Comments on: Forget Facebook. The Web's platform is Firefox
Mozilla has a huge opportunity on its hands with its Firefox browser. The key will be to shepherd its growth so that it remains a viable community offering.
Mozilla has a huge opportunity on its hands with its Firefox browser. The key will be to shepherd its growth so that it remains a viable community offering.
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Matt Asay brings a decade of in-the-trenches open-source business and legal experience to the Open Road, with an emphasis on emerging open-source business strategies and opportunities. Matt is general manager of the Americas division and vice president of business development at Alfresco, a company that develops open-source software for content management. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
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Building Facebook pluggins for a specific browser would mean a lock in to a single browser. That's the antithesis of open and no case was made as to how this could be achieved. Very weak or incomplete reasoning and the article does not support the headline.
Firefox competes (essentially) with Internet Explorer. A user can use either of these to render / view their favorite websites. Firefox is a very good standards based web browser, and IE is moving in that direction.... but in a perfect world, FaceBook should be browser independent. As such, there really is no comparison between FaceBook (an application) and Firefox (a browser).
Conceptually, an organization like this requires big thinking and what they have been able to do is nothing short of simply amazing. They have mobilized a global community that is so deeply engaged and committed that no amount of resources by Microsoft could beat them. Mozilla has taken a page from Sun Tzu's "The Art of War" and is winning with a small, albeit superior and committed group of forces. To me, that is the point of the article and companies like Facebook are communities in this vast ocean and the Firefox experience ensures that people can zip around, connect and share with ease and comfort.
Really. I live in Firefox. Gmail for mail and chat, Foxmarks to synchronise my bookmarks. I bounce between several computers in a day (Windows XP, Mac OS X, Kubuntu Linux); I live in Firefox on all of them. The operating system underneath doesn't matter any more.
- by techman21 September 4, 2008 4:37 PM PDT
- "Would I allow--indeed, beg--Firefox to collect information on these things in order to provide me more tailored advertising, social networking, etc.?"
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(10 Comments)NO NO NO NO NO!!