Mozilla's First Birthday 32
The Prognosticator writes "Here's a Wired article about Netscape's Mozilla project at it's first birthday today, 1.Apr.1999. It covers where Mozilla's been and where it's going in a short interview with a Mozilla PR guy and a Communicator Project Manager.
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Off topic: Nothing! (Score:1)
Anyone else notice there is nothing on everything today?
Real news? (Score:1)
It's all one big AFJ.
Another article (Score:1)
http://cgi.pathfi nder.com/time/digital/daily/0,2822,22429,00.html [pathfinder.com]
Another article (Score:1)
Why not?
So... (Score:1)
Yeah Right! APRIL FOOLS!!! (Score:1)
-Eric
Re: (Score:1)
And there's always the party tonight (Score:1)
Finally! Real NEWS! (Score:1)
No april fools!
Hoorrraaayyy!!!
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THE GREAT "GAS OUT" (Score:1)
If that's the 1st birthday, where is the child??? (Score:1)
Oh, Come ON, Guys! (Score:1)
how big was Mosaic?---why would the HTML part need to be big?
Real news? (Score:1)
--FroBugg
Momentum (Score:2)
Lots of independent developers are contributing: if not coding, then by bugfixing. Adam Lock, for example, has created the ActiveX Mozilla control. pavlov@pavlov.net (Sorry, not sure of his real name ;) has also helped a lot with the gtk conversion. And there are plenty of people submitting bugreports, be it with crashes or misrenderings or unsupported stuff; check out bugzilla [mozilla.org] to see proof.
A real reply (Score:2)
Open source really made a breakthrough with Mozilla. For one point he makes is very true, and only parenthetically referred to: Gecko's engine is only 1.6 Meg. Wow! Forget bloatware, this engine is powerful. If you don't believe me, go to the site and download a nightly build.
It does things that even impress me, in an incredibly small, fast package.
But despite the obvious shuckstering, I'm getting to the point. We are seeing an upcoming big release that turns its back on the Microsoft worldview and say, "We don't need everything in this engine... Let's slim down and get some great features."
And yes, it's taken awhile to get out. But they're trying to make this as *gasp* bug free as possible.
Hooray for Mozilla, and may more developers emulate them.
"Responsibility for my career? I'm just a freakin' phone monkey!"