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Mozilla IT

Mozilla Is Changing Its Look -- and Asking the Internet For Feedback (arstechnica.com) 226

Megan Geuss, writing for ArsTechnica: Mozilla is trying a rebranding. Back in June, the browser developer announced that it would freshen up its logo and enlist the Internet's help in reaching a final decision. The company hired British design company Johnson Banks to come up with seven new "concepts" to illustrate the company's work. The logos rely on vibrant colors, and several of them recall '80s and '90s style. In pure, nearly-unintelligible marketing speak, Mozilla writes that each new design reflects a story about the company. "From paying homage to our paleotechnic origins to rendering us as part of an ever-expanding digital ecosystem, from highlighting our global community ethos to giving us a lift from the quotidian elevator open button, the concepts express ideas about Mozilla in clever and unexpected ways," Mozilla's Creative Director Tim Murray writes in a blog post. Mozilla is soliciting comment and criticism on the seven new designs for the next two weeks, but this is no Boaty McBoatface situation. Mozilla is clear that it's not crowdsourcing a design, asking anyone to work on spec, or holding a vote over which logo the Internet prefers. It's just asking for comments.
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Mozilla Is Changing Its Look -- and Asking the Internet For Feedback

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  • by aussersterne ( 212916 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:45PM (#52748949) Homepage

    Way to hide your brand effectively, Mozilla!

    Go with the blue one that actually says "Mozilla" somewhere in a way that most people will be able to recognize.

    • by DickBreath ( 207180 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:59PM (#52749121) Homepage
      'Tweaking' a logo is supposed to mean that the new logo is largely recognizable from the old logo. Not that it is completely different.

      Microsoft would like to 'tweak' my Linux system so that it runs Windows 10.

      Most of the proposed logos are not legible or immediately intelligible. And certainly not recognizable as the Mozilla brand. If I saw one of these logos, my immediate reaction would be that some clown is trying to capitalize on the Mozilla name recognition, and not doing a very good job.
      • How about a [middle-finger emoji] logo? Or a [burning-pile-of-money] logo?
        • by myrdos2 ( 989497 )

          There already was a contest for a new Firefox logo. This one [wikimedia.org] was the winner. Why not continue on in that theme and have the mozilla dinosaur head encased in a glacier or something?

          You could stare into its dead eyes and relive memories of a once glorious past.

    • Feedback (Score:5, Funny)

      by pushing-robot ( 1037830 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @01:13PM (#52749263)

      Agreed. My take on the set:

      1. In 1985 it would have been cool.
      2. So you're hosting the Olympics?
      3. Mozilla is a media player?
      4. Bland but tolerable
      5. Mozilla is a CAD program?
      6. In 1995 it still wouldn't have been cool.
      7. Wait, that's a Monument Valley map.

      I'd suggest a simple but stylized M, with understated modern aesthetics and not the pop art of #6. People aren't looking for whimsy in an app they'll use for banking.

      • Re:Feedback (Score:5, Insightful)

        by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @01:21PM (#52749347) Homepage Journal
        It sounds to me like some executive somewhere there, has either:

        1. Too much time on his hands

        2. Needing to justify his position at the company

        I mean, for the average person, what does a "rebranding" actually do?

        NOTHING

        These great marketing dollars thrown about to come up with a new logo, or new colors, etc..means exactly nothing to the consumer. The consumer isn't going to be dazzled and really get on board with it this time!!

        It isn't going to entice anyone that was not he fence about using the product to jump onto the bandwagon.

        If anything, like mentioned before, you might lose some customers if the change is too radical and people not following the every marketing move of the company, might lose track of your product.

        This, IMHO, isn't just for this Mozilla revamp, but for 99% of companies out there too. These exercises are a waste of money and time....and for what to be gained?

        Nobody gives a shit about company mottos, except the poets at the marketing companies.

        • It sounds to me like some executive somewhere there, has either:
          1. Too much time on his hands
          2. Needing to justify his position at the company

          Don't blame executives. To come up with this level of crap requires a consultant. The only thing an executive has is 3. Too much spare money.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          It sounds to me like some executive somewhere there, has either:
          1. Too much time on her hands
          2. Needing to justify her position at the company

          Considering what SJWs Mozilla has become I just had to fix that for you.

      • by eepok ( 545733 )
        LOL. We are of a similar mind:

        "The Eye" - This is creepy and much too reminiscent of Big Brother. And the color scheme screams of Norton AntiVirus.
        "The Connector" - This looks like the very long history of very bad Olympics logos. Bad shapes, confusing, weird colors. It would not be immediately associated with a "web browser".
        "Open Button" - This is better, but reminds me of the many audio/media players with last track, pause, and next track button. This would be a great logo if Firefox were WinAmp.
      • 1. Looks like a brand that belongs in a Pac Sun store with a Jurassic Park dinosaur on the back. 2. Easy way to have everyone forget your logo immediately. So complex that it doesn't pop. 3. Napsterzilla 4. Creative, but symbols are easier to remember. The f in Facebook, the colorful G in Google, the windows for Microsoft.. 5. Nintendo 64 is coming back strong 6. The colors are just mismatched, and it's an overused optical illusion 7. Good luck printing it in black and white.. or and just no..
      • Re:Feedback (Score:5, Insightful)

        by DarkLordBelial ( 4474205 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @02:18PM (#52749789)

        They can have this one for free. I am not a designer, I spent 5 mins on this and it's shite - still better IMHO than any of the guff they came up with.

        http://imgur.com/a/70ReP [imgur.com]

      • by Dr. Evil ( 3501 )

        The Eye of Sauron is a good analogy for Pocket and other stupid ideas. Maybe it can sear with flames when it sends your data away.

      • Actually, what number 4 reminded me of? Mobile or Exxon gas station logo...
    • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @02:52PM (#52750091)

      Mozilla has been offering free software. Changing its look and feel could be disastrous because it can give the impression that it is something other than what we knew and loved for decades.

      Google only tweaked its font a bit.
      Microsoft just took the curves out of its logo.
      Apple had removed the colors.

      Mostly all the changes to the branding for these companies were a simplified version what they had. They didn't get Artistic and fancy. Just flat and dull, but reminiscent of the old logo.

  • In other words (Score:5, Insightful)

    by I4ko ( 695382 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:46PM (#52748953)
    They are trying to polish a turd. Logos don't mean anything, this isn't sugar water. They better fix their core.
    • by Alomex ( 148003 )

      Funny that you mention sugar water, since Coca-Cola has had essentially the same logo for a hundred years, with the exception of the short lived foray into "Coke" in the 80s/

      • but coca-cola contained real cocaine (coca leaves) for its first few decades, that's how it got more than a generation to affirm to their children that "yes this is really good shit!" Logo could have been anything..

        in not entirely unrelated matter a big popular cough remedy company used to be able to sell codeine and alcohol mix over the counter with no prescription, so when I was a kid it because massively popular. I suspect we kids stayed home from school "sick" one extra day just to get more fixes of t

      • Errr no. Just because they didn't change the name of the company (except for 1985) doesn't mean their logo has remained the same.

        Coke has changed it's logo significantly 9 times in the past 100 years, and 12 times overall (for one person's definition of significant. There's over 17 variants of their logo in the last 50years based on what I could find, and that's just the corporate face. The customer facing side of the logo (the can design) has changed 10 times in past 30 years in the USA alone, let alone ch

    • I use Mozilla and was mostly happy with it until they dropped the "decide on the expiry date of cookies at runtime" option a couple of months ago. Now I use ESR and am hoping an alternative - or add-on - turns up. Experimenting with Chrome shows me where the more idiotic of the recent changes arose, at least Firefox has about:config to turn most of them off again.
      Who cares about logos? The whole discussion indicates that their priorities have gone south.

      • by Doke ( 23992 )

        I've been using Palemoon for a while now. It's a fork of Firefox from before they decided to copy Chrome's interface (but make it worse). It added a lot of the customization features back in that Firefox had been deleting. All of the about:config stuff works too. I've heard good things about Vivaldi. Slimjim looks interesting.

  • Ice cream (Score:4, Funny)

    by LichtSpektren ( 4201985 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:46PM (#52748955)
    https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp... [arstechnica.net]

    Incredibly strong urge for Baskin-Robbins right now, am I the only one?
    • That one looks like a cartoon skull.

    • My knee-jerk response to that logo was "Sad robot -- the smile doesn't reach his eyes." Not the sort of upbeat attitude I think Mozilla wants to present.

      • by CBM ( 51233 )

        Definitely this. Also, it's the logo for an elevator button.
        The colors are grating too.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:46PM (#52748961)

    How about you just build a freaking browser?

    It takes the style from the window manager, has an address bar and buttons that you deem fit. It is a stupid browers, not a design project where you can compensate you did not go to art school. Big browsing window. Small frame as the window manager offers. Thankyouverymuch.

  • What for?! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:47PM (#52748981)

    You ignored al feedback so far, why ask now, just to ignore us again?

    • by HideyoshiJP ( 1392619 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @02:03PM (#52749669)
      Whoa. Hey, this is important. They don't want to alienate the community with such a crucial decision. Your complaints about monolithic processes, hiding options in about:config, Chromification, DRM, WebRTC, and website push notifications will have to wait.
  • not important (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:48PM (#52748991)

    So many other more important things they could be doing with their product. I've been frustrated with Chrome's greed lately and would love an alternative. They have an opportunity, but instead are making logos.

    • I'm sure their C programmers could be off fixing bugs right now, except they're being forced into doing art design.

      That, or these are completely separate offices in Mozilla and whether or not they change Firefox's logo has absolutely no bearing on its technical progress.
      • If Mozilla is paying non developers to work on these awful logos, they need to redirect their spending to hire more developers.

        What made Mozilla think there was something wrong with their highly recognizable current logo?

        It's like New Coke, but worse. Some of the logos look like street grafitti. Or the result of an explosion in a neon paint factory.
        • You're assuming more developers = higher quality.

          Throwing a hundred mediocre programmers at every project is why most Microsoft products suck.
  • Less header (Score:5, Insightful)

    by roc97007 ( 608802 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:52PM (#52749043) Journal

    As far as "look", I want to see the non-content part take up less vertical space. It's fine on a 1920X1200 screen, but on smaller screens I have to rock the page up and down to use it effectively. Find a way to offer browser features without taking up space at the top of the frame.

    As far as function, I'd like the browser to not consume the entire four cores, please. When I'm doing something else (example, Lightroom) and the response is extremely sluggish, Task Manager will show Firefox consuming most of my memory and nearly pegging all CPUs, reminding me yet again that I forgot to dismiss Firefox before doing, well, pretty much anything else. It's just a browser, for chrissake. Just sitting there it shouldn't take up that much in resources.

    • by Luthair ( 847766 )
      Take a look at what sites you have open, I've found a couple that for whatever reason end up consuming a lot of resources if they're idling for a while. Otherwise I can't say I've seen any issues w/ Firefox & CPU usage.
      • Javascript (Score:5, Informative)

        by Crispy Critters ( 226798 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @01:48PM (#52749567)
        he answer seems to be Javascript. When I have NoScript blocking everything, then browser load is minimal and stays minimal indefinitely regardless of the number of tabs. Certain sites that require Javascript must periodically have their tabs killed and then reloaded to keep the CPU usage reasonable.

        Maybe what we need is Javascript sandboxing that can pause scripts in tabs without focus, limit CPU usage, autokill pages, and so on. I have no idea whether the engine is buggy or the site code is buggy or the frameworks are broken or whatever, but if it hasn't been fixed yet, then we need a drastic solution.

    • Even less vertical space? On Windows, you can configure it to take up about 1 cm (tabs and address bar visible, everything else hidden). They've already removed the status bar (so now the link/image URL popup overlaps the page instead of being displayed in an empty area), and you can hide the menu bar and the bookmarks bar. Not my cup of tea, I prefer standard windows over hide-all-functionality and hamburger menus. But it's there if you want.

      On a Mac you always have the menu bar too and they can't invade t

    • What kind of stuff do you have in your header?

      I have a row of tabs, the address/search bar, and a bookmarks bar. On Firefox, that's about eight pixels less than on Chrome, because the back button is slightly bigger, but the overall height is only 90 pixels. I'm not running any special extensions to hide things - I have a few addons that add buttons to the main bar, and I've disabled more than a few things, but even those were through easily-discovered menus. If you disable the bookmarks bar, that cuts about

      • 90 pixels is (lessee, carry the one...) ten percent of a screen that's 900 pixels tall. (Common screen resolution in laptops.) That's pretty significant.

        • Okay, so you're on a 1600x900 screen. Or maybe 1200x900, if 4:3 laptops are still around, but horizontal space doesn't seem to be a problem for either of us.

          Vertically, that's not all that much more than the 1920x1080 screens I regularly use, and I've not made any special effort to optimize vertical space on my setup.

          My current screen has vertical space allocated like so:
          46px: Firefox window border and tabs (a bit extra wasted space because I'm not in a maximized window, but rather a 960-wide half-screen wi

  • Ask? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by alzoron ( 210577 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:52PM (#52749051) Journal

    They don't need to ask the internet. The internet will let them know regardless.

    • They don't need to ask the internet. The internet will let them know regardless.

      They don't need to ask especially since they have a history of ignoring the internet's opinion.

  • by CauseBy ( 3029989 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:53PM (#52749067)

    I've been away from Slashdot for a while. Lots of haters on this story, which is normal for Slashdot, but there aren't any insightful or interesting or funny comments. Have the last few nerds left this website or am I just looking at the wrong story?

    If they went, where did the nerds go?

    • Your ID is 7 digits. Get off our lawn.

    • Mozilla have done a lot of things in the last couple years to make nerds angry. This superficial change is so bad even Mozilla's defenders will be left with nothing to say.

      • There's nothing to say because they haven't actually changed anything yet. It's just a call for feedback.

        Even if they make Firefox super ugly, I'll just use a custom theme and it won't bother me.
    • Several things happened while you were away. Invasion of unwashed Windows hordes. Dice. And then Beta.
    • by myrdos2 ( 989497 )

      Yeah, when I get mod points and look for something to mod up, I realize what a wasteland it is. Thank god that doesn't happen very often.

      Although I don't recall Slashdot ever being any better in terms of the comments that do get modded up. And usually that's all I care about.

  • Ouf (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kinwolf ( 945345 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:53PM (#52749071)
    I took a look and I can't believe companies still waste thousands of dollars on "concepts" logos like this. All but one gave me nausea so much they looked bad/dated(especially no2) and the only one that didn't isn't worth the thousands of dollars they surely paid for it, because, let's face it, we could all have come up with it (Mozi//a) Stick with your current one, none of those are better IMO
  • I miss 3.6 (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sinij ( 911942 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:55PM (#52749081)
    I miss 3.6 and Mozilla that wasn't overrun with this crap.
    • by dysmal ( 3361085 )

      +1 I miss when it wasn't trying to be a half assed Chrome clone and they had a theme + addon community.

  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @12:59PM (#52749129)
    This idea has as much relevancy as any other idea for updating Firefox I have heard recently.
  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @01:01PM (#52749153)
    Mozilla's problem is not with its logo. How much lower does the Firefox marketshare have to drop before someone at Mozilla gets a clue?
  • by G00F ( 241765 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @01:03PM (#52749173) Homepage

    Ok, there is only 1 that doesn't look atrocious, the "Moz://a". The rest look like what I would expect from what grade schoolers class assignment.

    • by Yvan256 ( 722131 )

      I agree, Moz://a is the only one that's easily recognizable. The others were done by someone who just discovered the psychedelic artwork styles of the 50's and 60's.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 22, 2016 @01:04PM (#52749179)

    In the music industry, when a band runs out of ideas, "Greatest Hits" album is released.

    In the software industry, when you run out of ideas, you just change the look of your product.

    Here is an idea for you: design your product so that it fucking stays on the content the user is looking at, rather than jumping all over the fucking place when graphics/ads load!! If more content needs to come on, simply grow it above or below the content in the window itself, without moving the displayed content.

    Work on THAT for a while. Leave the look alone.

    • by Yvan256 ( 722131 )

      The fact that content jumps all around the place is the fault of the websites, not the browser. If the HTML/CSS doesn't tell the browser how much space the non-background images will take, the browser cannot determine the dimensions in advance and has to download the images first.

      And since the dimensions are usually at the beginning of the graphic files, that's why the page rendering keeps jumping all over the place when the images start downloading one after another.

    • I have no complaints with slamming the logo changes, however there is often a different reason for a "Greatest Hits" album.

      If a band ditches one record company for another, the old record company will often throw together a "Greatest Hits" album with the stuff they have the rights to publish. This lets them squeeze a bit more money out, while simultanously sending the message that it's time to look to other bands for new hits.

  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @01:07PM (#52749213)

    Just do what they've been doing for the product: see what Google is doing for Chrome and copy that.

    More seriously, why?

    Also, I imagine they're paying someone to do this, along with paying developers to shoehorn in features (basically) no one is asking for, wants, uses and have to figure out how to disable with each new release. How about channeling that money to useful, productive product development - and some of it for Thunderbird -- instead of looking to ditch it.

    • by LichtSpektren ( 4201985 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @01:13PM (#52749267)
      Leave Thunderbird alone! It does everything I want it to and nothing I don't. I heavily use extensions whose developers haven't touched it for 5+ years, and I don't want them to break for some features I won't use.

      It's still getting security updates, just leave it at that.
  • by Morgaine ( 4316 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @01:09PM (#52749231)

    Rebranding and image polishing are undertaken only when a company knows that things aren't going too well for them. Many Firefox users would probably agree with that, at least the technical users know it all too clearly.

    However, the problems are not caused by the brand being unsavoury or the image tarnished. The brand and image are fine. Where problems have appeared it is because Mozilla developers have been forcing unwanted change on their users, forcing them continually to find remedial fixes to preserve friendly and productive old functionality. Browsers are not kettles, people don't want a completely different look each year.

    The fact that Mozilla is now undertaking brand and image refurbishment clearly indicates the nature of the problem. The immense and unbridled ego of Firefox developers has put them in complete denial that Mozilla's problems are caused by them and them alone, and that has left their management with only one alternative, to play with branding and image.

    It will achieve nothing of substance.

    • by vux984 ( 928602 )

      Rebranding and image polishing are undertaken only when a company knows that things aren't going too well for them.

      Rebranding happens all the time for lots of reason. Yours, it just one of them. One company I work with rebranded because it was growing and the original branding was looking dated. Another I know of rebranded because its portfolio of products had expanded and its current branding didn't reflect it.

      The brand and image are fine.

      Meh. All they have is the lowercase mozilla; they've already distanced themselves from the big red dino head (which still appears on wikipedia, but doesn't seem to be anywhere else at least not prominently. So su

  • Dump the Mozilla name completely. The 'normies' you're trying to target don't know what it means, let alone how to pronounce it ("Moe-zee-ya?").

    You're welcome and I will be sending my bill, which will be about a tenth of what you've thrown away on these 'Style Maker' wankers, which I bet is easily in the mid to high six-figures.

    Non-profit, indeed.
  • Thank you for the challenge to IE you once provided, and thank you for making it very clear that I need not waste my time in the future seeing if you've moved Firefox back in a positive direction. You've made it crystal clear that you will not, and probably cannot.
  • Reminds me of the eye of Sauron which is fitting for a browser that's constantly calling home.

  • Mozilla is soliciting comment and criticism on the seven new designs ... but this is no Boaty McBoatface situation. Mozilla is clear that it's not crowdsourcing a design...

    OSS has tools with names such as Gnu, Gimp, Postresql, Vuze, Ogg Vorbis, and Troff. I don't see Boaty McBoatface being any worse.

    Names that sound like alien medical conditions and bodily fluids actually seem to give OSS tools "street cred", due to being names corporations would typically reject. They are nerdily refreshing after dealing

  • That's all.

  • Clearly the answer is Harambe...
  • Two Suggestions (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 22, 2016 @01:48PM (#52749569)

    1. Stop firing people for bullshit offenses to Social Justice Warrior sensibilities.
    2. When you automatically restore multiple windows after crashes, load the freaking close button controls before anything else.

  • What they need to do (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Chas ( 5144 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @01:59PM (#52749649) Homepage Journal

    1: Put off branding until their have their actual products well defined.
    2: Stop shoving their nose so far up Google's nether-sphicter. They want their OWN products, not Google also-rans.
    3: Dump the fucking SJW culture. It's toxic and it's negatively impacting your products by making your development every bit as psychotic and MPD as it is.
    4: Hire someone who ACTUALLY knows something about branding. Whoever's fourth cousin came up with the shit you have there needs to never be allowed near anything even RESEMBLING product branding ever again...

  • Obligatory (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Oblig [viruscomix.com]

  • ...it's about Mozilla - the maker of Firefox.
    Since that is the case, who gives a rat's ass?
  • by Qbertino ( 265505 ) <moiraNO@SPAMmodparlor.com> on Monday August 22, 2016 @02:23PM (#52749817)

    Disclaimer: I've got a design diploma (with accolades).

    The letter-logo is just fine. They should just iterate their branding a little.

    Here are my quick points for the website (German layout version) [mozilla.org] alone (a new style-tile incorporating these would also be a neat base for a brand overhaul) ... The current englisch version looks boooooring [mozilla.org] btw. - it's an example of a bad iteration. Just current trendy stuff quickly ripped and remixed without a clear concept, once again half finished. ... Why don't these people just iterate an ok design to make it perfect? Why always a complete overhaul? This is non-sense.

    My list:
    - Letter Logo off to the side a bit, more breathing room (hero image/video backdrop maybe?)
    - Letter Logo bolder (is there an extrabold version of the font? They should move to that.)
    - less clutter on the screen
    - limit the palette and have it follow color theory (looks like an unfinished MS Metro rippoff - not nice)
    - one radius for rounded corners and not 5 or so that I'm seeing.
    - Justify left, better images, perhaps some hippster hero images (yes I know, we have enough of those already, but well done they *do* work ... get an expert on this)
    - 2 to 3 font sizes, not the 6 or 7 I'm seeing (bad layout design!! Together with the various radi on rounded corners the layout is a mess - a little tweaking alone would be a huge improvement)
    - Flowtext font thinner.
    - Flowtext fontsize smaller
    - Double your whitespace. No, really, double your whitespace.
    - layout backdrop coloring is so 2010 - should get a redo, limit colorset or remove it all-together and stick to base-color-palette
    - We'res the Firefox Ad or the Moz equivalent? ... Mozilla needs a presentation video of its own. Hero size, professionally done. People want Moooovieezzz! nowadays.
    - Nice to have: They should check with some world class webdesigners and see if they can remove or limit the "bootstrappiness" of the entire layout. People are bored of that. Perhaps limiting the use of Icons would already help a bit. Fontawesome and Co. make sense, but they're often overused and out of place. Like postmodern architecture with no sense or meaning... Maybe more to the polymer icons - those are hip, classic and work well with fresh minimalistic designs.

    My 2 designer cents.

    • by Ormy ( 1430821 )
      I don't have any background in design whatsoever, but I know which designs I like and which I don't and I disagree with nearly all of your suggestions.
    • >"- We'res the Firefox Ad or the Moz equivalent? ... Mozilla needs a presentation video of its own. Hero size, professionally done. People want Moooovieezzz! nowadays."

      Um, please NO. Or if you absolutely MUST, then make DAMN sure it is separate, small (with ability to optionally make it larger), and doesn't autoplay.

  • 1. No, simply no. It makes my eyes go funny.

    2. No. Cute ways to make graphics spell out a company's name is a first-year student's approach. You can do better. It looks like a QR code FFS.

    3. Interesting. But what does it have to do with browsers? Is Mozilla now making robots? Or a chat app?

    4. Cute. Will not be cute in about 18 months.

    5. No, and see point 2 as to why. It also does not render well at 32x32.

    6. Makes my eyes bleed almost as much as #1. Also will not render well at low resolutions. FF

  • by UnknownSoldier ( 67820 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @03:06PM (#52750213)

    Instead of wasting time with a crappy new logos (that no one asked for) how about fixing your products instead so they don't suck ?

    You know, based on technical merits, like you did back in the FF 2.x and 3.x days.

    /sarcasm Because I'm sure a new logo will solve all your problems.

  • the last release was 2.40 back in March 2016, have they abandoned the project? seems like an updated browser would be released once every 2 or 3 months, and that some new and updated code from Firefox would be ported to Seamonkey, i want to know what Seamonkey's status is because i dont want to keep using it if it has been abandoned,
  • by codeButcher ( 223668 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @04:55PM (#52751107)

    Why don't Mozilla change the browser's functionality rather? To be more like Pale Moon?

    Or maybe change its name to Bloatey McBloatware...

  • Moz://a (Score:4, Insightful)

    by wonkey_monkey ( 2592601 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @05:21PM (#52751333) Homepage

    The Moz://a one is the only one that's remotely clever and interesting, and yet... the protocol prefix, including the ://, was one of the things they got rid of (by default) in an earlier update.

    So, irony.

  • by christurkel ( 520220 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @05:41PM (#52751487) Homepage Journal
    Someone actually paid money for this? Was it someone's nephew? Can they get their money back?

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