Firefox-Based Start-Up Gets Off The Ground 291
rudy_wayne writes "ZDNet is reporting that a new version of the Firefox Web browser is coming your way, but not from the Mozilla Foundation. 'When we launch our own services, in about a month or so, we'll be looking to offer the must-have companion to Firefox,' said Bart Decrem, Round Two CEO and a former staffer at the Mozilla Foundation. 'We see tremendous room for innovating on top of the Mozilla and Firefox platform, and we see ourselves as the first company outside of the nonprofit Mozilla Foundation that's fully dedicated to serving Firefox users.'
Round Two planned a corporate launch Monday night with the promise of bringing 'a new crop of products and services that will enhance your Firefox experience.'"
Open Source Competition (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:5, Informative)
The Mozilla license (MPL [opensource.org]) requires availability and redistributability of source code (BSD licenses do not). It seems legal, though, with a program under the LGPL or MPL, to create and not provide source for add-ons which can run with unmodified binaries (or modified binaries with source code available).
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:3, Informative)
So yes, it's certainly possible to build a business this way. Hard but possible.
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:3, Interesting)
Their code will be running on an unmodified firefox and thus they can license it any way they want.
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:3, Informative)
Remember - Netscape used to have an AIM component; I'm pretty sure they made sure they won't need to sue themselves...
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:4, Interesting)
Bookmark Synchronization (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:2, Informative)
Another (too difficult) approach would be to have your Mozilla preferences/bookmarks on an NFS , SMB or other network-mounted partition.
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes. And that's good. It's called "competition". Something forgotten on desktop computing world
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:2)
But if you think it's going to be hard for people to simply switch browsers (I agree) - what makes you think they'd be willing to switch their entire OS? (Linux? What's that? Is it going to give me a virus?)
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:2)
however, Ubuntu has a theme/reputation amongst non-linux users as a friendly, easy to use Windows alternative
It does?
Starting to sound like Ubuntu is the new Gentoo.
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:5, Informative)
> firefox will be more of a force.
You can:
http://hemiolapei.free.fr/divers/tabmix/tabmix.ht
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Open Source Competition (Score:2)
In addition to the suggestion another poster offered, try the Tabbrowser Preferences extension. I thought I wanted just what you described, and installed this extension in order to get it, but then I decided was that what I really wanted was for all links to open in the same window, and I could personally decide when I wanted a new tab (or even window); the extension gave me that ability, as well.
Let them come (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Let them come (Score:3, Interesting)
Unfortunately, being based on Firefox / Gecko, it won't create too much diversity.
On the other hand, being back up by a company, perhaps they will improve it and market it so that it will take a considerable portion of the market, and then the true standards, which the mozilla engine follows, will be respected by web designers.
Re:Let them come (Score:2, Interesting)
Hell, while we're wishing on stars, maybe they'll make it even MORE standards compliant.
I don't like that phrase (Score:5, Interesting)
That sounds a lot like Ads and spyware toolbars!
If that happens, I will be returning to IE!
Re:I don't like that phrase (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I don't like that phrase (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I don't like that phrase (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:I don't like that phrase (Score:2)
That sounds a lot like Ads and spyware toolbars!
He said CROP, not CRAP.
the bubble is back? (Score:5, Insightful)
what's the business plan?
Re:the bubble is back? (Score:4, Insightful)
Let's see:
Nintendo DS
XBox
PSP
Ferraris
Televisions
Cable TV
Satellite TV
DVRs
Pez
Porn
Music
Movies
is that enough of a list? Do you need more?
Leather jackets
$3000 a month Loft apartments
XM radio
McDonalds
Pot
Cigarettes
Liquor
Gasoli
Cellular Telephones
Blackberry PDAs
"Teach yourself Anything in 21 days"
Re:the bubble is back? (Score:2)
Re:the bubble is back? (Score:4, Insightful)
People are surprisingly stingy when it comes to a lot of things, finding out what they want and what they will pay for it is the heart of business. Throwing up a laundry list of items and saying "L@@K people buy stuff" to justify any new business is pretty silly. But it does get you mod points at slashdot.
Re:the bubble is back? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:the bubble is back? (Score:2, Funny)
is that enough of a list? Do you need more?
Don't forget Opera.
Re:the bubble is back? (Score:3, Funny)
They are aiming at the OEM (Score:2, Insightful)
Smaller computer makers, who can't get a good deal with Microsoft, would love to be able to customize the browser well beyond what they can do with IE. They must also be considering selling their stuff to the likes of Linspire, who have no problem with including proprietary extensions with their products.
The end-user is way below their radar.
And, if I were them, I would stay away from that layer.
Best business plan ever: (Score:2)
Re:Best business plan ever: (Score:3, Funny)
2) ???
3) profit!
Re:the bubble is back? (Score:3, Insightful)
Three words: supported, secure browser.
Medium sized companies that have had to purge about 20 rounds of viruses that snuck past firewalls, mail scanners and anti-virus programs (usually via social engineering) are just about as fed up as they'll ever get. They're moving to web-based mailers to avoid Outlook, and they're eyeing Firefox, but FF is just a browser... they want a company they can sink their teeth into. AOL's Netscape browser
Enterprise Application Platform... (Score:2)
Great! Cant wait to install it. (Score:3, Funny)
not a new version (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:not a new version (Score:2, Insightful)
Really, it's past the tipping point now, that critical mass needed to ensure web developers pay attention to it.
it is absolutely considerable (Score:2)
More than that, if you imagine that there are 300 million people on the web (I don't kno
Maybe they are following a .com tradition ... (Score:5, Insightful)
While I understand that you may base a business on for instance ZOPE [zope.org], here I have trouble to imagine how they want to earn from whom.
In a comment to a German version of the note (at best), someone thought they would later consult with respect to mass migration from IE to FF. Maybe.
CC.
right... so in summary, (Score:2, Informative)
I know I'm not paying for any of those.
Re:right... so in summary, (Score:2)
It's 1999 all over again.
Re:right... so in summary, (Score:5, Informative)
Right, except you only copied/pasted the part that you wanted to. The quote is actually talking about how they are sponsoring those projects, providing servers, bandwidth, and money.
(Emphasis mine.) They're also supporting (again, from TFA):
They're also developing their own extensions (which presumably you can buy):
Now, whether that (and possibly other future products) is useful, sure, let's debate that. But don't read the article and completely misrepresent what's written.
Re:right... so in summary, (Score:2)
I doubt there was ever any question as to the average Slashdotter being in the target audience.
The target audience is going to be that set of companies that consider finding and installing plugins to be difficult and worthy of a support contract.
What are they offering? (Score:2)
Where's the content? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Where's the content? - Its there, but "hidden" (Score:2, Informative)
Mozilla development ecosystem. While Round Two--formerly known as MozSource--puts the finishing touches on its own products, the company is sponsoring development of several other Firefox extensions.
Ok, what do we have here? Aight, a companys name, even two since it has renamed itself..
These include FlashGot, which lets Firefox work with third-party download managers; Bandwidth Tester, which lets people determine their connection speed; an
Re:Where's the content? (Score:5, Informative)
While I don't see how they can make money off this either, anybody making money off something like Firefox sounds like not a bad idea. I'll be watching. All the best!
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
a question to the slashdot audience (Score:2, Interesting)
Perhaps if we post some ideas of what we want, this company could do something useful
personally for me, I'd like a button up in the toolbar that when clicked, opens every link in the current window in a new tab.
Uh yeah (Score:5, Insightful)
Anything they come up with for Firefox will be copied by the OSS community and offered as a free download.
Good luck
Re:Uh yeah (Score:3, Informative)
I still run Mosaic on my NeXT machine...
Re:Uh yeah (Score:2)
Bah. Mosaic. This "graphical" and "visual" crapola. Bah. Lynx is all that has ever been needed.
Re:Uh yeah (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Uh yeah (Score:2)
Opera's biggest money flow is selling the web browser to mobile phone companies, as Opera does a fantastic job of rendering things to a small screen.
Perhaps this is the business model they're going after with Firefox?
Re:Uh yeah (Score:2)
Re:Uh yeah (Score:2)
I guess that's one of the first things that needs to change, Joe-user-education-wise. Most people can't even make a distinction between "the web" and the piece of software they're using to look at it.
The larger issue, of people that think things are "free" just because they see or get them without directly parting with money at that moment, is a symptom of a much larger cultural problem: basic ignorance of micro- and mac
Most interesting tidbit is in the last paragraph (Score:5, Interesting)
With Microsoft expected by many to offer antivirus software for free with windows, could they be beating them to the punch? I know that there are a lot of free antivirus packages (I use AVG myself) but if they can leverage Firefox's large user base then they might be on to something. I personally think that its a bad move to play Microsoft's game, which is effectivly making antivirus software worthless in the market.
Except for enterprise solutions, Symantec and McAffee could be in for a big hit in the personal antivirus protection department. Competition is an engine for innovation, but the most efficient engines for R&D come from within the firms that are actually selling the products and getting the most feeback. Something to think about, perhaps Symantec and Mcafee will continue to innovate and stay ahead of the curve.
Well, now that I opened the can of worms at both ends...proceed
Re:Most interesting tidbit is in the last paragrap (Score:2)
What I was wondering was: why should a virus scanner be "integrated" with a browser? The only thing I could conceive was that it would scan all downloaded files, but the file system virus scanners have that covered pretty well already (well, except for buffer-overrun-style exploits, but presumably Mozilla will just fix those in the browser).
The other thing about virus protection: there's an enormous effort involved to keep up with new viruses, an
Could expand to other products... (Score:3, Funny)
That way we could all get a Round Two IT.
And the enhancements are ... ? (Score:4, Funny)
About Bart Decrem (Score:2, Informative)
Safe haven for non-geeks? (Score:5, Interesting)
Somehow, I don't think this product is targetted towards most geeks. It seems to me that they should be aiming at people who are starting to hear about Firefox. People have heard that Firefox is supposed to solve their security problems and introduce new features to make browsing easy. It's supposed to come with all sorts of cool extentions that you can download and customise your browsing experience.
Most of the cool stuff that geeks do with Firefox is free and easy; we install extensions at a whim, customise the security settings, and tweak about:config to our liking. The problem is, most people find these activties confusing and time consuming.
Extensions: Which one do I choose? How do I know which one has bugs? What do I do if it breaks the browser?
Geeks know that you: a) Try them all! b) Read up on some forums for past experince. c) Backup your settyings and do a quick re-istall!
Well, there you go. People think you need to be a super computer genius to do all of those things.
Perhaps this company could be useful as the AOL of the open source community.
Re:Safe haven for non-geeks? (Score:3, Insightful)
All they have to do... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:All they have to do... (Score:2, Insightful)
Hired. These people are in it to get hired.
What is there to be acquired when the source code is open?
Maybe they are not selling to consumers... (Score:3, Insightful)
Like this one [faser.net]. Imagine if AmEx wanted a XUL app for their customers to check their statements etc. etc., but dont want to pay to skill up a dev team to write the XUL app...
You know what enhances my Firefox experience? (Score:4, Funny)
Not having an added layer or two of bloated advertising crapware between me and my web browsing.
Profit?? (Score:2)
Step 1: Take a browser that appeals to tech minded people who don't use the default IE and provide enhancement and "integration" of plug-ins that are already available to said tech-minded people.
Step 2: Keep looking desperately for that "must have" widget that will appeal to "mainstream" Firefox users.
Step 3: They're going to either charge for the browser or put ads in it or collect user info for money?
Step 4: Profit???
I hope they're smarter than I am because this "business mo
"I'm not paying!" (Score:2, Interesting)
How to make money off of Firefox (Score:5, Insightful)
Make a corporate-friendly, highly manageable release of Firefox: an MSI installer, so it can be easily deployed via Active Directory; management via Group Policy; default settings that don't make a mess of your roaming profile.
If Round Two did this, I imagine that they could make a decent income from organizations that are tired of IE but want something easier to deploy and maintain than Firefox.
Mozilla bug #74085, comment 113 [mozilla.org] expresses these shortcomings of Firefox better than I did and provides more information on the above issues.
Re:How to make money off of Firefox (Score:3, Informative)
Yada Yada Yada (Score:3, Insightful)
I think that this is not a big issue, just an announcement that they are planning on doing something. Just a preemptive tactic, probably to generate financing.
As for all the 'End of Microsoft Monopoly', I am not sure this is really a "Good Thing". Yes, the Benevolent Microsoft Monopoly has not been that Benevolent at times, but I view this as the 'Protestant Reformation' for the Consumer IT Service Industry [CITSI] (New useless acronym), where you end up with thousands (actually hundreds) of versions of LINUX because there is always someone who thinks they know better.
Take Three (Score:5, Funny)
Take Two based startup, Take Three, has just announced that they will be offering innovative enhancements to the community of Take Two users, who are themselves a small subset of the community of Firefox users, who are themselves a small subset of the community of Mozilla based browser users.
Take Three is currently seeking venture funding based on highly optimistic projections of a high percentage of signups from a subset of the Take Two subset of the Firefox subset of the Mozilla user base.
RoundTwo is not for geeks! (Score:5, Informative)
Folks, from what I have read on their site, RoundTwo is not appealing to geeks. They're not trying to force geeks to pay for stuff that they can get themselves, i.e. extensions and support and the like. I get the impression that they are offering extension support and bundling for corporations which want to adopt Firefox but also want a centralized entity that they can moan at when it doesn't work.
Their stance of 'adopting' extensions and providing infrastructure for the developers to leverage for that purpose is genius, IMO - it gives the extension authors the resources to improve and maintain their extensions, and it gives RoundTwo a direct line to the authors, which makes it far easier to get the author's attention if something is broken, which is critical if they really intend on creating Firefox 'distributions' with extensions bundled in, like what bdeonline is doing with Black Diamond Firefox [mozdev.org].
Sure, they've got the usual amount of marketing jargon out there right now, but considering that they've been supporting Mozilla software [mozsource.com] for a while now, I suspect that this is going to be the core of their business model.
This tells us nothing (Score:2)
If Woz and Jobs had issued a press release from their garage stating that they were going to revolutionize the microcomputer industry, would anyone have paid any attention? On the flip side, a lot of people gave numerous dot com outfits the benefit of the doubt during the bubble.
The moral of the story is: We don't know jack
The Killer Extension: IE Engine Rendering (Score:2, Interesting)
Don't get me wrong - I love Firefox, and especially the standards compliance and power of the Gecko rendering engine. But if Firefox is to true beat IE, it need
it's been a long time since i rock and rolled... (Score:2)
The only advantage Firefox has over other browsers is in it's built in extensibility capabilities, and thats the one area where it's going to ultimately end up shooting itself in the foot, if it ever becomes popular enough.
Re:Want to bet? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Want to bet? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Want to bet? (Score:3, Funny)
I know that nothing is as easy as getting money from humans. You can sell shit to them and they will buy it. (There is at least one company in Finland which been selling chicken shit for years.)
So, how much money did you want to bet?
Chicken Shit (was Re:Want to bet?) (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Chicken Shit (was Re:Want to bet?) (Score:3, Insightful)
So? (Score:5, Insightful)
But the thing is, there's a reason that people will pay for dirt or manure or whatever. Dirt and turds have legitimate uses. If you have a big hole in your yard after tearing down the old shed out back, you need some fill dirt to fill in that hole. If you need to fertilize a field, go buy yourself some animal feces. People pay money for these because making enough dirt or crap themselves is prohibitively inconvenient (do you really feel like raising chickens or cows yourself just for their excrement?).
On the other hand, browser extensions - which appear to be all this new company offers - are much easier either to create by oneself or to find a free version that someone else has created. Yes, the usefulness might still be there in some cases, but when you eliminate the prohibitive inconvenience of self-production, it reduces the value of the commodity tremendously.
The only way I can see this company succeeding is if they have a lot of capital available to buy the extensions that other people have created in order to lock down the market, as well as to tie people up in farcical legal battles over patents and copyrights.
Come to think of it, maybe they could hit Microsoft up for some investment prospects. [newsfactor.com]
Re:Want to bet? (Score:2)
Re:Want to bet? (Score:2)
Well, there's "bamzu.com", is that dot-useless enough?
Re:Want to bet? (Score:5, Interesting)
Regards,
Steve
Re:Want to bet? (Score:4, Interesting)
Not to say that I agree with that attitude, but it is reality. There has to be someone standing behind the software, so that if some disaster happens, the suit who recommended the app has some CYA ammunition for himself.
There's more to "enterprise support" than CYA (Score:5, Insightful)
There are far bigger problems with using things like Firefox and Thunderbird in large organisations than just the (mostly phantom) CYA aspect.
As much as I love the apps, I'm considering switching back to IE and Outlook at work, mostly for the following reasons:
Added to all of these are the current lack of tools for the corporate sysadmins to deploy, configure and patch Moz family apps centrally, and avoid changes by lusers who don't know what they're doing that might break their carefully maintained system. Just moving all the profile data from the Windows-standard-that-hardly-anyone-really-uses location to something that fits in with a corporate back-up strategy is likely to be a chore.
Most of these aren't serious problems (if problems at all) for home users or small businesses where things are done informally. In a megacorp, things work differently, and until basics like the above are addressed, I'm afraid Firefox's chance of becoming the preferred browser is approximately negative regardless of any technical and usability advantages it may have over IE.
Re:Want to bet? (Score:2)
Well, if those are his target customers then anyone could have told hime that he was doomed to failure (and probably would have).
I imagine that that's not at all the target. Instead, if I were him, I'd be targetting the mid-sized corporations that rely on IE now, and are just startin
Start Up - Shut Down (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Wow! Three cheers for MSIE!!! (Score:2)
I think the only likely market for this would be companies who are now using IE and thinking about switching, but wanting a corporate "face". Nifty new features would be a nice selling point, but "we offer Firefox's security and extensibility as a supported product," is really what a lot of small to mid-size companies are looking for right now.
Re:The unbeatable punch (Score:4, Insightful)
As for
Re:The unbeatable punch (Score:2)
XUL and the Firefox Chrome afford every developer on every platform the ability to build robust and static apps on a widely dispersed and growing platform. I can see a day when all computer programs run on Firefox. And what does
Re:...And prompty crashes and burns (Score:2, Funny)