:2, Insightful)
DeCSS code found embedded in Mozilla source code! (Score:2)
Gill Bates [mailto] writes: "According to this bugtraq report [randombugtraqlink.org] a rogue Mozilla programmer has inserted illegal DVD descrambling code into the freely-distributable Mozilla browser source code. Is there any question now whether open-source software is dangerous to intellectual property?
That should keep those Mozilla folks busy awhile. Who needs to script up some virus to take over broadband computers to send DDOS attacks at targets when you can just link to a website in a /. submission?
Seriously, isn't it time that Slashdot start mirroring some of these web pages that they kill via the /. effect? This could have easily been saved on the /. servers and then linked to without kiling the bugtraq servers over there.
Re:DeCSS code found embedded in Mozilla source cod (Score:2)
MozillaQuest for eradication... (Score:5, Insightful)
Does anyone have the scoop as to why Mike Angelo hates Mozilla so much? Was a contribution burned? Did they decide to use someone else's ideas instead of his? Is he just having a permanent "that-time-of-the-month"?
I ask this because he is not forthcoming on his own information. That, and his site is very, very misleading. Do not be fooled the "we asked" or "we investigated" lines. This is the pursuit of one person.
Also, almost all of this individual's "articles" are taken from the Bugzilla entries and Mozilla mainsite postings. They have little foundation in actual fact.
Now, I myself am not involved in the day-to-day of Mozilla and Netscape, but I follow the direction of this project closely, since the technologies being developed here (mainly XUL and XPCOM) can have a dramatic effect on the future of my employers (sorry, I cannot go into much detail here). I keep updated from the mailing lists, and from MozillaZine [mozillazine.org] and The lizard farm [mozilla.org].
I very rarely ever head over to MozillaQuest. The reason: most of the "articles" are factually incorrect. take for instance the article on "Mozilla 0.9.2.1 released". If all you ever do is read MozillaQuest, you'd think there was this tremendous conspiracy going on between Mozilla and Netscape. But a quick perusal of Mozilla and/or MozillaZine shed actual light on the subject: The 0.9.2.1 release is 95-99% equivalent to Netscape 6.1, and is being provided for developers to test and debug their XUL/XPCOM/Plug-ins/skins/etc.. against for Netscape 6.1 compatibility.
MozillaQuest is fiction, with enough truth to make it sound legitimate. If you want the real scoop, head over to MozillaZine [mozillazine.org]. Don't waste time at MozillaQuest.
But...but... (Score:2)
Actually, I have my own conspiracy theory on the subject. See, Taco's run up a tremendous gambling debt, and his income from Slashdot just doesn't cover it anymore. So every chance he gets, he puts up a story with a link to MozillaQuest. Why?? Because CmdrTaco is actually Mike Angelo! He's doing it for the ad revenue!
I have proof. First, no self-respecting parents would ever name a child Michael Angelo, unless they were some terrible TMNT freaks. Second, have you EVER seen them TOGETHER?
I didn't think so.
Other mysterious happenings... (Score:2)
Does anybody have any clues as to who this mysterious major vendor is? It's pretty obvious that the insiders at Mozilla.org are under NDA or something like that.
The timing of this makes me wonder if maybe Mitchell isn't going to some other Mozilla related company. Even if not, I think it's interesting that the "commercial" Mozilla community is growing beyond just AOL. It makes for a healthier project.
Re:Other mysterious happenings... (Score:2)
My guess would be RedHat, although that is pure conjecture on my part. I remember somebody from RedHat stating not too long ago that they are planning of replacing Netscape with Mozilla in their Linux distribution at some point and RedHat Linux 7.2 is just around the corner. Mozilla surpasses Navigator 4.x on Linux in just about all respects at this point, so I wouldn't be surprised if RedHat made the switch now rather than waiting for Mozilla 1.0.
There are some good (and probably better informed) guesses at the Mozillazine article on the subject [mozillazine.org]. So far, the other guesses are OEone and Netscape (yes, there's a good explanation for Netscape being the masked vendor even though they just released Navigator 6.1 - read the comments below the article).
Re:Other mysterious happenings... (Score:2)
RedHat seems unlikely to me. I doubt they'd take a branch and try to stabilize it themselves. IMHO they would just pick a build at run with it. It's just not important enough for their business for them to bother with a separate branch.
Netscape would make a certain amount of sense, but why keep it a secret?
I could see AOL, but I don't think AOL needs to put out a release any time soon. They'd be better off just waiting for 1.0.
OEone? I don't really know much about them. Would they really be called a "major" vendor? Major contributer yes, but major vendor seems like a bit of a stretch.
Somebody like Nokia or Sony (for the PlayStation) might be a possibility. I could imagine them wanting to keep mum about their product, and they would definately count as major.
What's next, using the National Enquirer? (Score:3, Informative)
Didn't you learn from the last time? Using MozillaQuest as a news source is like using the National Enquirer. If you dig deep enough you might find a kernel of truth, but most of it is sensationalist, wildly inaccurate crap. This is the site that claimed Netscape 6.1 was not based on Mozilla code, includes things like duplicates and feature requests when counting the number of "bugs," and somehow manages to skew every bit of news, whether positive or negative, to make it evidence of Mozilla's demise/irrelevance/uselessness/etc.
If you want straight-forward news (including the real story about Mitchell Baker), check out MozillaZine [mozillazine.org] instead. They may not update the site as frequently, but it's generally news from people who are actually involved with the project, and it's a hell of a lot more accurate (one advantage of waiting until you have real information instead of making up your own).
Re:What's next, using the National Enquirer? (Score:2)
MozillaQuest lays off MozillaQuest's Chief Article Wrangler, Michael Angelo, And Others?
According to Bug Number 34834 in the MozillaQuest Magazine-Suite's BugQuest database, MozillaQuest's Chief Article Wrangler, "Michael Angelo has left MozillaQuest." However, he is still listed on MozillaQuest's article pages as the MozillaQuest article writer.
Here's what we think happened. It appears that Michael Angelo's position at MozillaQuest was eliminated and that he consequently was laid off on or about 4 September 2001. Although Michael served as head of the MozillaQuest Magazine-Suite he was actually employed by Matrix Wireless and was being paid by Matrix Wireless for his work at the Magazine-Suite.
The lion's share of people working on the entire MozillaQuest Magazine-Suite are employed and paid by Matrix Wireless - or at least were employed by Matrix Wireless. Matrix Wireless through its spokesman Michael Angelo has refused to disclose how many Matrix Wireless employees work on the Magazine-Suite. However it is likely that at least 100-200 positions have been eliminated at the Magazine-Suite, which would leave it with only -99 to -199 employees. So layoffs at Matrix Wireless could have a substantial impact on the MozillaQuest Magazine-Suite.
New threat to the internet (Score:5, Funny)
September 5 2001, 4:54 AM
It has been discovered that a new and mysterious underground hacker-website called the "Slash Dot" has developed a powerful & destructive cyberweapon. Sources say that by "hyper linking" to a government or industry webserver, the Slash Dottors can destroy the victom's operations for days at a time. A recipient of a hyper link attack this Wednesday was the site called "Mozillabug", a massive technological service used by thousands of businesses to obtain free program "code". FBI spokespeople were unavailable to comment, it is believed a presumably insane collegue died of laughing upon hearing about this new internet security threat.
Industry leader Microsoft Corp [MSFT] has recomended users perchase their new Windows XP operating system in order to take advantage of their new innovation: a firewall. Firewalls are believed to protect users against all internet security threats, but Microsoft spokespeople were unable to elaborate due to lack of knowledge in the subject.
Meanwhile, reports are coming in that members of the Slash Dot called "Anonymous Cowists" are posting the phrase "Hacked By Chinese" on message boards all over the internet. British MPs have claimed in Parliament that reading those messages can cause keyboards to emit green haze.
Joe Bloggs, PAFP news.
Taco has a strategy here (Score:2)
Either that or he's just stupid (this evidence is supported by the fact that he keeps posting links to MozillaQuest) and had no idea his idiocy would singlehandedly set back the release of 0.9.4.
Re:So? -- Sorry, you are mistaken (Score:1)
Konqueror is based on KHTML which is completely different from Gecko. This is why Konqueror has been progressing much quicker than Mozilla since it is not limited by the Mozilla development cycle.
Re:So? (Score:1)
No it isn't. Konqueror is no relation to Gecko.
Yeah, I guess they noticed the effect already ;-) (Score:1)