Firefox advocates' call for donations to pay for an advertisement in The New York Times has more than reached its target, only three days into the campaign.
The campaign, run by Spread Firefox volunteers, started Tuesday to raise money to place a full-page ad for the launch of the open-source browser in The New York Times. The goal was to get 2,500 people to donate $30 or more to the marketing fund within 10 days, or before the official release of Firefox 1.0 on Nov. 9.
Bart Decrem, spokesman for the Mozilla Foundation, said on Friday that the Spread Firefox organization has already raised more than $100,000--enough for a couple of ads in The New York Times. The Mozilla Foundation, which developed the Firefox browser, is endorsing the volunteer campaign.
"We've definitely funded the ad and then some," Decrem said. "It's so impressive--the excitement around this and the numbers. People are coming out of nowhere to join in."
Supporters will get their name in an ad, with Community Champion status being awarded to anyone who signs up 10 or more extra names.
Any money left over from the ads will be used to fund other Mozilla projects, according to the Spread Firefox Web site.
wow it's so nice to hear some good news of people working together. and the fact that someone is standing up to microsoft is just terrific. good job everybody!
Prominent corporate governance organization says Facebook's dual-class stock structure gives CEO Mark Zuckerberg too much control over the company's future.
Google creates an animated doodle that features a boy, a girl, Google's search engine, and a jump rope. But might there be darker, more analytical, more troubling interpretations to this tale?
When the sun goes down, that's when the iPad gets busy for folks with news readers. The iPhone? It's more of a daytime habit. If you're building an app for both devices, heed the lesson.
Is the public ready for Samsung's new Galaxy Note device, which melds tablet and phone into one unique mobile device? We hit New York streets and received some surprising results.
EnerG2 opens a plant to make an engineered carbon that will improve performance of energy storage devices and make storage for start-stop hybrid cars less expensive.