Mitch Kapor Warns Against Firefox Gloating 257
An anonymous reader writes "Mitch Kapor, Lotus co-founder and president and chair of the Open Source Applications Foundation, says open-source advocates should be relatively cautious and avoid making claims and predictions despite the huge success of Firefox. He also briefly touches on Chandler in a ZDNet interview. Chandler is OSAF's personal information manager which will offer e-mail, calendaring, address and task management. The goal for Chandler, Kapor says, is to make it as successful and popular as Firefox."
No Gloating?!? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:No Gloating?!? (Score:2)
Yeah. I mean, if we can't gloat, how are we supposed to talk about Firefox/Thunderbird's UI versus that of Bloatus notes. Unless Mitch Kapor's around.
There's a joke in there somewhere, and if I could only get goddamn window focus back from this rogue application, I'd type it up and send it to someone. And if they were using the
It's not "gloating", it's "marketing". (Score:5, Insightful)
Keep boasting about the features your product has that your competitor doesn't. Remind everyone that they need those specific features.
Keep telling the "journalists" out there about how your product handles the same tasks better than the competition. Faster. Smaller footprint. Better security. Easier administration.
If someone hasn't heard of your product, they aren't going to try your product.
Get out there and GLOAT.
Re:No Gloating?!? (Score:2, Insightful)
The FF devs need to balance innovation with security (something, I must say, Google does perfectly and Microsoft fails at) because that is Firefox's strong promotional point: Security, and because innovation is simply k
Thanks for the advice... (Score:5, Funny)
This from the guy who helped bring us Lotus Notes? Perhaps YOU should be more cautious about ignoring the requests of your user base.
/me hits F9 to refresh
irony? (Score:4, Interesting)
He says not to gloat about firefox's success, then he uses it is a standard he wants to meet.
Re:irony? (Score:5, Insightful)
Improvement (Score:5, Insightful)
Projects that play catch-up (as happened for the first while) tend to go faster up to the point where they are more secure in themselves. Firefox is past the point of catch-up in many ways, but hopefully it will continue to show new features/improvements so that it can continue to become even greater, rather than maintaining a short lead.
Re:irony? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:irony? (Score:2)
In any case, Kapor isn't criticising FireFox. He's just cautioning against the surreal optimism that always seems to surround open source projects.
Re:irony? (Score:2, Informative)
Firefox? bleh. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Firefox? bleh. (Score:2)
Re:Firefox? bleh. (Score:2)
What we need is a Windows port, that way more people are going to get a chance to try it.
Re:Firefox? bleh. (Score:2)
HOWTO: Free Vaporware Product Ad On Slashdot (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Good Luck (Score:5, Funny)
It's healthy to have goals.
Re:Good Luck (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Good Luck (Score:2, Interesting)
Let's take a step off that pedestal. Sure, sophisticated minorities may choose better products some of the time, and monopolies can severely limit the choice
Re:Good Luck (Score:2)
Re:Good Luck (Score:2)
Re:Good Luck (Score:2, Insightful)
Sour Grapes but with a cautionary note (Score:4, Insightful)
However, he was never able to experience the same success. No matter how much hype and support his subsequent projects had, they never panned out in the long run.
FireFox could very much be the same thing. It's a long way from 2% market share to 98%.
Re:Sour Grapes but with a cautionary note (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd say the longest way is from 2% to 10% or 15%. At that point its not "weird software I never heard of" if 1 in 10 people are using it. Right now its still "well, my brother in law recommened it and I installed it, but havent used it much" stage in general, but it is doing a great job of infiltrating MS/IE only shops. The university I work for has it on all their lab computers in the CS departments, I see the laziest professors use it or even recommend it, etc. This was certainly not the case last semester.
Like the old saying goes - your first million dollars is always the hardest.
Roght now things are looking up for a healthy IT market. The Mac Mini is predicted to bring a lot of windows users over to the mac side, people understand the concept that the browser is not the "internet" and you can run other browsers, etc.
Dont get me wrong, the MS monopoly is still incredibly strong, but if they lose enough marketshare then it will be a win for standards and competitors will have a better chance of delivering better and more innovative software. It will also get people thinking that they dont have to use office or outlook and just like IE there are alternatives. Viva competition.
Re:Sour Grapes but with a cautionary note (Score:2)
I would be elated to see it hit 20%. A respectable percentage of marketshare that would force web designers/developers to acknowledge its existence and to code for cross-browser compatibility.
Anything over whatever that critical mass percentage may be is just gravy.
Re:Sour Grapes but with a cautionary note (Score:2)
ALL of the stuff I code I attempt to standardize to HTML 4.0, XSLT 1.1, XML 1.0, etc. The nice part about it is that I don't have to do much to make it cross-platform, just mess about with the client-side JS that gets sent over, as all the transformation and real crunching happen server side.
It sucks having to deal with IE sometimes though, as some pretty standard JS stuff breaks in IE.
Re:Sour Grapes but with a cautionary note (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Sour Grapes but with a cautionary note (Score:2)
I don't really want it to have 98% marketshare. It would be better for security and web standards if there was an even split between Gecko, KHTML, and MSHTML.
Re:Sour Grapes but with a cautionary note (Score:2)
Re:Sour Grapes but with a cautionary note (Score:2)
Re:Sour Grapes but with a cautionary note (Score:3, Informative)
Firefox is just a new version, and a new name, for a product that has continuity going back very far, that used to have 95% market share.
So, basically what he is saying is ... ? (Score:3, Insightful)
Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall. Proverbs 16:18 KJV
Re: So, basically what he is saying is ... ? (Score:2)
> Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall. Proverbs 16:18 KJV
Yeah, that's why Gates and Rumsfeld are living in the gutter these days.
Re:So, basically what he is saying is ... ? (Score:2)
Nah, it's more like, "don't let yer britches get too big for ya". Or, "your eyes are bigger than your belly". Sadly, with all this "good to go" and other trendy, pop culture (often coined by marketing types to sell a product) catchphrase overuse, we've largely lost these old pearls of word wisdom. Thanks Dad, RIP.
gloating? unlikely... (Score:2)
you may take "pride and joy" in the hobby, but as long as there are passionate developers out there who consider open source development very much his/her hobby, i don't see the open source as a whole "gloating" no matter the success.
Why are users and developers seperate? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Why are users and developers seperate? (Score:2)
Personally, I would LOVE TO BE ABLE TO DO THIS. I can't emphasize that enough. I've always wanted to get into the backend of things like browsers, but haven't had the time or drive to go get the source.
Re:Why are users and developers seperate? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, what mozilla needs is more people that work on the UI. That'll really help.
Seriously though, the problem with UI in most FOSS apps (and certainly in mozilla) is not a lack of people that know how to create patches for the UI. The lack is in people that know how to design good UI. Actually, i'd think this is true in comercial apps too.
In fact, one of the design-goals for the organisation behind FireFox, have fewer UI designers. This was because the old mozilla suit suffered from the classic too-many-chefs problem when it came to the UI.
The problem with UI is that it's very easy to have an oppinion about it, but it's much harder to do it right. While FireFox and many other applications are getting better, what the FOSS world desperatly needs is more professional UI designers and more professional level testing of UI. Computers are still desperatly hard to use, mostly because of bad UI.
Re:Why are users and developers seperate? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why are users and developers seperate? (Score:2)
You might see some odd things on the way there of course but that's the price to pay... (why are all my menus on the side today ?)
Re:Why are users and developers seperate? (Score:2)
I've been working on a project to do something along these lines for a fair few months now. My problem is everytime i get around to writing a functional spec I think of a new feature.
It would be great if you could do the middle click thing to get into the source code, and then use webdav to store it so you've got a history of the old code - rather like a revision control system.
One of the many things that has got in my w
Re:Why are users and developers seperate? (Score:2)
Re:Why are users and developers seperate? (Score:2)
Emacs does this quite well. If you find some key combo that doesn't behave the way you want it, you type 'C-h k ' and instantly you will be pointed to the function that is bound to that key and its documentation, from there on you can now either click your way through the documentation to find related function or click the source link and you end up in the exact location in the source where that function is defined. There is also 'M-x apropos' with
Re:Why are users and developers seperate? (Score:2)
He's missing the key element of software success.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Cool: Firefox, Thunderbird, Mozilla
Gay: Chandler, Bob, Opera
Re:He's missing the key element of software succes (Score:2)
Maybe that should be respelled as, "ghey". Or maybe be re-written as "uncool". As a het (or maybe "breeder") I dunno why "gay" is associated with "undesireable". Surely it's a teenage thing that develops during puberty and eventually they'll grow up and understand.
I suppose I should add a, "not that there's anything wrong with that" reference here.
Thundercougarfalconbird! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:He's missing the key element of software succes (Score:2)
Max
Re:He's missing the key element of software succes (Score:2)
People seem to enjoy the combination of singing and acting (same goes for musical of course). It seems there is even a browser with the same name, which of course is a rediculous name for something that neither acts nor sings.
Firefox too famous need some way to get some fame (Score:2)
Good luck.
the guy is not dismissing firefox's success... (Score:5, Insightful)
Kapor's put a lot of time, money, and probably other resources into open source. They are many who just talk a good game, and then there are others like Kapor who put millions into open source.
But hey, don't let that get in the way of a perfectly good lynching.
Don't be proud, but... (Score:2)
Those in glass houses should throw no stones (Score:2)
You also have to explain to suits why your OSS product will work better for them than the Outlook bundled with MS-Office for free. Don't try to tell them that the security is better, because they have developers exploiting those security flaws to automate email processes and also spy on what their users are doing to make
Firefox and Ofoto... (Score:2)
Re:Firefox and Ofoto... (Score:2)
I use a service called streamload to store files, but like to use Opera with it.
I still have full menus, full functionality, full batch uploads via drag to the window (granted they always had more than one upload styles, so batch was a different page than one up).
How does it work? It's a Java app. That is one of the things Java is good for IMO - the whole thing is even more professional looking IMO than IE's because you have a java box that pops up with a
Get a frickin clue man (Score:2)
I hate IE, but I sure as hell am tired of people complaining about yesterday's problems.
Re:Get a frickin clue man (Score:2)
Chandler exists (Score:2)
Chandler: How not to start an open source project. (Score:2, Insightful)
While paying developers to work on an EXISTING open source project does work, pa
Re:Chandler: How not to start an open source proje (Score:2)
That's funny, what you wrote sounds pretty much like what everybody was saying about Mozilla [joelonsoftware.com] circa 2000 or so.
Now, of course, we all can see what Mozilla.org hath wrought. But it took a loooooong time to get there, and a lot of missteps. So Chandler in this respect is not terribly di
misleading news again (Score:3, Informative)
He barely talk about cautiousness in ONE sentence in ONE paragraph in a 2 PAGES article!
Nobody knows what's going to happen. It's certainly not inevitable that Firefox's market share will continue to increase. I think open-source advocates would do well to be relatively cautious and avoid making claims and predictions.
He isnt even talking about gloating!!!
Don't tell me.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Don't tell me.. (Score:2)
Start Gloating (Score:2, Interesting)
Hey Mitch (Score:3, Interesting)
Domino runs on Linux, great. But we use Notes quite heavily, lots of custom databases, pda apps, custom apps etc, so iNotes is out of the question. We really are paying alotta microsoft tax only because of the ERP system which is 'promising' linux binaries, and lotus, which claims no plans yet. Its mostly java-based anyway, just compile it for Linux for each version minor number, its not too much work.
I can volunteer time.
Re:Hey Mitch (Score:3, Informative)
Mitch Kapor started Lotus in 1982; he was Director until 1987, at which point he ceased to have anything to do with Lotus. Notes was brought to market in 1989. The only connection Kapor has with Notes is the relationship between Notes and Agenda, a stillborn product that Kapor was involved with.
Lotus was sold to IBM in 1995. Nowadays, Lotus is little more than a brand name of the IBM software group.
If you have a beef with Lotus or Notes, have t
Re:Hey Mitch (Score:2)
Next generation of Lotus Domino/Notes will be running on websphere (J2EE application server) and intergrated with all different software from IBM. IBM moving all client software to java right now.
It will be pure Java application, IBM don't trust windows anymore.
More secure? That's opinion. (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, I dispute that. Most people that claim it's more secure say that it's because of the amount of vulnerabilities being found in Internet Explorer compared to Firefox. How many people are looking for unknown vulnerabilities in IE? How many are looking at Mozilla/Firefox? This is determined by the media. When there's a MS vulnerability, it's all over the news and the finder gets a ton of glory and hopeful job offers. I see MS patches making it into mainstream news such as the Associated Press. As Firefox gets a spotlight because of a good amount of security professionals (Which happen to be coders with a personal agenda) recommending people switch, I've seen an increase in the amount of vulnerabilities reported. Don't believe me? Look at the stats [secunia.com] and compare IE with Firefox. Yes, IEs numbers are higher, but think in proportion to how many skilled people are looking for vulnerabilities in each product. If you look at the different versions of Mozilla over the timeline they give, you can see that not many vulnerabilities were found early last year or before that compared to when Firefox really started to get attention. Imagine how many vulnerabilities would be found if they got the amount of media attention that IE vulns get. Until both products get the same amount of hacker attention, it's premature to say which is more secure.
As a security professional, I believe that as long as you keep your software patched up (computers, routers, switches, etc.), your only fear is a zero day. Hopefully you have other layers of security such as a border firewall, IPSec Transport mode with packet filtering at every host, multiple antivirus vendors software (with at least one of them configured to block password protected archives, known dangerous file types and dangerous content), ongoing training, locked down servers with all the fat trimmed, middle tier servers, etc. These things are not vendor specific. You can run Windows, Linux, OSX, BSD, Solaris and still be able to do these things. Assuming you have all that set up, one zero day most likely wouldn't be enough. If someone really wants in and you've done all these things, do you really think you're going to get "pwned" because you chose a specific vendor or software package? No. You're going to get pwned because someone will be social engineered or some aspect of physical security will be bypassed. It's a hell of a lot easier to get into a company by phishing than it is to hunt down a couple silver bullet zero days as you get through each layer of security. My point is that if someone wants to get in, they can do it. It only takes a few holes at most and enough patience to find them to get to a target. It's up to the admin to ensure that it's as difficult as possible to find them and to ensure that the damage is minimized. Auditing (logging), backups, intrusion detection, policies, procedures, security assessments, a good data structure with granular permissions, etc can help minimize impact.
My professional opinion is that it just doesn't matter what you use as long as it's well administered, but if you want to force me to pick one side and guess which code has less vulnerabilities, I'm going to pick MS. Security through obscurity isn't a magic elixir, but it's definitely another layer of protection. And with all the attention MS gets, they've had an opportunity to patch up a lot of their vulnerabilities. At this point, new vulns are probably easier to find on other vendors that aren't as popular.
-Lucas
Re:More secure? That's opinion. (Score:3, Insightful)
Firefox and seg faults (Score:2)
Marginally faster than NS7.2, but that's it (Score:2)
And I found that Thunderbird, an NS7.2 mail lookalike, did not handle embedded URLS in mail as well as NS.
Sure it's better than IE but I imagine so are all sorts of other browsers as well.
Now he
where's the beef? (Score:2)
I've been reading about Chandler for a few years now. The progress in developing it, if any at all, has been glacial. This is very unlike Firefox which was developed quite quickly.
For years, I've been waiting for a worthy successor to Lotus Agenda. Can Chandler be the one?
Re:where's the beef? (Score:2)
Goal for Chandler (Score:2, Insightful)
Even more important (Score:2)
who would gloat? (Score:2)
Re:who would gloat? (Score:3, Informative)
If you are referring to Gecko (which I believe you are), AFAIK it most certainly does _not_ break the DOM; rather, it is the stupid and poorly written JS and CSS tricks you describe which use proprietary DOM features available from a certain rendering engine...
wow... (Score:2)
Anyway, I guess that's what happens when you use an interpreted langu
chandler: Is it dead in the water? (Score:3, Insightful)
The promise
I remember when Chandler [osafoundation.org] was first mooted [osafoundation.org]. Finally an open souce project that has a vision of how to store and communicate small bits of information. Traditionally these types of applications have been lumped together with *ugly* (but accurate) acronymn, PIM [wikipedia.org].
Free the data
This is an important step in applications. Historically data is trapped or obfusticated into applications. Once you enter the data in it you can only get at it by jumping through the fire breathing coding hoops [jwz.org]. Ocassionally its open souce (mozilla mork [livejournal.com]) but commercial applications take this to a new level - (think MS Outlook Express [google.com.au]).
Updated Agenda? /.'s this is not the first crack Mitch has had at this market. In '88 Mitch Kapor (father of Lotus 123, Notes) Agenda [luca.com] was released into the PIM market to some success. The runs are on the board. Could Chandler be the answer?
For the younger
Release early and often
Well after 0.4 release I dont see anything compelling. It has trouble working on Windows, it's monolithic and appears to be *weighed* down in specifications [osafoundation.org] of how to do things rather than results. Chandler looks good on paper but in clumping email, calandering, PIM and other messaging it has lost for me its original appeal. I want it usable now. Even if it is a little bit at a time. For me like its name sake (Raymond [wikipedia.org]) I'm still searching for a usable application.
Alternative
So there you have it I've trashed a computer industry veteran who has runs on the board but has failed to deliver. Whats an alternative. Well one example is a Gnome [gnome.org] app called Tomboy [beatniksoftware.com]. Its a simple mono [go-mono.com], GTK based note taking applet that is searchable. It allows you to click on links according to mime types and load an application. It has spell checking (along with references to various IBM patents). But the single kicker that has moved Tomboy into my sights is the integration of Tomboy with Evolution [gnome.org] (unix version that mirrors crappy Outlook in too may ways) and Beagle [gnome.org] The Gnome desktop is now using Tomboy as the *PIM* input and building a plugin to Evolution (email, calander), Beagle (searching). So bit by bit it's making Chandler less attractive to me.
lessons
It helps to have access to an open souce platform. Release often and early. Build an application (especially a first version) to do one thing and do it well. Get a result. Dont bloat a product with features if it is not vital and work out how can you work with other applications. Tomboy may only have a short shelf life or morph into something else in as it develops but it works right now and does the job.
Chandler (Score:2)
Could it be any more like Outlook?
Don't gloat... (Score:2)
Re:first post? (Score:3, Funny)
It is the most powerful operating-system for Pee Cees. It looks not as gay as Mac OS X by Steve B10 Jobs and has 1,0000,0000 times more softwares that the Linus-operating-system.
Plus, it comes with every Pee Cee for free. People who have grown acusstomt to paying RatHat 699 $$$ or more can hardly beleive this when I consult them with my proffesional Internet- and Network-Service-Center-Bureau.
Wehn I have a new customer, I take him to the back-room to show him the "alternati
Re:wow, that is saying a lot (Score:5, Interesting)
What's not to like?
Re:wow, that is saying a lot (Score:2)
The Chandler PIM is named after one of the all-time great detective novelists - Raymond Chandler. Check out the OSAF site [osafoundation.org].
Re:wow, that is saying a lot (Score:2)
Chandler Bing _was_ in Data Processing. As the matter of fact, according to some job placement pro, it was his true calling in life. ;-)
Or so my wife says who is the one watching Friends
Re:wow, that is saying a lot (Score:2)
Besides the poorly-written, long-running, overly-syndicated, abomination of a TV show that features a self-serving, insecure, superficial, lazy male lead character who's biggest claim to fame is a simple on-liner of, "Could I be any more [fill in the blank]?"
Nothing. There is nothing else not to like.
And for the moderators who do like the TV show, Friends:
Could "Chandler" be anymore of a rip-off of Outlook?
Re:wow, that is saying a lot (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I agree. (Score:2)
2) I'll give you that one. Live with it. Turn off the bookmarks toolbar, rename the folder, and just pretend it's a normal subfolder of root. If you don't have enough bookmarks to require some sort of organization, I call this a moot point.
3) True. Also unfortunate. I've learned to cope - I know of a grand total of 2 websites I need to use IE on. And one of them is just for a bit of extra functionality, the brunt of it works fin
Re:I agree. (Score:2)
Why not CTRL+T?
Ok, I've got to ask why you would want to delete that directory. It's the top level. ROOT. You have to have a top level. This is like saying "I don't like having a monitor. I
Re:I agree. (Score:2)
Re:I agree. (Score:2)
1). What du you mean? alt+N opens a new window, or do you mean something else?)
2) dont understand what you mean... but if its in MSIE,too why does it hinder you from switching?
3) maybe, but i never noticed it. some pages are badly looking, but that could be by design (either lacking html or estethics skillz)
4) ask logitech. They surely can fix this bug in their utility. this has nothing to do with firebirg.
Re:I agree. (Score:2)
Do you mean that you want to set that action to that specific keyboard shortcut?
Re:I agree. (Score:3, Insightful)
2. The "Bookmarks Toolbar" folder can be removed by manually editing bookmarks.html in your profile directory.
Someone really should gin up a menu item in the bookmark manager to designate an arbitrary folder as the toolbar, and allow removal of the default.
That said, I have recently started using the bookmark bar after years of dispassionately ignoring it - and you know what? it's actually very useful for keepi
Ways Firefox is like the Second Coming (Score:2)
2) Represents the beginning of the final battle between good and evil.
3) The object of worship has gone through several name changes and major reworkings, with many unaware of its history.
4) Nobody knew/knows when it was/is coming, and there are always false alarms.
5) Lots of people don't believe anything will ever come of it.
6) Even the ones who do believe argue over it an awful lot.
7) No matter how nice it looks, th
Re:Ways Firefox is like the Second Coming (Score:2)
Re:Be careful... (Score:5, Interesting)
I generally think of bloated applications based on a few criteria:
1) Big download/space takes up: Is Opera a big download?
No, it's 3.5MB, including a flash plugin. FF is 4.7MB at my last check.
2) Slow to use: Is Opera slow?
No, it's far faster than IE, and at worst the same speed as FireFox on my machine.
3) Memory use: Does Opera use a lot of memory?
Not in the release versions on my machine...
Opera uses on average 22MB of RAM - not much on modern desktop machines, and I can of course turn off the "Use all available RAM" setting.
4) Has so many features they get in the way: Does Opera have so many features they get in the way?
Maybe. The level of customization lets me pare Opera 7.54 down to the way 5.12 looked, just a browser.
For others however, they might use some of the features I don't, or all.
The issue here is that the features don't get in the way - you can quickly turn them off, or move them around.
Frankly, #4 is all I can figure people mean when they refer to Opera as bloated, and it's really a misleading statement. It's at least as easy to remove things from Opera's interface as it is to find, download and install extensions to FireFox.
Re:Be careful... (Score:3, Informative)
IE for me tends to pause before displaying the page. On broadband, it's an annoying splitsecond wait for no good reason. On dial up, it's an average of 30 seconds staring at a blank screen.
IE also seems to ALWAYS reload a page when you go back to it, or forward to it.
Now, comparing to Opera (which I use far more), I have no white screen display with Opera. SOMETHING is displayed immediatel
Not everyone uses Exchange (Score:3, Interesting)
Many people in the organization I work for use a program called Goldmine to help them maintain contact with sizable networks of people. Goldmine is one of a suprisingly small number of programs that provide person-centric organization of information. In one view, you can see a person's contact information plus all the phone calls, appointments and email communication with that person. Once
Re:What's up with Chandler ? (Score:2, Informative)
Innovation is very much in the eye of the beholder, but Chandler's main "new" feature is its repository. It's there, it works.
Fundamentally, Chandler isn't trying to copy Outlook. It's a lot easier to copy than to create something really new. No disrespect intended towards the Ximian folks, they've done great work. But