In-Memoriam-Mozilla.md (3663B)
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- date: 2016-05-11
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- layout: post
- title: In Memoriam - Mozilla
- tags: [firefox]
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- Today we look back to the life of Mozilla, a company that was best known for
- creating the Firefox web browser. I remember a company that made the web better
- and more open by providing a browser that was faster and more customizable than
- anyone had ever seen, and by making that browser free and open source.
- I expect many of my readers will be older than I am, but my first memories of
- Firefox are back in high school with Firefox 3. I fondly remember my discovery
- of it. Mozilla gave us a faster and more powerful web browser to use on school
- computers. The other choice was Internet Explorer 6 - but with a flash drive we
- could run a "portable" version of Firefox instead. Using tabbed web browsing was
- a clear improvement for usability and I loved installing all sorts of cool
- add-ons and I'm sure I've spent at least a few hours of my life browsing persona
- themes.
- Mozilla continued to improve their web browser, and I loved it. As I grew up and
- learned more about techology and started making my way into programming I loved
- it even more. I remember a time when I would tell my friends that I'd gladly
- appoint Mozilla as the steward of the open internet over the W3C. Firefox
- continued to evolve and allow for even more customiziability. Firefox truly
- became a [hacker](http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/H/hacker.html)'s web
- browser.
- Eventually a new player called Chrome arrived on the scene. It was slick and new
- and very, very fast. Firefox, on the other hand, appeared to become stagnant.
- I made the switch to Chrome for a few years. However, to my eventual delight,
- Mozilla didn't quit. They kept making Firefox better and faster and continued to
- win on customizability and continued to fight for the best internet possible.
- One day I tried Firefox again and I found it to be just as friendly and hackable
- as it once was, only now it was a speed demon on par with Chrome. I returned to
- Firefox for several happy years.
- Chrome adopted a versioning scheme that made Mozilla nervous. They didn't like
- being Firefox 4 next to Chrome 11. They made the first of many compromises when
- they switched to bumping the major version with each release. Mozilla died in
- April of 2011.
- In Mozilla's place, a new company appeared and started to build a new browser.
- This new company had good intentions, but has completely lost the spirit of
- Mozilla. This new browser is a stain on Mozilla's legacy - it ships with
- unremovable nonfree add-ons, removes huge swaths of the original add-on API,
- includes a cryptographically walled garden for add-ons, and apparently now
- includes an instant messaging and video conferencing platform.
- The new company has been suffering as well. They have sunk enormous time and
- effort into projects that are doomed from the start. They tried to make a mobile
- phone OS whose UI was powered by technology that's been proven to produce an
- inferior mobile experience (HTML+CSS+JS) using the slowest rendering engine on
- the market (gecko) on the lowest powered phones on the market. When this
- predictably failed, they turned their sights towards running it on even lower
- powered IoT devices. This new company has also announced several times that they
- are killing off another well established and well loved project (Thunderbird)
- from the old Mozilla. They also recently struck a deal with another dying
- company, Yahoo, to make their search engine the default for this "neo-Firefox".
- To the new company that calls itself Mozilla: you do an injustice to the memory
- of Mozilla. I hope that one day we'll see the Mozilla of the past return.