Mozilla Firefox

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Mozilla Firefox

Mozilla Firefox 1.0 features a "latest headlines" Live Bookmarks feed "out of the box"
Maintainer: Mozilla Foundation
Stable release: 1.0.7  (September 20, 2005) [+/-]
Preview release: 1.5 RC1  (November 1, 2005) [+/-]
OS: Cross-platform
Genre: Web browser
License: MPL, MPL/GPL/LGPL tri-license
Website: www.mozilla.org/products/firefox

Mozilla Firefox (originally known as "Phoenix" and briefly as "Mozilla Firebird") is a free, cross-platform, graphical web browser developed by the Mozilla Foundation and hundreds of volunteers [1]. Before its 1.0 release on November 9, 2004, Firefox had already gained acclaim from numerous media outlets, including Forbes [2] and the Wall Street Journal [3]. With over 25 million downloads in the 99 days after its release, Firefox became one of the most used free and open source applications, especially among home users [4]. On October 19, 2005, Firefox had its 100 millionth download, just 344 days after the release of version 1.0. [5]

With Firefox, the Mozilla Foundation aims to develop a lightweight, fast, intuitive, and highly extensible standalone browser forked from the Navigator component of the Mozilla Application Suite. Firefox has become the foundation's main development focus (along with its Thunderbird email client), and has replaced the Mozilla Suite as their official main software release.

Firefox includes an integrated pop-up blocker, tabbed browsing, live bookmarks, support for open standards, and an extension mechanism for adding functionality. Although other browsers have introduced these features, Firefox became the first such browser to achieve wide adoption.

Firefox has attracted attention as an alternative to other browsers such as Microsoft Internet Explorer. As of September 2005, estimates of Firefox's usage share is around 7.6% of overall browser usage (see market adoption section), Firefox has slightly reduced Internet Explorer's dominant usage share.

Contents

History

Main article: History of Mozilla Firefox
The Firefox Logo (source)
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The Firefox Logo (source)

Dave Hyatt and Blake Ross began working on the Firefox project as an experimental branch of the Mozilla project. They believed that the commercial requirements of Netscape's sponsorship and developer-driven feature creep compromised the utility of the Mozilla browser. To combat what they saw as the Mozilla Suite's software bloat, they created a pared-down browser (then known as Phoenix, today known as Firefox), with which they intended to replace the Mozilla Suite. Ben Goodger currently works as the lead developer of Firefox.

Mozilla Firefox retains the cross-platform nature of the original Mozilla browser by using the XUL user interface markup language. Through Firefox's support of XUL, users may extend their browser's capabilities by applying themes and extensions. Initially, these add-ons raised security concerns, so with the release of Firefox 0.9, the Mozilla Foundation opened Mozilla Update, a website containing themes and extensions "approved" as not harmful.

The Mozilla Foundation had intended to make the Mozilla Suite obsolete and to replace it with Firefox. On March 10, 2005, the Foundation announced that official releases of Mozilla would cease with the 1.7.x series. The Foundation continues to maintain the 1.7.x branch because of its continued use by many corporate users, and because makers of other software still often bundle the product. The Mozilla community (as opposed to the Foundation) will release the next version. These community releases will be called SeaMonkey, and will start out at version 1.0 to avoid any possible confusion for organizations or people still wanting to use the original Mozilla Suite. The Mozilla Foundation will continue giving support (such as CVS hosting) for the Mozilla community developers.

Naming

The project which became Firefox started as an experimental branch of the Mozilla Suite called m/b (or mozilla/browser). When sufficiently developed, binaries for public testing appeared in September 2002 under the name Phoenix.

The Phoenix name survived until April 14, 2003, when it changed due to trademark issues with the BIOS manufacturer, Phoenix Technologies (who produce a BIOS-based browser called Phoenix FirstWare Connect). The new name, Firebird, provoked mixed reactions, particularly since the free database software Firebird uses the same name. In late April, following an apparent name change to Firebird browser for a few hours, the Mozilla Foundation stated that the browser should always bear the name Mozilla Firebird in order to avoid confusion with the Firebird database server. However, continuing pressure from the FLOSS community forced another change, and on February 9, 2004, Mozilla Firebird became Mozilla Firefox (or Firefox for short).

The Mozilla Foundation chose the name "Firefox" for its similarity to "Firebird", but also for its uniqueness in the computing industry. To avoid any potential further name changes, the Mozilla Foundation began the process of registering Firefox as a trademark with the United States Patent and Trademark Office in December 2003 [6]. As "Firefox" already existed as a registered trademark in the United Kingdom, the Mozilla Foundation licensed the name from the trademark's owner.

Branding and visual identity

Various logos used during the development of Firefox

The adoption of a new visual identity marks one of Firefox's most visible enhancements from its previous versions. Some people have noted that free software frequently suffers from poor icon and user interface design and from a lack of a strong visual identity. Such opinion held that the early releases of Firefox sported "reasonable" visual designs, but did not regard them as of a standard equivalent to many "professionally" released software packages. The release of Firefox 0.8 in February 2004 saw the introduction of new branding efforts, including new icons. Jon Hicks designed the icon for Firefox 0.8 and up.

The logo depicts a stylized fox, since the Red Panda (which is what the term "Firefox" was originally referring to [7]) didn't "conjure up the right imagery" for Hicks [8]. The specific logo won selection because it makes an impression, while still not "shouting" with overdone artwork.

The Firefox icon functions as a trademark used to designate the official Mozilla build of the Firefox software. Although Firefox uses open source core software, free licensing does not extend to the artwork. For this reason, software distributors who distribute patched or modified versions of Firefox may not use the icon.

Release history

New options window from Firefox 1.5 ("Deer Park")
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New options window from Firefox 1.5 ("Deer Park")

Firefox has developed considerably since its first release as Phoenix on September 23, 2002. Pre-1.0 releases suffered many issues with extensions, as the code for handling them changed from version to version. Several minor releases took place in the 1.0.x branch to address some security and regression issues.

Several builds codenamed "Deer Park" were released ("Alpha 1" in May 2005, and "Alpha 2" in July), and were originally destined to become Firefox 1.1. However, Mozilla Foundation decided to change the version number of the next major release from "1.1" to "1.5", since it contained more new features than originally planned. The builds use the latest Gecko core (1.8b4) as a basis, and feature numerous bug fixes, partial support for SVG, and support for the HTML canvas element. In an attempt to dissuade end-users from downloading the preview versions, "Deer Park" versions do not use the standard Mozilla Firefox branding.

Throughout its development, Firefox versions have had internal codenames. These have a basis in real locations, with codenames such as Three Kings, Royal Oak, One Tree Hill, Mission Bay, and Greenlane all referencing suburbs in Auckland, New Zealand, and the name Whangamata coming from a small seaside town on the Coromandel Peninsula, southeast of Auckland in New Zealand. Ben Goodger, who grew up in Auckland, chose these codenames. The other codenames included in the Firefox roadmap derive from an actual roadmap of a journey through California to Phoenix, Arizona. [9]

According to Goodger, "Deer Park is not Deer Park, Victoria, but just a symbolic name. I was riding LIRR a few weeks ago and saw the name go by and I thought it sounded nice." Therefore, this name probably references Deer Park, New York, a CDP on Long Island.

Future development

The next planned release of Firefox was supposed to be version 1.1, but has been renamed to 1.5. Mozilla Firefox 1.5 Beta 1 and 2 were released on September 9, 2005 and October 6, 2005 respectively, in preparation for the first release candidate which was released on November 2, 2005; most likely putting the final 1.5 release sometime in November 2005. Firefox 1.5 will resync the code-base of the release builds (as opposed to nightly builds) with the core "trunk" which contains additional features not available in 1.0, as it branched from the trunk around the 0.9 release. As such, a backlog of bug fixes between 0.9 and the release of 1.0 will become available in 1.5. Version 1.5 will also implement a new Mac-like option interface, much criticized by some Windows and Linux users, with a "Clear Private Data" action to allow a person to clear their privacy related information without manually clicking the "Clear All" button. Users will have the option of clearing all privacy-related settings simply by exiting the browser or by using a keyboard shortcut, depending on their settings. [10] Moreover, the Software Update System will improve with binary patches becoming possible [11]. Users can also expect improvements in the Extension management system [12]. An important feature to be enabled in Firefox 1.5 is partial support of the Scalable Vector Graphics 1.1 Full Specification [13]. This move makes Firefox the second major browser to support some form of SVG natively (Opera 8.0, released on April 19, 2005 supports most of the SVG 1.1 Tiny Specification).

On June 23, 2005, Mozilla Foundation announced that Firefox 1.5 (and other new Mozilla products) will no longer support Mac OS X v10.1. This is intended to improve the quality of Firefox releases on Mac OS X v10.2 and above. Users of 10.1 may still use Firefox version 1.0.x.

According to the roadmap, future Firefox development will feature three milestones: version 1.5, version 2.0 and version 3.0. Development for these releases will take place on the Mozilla trunk, with a release coming off a branch [14].

Likely goals for Firefox include [15]:

  • New "Places" interface for Bookmark and History
  • Tabbed Browsing improvements
  • Specific options per site
  • Extension system enhancements
  • Find Toolbar, Software Update, Search enhancements
  • Accessibility compliance
  • Download resuming across browser sessions, detection of signed executables

Mozilla Firefox 1.5 and future releases of Camino will also include the Java Embedding Plugin, which allow Mac OS X users to run Java applets with the latest 1.4 and 5.0 versions of Java (the default Java software shipped by Apple is not compatible to any browser, except its own Safari).

Features

Main article: Features of Mozilla Firefox

The developers of Firefox aim to produce a browser that "just works" for most casual users. Those interested can add (as extensions and plugins) many features not packaged with Firefox.

Usability and accessibility

Screenshot of performing "Find as you type". The user typed "ency" and the browser highlighted the first matched text found with green.
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Screenshot of performing "Find as you type". The user typed "ency" and the browser highlighted the first matched text found with green.

Developers put in a large amount of work towards simplifying Firefox's user interface. As a result, the interface appears less cluttered than that of many other internet suites. The design of Firefox's option panels leaves many of the infrequently used options found in the Mozilla Suite not visible in Firefox.

Firefox supports tabbed browsing, which allows users to open multiple web pages in the same browser window. This feature originated in the Mozilla Suite, which in turn had borrowed the feature from the popular MultiZilla extension for Mozilla. Firefox also belongs in the group of browsers which early on adopted customizable pop-up blocking.

The browser has a number of features which help users find information. First, Firefox has an incremental find feature known as "find as you type". With this feature enabled, a user can simply begin typing a word while viewing a web page, and Firefox automatically searches for it and highlights the first instance found. As the user types more of the word, Firefox refines its search.

Firefox also sports a built-in search toolbar with an extensible search engine listing. By default, Firefox allows users to search Google, Yahoo!, Amazon.com, Creative Commons, Dictionary.com, and eBay. Users may download more search plugins (including one for Wikipedia) from the Mycroft project or remove any unwanted ones.

Additionally, Firefox supports the "custom keyword" feature introduced by the Mozilla Suite. This feature allows users to access their bookmarks from the location bar using keywords (and an optional query parameter). For example, using a custom keyword, a user can type "google apple" into the address bar and be redirected to the results of a Google search for "apple". Custom keywords are provided "out of the box" for Google Search, Google Stock Search, Dictionary.com, Urban Dictionary and Wikipedia. When a user enters a keyword into the address bar that is not recognized by Firefox (for example, simply typing "apple"), it automatically redirects the user to the first result yielded by a Google search for the word (or words).

Customizability

A typical XPInstall confirmation dialog
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A typical XPInstall confirmation dialog

The design of Firefox aims at high extensibility. Through extensions (installed via XPInstall modules), users may activate new features, such as mouse gestures, advertisement blocking, proxy server switching, and debugging tools. Wikipedia editors using Firefox can even download a customised toolbar. Many features formerly part of the Mozilla Suite, such as the ChatZilla IRC client and a calendar, have become Firefox extensions.

One can view the extension system as a ground for experimentation, where one can test new functionalities. Occasionally, an extension becomes part of the official product (for example tabbed browsing, a feature which proved popular through the MultiZilla extension, eventually became part of standard Mozilla).

Firefox with the popular Noia eXtreme theme
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Firefox with the popular Noia eXtreme theme

Firefox also supports a variety of themes/skins, which change its appearance. Themes consist of packages of CSS and image files. The Mozilla Update web site offers many themes for downloading. Beyond adding a new theme, users can customize Firefox's interface by moving and manipulating its various buttons, fields, and menus, and likewise by adding and deleting entire toolbars.

A Firefox installation can keep all extensions and themes available on the Mozilla Update site up-to-date through Firefox's interface, which periodically checks for updates to installed themes and extensions.

Additionally, Firefox stores many hidden preferences that users can access by typing about:config in the address bar. This mechanism enables features such as single-window mode and error pages, or speeding up page rendering by various tweaks. Experimental features like HTTP pipelining often lurk hidden in the about:config menu.

Support for software standards

The Mozilla Foundation takes pride in Firefox's compliance with existing standards, especially W3C web standards. Firefox has extensive support for most basic standards including HTML, XML, XHTML, CSS, ECMAScript (JavaScript), DOM, MathML, DTD, XSL and XPath.

Firefox also supports PNG images and variable transparency, (which Internet Explorer will not support fully until the not-yet-released version 7 [16]). Indeed, Internet Explorer's lack of support for PNG images has occasioned much debate, as many web developers want to move away from the old GIF format, which does not have the same capabilities and image quality as PNG.

Mozilla contributors constantly improve Firefox's support for existing standards. Firefox has already implemented most of CSS Level 2 and some of the not-yet-completed CSS Level 3 standard. Also, work continues on implementing standards currently missing, including SVG, APNG, and XForms. The latest development builds include SVG support by default [17], and the upcoming version 1.5 is thus scheduled to have a partial SVG 1.1 support. (See Firefox's SVG status page) Some of the Mozilla standards like XBL is also making its way to open standards (via WHATWG).

Cross-platform support

Firefox, running under the Linux operating system
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Firefox, running under the Linux operating system

Mozilla Firefox runs on a wide variety of platforms. Releases available on the primary distribution site support the following operating systems [18]:

Firefox does not officially support Windows 95, but reportedly functions properly after the application of a few tweaks [19].

Since the Mozilla Foundation makes the Firefox source code available, users can also compile and run Firefox on a variety of other architectures and operating systems. Operating systems not supported by Firefox, but known to run the browser include:

Builds for Windows XP Professional x64 Edition also exist [22].

As of September 2005, known projects exist to port Firefox to RISC OS.

Firefox uses the same format to store users' profiles (which contain their personal browser settings) even on different operating systems, so a profile may be used on multiple platforms, so long as all of the platforms can access the profile (e.g., the profile is stored on a FAT32 partition accessible from both Windows and Linux). This functionality is useful for users who dual-boot their machines. However, it may occasionally cause problems, especially with extensions.

Internationalization and localization

Contributors throughout the world have collaborated in translating the Firefox browser into many frequently used languages/locales, including some of the least often supported locales, such as Chichewa, but excluding Latvian, Malay, Arabic, Thai, Vietnamese, Hindi and Persian. Because of the use of DTD and property files for storing the string literals displayed to users, even users without a programming background can easily complete part of the internationalization and localization process, requiring only a simple text editor.

Web development tools

DOM Inspector inspecting Wikipedia's main page
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DOM Inspector inspecting Wikipedia's main page

Like the Mozilla Suite, Firefox comes with two web-development tools: a DOM Inspector and a JavaScript Console. Firefox aficionados claim that no other browser includes the DOM Inspector, and that Firefox's JavaScript Console surpasses the consoles available in other browsers. While not installed by default, the tools become available via a "custom" install.

Other features

Powered by RSS or Atom feeds, "Live Bookmarks", another feature of Firefox, allow users to dynamically monitor changes to their favorite news sources. When this feature was first introduced in version 1.0 PR, some users worried that Firefox was beginning to include non-essential features, and succumb to bloat, much like the Mozilla Suite. However, use of web feeds (RSS/Atom) have grown tremendously over the last year as blogging becomes even more wide-spread. This increase in use can be partially attributed to the Live Bookmark feature in Firefox.

Firefox also includes a customizable download manager. Users can configure the browser to either open downloaded files automatically or save them directly to the disk. By default, Firefox downloads all files to a user's desktop on Windows or to the user's home directory on Linux, but users can easily configure it to prompt for a specific download location.

Security

Some of Firefox's key security features include the use of the sandbox security model, same origin policy and external protocol whitelisting [23].

Some argue that an important characteristic of Firefox security lies in the fact that anyone can see its source code. At least one other person reviews proposed software changes, and typically yet another person carries out a "super-review". Once placed in the software, changes become visible for anyone else to consider, protest against, or improve [24].

In addition, the Mozilla Foundation operates a "bug bounty" scheme: people who report a valid critical security bug receive a US$500 cash reward (for each report) and a Mozilla T-shirt [25]. According to the Mozilla Foundation, this "bug bounty" system aims to "encourage more people to find and report security bugs in our products, so that we can make our products even more secure than they already are" [26]. It should be noted that anyone in the world can report a bug. Also, all users can have access to the source code of Mozilla Firefox, to the internal design documentation, to forum discussions, and to other materials that can help in finding bugs.

The Mozilla Foundation has implemented a policy on security bugs in order to help contributors to deal with security vulnerabilities [27]. The policy restricts access to a security-related bug report to members of the security team until after Mozilla has shipped a fix for the problem. This approach aims to minimize the exploitation of publicly known vulnerabilities and to give the developers time to issue a patch. While similar to other "responsible disclosure" policies operated by software vendors such as Microsoft, this policy falls short of the full disclosure principle favored by some security researchers.

As of October 2005, Secunia has reported 3 unpatched vulnerabilities in Firefox (with the most serious one marked "less critical"), versus 20 for Internet Explorer (with the most serious one marked "highly critical"), and 0 for Opera.

Another security source, SecurityFocus, reports 1 known vulnerability in Firefox 1.0.7 (fixed in 1.5 Beta 2), versus 59 unpatched vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer 6 on Microsoft Windows XP SP2.

No publicly-known attacks since its launch have been discovered.

Criticisms

Main article: Criticisms of Mozilla Firefox

Firefox has sometimes attracted criticism for lacking features found in some other browsers. Many users observe that the developers have not implemented frequently requested features (The developers state in response that they intend Firefox as fairly minimal browser in order to reduce "bloatware" and bugs, while retaining a high degree of extensibility.) Most of these features and many others exist as installable Firefox extensions, but not all users wish to install extensions for the features they want, preferring to have all the features they desire available within the official software package.

Some note that Firefox takes longer to launch than other browsers such as Internet Explorer or Opera. The non-platform-native XUL implementation of the user interface may cause this perceived delay. Other Gecko-based browsers such as K-Meleon which use platform-native user interface implementations generally run faster than Firefox. IE also launches faster than Firefox as it is executed on Windows startup. Another common criticism involves Firefox using much more memory than other browsers.

Users switching from Internet Explorer sometimes find that certain websites do not render as expected in Firefox. This is rarely a Firefox-specific problem but is usually the fault of the respective website which uses code that does not comply with the standards (mostly W3C ones), has code specific to Internet Explorer, or code utilizing ActiveX applets or VBScript.

Market adoption

Usage share

Statistics reference: Usage share of web browsers
Usage share of Mozilla Firefox over time
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Usage share of Mozilla Firefox over time

Web-surfers have adopted Firefox rapidly, despite the dominance of Internet Explorer in the browser market. According to several sources (as listed in statistics reference), by September 2005, Firefox had around 7.6% of global market share - 10% for North America. Europe, according to a study released by the firm XiTi on September 25, 2005, generally had higher percentages of Firefox use, with an average of 15.15%. Firefox has reached a market share of 1/3 in Finland, 1/4 in Germany, and about 1/8 in Belgium. Australia has a similarly high usage, while Asia, Africa, and Latin America trail behind with around 5%.

Download count

A graph of Firefox 1.0 cumulative downloads, created by Asa Dotzler.
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A graph of Firefox 1.0 cumulative downloads, created by Asa Dotzler.

According to Mozilla's server log, over a million downloads of Mozilla Firefox 1.0 occurred within 24 hours of its launch on November 9, 2004. Within 99 days, the download count reached 25 million [28]. By April 29, 2005 50 million downloads of version 1.0.x had taken place [29], by August 14, 2005, the mark reached 80 million [30] and by September 20, 2005, it turned to 90 million [31]. 344 days after the inital release of version 1.0, Firefox had its 100 millionth download [32]. The download count is available as an RSS feed, so that firefox download counter can be added on websites to keep track of the number of downloads in near-realtime.

Cumulative downloads increased in a near-linear fashion during the first quarter of 2005. In other words, the download rate remained fairly stable. None of the Mozilla Foundation's previous product releases experienced that kind of growth.

It should be noted that a download count is not a user count: one download can be installed over many machines; while one person can download the software multiple times.

Spread Firefox campaigns

Main article: Spread Firefox

The rapid adoption of Firefox apparently accelerated in part due to a series of aggressive community-marketing campaigns since 2004. For example, Blake Ross and Asa Dotzler organized a series of events dubbed "marketing week".

On September 14, 2004, a community-marketing portal dubbed "Spread Firefox" (SFX) debuted along with the Firefox Preview Release, creating a centralized space for the discussion of various marketing techniques. The portal enhanced the "Get Firefox" button program, giving users "referrer points" as an incentive. The site lists the top 250 referrers. From time to time, the SFX team or SFX members launch marketing events organized at the Spread Firefox website.

Organization adoption

During the FOSDEM 2005 conference, Tristan Nitot, the president of Mozilla Europe, said that he knew "a few companies" that had deployed the Firefox browser or the Thunderbird mail client across a million seats. Those companies remained reluctant to publicize the migration, due to in-house concerns that this might damage their relationship with Microsoft [33].

According to a CNET article published on May 12, 2005, about 30,000 of IBM's staff (about 10% of the total) already use Firefox. IBM encourages its employees to use Firefox as the company's standard web browser, with support from the company's help desk staff.

Starting in quarter 3 of 2005, the Networking Services and Information Technology department of the University of Chicago will include both Firefox and Thunderbird in its connectivity package for all incoming students.

Industry adoption

Since the pre-1.0 stages, a number of well-known websites and web application, including Gmail, have supported (and in some cases, required) the use of Firefox. Since March 30, 2005, the Google search engine has utilized the link prefetching feature of Firefox for faster searching. (Link prefetching involves a standards-compliant optimization technique that utilizes the browser's idle time to download or prefetch documents that the user might visit in the near future.) Google, Inc. also recommends Firefox as the browser for its Blogger weblog service. On May 18, 2005, eBay announced support for Firefox for its eBay Picture Manager.

Search engine companies including Google, Yahoo! and A9.com now also offer Firefox extensions for accessing their services, in addition to their original Internet-Explorer add-ons.

A number of commercialized versions of the Firefox browser have developed outside the not-for-profit Mozilla Foundation. The current version of Netscape, known as Netscape Browser or Netscape 8, combines the functionalities of Firefox and Internet Explorer. And a start-up, Flock (formerly Round Two, MozSourc and more formerly E-Flo), plans to build enhancements for Firefox [34].

Portable Firefox

John Haller has developed Portable Firefox as one of the major offsprings of the Firefox project. He designed it to run on USB flash drives, CD-RW drives (in packet mode), Zip drives, external hard drives or some digital audio players. It retains nearly all of Firefox's features. Extensions that work in Firefox also work with Portable Firefox. It uses compression to reduce overall footprint. As a result of this compression, Portable Firefox loads quickly from a USB device.

John Haller has started development work on Portable Firefox Live, which aims to run on CD-R or other read-only media.

Opinions and responses

Despite Firefox's apparent gains on Internet Explorer, Microsoft head of Australian operations, Steve Vamos, stated that he did not see Firefox as a threat and that there was not significant demand for the featureset of Firefox amongst Microsoft's users. Vamos stated that he himself never used it personally [35]. Even Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates has used Firefox, but he has commented that "so much software gets downloaded all the time, but do people actually use it?" (Weber, BBC News).

According to a Microsoft SEC Filing on June 30, 2005, it acknowledged that browsers such as Mozilla are competitive threats to Internet Explorer: "Competitors such as Mozilla offer software that competes with the Internet Explorer Web browsing capabilities of our Windows operating system products." (MozillaZine)

Footnotes

  1. ^  Mozilla contributors list, Mozilla.org
  2. ^  Forbes, September 29, 2004.
  3. ^  Wall Street Journal, September 16, 2004. Walter Mossberg wrote : "I suggest dumping Microsoft's Internet Explorer Web browser, which has a history of security breaches. I recommend instead Mozilla Firefox, which is free at www.mozilla.org. It's not only more secure but also more modern and advanced, with tabbed browsing, which allows multiple pages to be open on one screen, and a better pop-up ad blocker than the belated one Microsoft recently added to IE."
  4. ^  Stross, New York Times. December 19, 2004. The article states that "With Firefox, open-source software moves from back-office obscurity to your home, and to your parents', too. (Your children in college are already using it.)"
  5. ^  Mozilla Firefox Download Counts
  6. ^  Firefox trademark, USPTO
  7. ^  Mozilla Firefox - Brand Name Frequently Asked Questions. Mozilla.org
  8. ^  branding firefox. John Hicks' weblog
  9. ^  Mozilla Firefox Roadmap (see also: Mozilla Firefox 1.0 Roadmap)
  10. ^  From Ben Goodger's weblog:
  11. ^  Ben Goodger discusses the Firefox update system (May 2, 2005).
  12. ^  Changes for Extension Developers (May 2, 2005). Ben Goodger's weblog.
  13. ^  Firefox nightlies now build with SVG (April 26, 2005). Source: Anne van Kesteren's weblog about Markup & Style. SVG Enabled by default (May, 2005).
  14. ^  1.8 alpha 6 around the corner (December 26, 2004). Source: Asa Dotzler's weblog.
  15. ^  Mozilla Wiki. Firefox:2.0 PRD. A document that describes the product requirements for Firefox 2, and also anticipates an interim milestone marker for Firefox 1.5.
  16. ^  IE7 beta 1 – A few details... (April 22, 2005). Source: Internet Explorer weblog. In the blog entry, Chris Wilson said that Microsoft would soon "[s]upport the alpha channel in PNG images [in Internet Explorer 7]. We’ve actually had this on our radar for a long time, and have had it supported in the code for a while now. We have certainly heard the clear feedback from the web design community that per-pixel alpha is a really important feature."
  17. ^  nightlies now build with SVG enabled by default (May , 2005). Source: Mozilla SVG Project page.
  18. ^  Firefox System Requirements. Mozilla.org.
  19. ^  Run Firefox in Windows 95 (and Windows 98 original release). Source: John Haller's website. Details a procedure to install Firefox on Windows 95 and the original release of Windows 98.
  20. ^  Firefox release notes for the 1.x series. Mozilla.org.
  21. ^  FreshPort entry on Firefox. freshports.org.
  22. ^  Mozilla for the Windows x64 platform.
  23. ^  External Protocol Whitelisting. Neil Turner's weblog.
  24. ^  Hacking Mozilla. Mozilla.org.
  25. ^  Mozilla Security Bug Bounty Program. Mozilla.org.
  26. ^  Mozilla Security Bug Bounty FAQ. Mozilla.org.
  27. ^  Handling Mozilla Security Bugs. Mozilla.org.
  28. ^  firefox 25,000,000. Source: Asa Dotzler's weblog.
  29. ^  Firefox: Blazing a Trail to 50,000,000. Spread Firefox.
  30. ^  firefox 80,000,000. Source: Asa Dotzler's weblog.
  31. ^  90,000,000 firefox downloads. Source: Asa Dotzler's weblog.
  32. ^  firefox hits one hundred million downloads. Source: Asa Dotzler's weblog.
  33. ^  Firefox sneaks into the enterprise. ZDNet UK.
  34. ^  Round Two looks to launch enhanced Firefox. MozillaNews.
  35. ^  Microsoft: Firefox does not threaten IE's market share. ZDNet.

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References

See also

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