JWZ isn't the only one 135
preed-man
writes "I don't know what's up in
Mountain View, but
it's not good: AOL has
laid off about 430 Netscape employees; in addition to this, a "key Mozilla.org figure" has resigned as well. It's a somber time in
Mountain View. " CT : Sorry about the lag in
story postings. Reformatted and reinstalled, but I now have
a nice shiny new Debian box.
Oportunity... (Score:1)
Let's face something here. Linux doesn't have a GREAT browser, I don't know if any OS does, but I really think Linux should. Everything else is great. I prefer Netscape on my system to Opera or Arena, but Netscape is still slow, a hog, and not as stable as it could be.
They forgot to release early and release often! (Score:1)
1. "release early and release often!"
They are bound by the unholy cathedral
JWZ et al still don't *get it.* (Score:2)
if you had any clue as to who jwz was then you would realize the stupidity of your statement. no where did he say that because he was leaving mozilla that he couldnt work on it, what he did was was the he was disillusioned with the project and was leaving it to other ppl to manage. due to his experience and knowledge of the project i would imagine that he will still contribute to it from time to time but he wont be devoting his life to it.
Of course on the other hand, do ANY of the devs working on this get it?
do you get it? it certainly dosent sound like it, or are you just trolling?
This is a very serious problem for Linux (Score:2)
Mozilla Does ... (Score:3)
2) They should dump their code to their FTP site more than once every two months; the last was 1-28-99 and it's like April already.
3) They should establish a usenet news group. (if they have, then promote it but I don't see "mozilla" on dejanews "Browse Group" 4) There needs to be a code overview/tutorial for morons like me that might possibly want to help.iCab's a good start... (Score:1)
This is a very serious problem for Linux (Score:1)
Newsgroups (Score:1)
You can still participate in discussion by pointing your favorite news reader to news.mozilla.org
Oportunity... (Score:1)
"force" ?? I seriously doubt if resignations such as these are of any help to keep the motivation of that community to help FS projects like Mozilla as high as it could be.. I don't want to blame the people resigning BTW.
re: This is a very serious problem for Linux (Score:1)
Right here [netscape.com]
I want to die peacefully in my sleep as my grandfather did...
One Year Anniversary summary (Score:1)
Spend the time to read this, and then come back and post thoughtfully.
I want to die peacefully in my sleep as my grandfather did...
RE:JWZ et al still don't *get it.* (Score:1)
They turned off a lot of potential developers
with the NPL, for one thing.
Did you even read jwz's statements on the matter?
Do you know his background?
I didn't think so.
brain drain (Score:1)
But then again, they do buy a lot of machines from My Favorite Comupter Maker.
----
brain drain (Score:1)
Let me clarify: in my experience, there always seem to be one or two people who really drive a successful development effort. While others put in a ton of work, these are the folks who you can single out and say "this wouldn't have worked without these guys". Think Romero and Carmack at id back in the olden days, Seymour Cray at Cray Research or (and you just knew I'd go there) Linus with the Linux kernel.
These are the folks who seem to be leaving Netscape/AOL now. You can call them prima donnas or credit hogs or whatever, but the fact is that all really legendary development teams have them, and they always seem to fall apart when they lose them. In that manner, 2 of 2000 can be really important.
PS: Don't call me a lemming. We prefer "sudden decelleration syndrome addicts".
----
Why do you credit Netscape for the web? (Score:2)
It also began to display a page before all the images were loaded...
IIRC, Netscape was the first decent web browser for Windows, too..
I still get a kick out of seeing the 'Throbbing N' in some movies of the time..
Nothing is required that isn't *REQUIRED* (Score:1)
You forgot to look at their site (Score:1)
What people don't realise is that there is nothing wrong with Mozilla [mozilla.org] as it is; it is simply not finished, that's all.
This is a very serious problem for Linux (Score:1)
What people fail to realise... (Score:1)
In any case, this had little to no effect on Mozilla itself. Coders are still working as hard on it as they were a year ago.
Nothing is required that isn't *REQUIRED* (Score:1)
Egcs supports the standard of C++, and gcc doesn't. This is a no-brainer, really.
Lynx, here we come? (Score:3)
Perhaps it would be good (at this point) to not worry about integrating the mail and news clients into the initial release of Mozilla. Focusing on the browser is key. Something just needs to get out to the world that shows that something has been done. I don't mean developer test versions (such as M3) either. Those releases do show a lot, but only to a small crowd.
Besides, it would be nice to componentize the release of Mozilla -- a "Browser Package" could contain just the browser, while a "Communication Package" could include News/Mail/etc.. Not only would it keep download times smaller for slow modem owners, it would allow the Mozilla team to get away with skipping the Communication Package for now.
Maybe I'm just too anxious to see the first major release of Mozilla.
My Favorite Comupter Maker (Score:1)
Since their servers are mostly O2Ks last time I checked.
Bad sign or oportunity? (Score:3)
I think this is a bad sign for Netscape/Mozilla. With Jamie Zawinskileaving [jwz.org] and the recent layoffs at both Netscape and AOL, I'm beginning to worry about the future of the Mozilla project.
At the same time I think they can rid themselves of all doubt simply by releasing a product as small as iCab [earthlink.net], has many more innovative features, and runs faster. There are two things lacking in iCab. First, it crashes on my computer. I expect this to be fixed soon. Second, it is slow in rendering images. I think Netscape/Mozilla can out do this easily, which would restore faith in the project, and enhance Mozilla's standing in the browser wars.
Good luck guys.
-Ben
brain drain (Score:1)
RE:JWZ et al still don't *get it.* (Score:1)
Nothing is required that isn't *REQUIRED* (Score:1)
Lynx, here we come? (Score:1)
into the initial release of Mozilla.
Or, better yet, not integrate them at all?
Daniel
What about Mnemonic? (Score:1)
I doubt this will be the "death of Mozilla", but it's good to know that there are other projects out there.
Daniel
I must be missing something... (Score:1)
First, parsing HTML is trivial but displaying it is at best difficult for anything more complicated than Lynx. Even for Lynx it's probably not easy (although I haven't looked at how they do it) Formatting is generally a tricky business.
Second, there are a bunch of non-HTML things which I can imagine would seriously complicate the situation, such as plugin architecture, JVMs, Javascript, and other such things.
Of course, it is (as usual) possible that I'm completely wrong about all of this.
Daniel
This is a very serious problem for Linux (Score:1)
The situation isn't "Mozilla or bust".
Daniel
Parser non-trivial (in practice) (Score:1)
Trivial might be going a little far though, I admit.
And of course in my world ill-formed HTML would be spit out by browsers anyway. Too bad I don't live in my world.
Daniel
Lynx, here we come? (Score:1)
Well, since Netscape already supports RDF, XUL, an JavaScript, which are used throughout the browser for the UI, the only real things necessary for mail/news support that aren't there are POP3/IMAP/SMTP/NNTP support and the Address Book/Mail DBs, at the moment, the only real sticking point is the DB, as one is being written from scratch for it (AFAIK). So, to create a mail/news reader, all one needs is a few HTML-style files, a bunch of GIFs, a few JavaScripts, and the networking and database backend. That's a grand total of somewhere under 1MB for Mail/News. Tacking this onto a 2.5MB browser isn't really that big a deal -- although I am sure that someone will write the prefs code so selecting another mail/newsreader is a simple task.
We're not talking about a 10MB mailreader for this, you know.
Jim Cape
http://www.jcinteractive.com [jcinteractive.com]
Mozilla Woes ... (Score:1)
Someone else has already pointed out most of your mistakes. I'll add one more. Having the code available as tarballs via ftp doesn't do much good. The code changes too often, and then you get people complaining about old bugs, which adds more noise to the newsgroups. Besides, if you are interested in working on Mozilla, then updating using cvs saves you time too.
Lynx, here we come? (Score:1)
I'm running the Nav-only version of 4.5 on Linux right now and it's frustrating not being able to click on mail-to and nntp links. But I agree that the browser is most important. Maybe a better solution would be hooks for using your own mail and news clients (e.g. slrn and Mutt).
If that was implemented then you could divert work on the Mozilla Editor to the browser too. As I understand it, the Editor is needed right now to provide editing capabilities for News and Mail.
Alpha user (Score:1)
| a remote shell netscape from my p120(yes,
| i have a box dedicated to running netscape).
Seems a little extreme, but I suppose it's doable. It also solves the problem of other things like Realvideo and shockwave not being available for anything but Intel Linux either.
|I have tried mozilla, hotjava, and kfm on my
|alpha but they all suck royally. Don't even ask
|about em86.
Mozilla (old 102898 release) is at least somewhat usable. It's what I use on my Alphastation. Hotjava never worked properly on my Alpha - it would render the page you opened correctly, but if you tried to click a link it would render the new page behind the old one - which was still visible. This quickly got old.
Kfm is
I really wish Mozilla
Alpha user (Score:1)
| available. It shouldn't be hard to get it to
| work with Linux for Alpha
I actually tried this.
What people fail to realise... (Score:1)
--Dan
The meaning of "release" (Score:1)
No, they haven't. I refer you to ftp.mozilla.org, on which you may find daily builds of Mozilla for many platforms, as well as a daily sourcedump.
Ah ah -- there's a nuance you're missing there. The key word is release. That means a working, useful build of the product. Daily source dumps do not constitute a release. I've downloaded sources on three separate occasions, including the "official" 12/03 "release," and in all cases I couldn't even get the thing to build, and not for lack of trying either.
M3 is close (I was actually shocked when it compiled succesfully, although I still can't get it actually working) but it's taken a year to get this far!
Can someone in the know tell me why a minimal working browser was not released quickly, and features added in gradually, without breaking the source base for extended periods of time? Is it because, as JWZ noted, the actual released source was such a crawling horror?
I'd like to know. . SNF .
Steve 'Nephtes' Freeland | Okay, so maybe I'm a tiny itty
OK but IE has more cruft than mozilla (Score:1)
IE still has more cruft. This will start to show later on, and IE might turn out to be another unmanageable micros~1 product. It's not bigger than 4.0, but it's sure close.
I admit it's sure hard to defend netscape these days.
tired of this nonsense (Score:1)
I must be missing something... (Score:2)
So here goes: Is a browser really such a complicated piece of software? It just seems to me that compared to the kernel, XFree, Gnome or KDE, a browser would not be such a monumental project. I suppose that once you add in the news and mail, it's going to make things more complicated. But as someone pointed out earlier, why not modularize those things?
Again, I'm looking for education here, not flames. Why is it so hard to get a good browser for linux?
/pub/communicator/4.51/engenglish/unix/unsupported (Score:1)
ftp://ftp1 3.netscape.com/pub/communicator/4.51/english/unix/ unsupported/ [netscape.com]
Funny how it only took me about three seconds to find it...
Parser non-trivial (in practice) (Score:1)
It's not a big deal. (Score:1)
Now, the loss of two people important to Mozilla is a blow. On the other hand, Mozilla is far healthier now than it was nine months ago, when it had three months of futile pounding on the old codebase while Netscape programmers were busy working on 4.5.
I mean, Mozilla is now to the point where bug hunting by non-coders is useful enough to recruit them. And when it eventually ships, even if it takes six months, it will take off.
Netscape **STINKS**!! - config? (Score:1)
Maybe it's Linux that's not stable, hmm?
Debian disadvantages (Score:1)
iCab's a good start... (Score:1)
JMZ article really confirmed my beliefs... (Score:1)
This is the final nail in Netscape's cofin... I actually like Crashscape... kfm as a daily brower?
iCab's a good start... (Score:1)
Just the same, iCab has some interesting things going for it - cookie management, ad filtering, a "checkable" hotlist, etc. etc. These innovative features, along with a lean code base, may get them a loyal following. There are, however, a few things I'd like to see improved:
1. Most ad filtering only prevents the ad from being drawn - because the HTML is still there, the space is still allocated, so your stuck with something almost as bad as looking at the ads themselves - blank space. I'd like to see an option to REMOVE the HREFs that point to ads, rather than just keep them from drawing.
2. The personal toolbar (even in Netscape) is a nice touch - but it'd be nice if it would expand to multiple lines if a user wants to include more than one line's worth of URLs. Folders shouldn't be excluded either- the folder name should appear and behave like a hierarchical menu.
Maybe both M$ and Netscape should pay attention here. Sometimes the biggest isn't always the best.
Mozilla not functional - is he KIDDING? (Score:2)
it seems.. I don't normally use Microsoft OS'es,
except that I have a job where I need to use
NT (on a laptop) every once in a while..
So while I was in NT, I decided to look at the
windows mozilla build...
WOW!
It renders much faster then IE 4, it LOOKS very
good, and it is VERY functional. If I could get
bookmarks implimented, I would use this as my
ONLY browser within windows.
I've tried to get the new mozilla to work in Linux
for a while now...just to be frustrated with an
immediate segmentation fault, or other immediate
crash, and I got apprunner to work once or twice,
but it always looked like hell. Suffice to say,
there are serious differences in parity..but
my last cvs update was march 4th. Impressed with
this latest mozilla binary, I'm compiling the linux
m3 version on my desktop..hoping it is somewhat
as good in terms of quality..
It's very obvious that the back-end components are
very high quality and finished...all we need are
more linux people to help them get a usable
front-end.
But mozilla is NOT a project in trouble. It is
VERY usable right now on the windows side, and
hopefully on the Linux side as well (watching
the compile continue as I type).
It just seems that everyone is extremely impatient.
Remember, the beta date is not until JULY 20th!
It's not broken or defective..just not finished.
Standards, was: definetely in agreement (Score:1)
If nobody follows the standards, they aren't really "standards" are they. I guess you could call them "W3C Feature Proposals".
--
Netscape butchered itself (Score:1)
Can't blame this one on AOL. By the time Navigator/Communicator and IE were both released as version 4 products, Netscape had lost the huge technical advantage that it originally held over the IE team. Now more people use IE than use Netscape, and the lead is only going to widen as long as Netscape/Mozilla delays in coming out with their version 5, which is almost certain to be too late to turn the tide. Also, you certainly can't blame AOL for all the carping that people have done about the state of the source code that Netscape originally released for Mozilla.org.
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
C'mon, Grail? (Score:1)
It doesn't even fully support HTML 3.2, much less 4.0, and it seems like it has a tendency to munge tables. which is not a good thing. Another big downside is that CNRI has announced that they're dropping the project.
I like Python and all, and I think Grail was an interesting work, but it's definitely not a realistic replacement for Netscape/IE.
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
This is a very serious problem for Linux (Score:1)
The guys who left netscape should get together and use the mozilla source to develop a kick-ass alternative to netscape and IE.
Linux Does Need a good Browser!!! (Score:1)
I hope people do get behind Mozilla or start a new browser project for Linux. Is it legal to take raptor an run with that?
Making mountains out of molehills. (Score:1)
(It seems to me that have a good, modern, browser is very important to the success of Linux and I hope that this will motivate people to chip in to the project.)
On the other hand, the news in this latest article isn't nearly as significant and I think the author should be given 50 lashes for trying to play up this new information.
JWZ was an early employee of the company. This other "key" developer sounds like a johny-come-lately, perhaps the sort of fair weather friend that JWZ seems to deplore.
JWZ, in addition to whatever he did in the early days, made (by his own assesment, at least) a real effort at making the open source Mozilla fly free. This other guy lead the development of a privacy invasion feature. The sort of tail-fin feature that netscape wasted their effort on when they should have been cleaning up the core of their browser and building in standards support.
As for the other layoffs, big woop. A sad symbol and no doubt stressful to those involved, but they don't sound like they are core to the developent of any products.
Enough molehills and the mountain is but a shadow. (Score:1)
People are going to be feeling very insecure for the next while, revising their resumes and following up head-hunter calls, just in case...
AOL's not going to be able to stop the bleeding that quickly; it's great time for a career change in this business.
JWZ's second-last paragraph, first sentence, just about sums it up: "I must say, though, that it feels good to be resigning from AOL instead of resigning from Netscape."
Forget JWZ, Look at XUL (Score:1)
No, Not on the Windows Platform. (Score:1)
They finally addressed lack of the ability to [TAB] between URLs on the page, which was a big shortcoming that had me switching to MSIE for a couple of years.
OK, so on my Linux side it takes a freakin' whole minute to launch Netscape (as opposed to one second on the Windows side). That's a serious problem but I think it is not a failure on the part of the product in general, just simply that they haven't taken time to optimize it for Linux.
brain drain (Score:1)
Netscape. When netscape was alone, it had a single
goal of product development and they would have
somehow managed to get Mozilla released. Now everything is with the new bosses...
Was it a M$ conspiray...?
This is a very serious problem for Linux (Score:1)
Freshmeat Rendering (Score:1)
Yes. It's documented in the Freshmeat FAQ [freshmeat.net].
Get the glibc version of Netscape. Worked for me.
Alpha user (Score:1)
Before I got the libraries I used a P166 as a Netscape "server." Worked, albeit not as fast as my 633MHz Alpha.
Standards, was: definetely in agreement (Score:1)
Fucking hell, IE is even more STANDARDS compliant than NS!
More standards compliant? Huh?
I'd say there is no such thing as being "more standards compliant". Either you are standards compliant or you are not. Make no compromises here.
And currently none of the browsers available are standards compliant.
The web of today is in really sorry state. I had hoped that Mozilla would bring us some hope, but now that hope seems quite vain...
--
brain drain (Score:1)
One of the key developers on the project just left though.....
Netscape missed its shot at greatness? (Score:1)
Netscape did actually create a revolution. The web is largely a result of their ideas back in 1992-1995.
Unfortunately, since then they have done nothing innovative. It seems like they created the web, was pleased and spent the rest of their years parching Navigator.
What they should have done was to keep supporting and extending Navigator, but focus on the design of WWW2.
This is a very serious problem for Linux (Score:1)
The main reason is that the prize for joining is too high. First of all, you need nearly 1 GB of free disk space and waste amounts of time to compile this thing. Second, the development process is too complicated. You just don't use five minutes to fix a small bug in a system with 100 full time developers. When you submit it, they have probably rewritten the entire module. Of course you could try to keep track of what all of them are doing, but that requires too much time.
In emacs I can just find a bug in CC-mode, fix it and submit the fix right away (except for the fact that I can't find a bug in CC-mode (except java-mode, which is crappy)). I don't have to recompile anything. In mozilla, I find a bug, I try to fix it, but I can't figure out where it is, or what will happen if I fix it, or what other things I will break.
The correct approach would be a more kernel oriented design,
And BTW, Javascript is a crappy, and not general enough, extension language.
This is a very serious problem for Linux (Score:1)
When I tested it, it was with the original source on Solaris. I used some of the university's Ultra1 boxes (~200 mhz, 128MB RAM), and spread the source across 1 local and 3 NFS mounted disks (using symlinks).
The compilation took 1+ hour, nearly 1 GB of disk space, and the resulting executable size was ~100MB.
Easy to find Mozilla newsgroups in Dejanews ! (Score:1)
http://www.dejanews.com/[ST_rn=ps]/query_profil
Netscape **STINKS**!! (Score:1)
beta should soon be available. It uses GTK
libraries. All the development is done on
Linux but apparently it already compiles on
some other Unix-based platforms.
This is a very serious problem for Linux (Score:1)
can I have some of what you're smoking? (Score:1)
No, Not on the Windows Platform. (Score:1)
Netscape missed its shot at greatness? (Score:1)
On the other hand, there are challenges ahead. But that doesn't diminish Netscape's past accomplishments.