• On CBSSports.com: Mike Tyson's daughter dies in accident

November 19, 2004 4:00 PM PST

This week in browser news

  • 2 comments
Related Stories

Week in review: The love of the game

November 12, 2004

Week in Review: Election takes center stage

November 5, 2004

Week in review: iPod rocks on

October 29, 2004
Firefox may be free and open source, but that isn't preventing developers from cashing in on the popularity of the Mozilla Foundation's new browser.

New businesses are cropping up to provide organizations ranging from museums to software companies to the U.S. Department of Defense with Mozilla-based applications--for a fee.

"With the popularity of Firefox and the economy rebounding, we've been swamped. We don't even advertise--clients find us and provide us with work," said Pete Collins, who last year founded the Mozdev Group in anticipation of demand for private Mozilla development work.


Pete Collins
founder,
Mozdev Group

The Mozdev Group is still a small shop--seven employees scattered around the globe, including two new hires. In response to demand, Collins intends to hire two more workers in January. In addition, hourly rates--which range between $75 and $100 per hour depending on volume--are going up.

Meanwhile, Microsoft, under pressure to add new features to IE, said it might do so by way of the browser's add-on mechanism.

The company has been steadfast in its insistence that it won't issue a new stand-alone IE, which saw its last major upgrade in August 2001. After sustaining a series of security crises with IE, Microsoft issued a major upgrade with the Windows XP Service Pack 2. But that IE update is available only to people who use Windows XP--about half the Windows world.

Microsoft has insisted that all hands are too busy working on the much-delayed operating system under development--called Longhorn--to revisit the browser. But now the company says that through the browser's add-on capability, it might add IE features that customers deem a "super high priority."

See more CNET content tagged:
popularity, Mozilla Corp., Web browser, Microsoft Internet Explorer, Firefox

Add a Comment (Log in or register)
uh?
by November 20, 2004 1:35 AM PST
and this is supposed to be information? that's only a shortened revamping of previous Paul Festa's articles. There was already nothing interesting in those articles so why a summary...
Reply to this comment
Another non-story story
by November 22, 2004 1:10 PM PST
Forget firefox, just use http://breasy.com
Reply to this comment
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Dow Jones Industrials (0.00%) 0.00 8,280.74
S&P 500 (-2.91%) -26.91 896.42
NASDAQ (-2.67%) -49.20 1,796.52
CNET TECH (11.32%) 149.69 1,472.57
  Symbol Lookup
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right