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Firebird Name Debate Enters a New Stage

An anonymous reader writes "As many readers will know, mozilla.org was asked to change the name for their standalone browser, Phoenix as another browser had the same name. After months of discussion, the new name was announced as Mozilla Firebird. Despite the new name being approved by AOL Legal, supporters of the FirebirdSQL database were quick to object (though the name is also used by many other people). A coincidentally named supporter of FirebirdSQL, IBPhoenix, put up a slightly immature request for their readers to participate in mass posting campaign targetting mozilla.org developers' email accounts, newsgroups and even forums at independent sites such as MozillaZine and Slashdot. FirebirdSQL's official site later reiterated this message. However, IBPhoenix have now declared this shock-and-awe stage of their campaign over, heralding it a success. Their second stage calls for a more focussed email protest at just two of mozilla.org's members: Mitchell Baker (mozilla.org's leader) and Asa Dotzler (announcer of the name change). In addition, they ask their readers to move away from 'derogatory messages' and to show more 'courtesy'. Unsurprisingly, the beleaguered admins of affected sites such as MozillaZine have welcomed this change of direction. This is getting very interesting!"

683 comments

  1. beleagured admins? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    I guess Mozilla was found dead this morning :-)

  2. Firebird... by kmweber · · Score: 0

    ...was Stravinsky's best work ever.

    --
    "Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play?"
  3. The new name by chrispl · · Score: 1

    Personally I don't like the new name at all. The whole Firebird/Thunderbird reminds me too much of a muscle cars. Come on they could have come up with something better than that.

    This is just a big mess isn't it?

    --
    What post? The one you're carrying inside your rusty innards!
    1. Re:The new name by lvdrproject · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I agree. It's just so much water under the bridge now, so there's no point trying to get people to agree with me or anything, but i absolutely hate the new names that've been chosen for the various Mozilla-based browsers. "Chimera", i think, was an excellent name for a browser, and "Camino" or whatever it is now, is retarded. And "Firebird"? How generic can you get? That name has been used for EVERYTHING.

      Anyway, if everybody is going to be as childish and immature as these FirebirdSQL jack-asses are, they should probably just change the names of all of their browsers to some random number, or a code, or something. Maybe then people won't kick and stomp about it.

      "5047bc596a4bab2dc7f7c120bb22dec5" has a nice ring to it, don't you think?

    2. Re:The new name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What makes this *really* interesting is that Ford decided to get pissy at AMD over 'Mustang.'

      However, it's less interesting when Google reminds you that 'Firebird' was a Pontiac.

    3. Re:The new name by D+iz+a+n+k+Meister · · Score: 4, Funny

      What about Stingray?

      IMHExperience, everything named Stingray was cool, and Phoenix was definitely worthy of such a name. Firebird is a pretty weak allusion to Phoenix.

      --

      He painted a unicorn in outer space. I'm askin' ya, what's it breathin'?
    4. Re:The new name by theedge318 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I would encourage people to send rational requests to the people at IBPhoenix. (aharrison@ibphoenix.com) However I will admit that Trademarks are usually applied to an industry, and thus since both are in the computer industry, their is a debatable question. McDonald's can't complain about Jim McDonald's auto repair, but they can sue Bob McDonald's cookie stand.
      Below is the email I sent, outlining three points:
      1. They never objected to Mozilla's use of the Phoenix name
      2. They have failed to properly defend their copyrights/trademarks because they fail to properly demarkate any instances of Phoenix or Firebird on their website as being copyrighted or trademarked
      3. Pointing out the obvious fact: Pontiac had the name Firebird name first, and they have real legal clout to defend the trademark, but as the industries are different they know not to even bother
      Your requests to Mozilla that they manhandled they name change of their
      browser, from Phoenix to Firebird is totally uncalled for and
      inappropriate.

      1. As far as I have been made aware, you had never objected to the use of
      the Phoenix name for the browser, yet now they change to Firebird you
      decide to find objection. You have a stake in both the Firebird and
      Phoenix name, yet you only object to the use of one?

      2. You have no claim to the Trademark or copyright for EITHER Firebird or
      Phoenix. I have browsed several pages of your site, and find no instances
      of "(tm)" "trademark" "copyright" or "(c)" (done with the appropriate
      circle) claiming either the Firebird or Phoenix name to be your
      own. Those are most definitely required to defend/protect a
      copyright/trademark

      3. You are not in the browser business, so you can't claim a total
      hold on the "Firebird" name ... although I will admit your are
      both in the same industry(software) thus making the issue
      debatable.

      I would have hoped that you would have attempted a more rational discourse
      with the members of the Mozilla/Firebird Project. As you have no
      corresponding emails/letters/documenation or phone calls to corroborate
      your claim of legal strong arming, I can only determine that a complete
      rational discourse was not followed to fruition. If there was instances
      of "Redmondesque" strong-arming tactics, I would strongly encourage you to
      report dates/times/content of ALL communication you have with members of
      the Mozilla/Firebird Project.

      Thank you for your time ... I hope this is resolved in a manner amicable
      to all ... Also thank you to both sides for your wonderful contributions
      to free/open source (whatever your religion may be)
      --
      Sig Nazi- "No Sig for you, come back 1 year."
    5. Re:The new name by offpath3 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I could be mistaken, but I don't think copyright would apply. They might be able to copyright the font their name is written in or their logo, but they can only trademark their name. Also, copyright does _not_ need to be stated to be enforcable. By creating something, you have immediately copyrighted it, and you gain all rights associated with that unless you explicitly relinquish such rights.

    6. Re:The new name by theedge318 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, the copyright _does_ need to be stated to be defensable US Code Chapter 17 Article 401 Subsection (a). While the courts may order an infringer to cease and desist, no damages can be accessed. However as any professional photographer will tell you, the laws aren't as clear cut as you might think.

      You are right copyright laws aren't actually under debate, I included them b/c if they care about such infringements, they really need to protect themselves, in case a company with real legal clout (that also happens to be in the database biz) decides to lean on them

      --
      Sig Nazi- "No Sig for you, come back 1 year."
    7. Re:The new name by kurisuto · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's more complicated than that; the law you reference simply tells how to affix a copyright notice if you choose to.

      Prior to the 1976 revision of U.S. copyright law, you would actually lose your copyright to a work if you published it without proper copyright notice being displayed.

      After 1976, you automatically obtain copyright on your work as soon as it is fixed in a tangible format. You own the copyright whether you add the copyright notice or not. Including the copyright notice is still a good idea, however, because it makes it easier to establish that someone _knowingly_ violated your copyright; it can affect the amount of damages you receive.

      All of this stuff is in the circulars which the U.S. Copyright office makes available on the web.

    8. Re:The new name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about MOZILLA LITE? Cause people are already familiar with the brand 'mozilla'.

    9. Re:The new name by kurisuto · · Score: 2, Informative

      2. You have no claim to the Trademark or
      copyright for EITHER Firebird or Phoenix. I have
      browsed several pages of your site, and find no
      instances of "(tm)" "trademark" "copyright" or
      "(c)" (done with the appropriate circle)
      claiming either the Firebird or Phoenix name to
      be your own. Those are most definitely required
      to defend/protect a copyright/trademark


      As someone else has already pointed out, copyright is not germane to protecting a brand name. You can't copyright a word or name; but under some circumstances you can have trademark rights to a name.

      You are incorrect that a name can only be protected as a trademark if the (tm) symbol appears. If a name is widely used for a particular brand, the original user of that name has certain trademark rights to that name, even if the name was never registered as a trademark.

      This can even be true if the name was not created by the product manufacturer, but is generally used to refer to a particular brand; for example, the Coca-Cola Corporation had trademark rights to the widely-used name "Coke" even before that company started using that name in its own marketing, since the name was widely understood as referring to Coca-Cola's brand of cola soft drink. The important test in any trademark infringement case is whether the use of the name is likely to create confusion and thus allow a user of the name to take advantage of the reputation of another vendor.

      Registering a name as a trademark is advantageous because it serves as public notice of your claim of trademark, and prevents a defense of ignorance in a trademark infringement case.

      You must not use the (tm) mark if you have not registrered your trademark; doing so can actually statutorily result in the loss of your trademark rights.

      All of this information is from a basic text on trademark law which I checked out from the Univerisity of Pennsylvania library a few years ago.

    10. Re:The new name by theedge318 · · Score: 1

      You are very right, and put the laws quite succinctly. My damages line was an allusion to the rules you refer to in your comment, but I was concerned about straying off-topic, which we have most definitely done. (Also the only site I could find on google with a good description of the laws, were porn sites), but since were are off-topic, go to Matt's Models for a practical guide to defending copyrights

      (Please mod parent up for being informative)

      --
      Sig Nazi- "No Sig for you, come back 1 year."
    11. Re:The new name by theedge318 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      ... the Coca-Cola Corporation had trademark rights to the widely-used name "Coke" even before that company started using that name in its own marketing

      That almost exactly goes to the point. I would surmise that FirebirdSQL never registered the trademark, thus lacks the (tm). Furthermore, they aren't widely known as "Firebird". (In fact until now they weren't even widely known as "FirebirdSQL", but thats another matter.)

      So FirebirdSQL meets neither the registered trademark requirement, or the "widely used" test for rights to a trademarked name.
      The important test in any trademark infringement case is whether the use of the name is likely to create confusion and thus allow a user of the name to take advantage of the reputation of another vendor.

      FirebirdSQL has been benifiting from any potential infringement, and any confusion will only continue benefit them.
      --
      Sig Nazi- "No Sig for you, come back 1 year."
    12. Re:The new name by stuntpope · · Score: 2, Funny

      Agreed. Let's see -- people who aren't ubercool hackers discussing web browsers... "I use Explorer.. I use Navigator...hey doood, I use that bitchin' Firebird!" (yes, really should be Camaro). I expect the user to have a black muscle shirt and wear a mullet. Definitely won't get along with the Opera crowd ;)

    13. Re:The new name by mark.odonohue · · Score: 3, Informative
      Hi theedge318

      The Firebird project (at sourceforge) was not created by IBP, in fact I created it, it's hard to call it owned by anyone since it's a fairly loose association of people who are working on the code, including some from IBP. From several discussions evolved the usage of FirebirdSQL for some of the web and packaging.

      In the last year the nonprofit association FirebirdSQL Foundation was created, (through about 12 founding members) to direct donated and membership funds, and probably a holding place for "firebird community property". Possibly, if there was to be an owner of the FirebirdSQL (or Firebird?) brand that is likely to be where we would like to see it directed (although at this stage IBP would be fine too).

      My small experience with "brands" also gave me the understanding that both being in the software business was close enough to "create confusion" in a brand, so I was very supprised to find Moz claiming fb as thier own.

      Our lack of prior claim to Firebird or FirebirdSQL (other than through usage) is due to the fact we are your average opensource project, not cashed up , and full of coders not lawyers.

      Currently we (all fb people) are still stunned, by Moz's actions to use the firebird name, of which we had no prior knowledge or warning. Our first meeting with big brother opensource, from a smaller project, has not been a pleasant one.

      Unfortunately, due to their actions we will obviously need to now spend effort in carefully review our own legal situation, and the effect that Moz firebird(tm) will have on our usage of Firebird and FirebirdSQL. Things that as with most opensource projects, will need to be done by donated work, and volunteer time, we were hoping to skimp on, and rely on general good will. So any advice appreciated :-).

      IBPhoenix was named as a twist on the InterBase, word. I'll let Ann fill you in on that when she replies to you.

      But a sobering thought to finish on. Our name was just the top one on the list, apparently we only got 5% or 37 votes. So if your name is on this list you were X votes away from getting the same treatment.

      Mark

    14. Re:The new name by Ponty · · Score: 1

      Camino is the lamest psuedo-muscle car browser name yet. I can't help but think of the high school football star who's now an insurance salesman and still tells stories about how cool his gym teacher was. And that's really depressing.

    15. Re:The new name by Tighe_L · · Score: 1

      How about keeping along the whole things on fire theme:

      • Inferno
      • Ember
      • Pyre - seems very appropiate considering that this name thing is beaten to death
      • Wildfire
      • Scorched Earth -- err I mean Scorched Web
    16. Re:The new name by kurisuto · · Score: 3, Informative

      Lest the point be missed here:

      Firebird (the database project) was using the name prior to the use of the name by Mozilla. Because of prior use, the Firebird database project has certain legally enforceable trademark rights to the name "Firebird" even if they did not register the trademark and are not using the (tm) mark. For example, if someone else started using the name "Firebird" for a database-related product, they would almost certainly be infringing on the Firebird project's trademark.

      The Mozilla project may or may not be infringing on the database project's trademark. The crucial legal question is whether web browsers and database products are sufficiently similar types of products that a reasonable layperson might be confused into thinking that there is a connection between the two.

      This is one of those questions where the answer is not clear-cut and where I wouldn't want to bet a lot of money on a court ruling in either direction. Just to give one example of the complexity of the laws when it comes to this kind of interpretation, consider this. When a company with no connection with Kodak-Eastman marketed "Kodak" brand cigarette lighters, they were found to be in violation of Kodak-Eastman's trademark even though the products are of quite different types. In this case, it was because "Kodak" is an invented word; if the name had been "Imperial", the finding would have probably been different. The point is that there are a lot of things which the court has to take into consideration in a case of this type, and the outcome of litigation in this case regarding the name "Firebird" would not be certain.

    17. Re:The new name by rembo · · Score: 1

      >Anyway, if everybody is going to be as childish
      >and immature as these FirebirdSQL jack-asses
      >are, they should probably just change the names
      >of all of their browsers to some random number,
      >or a code, or something. Maybe then people
      >won't kick and stomp about it.

      I strongly disagree. Use use both projects. There will be a lot of naming conflict problems, and confusion by users.

      I think the mozilla crew is the childish party here. Why don't they choose a name that hasn't been taken? How hard can that be? That would avoid all problems.

    18. Re:The new name by yakko+nef · · Score: 1

      Pointing out the obvious fact: Pontiac had the name Firebird name first, and they have real legal clout to defend the trademark, but as the industries are different they know not to even bother It isn't that they know not to bother it is because they don't think the bother is worth it. For an example where someone thought the bother was worth it check out http://wwwnissan.com and the story surrounding it.

    19. Re:The new name by orangesquid · · Score: 1

      How about they just call it something like:
      * EverybodyHasIssues
      * EverybodyHatesThisBrowser
      * LegalBattlesSuck
      * StopSpammingMeAsshole
      * TrulyUniqueNamesAreNearlyImpossible
      * UIHFIUEWHFAWIMEHCIXFUHAEOFAWECIFOECFIOAHFMUCWEHCUI F

      Or, if they name it something dirty, chances are, even if there are similar names, none of the owners would complain... maybe like HappyEndingFlumpkin?

      --
      --TheOrangeSquid Is it any wonder things seem so awry? We swim in a sea of confusion and don't have to think to survive
    20. Re:The new name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's wrong with having a different name for something different?

      a web browser - named Firebird
      a SQL database - named FirebirdSQL

    21. Re:The new name by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1

      They should just call it:
      "Go to Hell!"

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    22. Re:The new name by suicidal · · Score: 1

      Oh, yeah, I'm sure. I'm already confused how "their" name has been used by Pontiac for decades without having been taken. This is an asinine reaction from a group of jackasses. Their page complains that Mozilla has taken their "Mark" as well. I never saw their logo on Mozilla's page...but their mark DOES have a striking similarity to the City of Phoenix's symbol.

      -Never underestimate the power in large numbers of stupid people...

    23. Re:The new name by suicidal · · Score: 1

      FirebirdSQL and Mozilla Firebird

      I don't see the confusion. If anything, I think it might generate more hits to your site. I've never heard of FirebirdSQL before today, -- been using mySQL and thinking of looking at postgres.

    24. Re:The new name by rembo · · Score: 1

      I expained problems in an other comment

    25. Re:The new name by cHiphead · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, due to their actions we will obviously need to now spend effort in carefully review our own legal situation, and the effect that Moz firebird(tm) will have on our usage of Firebird and FirebirdSQL. Things that as with most opensource projects, will need to be done by donated work, and volunteer time, we were hoping to skimp on, and rely on general good will. So any advice appreciated

      Advice: Spending effort to 'review our own legal situation' doesn't sound like a very open way of dealing with a situation. I have never heard of Firebird SQL until this article and certainly wouldn't confuse mozilla's firebird BROWSER with an SQL database. Your industry is the Database Software Industry, you should not claim ownership of the term for the entire 'Software Industry', its not being a good neighbor.

      Be a good neighbor and don't let egos or lawyers ruin the credibility behind two decidedly different but useful software programs.

      --

      This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    26. Re:The new name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your such a dork. The problem is every name possible is used up because there are too many people on this planet. The solution: Destroy those taking up a lot of names, pass a law to modify copyright law so that in case of execution copyright is void, and Voliah!

      The guy who had the domain: www.nissan.com had to take his site down because of the pathetic excuse of a car corporation called nissan. Even though his site was up before there was a Nissan Motor Corp.

      How about the Lindows controversy? People try to have trademarks that are common language terms. I hate to see if I tried to make a software application called 'penis'. Some doctor from John's Hopkins University would sue the living crap out of me.

      Just my 2 1/2 cents.

      Morrons who would argue with me need not reply! Thanks!

    27. Re:The new name by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Anyway, if everybody is going to be as childish and immature as these FirebirdSQL jack-asses are

      I see this as more of a publicity thing for them; i mean really, who even heard of them before today? I certainly haven't. They also don't seem to grasp the idea of product domain; phoenix was the name for another web browser. Their product however is a sql server. Which is why pontiac hasn't come after them..

    28. Re:The new name by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Why don't they choose a name that hasn't been taken? How hard can that be?

      I agree. But the FirebirdSQL people should do that as well. I think more people think of a car then a sql server when they hear Firebird. Why don't those FirebirdSQL people stop being childish and pick a name thats not already taken.

      The very fact that everyone seems to be calling the sql server FirebirdSQL (notice the last 3 letters) should be enough to not to cause confusion.

    29. Re:The new name by BardicStorm · · Score: 1

      It would seem to me that you're actually using FirebirdSQL as one word, thus making any trademark issues you have for that full word. As an example, I could easily open a restaraunt and call it Donalds, to which McDonalds would not be able to press issue.

      I really don't see how you could have any issue with Mozilla's use of the word Firebird, unless you've consistantly been calling your project Firebird, an SQL DBMS. But then perhaps SQL might have cause.

    30. Re:The new name by samdu · · Score: 1
      But copyright and trademark are different animals. Copyright allies to a work and trademark applies to a trade name. I personally don't see a problem with the use of the Firebird moniker as the other Firebird company doesn't make a web browser. It seems to be the difference between naming a car Thunderbird and naming a lawn tractor or motorcycle Thunderbird. Sure, they all have wheels, but their purpose (in the case of the lawn tractor) or form factor (in the case of the motorcycle) are totally different. I also don't think there's any danger of people confusing the two products/companies/organizations. This also must be taken into account in these cases (IANAL).

    31. Re:The new name by kurisuto · · Score: 1

      Oh, I already know that, and I've said as much in other posts in this thread. I was simply responding to what someone else said about copyright. I agree that it is trademark law, not copyright law, which is germane to this case.

    32. Re:The new name by roca · · Score: 1

      There are a couple of other relevant legal issues.

      FirebirdSQL were not the first to use "Firebird" for software, not even for open-source software. There was Firebird BBS (firebird.org.tw), and others can be found via Google.

      Also, trademarks have to be defended. Until now, FirebirdSQL have not attempted to defend their purported trademark against other software products using the same name.

    33. Re:The new name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      - Here are your names: Mr. Brown, Mr. White, Mr. Blonde, Mr. Blue, Mr. Orange, and Mr. Pink.
      - Why am I Mr. Pink?
      - Because you're a faggot, alright?
      - You're Mr. Pink!
      - Who cares what your name is?
      - Yeah, that's easy for you to say, you're Mr. White, you have a cool sounding name. Alright, look, if it's no big deal to be Mr. Pink, you wanna trade?

    34. Re:The new name by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      But no, they have been using "Firebird" as a single word.

      In this discussion, they've been called "FirebirdSQL" to distinguish them from the newcomer "Firebird (web browswer)" project. But previously and in general, they were "Firebird".

    35. Re:The new name by hitmark · · Score: 1

      personaly i think of a bird on fire but then im a hopless rpg addict...

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    36. Re:The new name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I vote for "Burnt Chicken".

    37. Re:The new name by theedge318 · · Score: 1

      Because Kodak is an "invented" word, you can claim a copyright on the word, which gives you more power than a trademark. There are no trade group limitations to copyright laws.

      --
      Sig Nazi- "No Sig for you, come back 1 year."
    38. Re:The new name by theedge318 · · Score: 3, Informative
      Here is the full response to my email from Ann Harrison: (thankfully I have a karma bonus to use, I think this is a pretty informative email)

      Gentlemen,

      As you each wrote essentially the same message to me,
      I trust you will allow me to respond to you all at once.

      >Your requests to Mozilla that they manhandled they name change of their
      >browser, from Phoenix to Firebird is totally uncalled for and
      >inappropriate.

      You may not be aware that several administrators of the
      project wrote to Asa as soon as we heard of Mozilla's plans.
      The answer we got back was this:

      Our lawyers have looked into the various software
      companies and products using the name Firebird and
      concluded that there won't be any consumer confusion
      between the Mozilla Firebird browser and any existing
      companies or products. There are more than a handful
      of other software products named Firebird but none are
      Web browsers. Our investigation concluded that the
      Firebird relational database was not a Web browser and
      didn't offer Web browsing functionality. We believe
      that Mozilla is a recognized name and that a product
      called the Mozilla Firebird browser will not be confused
      with any of the existing software companies or products,
      including the Firebird relational database.

      When we responded, we got approximately the same answer. Probably
      you think we should have listened to the wizards of the AOL legal
      department, even if we disagreed with them. But we are administrators
      for a project that many people depend on for their livelihood. They
      told us that they expected to be damaged by the confusion. We feel
      a responsibility to them, and therefore could not ignore the problem.

      >1. As far as I have been made aware, you had never objected to the use of
      >the Phoenix name for the browser, yet now they change to Firebird you
      >decide to find objection. You have a stake in both the Firebird and
      >Phoenix name, yet you only object to the use of one?

      Actually, we have little or no stake in the Phoenix name. IBPhoenix
      happened to be a domain name we controlled at a time when we needed
      a new company name immediately. We have a major stake in the Firebird
      name - that's our product, brand, etc.

      >2. You have no claim to the Trademark or copyright for EITHER Firebird or
      >Phoenix. I have browsed several pages of your site, and find no instances
      >of "(tm)" "trademark" "copyright" or "(c)" (done with the appropriate
      >circle) claiming either the Firebird or Phoenix name to be your
      >own. Those are most definitely required to defend/protect a
      >copyright/trademark

      No, not so. The name Unix was used for 12 years before it was
      registered as a trademark, but Bell Labs was able to protect their
      interest in it. As you know, copyright has little bearing here
      as you can copyright the expression of an idea, but a symbol.
      We've been using the name in trade for three years, which is
      prior use.

      >3. You are not in the browser business, so you can't claim a total
      >hold on the "Firebird" name ... although I will admit your are
      >both in the same industry(software) thus making the issue
      >debatable.

      For what (very little) its worth the trademark registry
      recognizes a single category of Computer/software - no distinction
      between browsers, compilers, databases, etc.

      >I would have hoped that you would have attempted a more rational discourse
      >with the members of the Mozilla/Firebird Project.

      As above, we did and found the door closed and locked.

      > As you have no
      >corresponding emails/letters/documenation or phone calls to corroborate
      >your claim of legal strong arming, I can only determine that a complete
      >rational discourse was not fo

      --
      Sig Nazi- "No Sig for you, come back 1 year."
    39. Re:The new name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      EverybodyHatesThisBrowser? I kind of like it. I've been using it for about 6 months (on WinTel) and have had pretty much no problem with it....

  4. I got a name for em! by Nate+Fox · · Score: 5, Funny

    how bout Daawtrtdfw? Google turns up nothing, so I'm sure its not taken.

    smile, you'll live longer. :)

    1. Re:I got a name for em! by CaffeinieBaby · · Score: 1

      Hmm, well, it's got a nice ring to it.

    2. Re:I got a name for em! by Sevn · · Score: 1

      I vote Gazorninplat. That's a great name for a
      browser. 3 cool points to the first person that
      knows where that word came from.

      --
      For every annoying gentoo user, are three even more annoying anti-gentoo crybabies. Take Yosh from #Gimp for example.
    3. Re:I got a name for em! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bob Newhart if I'm not mistaken. As in "To be or not to be. That is the gazorninplat"

      No cool points needed though. I'm cool enough already. :P

    4. Re:I got a name for em! by klui · · Score: 5, Funny

      New tag line: It's spelled Daawtrtdfw but pronounced Phoenix. Hell, I sure can't pronounce how it's spelled.

    5. Re:I got a name for em! by smcn · · Score: 3, Funny

      I was going to suggest TBFKAP, as in "The Browser Formerly Known As Phoenix", but can you believe it? That's taken too!

    6. Re:I got a name for em! by Wakkow · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hmm.. Anyone think "Daawtrtdfw" will make Google Zeitgeist from Slashdotters checking if it -really- returns no results?

    7. Re:I got a name for em! by Buck2 · · Score: 1

      AC is god!

      You sure are cool, no doubt. I can't believe how many posts I've read from you that have been down-modded into oblivion, though. I'm sorry your /. karma might be fucked, but you sure are a worthy contributor.

      Three cheers for AC's coolness!

      --

      As my father lik@(munch munch)... ....
    8. Re:I got a name for em! by Isldeur · · Score: 1

      how bout Daawtrtdfw? Google turns up nothing, so I'm sure its not taken.


      Hey, that's Welsh, isn't it? :)

    9. Re:I got a name for em! by f0rt0r · · Score: 1

      What about Internet Exploder? That name has been suggested for another browser for years, but it is still available.

      In other news, Bill Gates is attacked by a giant penguin. Story at eleven.

      --
      I can't afford a sig!
    10. Re:I got a name for em! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forget "Daawtrtdfw", it should be called "Fat Elvis" instead.

      The splash screen could have so many possibilities.

    11. Re:I got a name for em! by sharkey · · Score: 1
      It's spelled Daawtrtdfw but pronounced Phoenix.

      How about "Raymond Luxury-Yacht". It's pronounced "Throat-Wobbler Mangrove".

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    12. Re:I got a name for em! by aePrime · · Score: 1

      Why not just name it Feenicks in that case?

    13. Re:I got a name for em! by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      Naw, already taken by a punk band. Fenix TX

    14. Re:I got a name for em! by betis70 · · Score: 1

      Yeah but then my spam filter might misinterpret an update announcement as a new way to grow bigger and last longer.

      --
      I forget...are we at war with Eurasia or East Asia?
    15. Re:I got a name for em! by krypt0g33k · · Score: 1

      Even better...what about Phirebyrd or some iteration of that...that way it's some hybrid name... ;)

  5. "Interesting" My Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This shows how hostile some members of the OSS crowd can be over something so simple as a name.

    This is the same crowd that gets excited when corporations try to take domain names from people who have had them for years. Using this same logic, shouldn't Mozilla switch their name since FirebirdSQL used it first? Prior art and all...

    This kind of petty (it's just a name), inmature (flooding people's e-mail), public arguing is one of the reasons Linux isn't getting the acceptance it should.

    1. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Dub+Kat · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This could also be just a smart move by the FirebirdSQL team. The project has been relatively obscure up until now, but with the /. articles people are much more aware of its existence.

      Maybe their methods aren't the greatest, but this is a good chance for them to raise awareness. The project should get more attention anyways, it's up there with Postgres (or maybe better) as a high-quality enterprise database (formerly SAP DB).

    2. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by den_erpel · · Score: 1

      This kind of petty (it's just a name), inmature (flooding people's e-mail), public arguing is one of the reasons Linux isn't getting the acceptance it should.

      Perhaps you are referring to the buy off and other techniques some companies use for manipulating the world to their will.

      I'm not saying they have not right to do this, but your argument here is flawed.

      --
      Genius doesn't work on an assembly line basis. You can't simply say, "Today I will be brilliant."
    3. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by AugustMoon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This kind of petty (it's just a name), inmature (flooding people's e-mail), public arguing is one of the reasons Linux isn't getting the acceptance it should. While I agree tactless spamming public forums and private email boxes is a bit immature, I think protecting your name is not petty at all. In the open source world what other sense of identity do you have but your name? There is no company affiliated with these products. "Internet Explorer" is still "Microsoft's Browser" but Mozilla, FirebirdSQL, and IBPhoenix are the only sources of identity and market presense these groups have. As for the public arguing, I think it would be worse if one group just rolled over for another. And I doubt this affects open source's PR negatively. There is bound to be some conflict at times. Mike

    4. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Cl1mh4224rd · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Using this same logic, shouldn't Mozilla switch their name since FirebirdSQL used it first? Prior art and all...
      Using this same logic, shouldn't FirebirdSQL switch their name since Pontiac used it first? Prior art and all...
      --
      People will pass up steak once a week, for crap every day.
    5. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by RajivSLK · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This kind of petty (it's just a name), inmature (flooding people's e-mail), public arguing is one of the reasons Linux isn't getting the acceptance it should.

      Why do people feel the need to drag Linux into every OSS related spectacle?

      This issue has absolutely nothing to do with Linux. Stop trying to drag every OSS project under one big Linux umbrella.

      (P.S. For everyone reading please don't reply regarding the acceptance of Linux and Mod this obvoius troll down.)

    6. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by GammaTau · · Score: 4, Informative

      This could also be just a smart move by the FirebirdSQL team. The project has been relatively obscure up until now, but with the /. articles people are much more aware of its existence.

      Yeah, a very good point. The sourceforge usage statistics for the Firebird project demonstrate this very well.

    7. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Buck2 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Thank fucking Jesus dying on a cross, getting thrown into a cave, and rising again in a few days that you mentioned this.

      A community bickering about namespace is not new. Linux is not even in the picture and it's surprising how oblivious the responses have been.

      --

      As my father lik@(munch munch)... ....
    8. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by bazmonkey · · Score: 1

      Exactly. FirebirdSQL makes it look like the Firebird browser is going to steal their business, or that MozDev is trying to capitalize on their name. It's terrible.

    9. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Firebird-the-database is based off of Interbase, not sapDB, which has it's own open source version/spinoff/project.

    10. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like it or not, names are important. If you want mass acceptance, a good name (multi-language compatible, catchy, unique, etc.) is a requirement. Screenshots are supplementing names as another form of arbitrary and mostly meaningless second impression, because users want a riskless way to familiarize themselves with a program. If users get disappointed by names and screenshots, chances are they'll never try the program, even it would be perfect for them.

      Name collisions make references to a certain project very awkward: "Firebird (the database)" is not as shiny and attractive as "Firebird". The database firebirds fear that the Mozilla/Phoenix project gets much more attention and thus the default meaning of "Firebird" will become "the browser", requiring that the database references be explained, which ruins the name for them.

      BTW, name-conflicts are also something which fans of open source projects can throw themselves at even if they don't code or contribute otherwise. All it takes to get into the fray is devotion.

    11. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Dub+Kat · · Score: 1

      Yeah you're right, my bad. FirebirdSQL is from InterBase. And SAP DB is from...SAP!

    12. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Adversive · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      "The database firebirds fear that the Mozilla/Phoenix project gets much more attention and thus the default meaning of "Firebird" will become "the browser", requiring that the database references be explained, which ruins the name for them."

      Do you really think that 99% of computer users have a clue what Mozilla is, or have any idea what a relational database is?

      The name "Firebird" has widespread recognition as a Pontiac automobile and Joe User will never hear the word and think of a computer program.

      The real loser here is whoever decided that "Firebird" was a good name for a relational database back in 1999.

      How uncreative can you get?

      --
      Adversive
      My cat's breath smells like cat food.
    13. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by bmj · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This issue has absolutely nothing to do with Linux. Stop trying to drag every OSS project under one big Linux umbrella.

      Well, if you're involved in the OSS community, then you know this has nothing to do with linux. But for any manager that might get wind of this *discussion*, they WILL associate it with linux. For most people outside the tech industry, OSS == linux. This will give OSS and linux a bit of a bad of name if the pointy-haired types read about it.

      --
      Whereof we cannot speak, thereof we must be silent. --Ludwig Wittgenstein
    14. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by sultanoslack · · Score: 1
      The project should get more attention anyways, it's up there with Postgres (or maybe better) as a high-quality enterprise database (formerly SAP DB).

      Ok, it seems that FirebirdSQL is based on InterBase which would potentially put it in the category of enterprisedatabases where SAP DB is. But most certainly Postgres is not in this category. Postgres is a fine database and it can be argued that it trumps MySQL and friends, but these are apples and oranges.

      I'm not terribly familiar with InterBase, but for example SAP DB is in the same category as Oracle, DB2 and such. It's performance is slightly below those two, but it's safe to say it's in that category. Postgres is nice for your super-spiffy-webapplications and whatever, but drop a terabyte or two in there and see what happens. ;-)

    15. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by mdfst13 · · Score: 1

      Buying out your competitors because you can't compete may be immoral, but there is nothing wrong with it from a public relations standpoint (obviously, you are a thriving business; otherwise, you could not afford to buy out your competitors; if anything, it reinforces your brand name). In regards to abuse of monopoly power, obviously that occurs *after* widespread acceptance (a monopoly is pretty widespread).

      SPAMming is harassment and runs right along the line of being illegal. Not to mention that it is immature. Stupid, criminal, and backbiting is not the kind of image that the open source movement needs. These kind of things reinforce the image that outsiders have of open source as a bunch of immature kids who will give up all this stuff when they grow up and get real jobs.

      --Matt

    16. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 4, Interesting
      This could also be just a smart move by the FirebirdSQL team. The project has been relatively obscure up until now, but with the /. articles people are much more aware of its existence.

      I'm not sure the "any publicity is good publicity" mantra applies when you're talking about an informed and critical forum like /. though. Just ask Microsoft how many new users they've acquired through their publicity here -- and they even get their own icon... ;-)

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    17. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by jallen02 · · Score: 1

      I think it is one thing to use a name that is from a completely different market segment. Firebird = Automotive, FirebirdSQL = Technology, Firebird Browser = Technology.

      Jeremy

    18. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Quarters · · Score: 4, Insightful

      (sigh...) Once again, class... "Prior Art" is for Patents. There is no such thing as "prior art" for trademarks or copyright. Any work is copyrighted at the time of creation. Trademarks must be applied for. Multiple products, companies, etc... can have the same trademarked named---as long as they don't compete in the same market space. For instance, if I started making beige-box computers and called them "Apple Computers" I'd be talking to some lawyers from Cupertino pretty quickly. If I made ball point pens and called them "Apple Pens", those same lawyers might try to coerce me to change the name, but there is no legal reason I would have to. I don't think a database and a browser are all that similar, personally. I don't think the FirebirdSQL team has much of an argument. That is, assuming they've bothered to trademark their name.

    19. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Troll_Kamikaze · · Score: 1

      Uh, last time I checked, there was a helluva lot more difference between a car and an RDBMS than between a browser and an RDBMS.

    20. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by James+Lanfear · · Score: 1

      Firebird = Automotive, FirebirdSQL = Technology, Firebird Browser = Technology.

      Automobiles are technology. In fact, my dictionary would have me believe that the Pontiac has a stronger claim on being a technology than most software (it says something about 'industrial applications' or somesuch).

      Regardless, FirebirdSQL and Phoenix are in different markets, unless one of them has more features than I'm aware of.

    21. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by jallen02 · · Score: 1

      You never know... Mozilla could have a RDBMS lurking in it somewhere. ;)

    22. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by TopShelf · · Score: 1

      It would be interesting to determine how many /. stories that have NOTHING to do with Linux end up with Linux being mentioned within the comments. My guess is that it's somewhere between 99.999 and 99.9999%...

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    23. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Delirium+Tremens · · Score: 3, Informative

      You all most be kidding.
      The month-by-month statistics show that this is a large project, very much active and rather popular. How else would you explain the steady 30,000+ downloads a month for the last 18 months?
      This doesn't beat Mozilla's download stats but keep in mind that this is a database, not a browser.
      Overall, this respectable OpenSource project should be given much more credit than what it is getting right now.

    24. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If the people running the project don't deserve respect because of their actions, does that mean that their project deserves any respect?

      What if I want to use their database; do I need to worry that if I try to modify it in any way to suit my needs but may be contrary to the direction the database developers want to go that these developers then don't get their panties in a wad and slam my company in a public manner. What if I want to add my own improvements and decide to fork the project, will I have my email boxes flooded with "protests" and be subjected to other similar immature behavior?

    25. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Delirium+Tremens · · Score: 1
      You never know... Mozilla could have a RDBMS lurking in it somewhere. ;)
      Indeed, it could have some RDBMS support lurking in it. You never know.

      81653 - FIXED - SQL: Nat - Add native database support
      199815- FIXED - SQL: Nat - Add Native DB Support to Projects listing

    26. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look Bubba, your user ID number suggests you've been around /. for quite a while. You should know by now that facts have no place in a /. discussion. Especially when the discussion involves patents, M$, Mitnick, and other sorted topics.

    27. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by rembo · · Score: 1

      >This could also be just a smart move by the
      >FirebirdSQL team. The project has been
      >relatively obscure up until now, but with the
      >/. articles people are much more aware of its
      >existence.

      Plan:
      1. Suggest your own name to the mozilla crew
      2. Complain your name has been taken
      3. Get a lot of publicity
      4...
      20. Profit!

      Seriously, this is obviously not what happened.

    28. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...an informed and critical forum like /. though.
      hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha

    29. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by bokmann · · Score: 1

      For all those interesting in using this database with java, it might be helpful to know that the TriActive JDO implementation (tjdo.sourceforge.net) provides an open source JDO implementation that uses firebird.

    30. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      Just ask Microsoft how many new users they've acquired through their publicity here

      You mean there are Slashdot users who wouldn't have heard of Microsoft but for the submissions here that mention them?

    31. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by jmauro · · Score: 1

      Except that the law has been changed so "well known" trademarks have protection out side of there normal industries. So Apple Pens would be banned from using the name by both Apple Computers and Apple Music, the well known holders of the Apple trademarks.

    32. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      "This will give OSS and linux a bit of a bad of name if the pointy-haired types read about it."

      I think the opposite will happen. Th pointy headed addle brain CIOs who are unable to make a distinction between a database and n operating system will now have increased respect for OSS.

      They will see all this fighting and think to themselves "this is just like Sun and Microsoft or IBM and Microsoft".

      Remember the CIOs are some of the stupidest people in the world and for them this will look exactly like MS and it's competitors slinging mud at each other. Hell it's also a lot like democrats and republicans slinging mud at each other. Let's hope those Pinty Haired types don't confuse linux with a political party though or FOX News will get into the act.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    33. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by N3WBI3 · · Score: 3, Funny
      How else would you explain the steady 30,000+ downloads a month for the last 18 months?

      Ok I admint it it was me I donwloaded it 28,763 times I dont know what the other 1,237 times were. I had nothing to do and I just my my BB connection in, sorry for screwing up the usage stats..

      --
    34. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      You know that SourceForge is running off postgres, right?

    35. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Unordained · · Score: 1

      it seems odd to me that on a daily basis, i see release notes for gnome, freebsd, every last version of mysql ... and even windows! and yet, a perfectly good, fast, small, powerful open-source database engine doesn't get mentioned!

      they're releasing 1.5 now/soon ... that's a -big- milestone for them. they're in the middle of, well, a code-rewrite to C++, so they can give us an even better product. i don't even remember slashdot posting news about 1.0 coming to us ... and hey, that was a rather nice improvement. (i'm still running it.)

      i, for one, support firebird. not the tactics in this case, but as others point out ... they've had a rough ride of getting pushed around. mozilla is known to the slashdot crowd, firebird's not. it's obvious who's going to get the sympathy.

      give the database a try ... and maybe overlook this, k?

    36. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by brlancer · · Score: 1
      This could also be just a smart move by the FirebirdSQL team. The project has been relatively obscure up until now, but with the /. articles people are much more aware of its existence.

      It's all a right wing conspiracy. The Mozilla and FirebirdSQL projects conspired to hype both up and gain publicity while having an excuse for the true name of the new Mozilla browser:

      Operation: Browser Freedom

      --
      Someone asked if I had patched against MSBlast; I said yes, I installed Linux.
    37. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please do not forget IBPhoenix is InterBase and run by the same a-holes who brought you Interbase. This is just a PR stunt by their maketing dept (which I heard is based in Australia).

      Listen,

      This thing is called firebirdsql. I don't even see how this could be an issue even in debian.

      Do other (Real) SQL's go around saying you should remove the sql at the end of their names?

      Eg:

      apt-get install my
      apt-get install postgre

      rather than

      apt-get install mysql
      apt-get install postgresql

      Seems like their issue is that debian and co would put firebird as the first hit rather than firebirdsql. I don't see an issue here, since firebirdsql is not deemed stable even by the developers and it has not even entered debian and other mature stuff yet.

      So let them be "firebirdsql" and let Mozilla's firebird be what it is.

      BTW a big FU to firebirdsql crappers who SPAMed my e-mail for just filing bugs on mozilla.

    38. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      There is no such thing as "prior art" for trademarks or copyright

      Sure there is. If someone uses a term as a public identifier, other people cannot come along and claim a similar term as a new trademark (without going through an analysis of whether or not the trademark will introduce confusion with the existing usage).

      No one has a trademark on "Web Browser", but that doesn't mean I can go apply for one. The term is already in common use, and my trademark would confuse existing markets. "FireBird" is also already in wide use.

      See, for example, the lawsuit over "etoy.com". A website of that name already existed when the trademark "etoys.com" was registered. Because of that, the trademark was significantly weakened.

      The act of "trademark sniping"- learning or guessing what a new product name will be, and registering your own application before the developer gets around to it- is a civil offense, although rarely proven (because companies with enough lawyers to challenge those things find it easier to just register their own marks quickly).

    39. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      But most certainly Postgres is not in this category.

      or example SAP DB is in the same category as Oracle, DB2

      I read an article recently, and I wish I had a link to give you, that showed Postgres outperforming the shit out of Oracle and DB2. Interesting that you should put it in a class with MySQL, I've been under the understanding that PostgreSQL is an enterprise database, which MySQL isn't really.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    40. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by DarkEdgeX · · Score: 1

      You used the word "informed" in the context of Slashdot readers. WTF dude, don't give me too much credit.

      --
      All I know about Bush is I had a good job when Clinton was president.
    41. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      an informed and critical forum like /.

      Coffee just came out of my nose.

    42. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1
      You mean there are Slashdot users who wouldn't have heard of Microsoft but for the submissions here that mention them?

      No, but there are probably quite a few people here who didn't know as much about Microsoft's dubious business practices, or the details of how their software performs, as they do now. I imagine a lot more people who find that information switch away from the Microsoft route than towards it.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    43. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by jejones · · Score: 1

      Automobiles aren't technological?!

    44. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by wuice · · Score: 1

      If you're talking about the legal definition of prior art, you are correct. AOL legal cleared the name - I don't think many people are going to argue that AOL's lawyers are ignorant of the law. The issue is not whether or not it is legal. The issue has to do with ethics, and open source software seems like one of the few arenas left in this world where ethics is a valid topic.

      FirebirdSQL does not argue the legality of Mozilla adopting the name (to my knowledge) but instead the ethics involved in such a decision. I believe they are well within their rights in challenging the ethics of that decision.

    45. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by jallen02 · · Score: 1

      Software, not technology. Sorry.

    46. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Sxooter · · Score: 1

      FYI, the folks who are tuning the Linux 2.4/2.5 kernel for high performance under heavy parellel database load are switching FROM SAPdb to Postgresql because it is faster and can provide a greater load than SAPdb.

      I'm willing to bet 99.9% of the folks saying Postgresql isn't as good as SAPdb haven't spent more than 5 minutes reading the glossy tri-folds for SAPdb or Postgresql.

      --

      --- It is not the things we do which we regret the most, but the things which we don't do.
    47. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Sxooter · · Score: 1

      Sorry, that's no longer true. Remember a year ago when keyword searchs were lightening fast and all? Well, last summer sourceforge whored itself out to IBM and switched to DB2, and now it's dog slow.

      Don't believe me? Grab a copy of sourceforge, download db2 personal edition and postgresql and compare for yourself. DB2 is a pig. A mighty, powerful, capable, but slow database. That's not just my opinion, it's the opinion of anyone who's benchmarked it against Postgresql lately.

      --

      --- It is not the things we do which we regret the most, but the things which we don't do.
    48. Re:"Interesting" My Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why are there 551 bugs and only 2 patches ?

  6. So... who's going to object next? by imtheguru · · Score: 1

    PONTIAC !

    --
    Yet Socrates himself is particularly missed.
    A lovely little thinker but a bugger when he's pissed.
    1. Re:So... who's going to object next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >PONTIAC !

      Did you hear about the nigga who bought a Pontiac? Po' Ol' Nigga Thought It Was A Cadillac!

    2. Re:So... who's going to object next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, PONTIWAC?

      Idiot.

    3. Re:So... who's going to object next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Po' Ol' Nerd Thought It's A Cadillac!

  7. No, by pb · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think that's a well-known Welsh browser, actually.

    Are you sure you weren't searching English-only? :)

    --
    pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
    1. Re:No, by Inda · · Score: 0

      Doedd eich ymchwiliad - Daawtrtdfw - ddim yn cyfateb ag unrhyw ddogfen.
      Methwyd dod o hyd i dudalennau yn cynnwys "daawtrtdfw".

      Chwilio Google

      --
      This post contains benzene, nitrosamines, formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide.
    2. Re:No, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doedd eich ymchwiliad - Daawtrtdfw - ddim yn cyfateb ag unrhyw ddogfen.
      Methwyd dod o hyd i dudalennau yn cynnwys "daawtrtdfw".

      That's Welsh for "Hi". :-)

  8. Shock and Awe? by Jason1729 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If it were my choice, the childish email campaign would just make me more determined to keep the firebird name. Sending offensive messages to people who have nothing to do with the name change is no way to get things done. Maybe AOL can send it's lawyers after IBPhoenix for DoSing them. They can easily show damages in lost developer time deleting the messages and extra load on their mail server.

    Jason
    ProfQuotes

    1. Re:Shock and Awe? by jkrise · · Score: 1

      Absolutely! Actually AOL should keep this debate simmering for about 23 days - until the shock and awe is gone. They should reluctantly change the name at the end of it all, should get enough publicity.

      Contrary to earlier perception, this debate is actually doing a lot of good to Open Source stuff - keep it up.

      --
      If you keep throwing chairs, one day you'll break windows....
    2. Re:Shock and Awe? by Draigon · · Score: 5, Funny

      Where do I sign the petition to prevent the words "Shock and Awe" to ever be used together again? If I have an aneurysm, you'll know why.

      --
      -Rabbit
    3. Re:Shock and Awe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sign on your ballot when you vote for someone else for president to show Bush how much you hate the phrase?

      Vote with your dollars can cancel your CNN/etc subscriptions?

    4. Re:Shock and Awe? by MCZapf · · Score: 1

      Didn't Sony recently trademark that phrase?

    5. Re:Shock and Awe? by MCZapf · · Score: 1

      Nope. I should have checked Google News first. Sony wanted to trademark the phrase, but backed down.

    6. Re:Shock and Awe? by netsharc · · Score: 0, Troll

      Bin Laden should come with a new video clip (hey his videos probably get more airtime than some clips in MTV), and say September 11 was his "Shock and Awe" move. (Although is he really behind it, or is that just the US propaganda?) I bet that would stop anybody else from using it.

      --
      What time is it/will be over there? Check with my iPhone app!
    7. Re:Shock and Awe? by horza · · Score: 2, Funny

      Well you won't be hearing the phrase from Sony any time soon...

      Phillip.

    8. Re:Shock and Awe? by stinky+wizzleteats · · Score: 2, Funny

      Where do I sign the petition to prevent the words "Shock and Awe" to ever be used together again?

      What's the matter? Aren't you a patriot? Guards! Seize him!

    9. Re:Shock and Awe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "These colors don't run!" I want to punch someone in the face.

    10. Re:Shock and Awe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it wasn't lame. It was heretical.

    11. Re:Shock and Awe? by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      "Shawkinaw" - I think they're a small North American Indian tribe.

    12. Re:Shock and Awe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    13. Re:Shock and Awe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what a bunch of pussies!

  9. One Man's Opinion by BurritoWarrior · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I do not think that the Moz team should use Phoenix. Even though it probably passses a legal litmus test, as they are very different products, that doesn't mean they should continue to use it.

    I think it would be nice to show some respect to another open source project which precedes yours. I am sure that if the database guys called their product MozillaDatabase, the Mozilla team wouldn't be very happy, and I am sure there would be an outcry on Slashdot. Or better yet, how about Microsoft changes one of their product to the name Phoenix. How about instead of MSN Messenger they call it MSN Firebird? Would everyone here tell the Firebird/Moz team to "quit crying"?

    I guess the summary is, just play nice with others and change the name out of courtesy for others.

    1. Re:One Man's Opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't confuse FirebirdSQL Datebase with Mozilla Firebird Browser. What they did was childish and petty. I really couldn't care less what IBPhoenix wants.

    2. Re:One Man's Opinion by dabadab · · Score: 1

      Gimme a break.
      Mozilla is a unique name which is very much recognized as a brand, but Firebird is not.
      There is/was a car, a game development company, a game, a raceway, a music publisher, a book publisher and a thousand million other things with that name.
      This protest is almost like if he complained about someone being called John, just because that is his name too. Childish.

      --
      Real life is overrated.
    3. Re:One Man's Opinion by smcn · · Score: 5, Informative

      According to the Phoenix (now Firebird) project page, they already went through months of legal investigation and deemed Firebird a perfectly usable and un-infringing name. There is no way they will change it now.

      Also, considering the Firebird Database is an open source project, I doubt they would be able/willing to bring up a lawsuit for the name anyhow.

    4. Re:One Man's Opinion by BurritoWarrior · · Score: 1

      Also, considering the Firebird Database is an open source project, I doubt they would be able/willing to bring up a lawsuit for the name anyhow.

      Hi smcn,

      I wasn't saying they should bring up a legal challenge. I think we are overly litigous as it is. I also don't agree with the approach they took. All I meant is that I don't think others here would be happy if they were on the receiving end of the naming issue, and that it would be quite nice/kind/mature to simply show respect for another open source project and pick a different name.

    5. Re:One Man's Opinion by Frodrick · · Score: 2, Interesting
      "Also, considering the Firebird Database is an open source project, I doubt they would be able/willing to bring up a lawsuit for the name anyhow."
      If we start picking whose rights to trample based on their ability to resist us legally, then we are no different from bastards who forced the Mozilla team to abandon the name "Phoenix".
    6. Re:One Man's Opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, considering the Firebird Database is an open source project, I doubt they would be able/willing to bring up a lawsuit for the name anyhow.

      Oh thats O.K then. I think I'll steal their code and break into their houses, too. They don't have the money to pay for a legal defence so it's O.K

      You flaming dumbass.

    7. Re:One Man's Opinion by moncyb · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, due to the rampant abuse of copyright, patent, and trademark laws, many people feel as if they have no choice but to do this...

    8. Re:One Man's Opinion by spells · · Score: 1
      John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt
      His name is my name, too!
      Whenever we go out,
      The people always shout
      There goes John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt!

      Well the parent got it running through my head, now everyone can suffer with me!

    9. Re:One Man's Opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Also, considering the Firebird Database is an open source project, I doubt they would be able/willing to bring up a lawsuit for the name anyhow.
      Right: they can't fight, so let's take their name and call them losers if they protest.
    10. Re:One Man's Opinion by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      Firebird was the name of British Telecom's original software division. If I remember correctly, they published Elite on various 8-bit and 16-bit formats, Starglider on the Commodore Amiga and Atari ST, and various others.

      There's prior art for you, and prior art in the computing field no less.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    11. Re:One Man's Opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I completely agree. Legality isn't the issue. How about avoiding confusion in the OSS community? Now every time I see "Firebird" I have to figure out which project it refers to.

      "Serious security bug found in Firebird"
      "Firebird update available"
      "Firebird chosen by IBM"

      Come on guys. Its not like we're running out of names.

    12. Re:One Man's Opinion by DarkZero · · Score: 1

      do not think that the Moz team should use Phoenix. Even though it probably passses a legal litmus test, as they are very different products, that doesn't mean they should continue to use it.

      I think it would be nice to show some respect to another open source project which precedes yours. ....

      I guess the summary is, just play nice with others and change the name out of courtesy for others.


      Personally, I think that whatever moral high ground the FirebirdSQL people had went out the window when they immediately engaged in a pathetically childish campaign to spam the forums and email boxes of the people that they had a disagreement with. After that little show of petulance, I hope the Mozilla Firebird people hold onto the name like a pit bull with a piece of steak. People with no respect or courtesy for others do not deserve respectful or courteous treatment. They probably deserved the name before, even though they just have a little project that no one has heard of before and no one could reasonably be expected to know about, but they don't know. When you act like they did, your right to be treated in a respectful manner is forfeit.

    13. Re:One Man's Opinion by axxackall · · Score: 1
      If Microsoft will name their product using some (unregistered!) name from OOS world, than that OSS project has nothing to do but give up. Lawyers cost money and OSS is no much to Microsoft from money prospective.

      But what OSS projects can do, in order to protect them from name hijacking by big corps, is to choose the name which a big corp will never want to use. For example, it can remind some bad moment from the history, like, Cake4BillGates. Or it can just call something bad, like Shame2LarryEllison. Or it can remind the bad quality of commercial products, like WinBugs or OraBugs. Of course, if you will create a Linux distro called Slowlaris than you might be called to the court, as Lindows guys.

      All examples above can be used not only by OSS, but also by other commercial competitors. I can imagine that if some OSS project will choose the name "Pink Giant" then Sun can steal it to call one of their big computers.

      But you want the absolute guarantee that no big corp will want to hijack, then you should choose realliy bad names. How about FsckOS? Or FreakingSQL? Or Sh*t++? Doubt any corps want to take such a name away from you. But be careful, if you will choose a name like LesbOS or PedofilML than you may have a problem with sexual minorities or even with FBI.

      So, basically, the choosing a name is very difficult and you should use all your creativity for it.

      --

      Less is more !
    14. Re:One Man's Opinion by PolyDwarf · · Score: 1

      Also, considering the Firebird Database is an open source project, I doubt they would be able/willing to bring up a lawsuit for the name anyhow.


      Great... So the person/project with the most money for lawyers wins? Gee, weren't we supposed to be against that kind of thing?

    15. Re:One Man's Opinion by platypus · · Score: 1

      I'd prefer "jlosass"

    16. Re:One Man's Opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Also, considering the Firebird Database is an open source project, I doubt they would be able/willing to bring up a lawsuit for the name anyhow.

      This offensive attitude is exactly how this whole mess got started. Phoenix Technologies threatened to sue because people might confuse the Phoenix web browser with the FirstBIOS web browser. The only reason the Phoenix developers changed the name is because they didn't want to fight a lawsuit.

      If the Phoenix web browser were a core product of a large company, they would have laughed at Phoenix Technologies and continued using the same name.

    17. Re:One Man's Opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know you're on Slashdot, so you think you can spout off about whatever without knowing anything, but FYI - you're wrong about this (ambiguous pronoun, yay). Phoenix Technology makes a BROWSER (its built into the BIOS)! Read up on their fucking website so you can pretend a little better on Slashdot to know what you're talking about. Would you have a problem if I called my new browser Konquerer, or my new file manager Nautilus?

  10. Open source politics? by Blaine+Hilton · · Score: 2, Insightful
    This seems more then anything to be nothing but open-source politics. People should spend more time coding better software then arguing about the names of that software.

    Go Calculate Something

    1. Re:Open source politics? by Buck2 · · Score: 0

      Score 1: troll

      you win!

      gak! 18 seconds since my reply or something stupid like that ... I'm just filling space ... you might have lost if you actually posted at 2 and were modded down ... I think being positive with a troll mod is a victory, though, in any case ... I mean, it's not as if all of your posts were trolls, it's obviously just a "glitch" in the "system" ... /. r0x0rs!

      --

      As my father lik@(munch munch)... ....
  11. What it should be called by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mr Potato head

  12. I don't get it.. by zcat_NZ · · Score: 1

    I'm still wondering why they wanted to change the name in the first place. What was wrong with Phoenix for a name?

    --
    455fe10422ca29c4933f95052b792ab2
    1. Re:I don't get it.. by amlutias · · Score: 2, Informative

      phoenix bios has a browser for embedded systems and they own the TM on phoenix.

    2. Re:I don't get it.. by Buck2 · · Score: 1

      Oop! _I_ own "T" and "M" being as they are part of my name ... and I give explicit rights to anyone to use these letters as they feel necessary.

      Yup.

      Actually, I don't own "M". I was just making that part up. But "T" ... have at it!

      --

      As my father lik@(munch munch)... ....
    3. Re:I don't get it.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wether or not you enjoy being an ass is irrelevent. Phoenix is a legal trademark of the BIOS company, who have a product (An embedded web browser) which is clearly within the same namespace as Phoenix, the web browser. Quite rightly, Phoenix The BIOS guys complained to Pheonix The Browser guys about the name collision, and Phoenix The Browser had to change its name. Thats how the Real World works.

    4. Re:I don't get it.. by gilesjuk · · Score: 1

      I thought trademarking words in the dictionary was frowned upon?

      Windows always starts with a capital letter, that's how Microsoft make the distinction between the trademark and the word.

      So call it "phoenix" not "Pheonix" and you'll be fine :)

    5. Re:I don't get it.. by amlutias · · Score: 1

      um. i would bet 90% of current trademarks are made up of "words in the dictionary". the point is that the owner of a conflicting mark is operating in the same space, and AOL has decided to avoid having to defend their use by changing the name of the lightweight browser component.

      and actually, no, trademarking words in the dictionary is not frowned upon at all. you can trademark anything you want, if you have deep enough pockets to pursue infringement and general upkeep of the mark. indeed, this recent post by DJ Spooky to <nettime> describes a press conference describing the trademark of the term "hip-hop".

    6. Re:I don't get it.. by moncyb · · Score: 2, Funny

      Just shows how crazy the so-called IP laws have gone. Maybe I'll trademark the names Cary Sherman and Jack Valenti. Sue those bastards into the ground.

    7. Re:I don't get it.. by amlutias · · Score: 0

      I hope you're trolling.

      The failure of slashdot to educate its users about the way trademark ACTUALLY WORKS never fails to disappoint me.

    8. Re:I don't get it.. by Bedouin+X · · Score: 1

      I hope that you were being facetious with that link that is so obviously an April Fools joke. RICHard GONNAHANGYOU? Come on...

      --
      Dissolve... Resolve... Evolve...
    9. Re:I don't get it.. by moncyb · · Score: 1

      You confuse sarcasm and trolling.

    10. Re:I don't get it.. by gilesjuk · · Score: 1

      Well you can trademark anything if you're a big powerful company, if you're a smaller one then it's harder.

      If you trademark a common word then you will need to captilise the word, other wise I could for example trademark the word "and" and (TM) make lots of money from it.

      Also you need to actively use your trademark, otherwise you can't keep it. This prevents people trademarking the whole dictionary, waiting for someone else to use that name.

  13. Cutesy names are retarded. by juuri · · Score: 2, Funny

    Just call it "Open Source Web Browser" or "Open Browser".

    --
    --- I do not moderate.
    1. Re:Cutesy names are retarded. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Just call it "Open Source Web Browser" or "Open Browser".

      They can't do that, I am already manufacturing a barbecue called "Open Source Web Browser". I call on all slashdotter's to send offensive messages to juuri!
    2. Re:Cutesy names are retarded. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      The OSWB acronym is already taken by the Ophthalmological Society of West Bengal.

    3. Re:Cutesy names are retarded. by Buck2 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      your bbq sucks

      I burnt like twelve chickens and a SWEET hamhock on that POS.

      plus! there's no tech support for this thing ... garbage if you ask me ... I'm going to give it to Goodwill, not that I want to foist this piece of junk on some other poor soul or anything, but HEY TAX WRITE-FUCKING-OFF!

      --

      As my father lik@(munch munch)... ....
    4. Re:Cutesy names are retarded. by revividus · · Score: 1

      They should have called it something utilitarian, say, Internet Explorer. Wait... which name was retarded again?
      Does this mean I should call my OS `Open Source OS'(OSOS? we could abbreviate it `OS/2'... Too cutesy?), instead of the cutesy `Linux'?

    5. Re:Cutesy names are retarded. by Drakin · · Score: 1

      Naw, it's be OS^2, otherwise it'd just be half and OS

    6. Re:Cutesy names are retarded. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And anyone else, after that, has to name their product Open Browser 2, and so on.

      So, you could like Open Browser 44 over Open Browser 72, but not as much as Open Browser 11... and can't wait for Open Browser 78 to come out.

      he he he

    7. Re:Cutesy names are retarded. by revividus · · Score: 1

      ... as long as it isn't called `warp' or anything. That would be cutesy.

  14. It doesn't seem like a big mess to me by mharris007 · · Score: 1

    Ok, so someone else in the Open Source community is using FireBird as part of its products name, big deal!!! C'mon guys get over this bickering like little children and grow up.

    Thank heavens they made the call to try and put forth a much more professional boycott regime.

    --


    ---
    Mike
    I'm going to kick the next person that I see with their karma rating in their sig.
    1. Re:It doesn't seem like a big mess to me by Rastor · · Score: 1
      Ok, so someone else in the Open Source community is using FireBird as part of its products name, big deal!!! C'mon guys get over this bickering like little children and grow up.
      The problem is the possibility of confusion.

      Part of the Firebird SQL project is the "Firebird Browser", which browses the database. You don't see a possibility of confusion with the "Mozilla Firebird Browser"??

      Suppose one day it is announced that the slash system now supports Firebird. Wait, what does that mean? Does it mean that the database backend can now run on Firebird SQL? Or does it mean that slash can now be browsed with Mozilla Firebird? Result: confusion.

      What about the package maintainers for the various Linux distributions? If someone installs the "firebird" package, are they getting a web browser or a database? More confusion.

      This name change DOES cause very real problems.

      Thank heavens they made the call to try and put forth a much more professional boycott regime.
      What are you even talking about? At no point during this exchange was a boycott proposed.
  15. Why complain this way? by tolldog · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I find it hard to believe that this is how adults react in such a situation?

    Do they think that annoying some group of people will make it better? If I were the mozilla group I would have issues with giving in. Brute force does not mean its right.

    A database and a browser are not the same. There would not be any confusion. There has to be a better way to handle this.

    I think I would be less likely to use or work on the database project now... all because on how they reacted.

    --
    -I just work here... how am I supposed to know?
    1. Re:Why complain this way? by wadetemp · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I find it hard to believe that this is how adults react in such a situation?

      Do you live on the same planet I do? Here on Terra the reaction of adults is wholely unpredictable. Myself included. Of course a database and a browser are the same. Let us send our nasty Terran rage mail in peace please.

    2. Re:Why complain this way? by Kircle · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I find it hard to believe that this is how adults react in such a situation?

      They might be five year olds trapped in a man's body. :-)

      --

      -- Kircle

    3. Re:Why complain this way? by Buck2 · · Score: 1

      Terra is for sucks.

      ACent is where it's at. Triple-breasted DDD's a-plenty. Send me an email and I'll hook you up with some pimp travel rates!

      booyah!

      --

      As my father lik@(munch munch)... ....
    4. Re:Why complain this way? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. I would have felt sympathetic for the Firebird developers and users, however the way in which they have reacted has actually put me off ever being interested in what they have to offer.

      If they had been quite friendly about it and hadn't reacted so badly, I might have felt sympathic for them.

      Go Mozilla!

    5. Re:Why complain this way? by Kircle · · Score: 1

      You wonder that, but it's amazing how easily people forget that age does not translate into mentally mature. My comment was meant as part jab, part observation of a fact that many people seemly overlook.

      --

      -- Kircle

    6. Re:Why complain this way? by NineNine · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I find it hard to believe that this is how adults react in such a situation?

      No, this is how zealots react. This kind of silly, childish bullshit is exactly why people have such a hard time even considering Open Source anything.

    7. Re:Why complain this way? by Rastor · · Score: 1

      I find it hard to take admonition on maturity from someone advertising "Nakkid Nerds" in their signature...

    8. Re:Why complain this way? by Lord+Ender · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One thing I have noticed is that a lot of people tend to act like children when they are online even if they seem mature in person. My hypothesis is that removing face-to-face contact removes many of the social pressures that force us to act 'maturely'.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    9. Re:Why complain this way? by chaosmind · · Score: 1
      I find it hard to believe that this is how adults react in such a situation?

      • Israel v. Palestine
      • England v. Ireland
      • India v. Pakistan
      • Windows v. Mac
      • Emacs v. vi
      • GNOME v. KDE
      • (insert ad nauseum other petty squabbles here)

      You might think I'm being facetious with that list but, sadly, I'm not: all these disputes differ only in degrees of scale. Frankly, I'm always astonished when people from different walks of life manage to "agree to disagree"... Most adults do not live life like a Sly and the Family Stone song...

      =(

    10. Re:Why complain this way? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot v. Microsoft

    11. Re:Why complain this way? by NineNine · · Score: 1

      I find it hard to take admonition on maturity from someone advertising "Nakkid Nerds" in their signature...

      Hey, easy now. All of the Nakkid Nerds are grown-ups, and the site's only for grown-ups. It's very "mature".

  16. I see it as Mozilla.org's duty by Sevn · · Score: 5, Funny

    to completely ignore these idiots and definitely
    keep the name to spite them now. It might not be
    a bad idea to write some sort of redirection or
    "pitty party" filter code that rewrites the
    offending morons websites like Opera did with
    MSN.

    --
    For every annoying gentoo user, are three even more annoying anti-gentoo crybabies. Take Yosh from #Gimp for example.
    1. Re:I see it as Mozilla.org's duty by jkrise · · Score: 1

      "It might not be a bad idea to write some sort of redirection "

      Nice idea! Any reference to FireBird SQL sites using the Firebird Browser should be redirected to:
      microsoft.com? slashdot.org/this_debate? mozilla.org? Any other ideas welcome.

      --
      If you keep throwing chairs, one day you'll break windows....
    2. Re:I see it as Mozilla.org's duty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right. I'd go one step further and re-name the browser to the "Firebird SQL Web Browser," too, but I'm sure the mozilla folks will show a bit more restraint.

    3. Re:I see it as Mozilla.org's duty by dpete4552 · · Score: 1

      "code that rewrites the offending morons websites like Opera did with MSN"

      Care to elaberate?

      --
      http://www.archive.org/details/ThePowerOfNightmares
    4. Re:I see it as Mozilla.org's duty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    5. Re:I see it as Mozilla.org's duty by agentkhaki · · Score: 2, Informative

      Opera released a version of their browser - the fark edition or something like that - that, when accessing the MSN site, runs the contents through a translator of sorts and basically screws up the content. This was in responce to Microsoft deliberately making sure that anyone using Opera to access their site wouldn't be able to make much use of it, and for no reason other than the fact that they felt like it.

      --
      Ack!
    6. Re:I see it as Mozilla.org's duty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Yeah, what a great response. If that doesn't work, lets just crack their website and post goatse all over it? If that doesn't do it, then we'll kill their puppies! How dare the Firebird SQL guys go so far to complain!?

    7. Re:I see it as Mozilla.org's duty by ianscot · · Score: 1
      Yeah -- "spite," ignoring the idiots who complain, hacking Web sites... truly, those are the tolerant values that make Rwanda a great country.

      (At least it got modded "Funny.")

      --
      "Fundamentalism" isn't about divine morality. It's about human authority.
    8. Re:I see it as Mozilla.org's duty by dpete4552 · · Score: 1

      lol

      --
      http://www.archive.org/details/ThePowerOfNightmares
  17. Actually, No. by ogre2112 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    It's not very interesting. ^_^

    A tad 'sad', combined with a little 'why'.

  18. Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The use of the name in this case is non-confusing and the SQL people with their database have no basis for interfering with the Mozilla people and their specialty browser. The only reason Phoenix had trouble was that the BIOS maker also had actual browser functionality being marketed under the Phoenix name. This sameness does not apply in the case of FireBird. To conclude, someone should bitch-slap these children for running a spam campaign to annoy one group of open-source programmers to change their non-similar project's name. What would be appropriate at this stage is if the SQL folks would give up their name as contrition for their inappropriate steps.

    1. Re:Non-story by GlowStars · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The use of the name in this case is non-confusing

      Because you say so? Heck, a lot of people are very likely to install both products if for example they develop a 3-tier Application with Firebird as backend SQL server and testing the web-tier with Mozilla the browser.

      Even naming the RPMs of both products non-confusing would be a challenge.

    2. Re:Non-story by fishbert42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "...the SQL people with their database have no basis for interfering with the Mozilla people and their specialty browser."

      Actually, I think they do have a basis for interfering...
      The more I think about it, the more I come to the conclusion that the SQL people are mostly making all this fuss to get the massive amounts (relatively speaking here, folks) of free publicity for their project. I'd never heard of them until this Mozilla Phoenix/Firebird mess, so I guess it must be working.

    3. Re:Non-story by Selanit · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There are two issues at hand here: legality and politeness. It is certainly legal for mozilla.org to choose and use the name Firebird for their browser -- it is indeed difficult to confuse a browser for a SQL server. It was also, however, impolite of them to do so without even taking the time to send an email to the FirbirdSQL people saying "Hey, we'd like to call our browser Firebird. You cool with that?" After all, it's not as if there's no similarity between the projects. They do different things, sure, but they're both open source, they're both computer programs, and sometimes you use a browser to access a SQL database. Fairly often, in fact.

      And don't tell me that the name-choosers were unaware of the SQL project. It took them, what, four months to pick this name? Or was it five? Five and a half? And in all that time, these inveterate computer geeks never even typed the word into Google? (As of this writing, the FirebirdSQL project still tops the list of results for that search.)

      It's not as though there's no precedent for two OSS projects to share a name. Look at Gentoo the Linux distro and Gentoo the file manager. At the very bottom of that second link you'll find a little note from the developer of the file manager saying "Gentoo the Linux distribution has nothing to do with gentoo the file manager, except the latter runs on the former. I actually used the name first, way back in September 1998. I've been in touch with the Gentoo folks, and we're cool."

      So, ultimately, the parent post is only partially right: the legality of this move is a non-story. The story lies in the fact that the name change was made in an impolite way, apparently without any attempt to contact the FirebirdSQL group at all. Would it really have been so hard to have sent that email? They could even have exchanged reciprocal links, so that anybody who did get confused would easily be set straight. In the initial announcement of the name on the MozillaZine forums, Asa Dotzler (sp?) wrapped up with the words "Hopefully this will be the end of naming legal issues for a while." Well, he got his wish -- about the legal part, anyway.

    4. Re:Non-story by lewp · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It's not as though there's no precedent for two OSS projects to share a name. Look at Gentoo the Linux distro and Gentoo the file manager. At the very bottom of that second link you'll find a little note from the developer of the file manager saying "Gentoo the Linux distribution has nothing to do with gentoo the file manager, except the latter runs on the former. I actually used the name first, way back in September 1998. I've been in touch with the Gentoo folks, and we're cool."

      That's how things should be. I wish Gentoo-as-file-manager's author would go smack some sense into Firebird-as-database's whiny users/developers. Of course I also wish it didn't take a pack of lawyers to pick a name for your fucking software.

      --
      Game... blouses.
    5. Re:Non-story by rherbert · · Score: 4, Insightful

      mozilla-firebird-1.5-7.rpm
      firebirdsql-1.0.2-908. rpm

      That's confusing?

    6. Re:Non-story by rjstanford · · Score: 3, Interesting
      And don't tell me that the name-choosers were unaware of the SQL project. It took them, what, four months to pick this name? Or was it five? Five and a half? And in all that time, these inveterate computer geeks never even typed the word into Google? [google.com] (As of this writing, the FirebirdSQL project still tops the list of results for that search.)
      Well, of course it does. There's just been a big rush of sites talking about this problem posting links to them. Google is nothing if not adaptable.

      Or do you really believe that more people are associating the name Firebird with this database (for the record, I didn't know about their name change to Firebird, and I'm a professional DBA) than they are with the Pontiac muscle car? I would be willing to bet that they were much further down the list before this came out.

      Anyway, did the Firebird team consult with, let's see, Firebird Web Design? Or Financial Firebird? Or any number of other software projects using the name Firebird?

      My opinion? Its their fault for using a generic name. Microsoft's product isn't called Windows, its "Microsoft Windows". Why isn't the database Firebird called "Firebird SQL" (for example)? And the browser "Mozilla Firebird" (hmm.. bulky..). Nobody has exclusive rights to the name Firebird, no matter who came first.
      --
      You're special forces then? That's great! I just love your olympics!
    7. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So then you are telling me that the real issue here is how the Firebird browser team was impolite? Now that's news! I'm sooo glad I looked into this issue. I will now politely retreat from this whole worthless debate.

      P.S. If you feel that my posting was impolite, feel free to submit a news article to Slashdot.

    8. Re:Non-story by idontsmoke · · Score: 1

      It was also, however, impolite of them to do so without even taking the time to send an email to the FirbirdSQL people saying "Hey, we'd like to call our browser Firebird. You cool with that?"

      Whilest that is so, the FirebiredSQL team has now used up any currency they have to negotiate with the Mozilla team. Resorting to harrasment of one or two of the members of the Mozilla project personally is not just plain rude, but quite disgusting behaviour.

      The Mozilla team may have been wrong to simply take the name (and I'm sure the AOL legal team knew about this project, I can't see them investigating this for 5 months without talking about this overlap), but the firebirdSQL team are also wrong result to spaming mailboxes with abusive mail.

    9. Re:Non-story by Rastor · · Score: 1
      The use of the name in this case is non-confusing and the SQL people with their database have no basis for interfering with the Mozilla people
      WHAT?? Non-confusing? How did this get modded up?

      Part of the Firebird SQL project is the "Firebird Browser", which browses the database. You don't see a possibility of confusion with the "Mozilla Firebird Browser"??

      What if someone develops a 3-tier Application with Firebird SQL as the backend database and Mozilla Firebird as the client? "Wait, now I install Firebird? I thought I already did that!!" Sounds like confusion to me.

      Suppose one day it is announced that the slash system now supports Firebird. Wait, what does that mean? Does it mean that the database backend can now run on Firebird SQL? Or does it mean that slash can now be browsed with Mozilla Firebird? Result: confusion.

      What about the package maintainers for the various Linux distributions? If someone installs the "firebird" package, are they getting a web browser or a database? More confusion.

      The Firebird SQL project has legitimate reason to complain.
    10. Re:Non-story by TaliesinWI · · Score: 1

      The problem is, the Mozilla people are faw more worried about picking a name that a corporation can come after them for than stepping on other free projects' toes. What IF, after doing all the months of research to find out that Firebird doesn't violate any trademarks, they would have asked the Firebird database team and that team would have said "no"? Would you expect Mozilla to just chuck all that research and come up with another name that also isn't trademark infringing but this time might piss off some guy somewhere who named his MP3 player "Malibu" five years ago? At some point you gotta stop and use common sense. No one is going to confuse these two products.
      (And yes, you do the research FIRST because not violating _actual_ trademarks are the thing you're trying to avoid here, not _implied_ trademarks.)

    11. Re:Non-story by PolyDwarf · · Score: 1

      Well, of course it does. There's just been a big rush of sites talking about this problem posting links to them. Google is nothing if not adaptable.


      Just to point something out.. I'm a developer that uses Firebird extensively, and they've been at the top of Google search results for Firebird for as long as I can remember (IE more than just since this flap broke out).

    12. Re:Non-story by sootman · · Score: 1

      And in case anyone doesn't know, the reason that two projects could come up with the same (odd) name, it's because 'Gentoo' is a type of penguin. So, when you name your project after a common thing, it's a risk you take.

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    13. Re:Non-story by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Well, of course it does. There's just been a big rush of sites talking about this problem posting links to them. Google is nothing if not adaptable.

      That has nothing to do with it. Search for "firebird download", "firebird bugs", or "firebird ML archive" and you get exactly that database project. It is confusion in those areas that they want to prevent.

    14. Re:Non-story by User+956 · · Score: 0

      What about the package maintainers for the various Linux distributions? If someone installs the "firebird" package, are they getting a web browser or a database?

      If they install a "Firebird" package, they're getting a web browser. If they install a "FirebirdSQL" package, they're getting a database. If you had any reading comprehension skills you would know that from reading the story.

      --
      The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
    15. Re:Non-story by Wavicle · · Score: 1

      The story lies in the fact that the name change was made in an impolite way, apparently without any attempt to contact the FirebirdSQL group at all.

      As one of the previous posts points out, the Firebird SQL team can no longer claim the moral high road on this one. They have resorted to a campaign of harrassment via spam. If there was one sure way to invoke the ire of the internet community, spam is it.

      they're both open source, they're both computer programs

      I always love arguments that in order to bulk up throw in large redundant sweeping generalizations. How many "open source" projects are not computer programs? How large is the "open source" software world? Should we argue that two persons should not have the same name because they are both people and they both live on planet earth?

      and sometimes you use a browser to access a SQL database. Fairly often, in fact.

      I have never once used a browser to access a SQL database. A browser's primary role is accessing an http server. The only server I've used that can access a SQL database is Tomcat. The most popular web server out there is apache and apache doesn't access a SQL database, it hands the request off to a handler module or invokes an external program (cgi). There are generally two layers between browser and database, and by the time you're into that second layer the method of datastore is immaterial.

      If your argument is that the browser is the interface through which people see the representation of the data stored in an sql database, that is still a pretty weak argument. A browser is also the interface through which many people see the images taken by a camera. Should a browser ensure that its name does not conflict with the name of a digital camera? There are all manner of representations of information that are now "web enabled", and by "web enabled" we mean "viewable in a web browser". A browser should not be limited in name because something of similar name could be accessed by it because practically everything can be accessed by a browser through an appropriately enabled web server (that's why browsers are so popular!).

      It's not as though there's no precedent for two OSS projects to share a name. [...] At the very bottom of that second link you'll find a little note from the developer of the file manager

      So was the developer of the file manager consulted by the gentoo distribution before the distribution came into existence, or did they have civil discourse after the fact and come to an amicable resolution?

      They could even have exchanged reciprocal links, so that anybody who did get confused would easily be set straight.

      This could have been done after the naming issue had come to light. Did the FirebirdSQL people try this or did they just head straight to a spam campaign? There are all manner of things rationally thinking people could have done. Which of them did the database folks use?

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    16. Re:Non-story by Uberdog · · Score: 1

      So, what you're saying is that, obviously, the distribution needs to change it's name to Chinstrap Linux.

    17. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The current links for phoneix
      ftp://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/phoenix/nightly /latest-t runk/phoenix-i686-pc-linux-gnu.tar.gz
      might change to
      ftp://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/FIREBIRD/nightly/lat est- trunk/FIREBIRD-i686-pc-linux-gnu.tar.gz

      Which might cause confusion among users with existing open sources FirebirdSQL something like
      http://unc.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/fi rebird /FirebirdCS-1.5.0.3234-0.RC1.i686.rpm

    18. Re:Non-story by bshensky · · Score: 1

      Oh c'mon! You want Oracle to change their name to OracleSQL? SybaseSQL? InformixSQL? PostgreSQ---.

      Never mind.

      --
      Makin' money, makin' friends, makin' whoopee and wearin' Depends
  19. We at Mozilla... by raehl · · Score: 0, Informative

    We at Mozilla believe that having a browser and database group with the same name in the same market is confusing. We ask our users to make their concerns known to IBPhoenix so that they may understand the problem they have created and take appropriate action. You should consider writing to:

    (This is where I would put the emails of all the IBPhoneix people if I was not incredibly lazy.)

  20. "With my last breath, I stab at thee" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Despite the new name being approved by AOL Legal, supporters of the FirebirdSQL database were quick to object (though the name is also used by many other people). A coincidentally named supporter of FirebirdSQL, IBPhoenix, put up a slightly immature request for their readers to participate in mass posting campaign targetting mozilla.org developers' email accounts, newsgroups and even forums at independent sites such as MozillaZine and Slashdot. FirebirdSQL's official site later reiterated this message. However, IBPhoenix have now declared this shock-and-awe stage of their campaign over, heralding it a success. "

    Sounds similiar to tactics we hear around here, when it's a company or person we don't agree with. How many times have we heard "everyone E-mail them" or we're going to "/." their site?

    Sounds like bad karma coming home to roost.

    1. Re:"With my last breath, I stab at thee" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that makes no sense all!! So since there are retards on /. that do these things that its bad karma on Mozilla?
      How in the hell is what happens here on /. coming home to roost on Mozilla. What are you talking about? More mindless /. dribble....

    2. Re:"With my last breath, I stab at thee" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "With my last breath, I stab at thee"


      The question is, are you quoting Ahab, or Khan quoting Ahab? And it's "From hell's heart I stab at thee. For hate's sake I spit my last dying breath at thee."

    3. Re:"With my last breath, I stab at thee" by nosferatu-man · · Score: 1

      ... or Monty Burns quoting Ahab?

      'jfb

      --
      To spur "enterprise Linux," Big Bang, the distributed two-phase commit.
  21. Just going to have to make up a word by gaminRey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is the problem with using a word from any established language. No matter what you choose, it is very likely that someone, somewhere is already using it, and won't like you using it. This is even more likely to happen if you use a word that has some kind of "coolness" or "geek" factor. This of course is not to say I think the name Firebird is at all interesting. In fact, it just doesn't roll off the tongue well enough for me use it. As for me and my house, we shall use "phoenix" unless someone gives me good reason to do otherwise.

    --
    j.goforth
    1. Re:Just going to have to make up a word by yuri · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So, basically Phoenix changed it's name from one that is already taken by a BIOS Maker that can sue, to the name of another OSS product that can't.

      Its not a legal matter as far as I'm concerned. Comes down to fact that AOL staff didn't have the imagination to think up a name of their own. So they took one that they know they can stomp all over and make it theirs.

      Is this the respect different OSS projects show each other, or only when they are actually heartless multinationals is disguise.

    2. Re:Just going to have to make up a word by roca · · Score: 1

      Phoenix BIOS has a web browser which naturally would be referred to as the Phoenix Browser. FirebirdSQL does not have its own Web browser. That's the difference.

      > AOL staff didn't have the imagination to think up
      > a name of their own

      Just for fun, try to come up with a name that's memorable and that no-one's ever used before for any software product. Perhaps it's harder than you think.

  22. It's a moot point. by Ambiguous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's all foolish. If they called it FirebirdSQL, that would be one thing. But the word "firebird" is still free use. Just like how we can stil call windows windows, even though Microsoft would probably try to claim otherwise, given the chance. But, since you can't claim a word like that as your own, we have windows, instead of "transparent-but-solid wall portals." Same goes for firebird. Besides, it also helps that they're different products. You can legally claim it as infringement if they name their product the same (or similar) to yours *if* it's the same (or similar) product. But, in this case, they aren't the same (nor similar). Nobody will confuse the two. They can call it firebird if they want to.

    --
    Their may be a grammatical error, misspeling, or evn a typo in this post.
    1. Re:It's a moot point. by Rastor · · Score: 1
      But, in this case, they aren't the same (nor similar). Nobody will confuse the two. They can call it firebird if they want to.
      I disagree.

      Part of the Firebird SQL project is the "Firebird Browser", which browses the database. You don't see a possibility of confusion with the "Mozilla Firebird Browser"??

      What if someone develops a 3-tier application with Firebird SQL as the backend database and Mozilla Firebird as the client? "Wait, now I install Firebird? I thought I already did that!!" Sounds like confusion to me.

      Suppose one day it is announced that the Slash system now supports Firebird. Wait, what does that mean? Does it mean that the database backend can now run on Firebird SQL? Or does it mean that Slash can now be browsed with Mozilla Firebird? Result: confusion.

      What about the package maintainers for the various Linux distributions? If someone installs the "firebird" package, are they getting a web browser or a database? More confusion.

      Think about some of the clueless people in the world of confusing and then tell me again that nobody will confuse these two projects.
  23. HotWings by sssmashy · · Score: 4, Funny

    In keeping with the Fiery Bird Motif of Firebird and Phoenix (a mythical bird that bursts into flame and is reborn)...

    May I suggest that they change the name to "HotWings" to avoid futher disputes. Has a nice ring to it, eh?

    1. Re:HotWings by cei · · Score: 1

      You, sir, have gone too far with the blanket term "Fiery Bird Motif". I hearby ask that you cease all further utterances.

      --
      This sig intentionally left justified.
    2. Re:HotWings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This would be angering another formidable corporation: McDonalds China.

    3. Re:HotWings by version5 · · Score: 1, Funny

      I don't even want to know what fiery hot wings are reborn as after they're eaten.

      --

      "It's Dot Com!"

    4. Re:HotWings by klui · · Score: 0

      Kentucky Fried Chicken thought so. :)

    5. Re:HotWings by Bakajin · · Score: 1

      Sticking with the heat and bird motif. I also suggest:

      BakedChicken and RoastTurkey

      My favorite though, since Phoenix was a women in X-Men, Ozzies/Kiwis call their women "birds", and American's call women "chicks", is is..

      SmokinChick

    6. Re:HotWings by rowanxmas · · Score: 1

      It depends on how clean the ber taps are at the Wingdome really, cause I can eat loads of hotwings without problems, unless the beer makes me sick.

      Although I think that HotWings is actaully a great name. But I question the need when the plan is to roll Phoenis/Firebird/HotWings into SeaMonkey as the main browser component at which time it will be simply "Mozilla".....

    7. Re:HotWings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Phoenix = Chickennuggests
      Minotaur = Spam
      Chatzilla = Nachos
      Composer = Pizza

    8. Re:HotWings by stinky+wizzleteats · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      See, this is why I should have read the whole thread before posting. I actually have mod points today, but can't mod this funny as it so richly deserves because I already posted in the thread. Damn! I did it again! Argh.

    9. Re:HotWings by bokmann · · Score: 1

      I think KRC has a trademark on that term... they may come after you. The Colnel may start a denial-of-chicken attack against you and your family.

    10. Re:HotWings by Phil+Wilkins · · Score: 1

      Or, in keeping with the car motif, HotWheels.

  24. Your right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is getting interesting. But not for the reason the editors advertise it...

    The IBPhoenix starts a (suposedly 'sucessful') spam campaign targeted partly at Slashdot.

    What's the most harmful thing Slashdot can do in return?

    Slashdot them.

  25. Pathetic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is really patetic, and quite sad. While I have to agree that the new names are quite unorignal, FirebirdSQL and IBPhoenix are just using this as a Publicity Stunt.
    I personlly don't think FirebirdSQL has a leg to stand on. it would be intersting to bring the antispam legeslation against these morons. I hope this whole thing back fires royaly on IBPhoenix & FirebirdSQL.

  26. Settle this like real nerds by tankdilla · · Score: 2, Funny

    they should settle this in the ring. But they're nerds, so Battlefield 1942 should be a suitable ring. Allied vs. Axis => Mozilla vs IBPhoenix. Winner gets their way.

    --

    -Look lively. LOOK LIVELY!!! --Mr. Shmallow

  27. Based on my research... by beerits · · Score: 1

    The only names not yet trademarked
    are Popplers and Zitzles. I suggest Popplers.

    1. Re:Based on my research... by 0racle · · Score: 1

      Didn't Futurama have things called popplers

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
  28. Did they trademark the name? by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    If not, then they should just STFU. Firebird is a common term, searching for "Firebird" isn't going to turn up their database without "SQL" attached, so who cares?

    OTOH, I think "Firebird" and "Thunderbird" are pretty lame names, and I wish Moz would go back to the old ones.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:Did they trademark the name? by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 1, Funny

      OTOH, I think "Firebird" and "Thunderbird" are pretty lame names, and I wish Moz would go back to the old ones.

      Like what? "Netscape 3.0 gold"?

      --
      0 1 - just my two bits
    2. Re:Did they trademark the name? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes it does:

      http://www.google.co.uk/search?sourceid=navclien t& ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=firebird

    3. Re:Did they trademark the name? by sandman_eh · · Score: 1
      Firebird is a common term, searching for "Firebird" isn't going to turn up their database without "SQL" attached, so who cares? You didn't actualy try this in goggle did you?

      The top hit I got was: Firebird - Relational Database for the New Millennium

      Also, where would you expect www.firebird-conference.com to be about ?

      I agree with the previous poster that the story is not about the legal side, but about the politiness side. It seems mozilla should have contacted the firebird core team in advance, and they didn't seem to on any of the firebirdsql lists i'm subscribed to. However I feel the behaviour and calls to mail bomb do rather let down the firebirdsql project.

      Without that at least the firebirdsql project could claim the moral high ground, but that been ceeded now.

      Using clashing names will cause a real problem in some other places to, I don't what to have to think too hard about what

      apt-get source firebird
      is going to do. Whats worse is I plan to deploy elements from both projects so this spat over names really does make my life harder, as well as the packaging names issue , there the confusion between developers after all saying "it appears to be a bug in firebird" to co-developers doesn't narrow stuff down much anymore...
      --
      Master of Peng Shui.Ancient oriental art of Penguin Arranging)
    4. Re:Did they trademark the name? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, searching for 'firebird' in google turns up the database as hit #1...

  29. Its all one big scam, for Media Attention and $ ! by westyvw · · Score: 1

    All parties interested are in on this one. Watch this logic: Step 1: Use other peoples names in your product Step 2: Complain, get Media Attention Step 3: Ask for Mass Emailing! Step 4: Sell those emails to spammers Step 5: PROFIT! Seriously, would I have heard about the other browser or the database? How many more names will "pop up"? Heh. WestyVW

  30. This is very childish. by blaqsun · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think it's really telling how healthy a community is when all they manage to do is spend time and energy flaming and mailbombing one another regarding a project's name. Couldn't they be coding instead?

    1. Re:This is very childish. by yuri · · Score: 1

      Is it healthy everytime some slashdot article starts a mailbombing of whoever the latest hate target is?

    2. Re:This is very childish. by Dionysus · · Score: 1

      Doubt most of the people complaining are coders. I suspect the majority of complainers are cheerleaders.

      --
      Je ne parle pas francais.
  31. How about Bennu? by steve's+nose+is+blee · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Staying in the Mythical Birds and flame categories, how about a new name that doesn't step on toes, opensource or otherwise,

    I propose:

    Bennu - Heron-like Phoenix of Egyptian mythology. It arose from the flames of Heliopolis and was worshipped as the soul of Orisis incarnate.

    http://members.tripod.com/~Ertosi/Folklore/Mythi ca lBirds/BennuMC.html

    1. Re:How about Bennu? by steve's+nose+is+blee · · Score: 1
    2. Re:How about Bennu? by critter_hunter · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There ought to be *something* that can satisfy them in this bestiary. If it's not enough, well, there's plenty more deities and mythical personaes on the site...

      --
      Karma: Could be worse (could be raining)
    3. Re:How about Bennu? by Buck2 · · Score: 0, Troll

      WRT your sig:

      Oh, yeah .... has it ever rained on you when digging out a corpse?

      Not so funny then, eh?

      No, I thought not.

      Keep your witty references to yourself and let us corpse-diggers deal on our own terms. We don't need you reminding us how crappy our jobs are when logging onto the interweb.

      --

      As my father lik@(munch munch)... ....
    4. Re:How about Bennu? by tuxedo-steve · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Okay, that's a valid suggestion given the "mythological beast" motif the team is going for. Just one problem, though: "Bennu" doesn't sound nearly as cool as "Phoenix" or "Firebird".

      I mean, yeah, when you're explaining what it means to your uncultured IE-using colleagues, you'd get to use phrases like "flames of Heliopolis" and "soul of Orisis (sic)"... but they're just going to go, "Benoo, huh? Ah think ah'll jez stick with me Explorer, or mebbe see what all the fuzz about this Firebird thingy wot I heard about is, it sounds tootin'-good. You can keep yer Benoo, college-boy."

      I propose moving away from the flaming-bird theme if it'll make getting a cooler name possible. Minotaur, maybe, or Gorgon, or even a non-creature, like Odysseus or something. Hey, there's an idea: Odysseus was a navigator of sorts, wasn't he?

      --
      - SMJ - (It's not just a name: it's a bad aftertaste.)
    5. Re:How about Bennu? by thinduke · · Score: 1

      So I propose:

      Simurgh: a bird so old it has seen the world destroyed and rebuilt three times.

    6. Re:How about Bennu? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dont know why anyone hasnt thought about this yet - but I propose that we call it Trogdor!
      Burni-nating the Micro-soft.

    7. Re:How about Bennu? by Fascist+Christ · · Score: 1

      Odysseus was a navigator of sorts, wasn't he?

      Yeah right, some navigator. How many years did it take him to get home? I don't think that would go very well in the benchmarks.

      2008: "We would test the new Mozilla, too. Unfortunately, we are unable to upgrade since the old version is still loading the home page from five years ago."

      --
      TodayTM BillyJoelTM GoogleTMd for StitchTMes due to WindowsTM while RollerbladeTMing with an AppleTM and a PopsicleTM
  32. Name propositions for Phoenix browser... by ceeam · · Score: 1, Funny

    How about Apache Navigator, PHP Explorer or plain simple MySQL?

    But I guess Phallus is still a popular favorite. :)

    1. Re:Name propositions for Phoenix browser... by crazyphilman · · Score: 1

      I say we just go for the gusto and call it "The Mighty Penis" like the yacht of the same name in the Dice Clay movie. Imagine:

      "Hey, what browser are you using?"
      "The Mighty Penis. It's a pretty big download, but it sure is powerful!"

      --
      Farewell! It's been a fine buncha years!
    2. Re:Name propositions for Phoenix browser... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'phallobird' seems to be not taken yet

  33. Re:They should call it... by moveax · · Score: 1

    Good idea! And to solve this issue completely the FirebirdSQL guys could rename their project to:

    "Database"

  34. Re:They are 100% right. by sweetooth · · Score: 4, Informative

    The problem is not Phoenix bios, it's the Phoenix Technologies _BROWSER_ for embedded systems. Hence they are similar and could be confusing.

    The same is not true of the Firebird SQL software. They are in differant spaces and in my opinion are not likely to be confused. The IBPhoenix guy also handled the situation poorly and doesn't merit a response.

  35. Re:They are 100% right. by ceeam · · Score: 2, Interesting

    To which I say: who cares? As long as people (managers) will be confusing the things. (Like: "Firebird DB? Must be from the same guys that do Firebird Browser. I tried that, didn't like it. Hence - we are not using the DB." etc...).

  36. why does it matter from now on? by lingqi · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Since Phonix / firebird / whatever it will change to will be intergrated into Moz ANYWAY, why not just call it moz.browser and moz.mail and moz.chat or something?

    Heck even M$ has realized that keeping up with multiple names and multiple "product images" are silly and effort-consuming, and .NET will be named "Windows server family" or some such.

    i mean, if it's a code name, fine - you use it INTERNALLY and you can call it whatever you want. Seriously though, people...

    --

    My life in the land of the rising sun.

    1. Re:why does it matter from now on? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      you totally miss the point what phoenix is, it's not just some internal codename for future mozilla release, instead it's a stripped down mozilla browser (basically) that's a seperate program, and will be so.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    2. Re:why does it matter from now on? by eyeye · · Score: 1

      No, you miss the point entirely.
      Phoenix (now firebird) is the name of the browser in the mozilla suite.
      If you are going to claim others are missing the point ensure you know what it is yourself.

      --
      Bush and Blair ate my sig!
    3. Re:why does it matter from now on? by Ed_Moyse · · Score: 1
      Tell you what, why don't you go and read about it? The previous poster was entirely right - Phoenix is a *separate* browser, based on mozilla (whose browser, or rather the codebase, is known as SeaMonkey).


      Of course, you could have found it yourself with minimal effort - look at the first line of the Firebird/Phoenix webpage which says: "Mozilla's Firebird browser is a redesign of the Mozilla browser component, similar to Galeon, K-Meleon and Camino, but written using the XUL user interface language and designed to be cross-platform."


      Note the word re-design.

    4. Re:why does it matter from now on? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might want to check the LATEST facts, before reaming someone.

    5. Re:why does it matter from now on? by eyeye · · Score: 1

      He said its a "stripped down version of the mozilla browser" which is not true, it is (or shortly will be) THE mozilla browser.

      I think the page you link to hasn't quite been updated to be consistent with the recently published roadmap.

      --
      Bush and Blair ate my sig!
    6. Re:why does it matter from now on? by gl4ss · · Score: 2, Informative

      "1 Switch Mozilla's default browser component from the XPFE-based Navigator to the standalone Phoenix browser."

      does not mean that phoenix/firebird will stop existing as what it is, stand alone browser.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  37. "This is getting very interesting!" ??? by bcilfone · · Score: 1

    Must be a slow day.

  38. Just call it Mozilla by WankersRevenge · · Score: 0

    This is really dumb and making all parties involved look really childish. What doesn't Mozilla just call their browser Mozilla. Silly huh? I mean, when you people ask you what browser you use, you don't say Firebird, you say Mozilla. yah yah - Mozilla is a platform - blah blah blah - all news and press call it Mozilla. It's labelled Mozilla - call it Mozilla. This whole thing is a too much hot air over a non-issue.

    And if there are sides to be taken, I support the database people since they are being acted upon by the open source's equiv of the 800 lb gorilla. Mozilla is acting like some other company know and they should be called on it.

    now burn me up

    1. Re:Just call it Mozilla by Wtcher · · Score: 1

      Maybe because it isn't the same browser? ^_~

      --
      ----- Wtcher Dragon, UDIC
    2. Re:Just call it Mozilla by bobbozzo · · Score: 1

      They do call it Mozilla.
      Phoenix (and Chimera, ...) are OTHER browsers, based on the same Gecko renderer, etc., but are not the same as the Mozilla browser.

      --
      Nothing to see here; Move along.
    3. Re:Just call it Mozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or since Mozilla is actually a (slightly) different product, call Phoenix Mozilla-lite (or maybe Mozillite or something).

      Quite honestly, Mozilla is the only decent name they have come up with so far. Phoenix is worse, but not terrible, Firebird, Thunderbird and Cameo are just awful, Chimera could've been ok (but worse than Mozilla) except that it was actually taken by another browser years ago.

  39. Mozilla.org's Leader? by zonix · · Score: 1
    Mitchell Baker (mozilla.org's leader)

    ... that's Chief Lizard Wrangler to you, dude! :-)

    Jokes aside, this situation is quite unfortunate and I hope it gets sorted out soon. Less fighting, more coding - can't we all just get along?

    z
    --
    What would an EWOULDBLOCK block, if an EWOULDBLOCK could block would? -- me
    1. Re:Mozilla.org's Leader? by cbovasso · · Score: 1

      na-na-na-na-leader.... leader... leader!

      --
      I ask for a car and I get a computer. How's about that for being born under a bad .sig?
  40. Ok, here's the thing by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First, minor correction they are chainging it FROM Phoenix (to Firebird) not TO Phoenix.

    Now, the real thing is that people need to stop getting to damn defensive over names. The browser Phoenix had a legitimate beef, I mean you have two browsers of the same name. That is really confusing. However the SQL Firebird people need to sit down and shut up.

    Firebird is NOT an orignal name by any strech of the imagination. I can easily name one Firebird that predates both of them: the Pontiac Firebird (a car). When you pick a popular name, you need to be prepared for other people to use it as well. Also, if you aren't the first to use it, you certianly have no right ot bitch when someone else picks it up as well.

    Like I said, the Phoenix browser had a legit complaint. Here you had two of the same kind of product named the same thing. I can gaurentee GMC would raise hell if Chrysler introduced the Dodge Firebird car. However they won't mind about either the database or browser, as they are clearly different products.

    Hell, the same is true of Phoenix. In additon to being a mythical bird, it is also the name of the captial city of the state Arizona. I bet if you talk to most people and ask what they associate Phoenix with, it will be the mythical bird or the city, not the browser. It is not an orignal name and the city of Phoenix will not be screaming at the browser to change its name as most people can tell the difference.

    Unless you have a truly orignal name you really can't whine about people in unrelated fields using it too. After all, you borrowed it from somewhere else. Even if you do think up an orignal name (which Firebird is not) you still can't really complain if someone with an unrelated product uses it. After all, what is the harm? No one will confuse the two since they are different.

    However, so long as there are other, older Firebirds than the database, these people are just being whiny with no good reason.

    1. Re:Ok, here's the thing by BurritoWarrior · · Score: 2

      Yes, sorry about my using Phoenix when I meant Firebird in my original post. I should really use make use of that preview button. :)

      Second, I realise that "Firebird" is neither completely original, nor without prior products, such as the car, that used the name first. I simply meant that there's another open source project with the name, and therefore, were it my choice, I would try to accomodate their wishes. That is why I brought up the MSN Messenger naming. Would everyone think it was OK if they called it MSN Firebird?

      Third, I also don't agree with the way they (the SQL guys) reacted. They overreacted, but now appear to be taking a more measured approach. They should *not* have asked people to flood someone else's inbox or website, as that simply makes them look childish.

      But once again, I still don't think there is any need to use the same name as another open source software project. Just like I wouldn't call my database containing the fat content of fast food hamburgers e-Macs. :) If the Phoenix-now-Firebird/Mozilla guys want to use a sort-of speedy-sounding name for the browser, which will at the same time allude to excellence, I suggest calling it Excel. :)

      PS - I use Mozilla every day on both Linux and Windows and think its a tremendous product and am quite grateful to its developers who have put in tons of hard work. I am not trying to snipe at them.

    2. Re:Ok, here's the thing by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 1

      "I bet if you talk to most people and ask what they associate Phoenix with, it will be the mythical bird or the city, not the browser."

      That probably changed after Harry Potter 2 - now what most people will assossciate it with is probably Fawkes ;o)

      --
      Beep beep.
    3. Re:Ok, here's the thing by horza · · Score: 2, Informative

      The browser Phoenix had a legitimate beef, I mean you have two browsers of the same name. That is really confusing.

      The browser isn't called Phoenix, that is the name of the company. The browser is part of what's called "FirstBIOS". They are obviously worried people would mistake the name of the company for the name of the application. Sure it's about protecting a company's brand, but it's not because there is another browser called Phoenix.

      Phillip.

    4. Re:Ok, here's the thing by crazyphilman · · Score: 1

      I agree completely. In my opinion, only a pansy bedwetter would get his panties in a bunch just because someone else borrowed the same name HE borrowed. It's lame, and stupid. Of course, no one was using their product, anyway -- everyone's using either PostgreSQL or mySQL, right? So maybe this is a case of a forgotten, lonely child screaming at the top of its lungs for someone, anyone to notice it.

      Sad. I thought all these phony dot-com tactics had died off.

      --
      Farewell! It's been a fine buncha years!
    5. Re:Ok, here's the thing by Rastor · · Score: 1
      I also don't agree with the way they (the SQL guys) reacted. They overreacted, but now appear to be taking a more measured approach. They should *not* have asked people to flood someone else's inbox or website, as that simply makes them look childish.
      I feel it should be pointed out that the Firebird SQL leaders tried to go through the proper channels, but they were basically ignored. Although their original page requesting people to contact the Mozilla leadership may have been a bit agressive in terms of how many addresses it listed, it certainly did NOT ask people to "flood" or "spam" any of them, but rather to write a reasoned explanation of why they disagreed with the name change.
    6. Re:Ok, here's the thing by platypus · · Score: 1

      Think about it from a practical POV.
      Say you have a problem with firebird corrupting tables (I'm sure it doesn't just an example).
      Now you go to google and enter 'firebird "corrupt tables"' just to find 2323007734 hits about a browsers rendering bugs. This sucks.

      And adding "sql" or "database" might miss a lot of hits (because e.g. pages in mailing list archives might not carry one of these also). Oh, and it doesn't even rule out getting mozilla/firebird results.

    7. Re:Ok, here's the thing by cpeterso · · Score: 1


      There has been a Firebird BBS software project since 1999.

  41. Open Source Psychology by Farley+Mullet · · Score: 2, Insightful

    One of the terms that often gets thrown around when discussing open source software is the "Open Source Community", and I suspect that one of the most important features of this community is the recognition that is accorded to developers, so project names take on a special significance in the OSS community, almost paralleling their significance in the world of commercial software. In the world of commercial software names are important for marketing purposes, while in the open source world, project names are important because of the cachet value that having your name associated with a project brings. So just as a commercial product named x would suffer adverse effects if a dominant company were to name their product x, so does Firebird-the-database when the second-or-third most successful OSS project (behind the Linux kernel and maybe apache) decides to take the name Firebird-the-browser.

    Having said that, this all seems pretty silly, and it occurs to me that mass mailing campaigns aren't the mature way to deal with this, even if egos are involved. If this were a commercial situation (if the lawyers weren't involved) a mutually beneficial solution would be negotiated between the grown-ups running the two projects. It seems to me that this is the best course of action in this case as well.

    -----

    posted while drunk-as-in-bourbon.

  42. Sheer Pointlessness by Wtcher · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Trying to trademark the name "Firebird" is like trying to trademark the word "Sky" or the word "Video". Some of these SQL guys seem to have way too much time on their hands and I think they should relax - as someone else as said, they /are/ getting free publicity... and it really isn't as if the browser folk were creating another database. Personally, I was quite enamoured with the name Phoenix.

    Unfortunately, this sort of thing happens all the time in the business world. >_< The new thing, though, was the e-mail campaign - seems a tad childish because it needlessly makes it more difficult for the developers to keep up with other mail. The least they could've done was simply meet with eachother cordially.

    --
    ----- Wtcher Dragon, UDIC
    1. Re:Sheer Pointlessness by Buck2 · · Score: 1

      Have you ever tried to trademark "Buck" ... I have. It's a PITA.

      Believe you me.

      I just flat out gave up many years ago.

      I don't know what my point was, but it seemed topical when I started.

      --

      As my father lik@(munch munch)... ....
  43. I have come up with a name. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SplorkDorkJiggyInMyPantsHooplaBarf202234581.

    I don't think it's currently in use by any existing project, but you'd better hurry.

    1. Re:I have come up with a name. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I recieved spam from someone called this earlier...

  44. Just name it like all unix executables by Sexy+Commando · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'd pick the name "br" as my first choice. Self-explainatory, too.

    1. Re:Just name it like all unix executables by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      shouldn't it be 'bo'? :-)

    2. Re:Just name it like all unix executables by MSBob · · Score: 1

      wb?

      --
      Your pizza just the way you ought to have it.
  45. Name it "Ph"indows! Imagine the fallout. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Phindows.
    Findows.
    Mozindows.

    1. Re:Name it "Ph"indows! Imagine the fallout. by MisterFancypants · · Score: 1

      If they did that they might get sued by Lindows.

  46. Screw this. by Scotch+Game · · Score: 0, Interesting

    This is bull. If Microsoft pulled something like this, a bunch of open-source weenies would be storming Slashdot with signs, torches and pitchforks denouncing the unfriendly rule of a malevolent dictator. Because this is Mozilla though, a bunch of posts go up calling for reasonable action and logical thought, not to mention calling for the FirebirdSQL team to protest in a respectful manner. One Mozillazine poster even goes and posts that because FirebirdSQL has 0 percent market share, well, that's just tooooo bad. If anyone can't see the hypocrisy in that, well, they're blind.

    Now there are similar posts here talking smack about "well who the hell knows who FirebirdSQL is anyway?" and "those immature people", all while any time a Microsoft employee farts loud enough for the guy in the next cubicle to hear it, it appears as a !!shocking post!! on Slashdot.

    Also any time some remote governmental body in the furthest reaches of BFE adopts Linux to run its fileservers, its likewise heralded here so that the sheep-like masses may learn of the great advances of Unix-like OSes.

    Yeah, people, I know, this is Slashdot. So let's just not even try to be even remotely even-minded, okay?

    Screw the people behind this. They're twits that apparently couldn't handle the seemingly reasonable task of arriving at a name that was original (meaning that it wasn't before used by an automobile company for a popular car, or any other of a number of companies for any number of other products), creative (meaning that it didn't absolutely have to do with some kind of mythical flaming avian), and fair (meaning that they didn't decide to step on people's toes just because they finally got shoes big enough to do it). This just suggests that software developers in this space are all competing for the same pie and that ultimately it all comes down to who has the power to pull what stunt they want to pull. Mozilla's no better than Microsoft, they're just smaller.

    Go ahead. Mod me down. At least I'm not baa-baa-baaing my way down the slaughterhouse chute while the rest of you are chanting the praises of the farmer.

    1. Re:Screw this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet again, the speakers of the truth are modded down to -1.

      Scenario: Microsoft invents cure for AIDS.
      Slashdot Reaction: It's part of a conspiracy to take over Africa.

      Scenario: Linus goes on a rampage and kills 50 Windows users.
      Slashdot Reaction: Linus is making the world a better place for Linux and other OSS projects. Hundreds of "Free Linus!" websites go up in a matter of hours. Love live Linus!

  47. Silly by xaaronx · · Score: 0

    This seems to be an awfully silly way to go about this unless their purpose is, as someone else suggested, merely to stir up interest in their own product. It seems that Mozilla really did need to change the name from Phoenix and picked a synonymous term. If the Firebird people really care, a nice letter wxplaining their problem and maybe even suggesting another similar name (Thunderbird, Trans Am, IROC) would have been infinitely more productive, I think. Therefore I must assume either the're trying to drum up interest in Firebird the database or the people there are all vindictive eleven year olds.

    --
    It's amazing how much "mature wisdom" resembles being too tired. - Robert Anson Heinlein
  48. Indian names? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pontiac? How about Iroquois? Or any other Indian name? Cheyanne, oops, taken. Let's try Lingham. That's the ticket...

  49. Are we missing the point? by baudtender · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anyone who knows the recent history of how
    Interbase became Firebird appreciates just how
    wretched and bloody and ugly the final months
    were before it became open source. There were
    folks fighting tooth and nail to give this
    incredible product a fighting chance, and I have
    nothing but respect for what they have achieved.
    If you spend a couple of hours really, seriously
    researching what this product offers, you'll
    not only wonder how Borland could mismanage it
    as badly as they did, but also wonder why MySQL
    and PostgreSQL get so much press without being
    mentioned as an afterthought. If only a tenth
    of the resources were placed into Firebird as
    are placed into PostgreSQL, I seriously wonder
    if PostgreSQL wouldn't be largely abandoned
    within the next two years.

    This is a story about a beat up and exhausted
    small group of core supporters coming up with a
    name, and then, a year and some months later,
    just as they're really starting to get the code
    base they inherited under control and figured
    out, a much bigger and well known crew picks
    that same name. It isn't that the Mozilla team
    couldn't keep the Firebird name - it's that they
    shouldn't. It isn't that anyone will confuse
    a web browser with a RDBMS, it's that it's a
    completely unnecessary risk that anyone could.

    It's about essential respect in the open source
    community. The Mozilla crew could win this
    argument, partly based on sheer inertia, partly
    based on beleaguered opponents mounting an
    ineffectual fight, and partly based on the
    relative resources.

    But they shouldn't. And to anyone who spends any
    time at all researching the issue, the Mozilla
    group is clearly engaging in "friendly fire."

    I deeply respect both of these projects. It's
    time for both sides to raise the bar on what it
    means to fight for a common cause.

    Baudtender

    1. Re:Are we missing the point? by mark.odonohue · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Thanks for the kind words.

      Hit by Friendly Fire is definately how I feel about this whole issue.

      We don't have the resources for any legal challange, although I do think the claim we're in a seperate industry is questionable.

      Essentially we probably have to cop whatever Mozilla (and their AOL legal team) decide they want to do.

      If Firebird(tm) is all about standing up to defending your brand, then at least (but probably not in any important legal sense) we are doing that.

      Cheers

      Mark

    2. Re:Are we missing the point? by Kneht · · Score: 1
      Who is the worse culprit, those who engage in friendly fire, or those who return the fire _knowing_ it's friendlies they're shooting at?

      Seems to me that Mozilla probably picked this without knowing about FirebirdSQL, but the FSQL team is responding with underhanded tactics.

      I'd think that having the same name as Mozilla's browser lite would help rather than hinder a little-known DB. I'd never heard of FSQL before today, and I've been involved in open-source for several years.

      kneht

      --
      "Are you on some kind of medication?"
      "No"
      "Well, you should be."

      --Bean

    3. Re:Are we missing the point? by Aquitaine · · Score: 1

      I respectfully disagree. (although I am involved in neither project).

      "If only a tenth of the resources were placed into Firebird as are placed into PostgreSQL, I seriously wonder if PostgreSQL wouldn't be largely abandoned within the next two years."

      This may be true, but it is not relevant. The logically and morally correct answer to this situation would not change even if FirebirdSQL were well known.

      ---
      "just as they're really starting to get the code
      base they inherited under control and figured
      out, a much bigger and well known crew picks
      that same name. It isn't that the Mozilla team
      couldn't keep the Firebird name - it's that they
      shouldn't. It isn't that anyone will confuse
      a web browser with a RDBMS, it's that it's a
      completely unnecessary risk that anyone could."
      ---

      I can't put it more bluntly: you're mistaken, as is anyone on the Firebird team that buys into this. It isn't a risk that someone could confuse these two things; this assumption is founded on the idea that someone will discover your database by googling 'Firebird' or some other method based on the name of the project, at which point they'd get presented with the browser and the RDBMS.

      Now, it is my experience -- and do feel free to jump in if yours varies -- that people don't just browse the web for databases and then go 'hey, a database! I will install this database!' Furthermore, nobody who -does- need a database is going to think: "I want a database that rises from the dead after I have deleted it. Perhaps there is a database called Phoenix. (looks, doesn't find one). Okay, perhaps there is a database called firebird."

      OR: "I am interested in a database built along the same lines as a macho American car, because my database is compensating for other areas of my personal life."

      It just isn't going to happen. The whole notion that a database succeeds or fails based on its name is preposterous. I sure as hell would never wonder if perhaps 'Postgres' had a database. I don't even know what a Postgres is.

      Marketing and branding have very little importance for a database project; the only possible benefit I can see is in getting your name out there, because, as you say, FirebirdSQL hasn't had the attention it deserves; a browser, on the other hand, does benefit from these things. If anything, FirebirdSQL will benefit from having the same name, because people -will- google Firebird and you will come up, and people might just go 'Hey, look, I wonder what that is.' Take advantage of the situation. Don't get up on some high horse and claim that Mozilla is damaging the open source movement.

      I'm the lead designer of the FreeOrion project. We found out that there was a Free-Orion project that was doing exactly the same thing as us. We said 'Hey, cool,' and went about our business. We like our neighbors.

      -Aquitaine

    4. Re: Are we missing the point? by Mike+Shaver · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Anyone who knows the recent history of how Interbase became Firebird appreciates just how wretched and bloody and ugly the final months were before it became open source. There were folks fighting tooth and nail to give this incredible product a fighting chance, and I have nothing but respect for what they have achieved.

      From what little I know about the FirebirdSQL database, I have tremendous respect for their technical accomplishments, and the work they did to get their project off the ground.

      I do not have any respect at all left for their methods in dealing with conflict. There are a lot of people trying to guess what mozilla.org did or did not do in the search for a new name for Phoenix, and how mozilla.org will or will not use the name "Firebird". These are speculations that don't need to happen, since simply asking politely would have had the questions answered. Instead, the FirebirdSQL crew assumed malice and and "dirty deeds" and went straight from "hey, they're using the name Firebird as well" to "they're evil and we must mailbomb them into the ground, so that they see that we deserve the name more".

      I'm not involved in the day-to-day operation of Mozilla anymore, and I've been under email siege for days now. When this whole thing started, I was sympathetic to their emotional reaction, and interested in finding ways to mitigate the (incredibly small) chance of user confusion. Now, I don't want to have anything to do with the Firebird people at all, I no longer care much for their feelings, and I'm very unlikely to expend more effort in trying to reach some sort of outcome that makes them happy. Maybe that was their intent, but maybe I'm starting to understand why their dealings with Borland were so troublesome.

      (That they've had historic problems with names and legal issues and whatever other hell they, like any other large project, have endured might explain some of their IMO immature, self-damaging, offensive behaviour, but it sure doesn't excuse it.)

      Actually, the very first thing I did when I heard about the conflict was head to Google, where I found that searching for firebird turned up a pile of projects and products, firebird software was just as crowded, and firebird internet completed the trifecta of shared-namespace results. So my take was, and largely still is, that there's a community of projects using the name "Firebird", including many in the software and internet spaces, and that we would be N + 1 to their happy N. Nobody has yet made a convincing argument to me that it can't be the case, nor that FirebirdSQL's million-plus users and developers will disappear because FirebirdSQL is no longer the largest project using the name-part. And believe me, I've heard a lot of argument on this topic.

      If a name change is made -- which I find to be unlikely, and which makes the "only a name change will satisfy us" position of the FirebirdSQL people somewhat unfortunate -- I hope it's to "butt-head database".

      I am not speaking for mozilla.org here, in case that wasn't clear. I just think that the FirebirdSQL people could have done themselves a lot of good by approaching mozilla.org politely and explaining their concerns, before bitching to the press and inciting mail and forum-bombings, replete with ad hominem nonsense. At the least, they've lost themselves whatever meagre contribution I could have made to a peaceful resolution.

      Mike
    5. Re:Are we missing the point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Little know? I see that puts you in the place of someone living under a rock for the last few years. Have you heard of interbase, they are from the same source code. Firebird is the name of open source interbase basically.

    6. Re:Are we missing the point? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Who is the worse culprit, those who engage in friendly fire, or those who return the fire _knowing_ it's friendlies they're shooting at?

      From a military standpoint (not an analogy, since that analogy doesn't work), the party of the first part bears all the culpablity. Once a supposed teammate opens fire on me, I have every right to shoot him in self-defense.

    7. Re: Are we missing the point? by justins · · Score: 1
      If a name change is made -- which I find to be unlikely, and which makes the "only a name change will satisfy us" position of the FirebirdSQL people somewhat unfortunate -- I hope it's to "butt-head database"

      Way to rise above all the immaturity!

      Damn all those... immature people!
      --
      Now before I get modded down, I be to remind whoever might read this that what I am saying is FACT. - bogaboga
    8. Re:Are we missing the point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If only a tenth
      of the resources were placed into Firebird as
      are placed into PostgreSQL, I seriously wonder
      if PostgreSQL wouldn't be largely abandoned
      within the next two years.


      I suggest the FirebirdSQL folks stop all work on FirebirdSQL in protest.


      Those who cant be without programming constantly, should help the more advanced PostgreSQL project instead of trying to catch up with it in a few years.

  50. I hope the SQL people succeed... by horza · · Score: 1

    ... because I think Firebird isn't a very good name for the browser. It's all very well having it as an in-joke but the wider world won't get that. I'd keep it as Phoenix if legally the position is tenable. The name was chosen in good faith, is a good name for the browser, and has now massive brand recognition. From the Phoenix thread, I liked "Browse" best, which was/is the name of the RiscOS web browser that is available only on the Acorn platform. Simple 'lite' name, which complements the browser.

    Phillip.

  51. Huh? by KAMiKAZOW · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm sorry, but I don't understand what's the f*cking deal is.
    Mozilla.org announced in the new roadmap that the whole Mozilla suite will be Using Phoenix/Firebird/... and Minotaur/Thunderbird/... as the base for future development.
    Why doesn't Mozilla.org just rename Phoenix to Mozilla Browser NG and Minotaur to Mozilla Mail NG (NG = Next Generation) or something? That would IMHO stop confusion.

    1. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or maybe Mozilla XP or Mozilla .NET...

      I'll go hang myself now before someone else does it.

  52. This is silly by GammaTau · · Score: 1

    This is just plain silly. One of my favorite pieces of classical music is called "Firebird" by Igor Stravinsky. Maybe I should start campaigning against FirebirdSQL project to stop associating their product with that piece of music?

    Both of the projects have picked a word that is used in many, many contexts. As long as you pick one short English word, things like this might happen, as we can see.

    However if both of the projects wish to get an unique name in this area, perhaps they should take a look at projects like fvwm2 and udhcpd that do not suffer from this problem. If they were named frbdsql and frbdhttp, all these silly battles over common words would cease. :)

    1. Re:This is silly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn stright. I appreciate the development efforts of the Firebird SQL team, and yes I have seen the project and tested it recently BUT I think if FirebirdSQL even think about suing Mozilla or doing something legal like that, then the Stravinsky estate should think about doing something legal to the FirebirdSQL folk!

  53. Oh, and ... by Scotch+Game · · Score: 1

    One last breath of vitriol. Before any /.er here posts and attempts to point out what I must have missed, that Microsoft is different because Microsoft has blah, blah, blah, frickety, blah, let me just say whatever. I'm aware the Microsoft is evil, banal, and corporate.

    But my sympathy for the underdog disappears the moment it feels comfortable enough to start humping the legs of everyone else in the house, just because it's got big teeth now, and it's such a gooooood dog after all.

    Smack it with a newspaper.

  54. call me an asshole.. by sickboy_macosX · · Score: 1

    but if the FireBird SQL Project had a product, with all the international use, why havent i (or any of the guys i happen to work with) heard of this product?? After that immature posting that the article mentioned, i would not change my name, we all know AOL is just as powerful as Microsoft so why dont they just go and kick some open source ass..

    --
    --- /* In Soviet Russia, the Mac OS X kernel panics you! */
    1. Re:call me an asshole.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because you are totally ignorant. Firebird is by far the best relational database of the OSS community. It only has one problem it doesn't really get the press coverage it deserves. Believe me, have a closer look at it, it runs circles around PostGres which everybody considers to be the best.
      Both speedwise and featurewise.

  55. Children, children! by Zenjive · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Play nice now. Little Johnny, time out for you! No email priviledges, go sit in the corner.

    --


    A vacuum is a hell of a lot better than some of the stuff that nature replaces it with. - Tennessee Williams
  56. names by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's really hard to think of new names. I thought of a new name one time, and used it on the internet. Google never returned a query for it. There is no way anybody had this name before in the history of mankind. Ever since I used it on the net, all kinds of people used that name. It wasn't even *that* cool of a name. No I'm not going to tell you the fucking name, but I think you understand how frustrating it can be to think of an orginal name that is pronouncable with vowels and consonants.

  57. Dinosaur by MrTangent · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think they should personally name everything after dinosaurs to go along with the icon's motif.

    Mozilla Allosaurs Mail
    Mozilla Stegosaurus Web Browser
    Mozilla Coelophysis Usenet client

    If not, then maybe stick to the lizard theme (i.e. Gecko):

    Mozilla Chameleon?
    Mozilla Iguana?
    Mozilla Salamander?

    Etcetera.

    1. Re:Dinosaur by Vargasan · · Score: 1

      Mozilla always reminded me of Godzilla. Why don't they use that motif?

      Mothra -> Mozthra
      Ghidorah -> Mozdorah
      Garuda -> Mozuda
      Rodan -> Mozdan
      Mogera -> Mozera

      Yeah, some of those suck. Mozthra almost rolls of the tongue.

      --
      Putting the romance back into necromancer.
    2. Re:Dinosaur by MrTangent · · Score: 1

      You forgot MECHAMOZILLA! :D

    3. Re:Dinosaur by caluml · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Mozilla Stegosaurus Web Browser

      Surely the stegosaurus name should be reserved for whatever app they make that hides information in jpgs, mp3s, etc?

    4. Re:Dinosaur by MrTangent · · Score: 0

      Good point. Steganography certainly is an interesting subject.

    5. Re:Dinosaur by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      I know you were probably kidding, but Mozilla and other zilla people have already gotten threats from the owners of the Godzilla trandemarks.

      http://yro.slashdot.org/yro/02/08/13/1748247.sht ml ?tid=154

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  58. zing-unit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I suggest a completely arbitrary and impartial method for deciding on a name. Take the words 'fire' and 'bird' and enter them into thesaurus.com. Replace each word with, say, the last synonym suggested for each word.

    Voila, mozilla becomes firebird becomes 'zing-unit'.

    Even better, there's only one, non-relevant Google result for it. Woot!

  59. What next? by elixx · · Score: 1

    Pontiac could jump in and get a piece, too...
    Perhaps a Phoenix will rise from the ashes, and file a class-action suit for creating a stigma involving it's race?
    Or maybe Thunderbird could get involved (you know, that really cheap wine that gets you bent). They sound alike, and after all, Windows... Lindows...

    Only in America, folks...

    --
    No, Beowulf clusters can't imagine in Soviet Russia.
  60. how about... by BEA6D · · Score: 0

    the browser formerly known as phoenix.

    you guys dream up a gay ass drawing.

    Peace Bra.

    --
    rehab, captain ahab, you're chasing the wrong fish!
  61. Re:wrong by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 2

    Karma be damned, this AC has a point. This is petty squabbling between open source programs. A clear example of ego's intruding into the scene. The parties involved need to grow up I think and learn to behave like adults. From what I've heard, Mozilla changed the name knowing FULL WELL there was another piece of software with the name. Why not rename it to "Fire Lizard" or something? It's more apt given the logo, and doesn't read on anyones toes. (Cue 10 people posting links to the Fire Lizard homepage that I've never seen...)

    I love Mozilla, but this whole thing to me sounds a lot like an 800 pound gorilla trying to stomp on a mouse.

  62. I almost forgot... by elixx · · Score: 1

    I'm sure Godzilla has been just itching to get a piece of the Mozilla team (in the courtroom, of course).
    I hear that his lawyers can spit fire.

    --
    No, Beowulf clusters can't imagine in Soviet Russia.
  63. "We've got their attention." by Cl1mh4224rd · · Score: 1

    Now... in this situation, I can't help but think that's a bad thing for them.

    It's like getting the attention of the Mafia by beating the crap out of a few of their guys...

    --
    People will pass up steak once a week, for crap every day.
  64. I have a question... by Znonymous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why not just call it Mozilla 2.0? Thats what is really is, the next major release of mozilla.

    Just a thought.

    --

    Karma: The shiznight, mostly because I am the Drizzle.

    1. Re:I have a question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it is based on the current Mozilla 1.X code.... and because Mozilla 2.0 isnt due for another 8 years.

    2. Re:I have a question... by adamfranco · · Score: 1

      Maybe not Mozilla2.0, as that could be confusing for those looking to upgrade their version of Mozilla -- the possiblity of Mozilla1.6 having new fixes that 2.1 doesn't. However, a name based on Mozilla would allow the community to leverage Mozilla's growing name recognition. Something like MozillaLite, MozillaBO (Browser Only), or MozillaB (Browser) to go allong with MozillaM (Mail) would work.

      Maybe I got the wrong idea from the Mozilla Developement Roadmap, but it sounded like "main trunk" Mozilla wasn't going to be developed after 1.6 or so. If that is the case, then some browser name based on Mozilla has the benifit of continuing the recognition of Mozilla.

      --
      "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
    3. Re:I have a question... by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 1

      Why not just call it Mozilla 2.0? Thats what is really is, the next major release of mozilla.

      No, it isn't. The Mozilla project encompasses a number of technologies, and the "Mozilla" all-in-one web browser, email client, etc is not disappearing anytime soon.

      Firebird (the browser formerly known as Phoenix) is a smaller, lighter, browser built on top of the same technologies as Mozilla, but without the email client, chat client, and other extra programs, and without many of the tools for developing web sites and web applications. Unlike Mozilla, Firebird is intended for the "average joe" to use as their main web browser.

      Not at all the same thing as Mozilla 2.0.

    4. Re:I have a question... by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      If you want to keep it simple along those lines, what about Mozilla Navigator? It's just like how Netscape 4 had Communicator for the suite and Navigator for just the browser.

    5. Re:I have a question... by Dave+W · · Score: 1
      I don't think you are correct.

      Quote from Brendan@mozilla.org today on the Firebird-general mailing list (that is Firebird the dbms).

      What I'm trying to convey is that we don't want people to run "firebird" or "firebird.exe" in a year -- we want them to run "mozilla". But we need to change the front end of the program. And we need to keep the old front end around, under the "mozilla" name, in the interim. Unless you're a milestone or daily build tester for Mozilla, you're not going to see the "firebird.exe" name. And if you are such a person, you are *not* going to be confused about anything.
      So it appears that firebird the browser is not intended to be the name that end users will see.

      Regards

  65. Amen. I stand with you. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I might not have agreed with their tactics, but FirebirdSQL deserves a fair say.

    By the way, doesnt the M1A1 tank run off Firebird or some deviation of it? I've heard of a lot of applications for Firebird. What was the last thing Mozilla did for me besides stop pop-up porno banners?

    Kristopher

  66. Could it help spam filtering? by L0k11 · · Score: 1
    Maybe they can use this flooding to further develop filtering for spamming and flooding.

    I dunno probably a stupid idea but you have to look for the postives in a situation like this. Both the browser and the database are getting publicity.

    --
    "Those who cast the votes decide nothing. Those who count the votes decide everything" -- Josef Stalin
  67. "Shock and awe"? by fo0bar · · Score: 1

    The analogy doesn't cut over too well. Observe:

    "We've publically attacked, insulted and annoyed them for the first couple days. Now let's stop and ask to kindly discuss the issue."

    "We've bombed the shit out of them for a couple days, now let's stop and kindly ask them to give up power."

  68. firebird database ppl should rename their databse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is Mozilla database sound?

  69. New name idea... by Znonymous+Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Let's just call it "Browser" and "eMail". That's what everyone calls them anyway...

    Example

    "My browser just crashed."

    or

    "I can't check my email."

    --

    Karma: The shiznight, mostly because I am the Drizzle.

    1. Re:New name idea... by panaceaa · · Score: 5, Funny

      We should merge both into one project called "The Internet".

      Example

      "The Internet isn't working."

      That's what everyone calls their computers anyway...

    2. Re:New name idea... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's call it "D Internet Browser", "D Email". Or actually, you can use "The" instead of "D".

      Just thing about it.

      Cheers.

    3. Re:New name idea... by seney · · Score: 1

      no, it's "my internet isn't working" - as if they're al gore.

    4. Re:New name idea... by ab0b · · Score: 1

      Al Gore might take issue.

      --
      ____
      to asdf and beyond!!
    5. Re:New name idea... by TheBensE · · Score: 0

      they should call it "little M" but wait a minute, then Microsoft would claim that people would mistake the M as being somepart of microsoft. :-/

    6. Re:New name idea... by Znonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

      That's so funny, seriously. It just might work.

      --

      Karma: The shiznight, mostly because I am the Drizzle.

  70. Why bother to take another projects name? by mark.odonohue · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Mozilla's decision (if they decide to proceed) to use our project name (Firebird) will certainly cause a lot of confusion, certainly amongst our end users and more than likely amongst their users.

    I would ask them to consider how they would feel if Microsoft decided to rename Powerpoint as Microsoft Mozilla - in their (mozilla's) legal teams opinion it would cause no confusion?

    Yes, Ok we could have chosen better as well, Firebird is but our mistake is three years ago and we didn't have the financial means to get any legal advice (still don't really). It was a name chosen by a few enthusiasts, after checking round the web that it wasn't going to conflict with anyone. From the lack of complaints over the last three years, I guess we haven't stepped on anyones toes.

    But with mozilla we will overlap, some examples of confusing areas:

    1. I can see mozilla users ending up at firebird.sourceforge.net looking for information on mozilla-firebird.

    2. I can see much confusion between news and list names : see

    http://www.mozillazine.org/forums/index.php?c=4
    vs:
    http://www.firebirdsql.org/index.php?op=list s

    After a year of two of posts to these, that will seriously muck up google searches for "firebird" and "download" for instance, as well as firebird (and moz) getting user requests for browers/databases in both our general newslists.

    3. I can see package confusion occuring on most linux distributions - install which firebird rpm?

    4. Security releases for "Firebird" are likely to overlapping on searches by product name.

    5. My (limited) exposure to legal issues, was that just being another software product is cause enough to create user confusion. So Im supprised at their legal advice (but am not a lawyer).

    6. Web applications often include browsers and databases. Scripting languages often support both , so what will something like PHP with Firebird support mean. My feeling is after a year, noone will remember it was a database.

    7. I don't want to spend the rest of my life explaining to people that Firebird (our project) is not a web browser.

    So you've got to ask why cause all the confusion (most of which I fear will be suffered by our users and developers), when it can be simply fixed by Mozilla choosing another name that doesn't conflict with an existing project.

    I find this especially strange when coming from one name clash, they decided to go into another, with all that "months of legal help" surely they can come up with their own unique name.

    And yes I am involved with the firebird project and the firebirdsql foundation. Where a lot of people work very hard on a Firebird for zero dollars in return.

    Regards

    Mark O'Donohue
    --
    See you at the First European Firebird Conference in May in Fulda, Germany
    http://www.firebird-conference.com

    (since I've had a few pointy notes, that Im only doing all this for the publicity, [Im not personally I feel quite sick in the stomach about this whole episode] I thought I'd include my normal .signature :-)

    1. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you even post at all ?
      Firebird SQL's name is now totally rotten due to IBPHOENIX .

      Asking nicely should have been done in the first place, followed by asking for Slashdot opinion may generate support.

      Too bad Firebird SQL.
      Another one bites the dust?

    2. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by twistedcubic · · Score: 2, Interesting


      I hope you don't represent the Firebird SQL group, because that long list of examples you gave is kinda weak.

      1. I can see mozilla users ending up at firebird.sourceforge.net looking for information on mozilla-firebird.

      And so? It's not like people looking for Firebird SQL will end up going to mozilla.org. This example is something that should worry the Mozilla group, but guess what, it doesn't. Maybe you should thank the Mozilla community for giving Firebird SQL the free publicity.

      2. I can see much confusion between news and list names : see ...
      After a year of two of posts to these, that will seriously muck up google searches for "firebird" and "download" for instance, as well as firebird (and moz) getting user requests for browers/databases in both our general newslists.

      Alas, any popular software named "Firebird" would give you the same problem. I know you don't think that you're the first software project named "Firebird", and I bet you're not even the first database named "Firebird". To whine about this now, after having chosen a very popular word used to sell many different types of products, is ridiculous. You may not be concerned that the category "software" is considered (common usage) a more broad category than one such as "automobile" (so a Mitsubishi Firebird is illegal, for instance), but you threw all your credibility out the door when, instead of coming up with an original name (a highly trivial task), you chose a generic name everybody and his cousin would consider using.

      3. I can see package confusion occuring on most linux distributions - install which firebird rpm?
      4. Security releases for "Firebird" are likely to overlapping on searches by product name.

      please.

      5. My (limited) exposure to legal issues, was that just being another software product is cause enough to create user confusion. So Im supprised at their legal advice (but am not a lawyer).


      Are you saying there was no other software product name "Firebird" when you started using it three years ago? If so, I'd be interested in hearing about how you checked.

      6. Web applications often include browsers and databases. Scripting languages often support both , so what will something like PHP with Firebird support mean.

      The same thing "PHP with Mozilla support" or "C++ with Mozilla support" means. Nothing.

      7. I don't want to spend the rest of my life explaining to people that Firebird (our project) is not a web browser.


      So what? You can't even come up with an honest scenario where confusion is likely. People who use SQL databases aren't as inept as you think.

    3. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by surprise_audit · · Score: 3, Insightful
      After reading Mark's comments I have to say I think all his points are good ones. There will certainly be an adverse effect on web search engines, and there will certainly be a lot of time wasted on both sides redirecting people to the other project.

      FWIW, I'd say that the the folks causing the collision should be backing up and apologising. Mozilla Firebird hasn't had very long to become entrenched in the public awareness and it wouldn't be too great a hardship for them to suck it up and switch again. There have been plenty of good suggestions made here. Is Mozilla Firebird so radically different that it couldn't be called Mozilla2.0??

      flame on!

    4. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by mark.odonohue · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Users are fickle creatures. They don't know where their browsers come from and you could be on the phone giving directions, and we are both downloadable software projects.

      When even a search for "firebird" & "download" will give both moz and fb download results I can see it will cause confusion.

      It just seems to me, that with a bit of foresight, moz could have avoided this problem for both of us.

      Mark

    5. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by mark.odonohue · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Why do you even post at all ?

      Because Im hoping some sense of decency will be awakened in the mozilla team, and they will recind their decision.

      Firebird SQL's name is now totally rotten due to IBPHOENIX .

      Unfortunately I think your right, the "high moral ground" and judgement at the click of a button, on this issue will create enough fog, and distract people from the predicament that this situation places the firebird project in.

      Asking nicely should have been done in the first place, followed by asking for Slashdot opinion may generate support.

      Actually a polite discussion from moz prior to publication, or even a period of public comment before using the firebird name could also have helped avoid this mess. That and the "I've checked it with the AOL lawyers, it's legal it's over" attitude really annoyed a lot of our users/developers.

      Too bad Firebird SQL.
      Another one bites the dust?

      Yes and with it a sh*tload of hard work by a lot of people under hard conditions goes down the drain as well.

      Mark

    6. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's hope that there are more of you in Firebird SQL and there are IBPHOENIX.

      Lets hope you are able to salvage the situation.
      Tough job.
      Wish you good luck .

    7. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The firebird team, to me, come across as immature drama queens over their behaviour and handling of this issue.

      I'd never heard of firebird before, and I do make use of relational databases for my job. The way that I've heard of it now means I'd be reluctant to use it due to the attitude of the team members over this issue. I wouldn't have faith using a project run by people who react this way. Regardless of how the Mozilla team have or haven't behaved, there is no call for asking for the sort of mass mailing you did in the way you did at this point.

      If you'd organised a petition amongst your users, published that, got publicity of it, mailed the petition to mozilla, not resorted to effectively calling for mass mailing of lots of the mozilla team, then the issue would have been raised and you wouldn't have looked like petty idiots.

      If the Mozilla team were that aware of your product (I can easily believe they weren't) and its name, then they do seem to have not thought through the potential problems due to name conflict. I don't think the conflicts are going to be that great, as your stuff can easily be known longhand as FirebirdSQL, their browser will have the intertia of being called "Mozilla" and people are likely to be clear about what they're referring to given the context of discussions about whether it's the browser or the database.

      Asa's post on mozillazine which you quote on your front page was made on the 5th of December last year. The way you quote it seems to give the impression that's a recent response to you guys saying "we think there could be some confusion".

      You already have firebird.sourceforge.net, mozilla is a larger project, it's likely that if there is any initial confusion when hunting for software that you'll get more people find you by accident when looking for mozilla.

      People aren't going to get to the point where they have a browser in front of them and are going to be going "Hmm... this is a funny looking database...".

      Did you enter into much of a dialogue with the mozilla team before calling for the en-mass mailing of the mozilla team? In other words is it an action of last resort? Or were you so irritated that you wanted to lash out?

    8. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Etyenne · · Score: 1

      You made a few good points, although it is debatable how people smart enough to use a relationnal database could confuse it with a browser. However, you totally obscured the real question : why in the world did the FirebirdSQL team started an email flood campaign ? This is the kind of behavior I would expect from a bored 14 years old. Since I suppose maintaining a SQL database codebase require more skill than most bored 14 year old dispose, I can only conclude that the FirebirdSQL team is composed of immature jerk with an inflated ego and no sense of diplomacy. Either way, I do not want to be associated with this kind of people so I will probably never use your project or recommend it to client. Too bad.

      --
      :wq
    9. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by fname · · Score: 1

      Well, it doesn't look like there are other software projects titled "Pheonix." Did you guys ever get a trademark? Right now, I'm assuming no. That would have gone a long way, b/c AOL legal would have found out about it. Which is why things like trademark exist. Because if you did trademark it, AOL never would have approved the name.

      The reason the Trademark office exists is to avoid situations like this. But failing to secure the trademark, you made it inevitable that eventually, someone would use the name.

      The immature reaction only hurt the cause, since Mozilla took reasonable measures to check for usage. Their resposibility went only as far as checking trademark. To respond like your community is uncalled for, since Mozilla made good-faith efforts to choose a new name. The fact that they missed you has mostly to do w/ the fact that you didn't trademark it.

    10. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then you whiners should just stop wasting your time. You even said there is no reward for the time you waste.

      Once your project is removed, no confusion.

    11. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by mark.odonohue · · Score: 1
      Hmm a lot to answer :-)

      Regardless of how the Mozilla team have or haven't behaved, there is no call for asking for the sort of mass mailing you did in the way you did at this point.

      Im assuming the "you" and "your website" mean the IBP people.

      Like most opensource projects, we (firebird people) are a loosly connected group of individuals.

      I don't have any control over the IBP website, not what they post, and that's true for most of us in the Firebird project. Our statment is on our web page, and our users comments thoughout both our public and private forumns. The IBP people are responsible for their own actions.

      Personally, I think they made a mistake, for IBP, to publisihing the email addresses the way they did, but not a huge one (email campaigns are fairly popular). But they were right to ask for firebird users to contact Moz and indicate they were displeased with both their choice and the way they did it.

      I'd never heard of firebird before

      apparently it's a browser :-/.

      If you'd organised a petition amongst your users, published that, got publicity of it, mailed the petition to mozilla

      A bit slow considering the speed they are moving on rebranding at Moz.

      If the Mozilla team were that aware of your product (I can easily believe they weren't) and its name,

      they were Asa, has admitted that.

      then they do seem to have not thought through the potential problems due to name conflict.

      Yes, that's the interesting question, why deliberately do this?

      Asa's post on mozillazine which you quote on your front page was made on the 5th of December last year. The way you quote it seems to give the impression that's a recent response to you guys saying "we think there could be some confusion".

      That doesn't quite sound right, but when mozilline comes back up I'll check, first I've (or anyone else in firebird) has heard or seen any of this stuff was a few days ago starting on slashdot.

      People aren't going to get to the point where they have a browser in front of them and are going to be going "Hmm... this is a funny looking database...".

      its more all the supporting things. 'Oh your from "that" firebird project', and the branding stuff.having someone with a lawyer talking [tm] is enough to scare most programmers - certainly we don't have the finances, legal or visibility to compete with whatever Moz wants to do.

      Did you enter into much of a dialogue with the mozilla team before calling for the en-mass mailing of the mozilla team? In other words is it an action of last resort?

      I didn't make the call, or become involved till later, that was IBP people, Asa's early attitude and responses in slashdot, and on the mozilline sounded fairly non negotiatory. I belive the IBP people had some more of a dialog (or with others in Moz, I only started my own conversations direct with Moz people recently) - but even that is limited to whoever is willing to reply. But with Asa in the early days, but he wan't moving. But last I saw (earlier today) Asa was still there pushing his point of view pretty hard, on mozilline ( I exchanged a few posts).

      Or were you so irritated that you wanted to lash out?

      First I heard of it, this was a "done deal", as posted on slashdot. Asa's comments at mozilline, ( currently giving mysql errors) - but along the lines of, 'it's checked by AOL legal, it's done'

      So Yes, as a fb admin, and as member of the ff committee, I felt justified and angry enough to post (my own message) to those identified as the project leaders and appropriate forumns of Moz. But hey, I just kept it fairly polite. and Moz people seem to give as good as they get. And for what and the way they did it, I think they need to expect to receive a bit of pith and vineger.

      Mark

    12. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by chrisgeleven · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would ask them to consider how they would feel if Microsoft decided to rename Powerpoint as Microsoft Mozilla - in their (mozilla's) legal teams opinion it would cause no confusion?

      Mozilla is an invented word, Firebird is so common in the English language that it is no longer an invented work. Hence, no one can use Mozilla in any product (just try to name a store "Coca-Cola", you'll last at most 24 hours). Everyone can use Firebird, as long as there isn't competiting products with the same name in the same area. Since Mozilla Firebird is a web browser and the Firebird DB is a database, there is no competition and therefor no conflict.

      1. I can see mozilla users ending up at firebird.sourceforge.net looking for information on mozilla-firebird.

      Mozilla users? Any Mozilla user knows that http://www.mozilla.org is the Mozilla web site. The media and all download sites correctly link to the Mozilla web site whenever talking/promoting the product. If a user is looking for the Mozilla Firebird web browser on Google and stumbles upon the Firebird DB project, a simple click on the back button and they are back to their search. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if Firebird DB and Mozilla Firebird were ranked 1 and 2 in Google. No confusion if they are clearly labeled.

      3. I can see package confusion occuring on most linux distributions - install which firebird rpm?
      Once again, it is MOZILLA FIREBIRD not just plain Firebird. Hence, any RPM'S for Mozilla Firebird will probably be something like mozilla-firebird-1.5.rpm

      4. Security releases for "Firebird" are likely to overlapping on searches by product name.
      Once again, in the media and official web sites, Mozilla Firebird will be used whenever describing a security issue. The security information will always make it clear that it is a web browser. A simple google search for Firebird + Security NOT "Mozilla Firebird" will bring up all the relevant issues for the Firebird database.

      5. My (limited) exposure to legal issues, was that just being another software product is cause enough to create user confusion. So Im supprised at their legal advice (but am not a lawyer).
      In my business law class at my university, I asked a question about this. The answer I got was as long as a software product wasn't competiting directly with another software product in the same market (hence, the web browser market or database market), then it is ok to have similar names. For years I have seen various products with the same names by different companies for different purposes. Pick up the latest software catalog and see how many names are the same or very similar.

      6. Web applications often include browsers and databases. Scripting languages often support both , so what will something like PHP with Firebird support mean. My feeling is after a year, noone will remember it was a database.
      Clearly label any mentions of the web browser Mozilla Firebird and label any mentions of the database Firebird DB. Even put a 1 line disclaimer if you are so worried ("Mozilla Firebird web browser and the Firebird DB are two completely unrelated products by different vendors"). Problem solved.


      7. I don't want to spend the rest of my life explaining to people that Firebird (our project) is not a web browser.


      Don't have to, everyone will call the web browser Mozilla Firebird. Anyone who can figure out how to use the Firebird DB cannot possibily be confused with Mozilla Firebird. Everyone knows what a web browser looks like. The icons for these applications will be very different. Mozilla Firebird will be written underneath the icon. No confusion.

    13. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by mark.odonohue · · Score: 1

      However, you totally obscured the real question : why in the world did the FirebirdSQL team started an email flood campaign ?

      The real question for me is for the firebird project not to clash namespaces with Mozilla.

      The flood thing, is a distraction, (asked for by a stong supporter of FirebirdSQL) but that for me it masks the main problem.

      Now, why did they do it?. Well email protests are not uncommon t oget soemones attention, so it's not that far out of line, usually as long as you are polite. Our user and developer base were (are) really annoyed with both the what and the way Moz did what they did.

      I send a protest message, (which I though was polite enough) to those identified as Moz admins and have corresponded to those willing to reply.

      Now, I didn't call for it, but from my position, I can inderstand why someone asked for it.

      I think active, but polite participation in appropriate lists, and with the appropriate Moz admin people, is the only way we can get our message across and hopefully resolve this issue to both groups satisfaction.

      Mark

    14. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by brlancer · · Score: 1
      "It just seems to me, that with a bit of foresight, moz could have avoided this problem for both of us."

      You're missing the point: my use of the term 'firebird' to name my cat shouldn't infringe upon your ability to use it for your DB; your DB shouldn't infringe upon someone else using it for a web browser.

      I understand there is an issue of "confusion", but that happens all the time and it won't be solved by limiting ourselves to "unreserved" words. At what point does a project (or cat) become so big that I cannot use the name? If you want to avoid confusion, then continue using 'FirebirdSQL' (as I almost always see it) and the Mozilla project can use 'Firebird Web' or 'Mozilla Firebird'.

      Besides, nothing seems so childish as "he took my name, I was using it first". This is the mentality that has tied up the WIPO and caused all kinds of lawsuits.

      --
      Someone asked if I had patched against MSBlast; I said yes, I installed Linux.
    15. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Nick+of+NSTime · · Score: 1

      I think Igor Stravinsky would take issue with your use of the name 'Firebird.' He used it back in 1919.

    16. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by mark.odonohue · · Score: 1
      Well, it doesn't look like there are other software projects titled "Pheonix."

      Within the Firebird project, we're not interested in Phoenix or such like, only Firebird. If it came to trademark things, we would probably go for something like FirebirdSQL. But still to avoid confusion because we are both software products, and it will cause us confusion, we would appreciate it if Moz chose a name that didn't conflict with an existing (our) project.

      The reason the Trademark office exists is to avoid situations like this. But failing to secure the trademark, you made it inevitable that eventually, someone would use the name.

      I think most opensource projects live a little on trust, and good nature, and bad press to keep the legal wolves from the doors.

      One complication is that most of us don't live in the states, for me Australian law is applicable, nor are we lawyers and yes Moz were aware we existed.

      Cheers
      Mark

    17. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by mark.odonohue · · Score: 1
      Usually visibility is determined by industry, in ours (and Mozilla's case) the usual call is "the software industry". Asa is the first time I've heard advice dividing software into seperate markets "database market" and "intenet browser market" - but Im not a lawyer.

      So if you search the web, with software related terms, say "download" you'll get our web pages.

      If you search the web with "kitty" you (may) get your pets home page. Same if I go to a software conference or a pet show, Im not going to get confused. I know you need to register greyhounds or racehorses with unique names, but perhaps with cats they are not so fussy :-).

      If you want to avoid confusion, then continue using 'FirebirdSQL' (as I almost always see it) and the Mozilla project can use 'Firebird Web' or 'Mozilla Firebird'.

      Formally, I think, we really prefer FirebirdSQL, it we get a trademark or something it's likely to be FirebirdSQL,

      but on the ground, it's still refferred as firebird, our newsgroups are firebird etc. Now Moz's own firebird project is doing the same thing, now they have started - their groups are called Firebird-Bugs, Firebird-Checkins, very similar to our own lists.

      We don't want to own the Firebird name, it belongs to a car. But within "the software industry" we don't want to avoid our firebird project clashing namespaces with Mozilla.sponsored projects.

      Mark

    18. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Deven · · Score: 1

      Well, it doesn't look like there are other software projects titled "Pheonix."

      I had a software project under the name of "Phoenix" from April 21, 1994 until November 30, 2001. At that time, I renamed the project to "Gangplank" to coincide with the first open-source release of the source code. I never distributed the code under that name, but it's been running on a publicly-accessible Internet server since April 21, 1994. (I haven't actually upgraded that server to the Gangplank codebase yet, but I will.)

      I didn't want to continue using the name "Phoenix" partly because it seemed overused, and people also seemed to have some difficulty spelling it correctly (as you did). Most importantly, I wasn't able to register a domain name to use for the website. After an exhaustive search of random dictionary words, I rather arbitrarily chose "Gangplank" as the new name, since I was able to register the gangplank.org domain name...

      --

      Deven

      "Simple things should be simple, and complex things should be possible." - Alan Kay

    19. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by happystink · · Score: 1

      Fuck, stravinsky wrote open source software too? That guy ruled.

      --

      sig:
      See the "..for smart people" banners Wired runs here? Look elsewhere guys.

    20. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by sootman · · Score: 1

      See you at the First European Firebird Conference in May in Fulda, Germany

      Cool, a whole conference dedicated to my favorite browser!


      Just kidding, Mark. I hope this gets resolved soon.

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    21. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I belive the IBP people had some more of a dialog (or with others in Moz, I only started my own conversations direct with Moz people recently) - but even that is limited to whoever is willing to reply.

      Maybe it would have been easier to get in touch with them if they weren't so busy dealing with all the spamming?

    22. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by WNight · · Score: 1

      Wah. Take a common name, run into collisions. Deal with it.

      If you weren't a jackass about it you could probably have gotten Mozilla people to put a "If you meant to find Firebird SQL the database, go here instead" on their download page. Instead, they know you're spamming babies and they won't give you the time of day. Way to fuck it up.

      There's two ways to look at this...

      1) There are only 13(?) industry categories for the purposes of trademarks, *all* computer related products fall into one of them. This means that if someone used the name Firebird years ago on an Apple // side-scroller game, you couldn't trademark it now because it's not distinctive enough. This calls into question your right to be using the name, let alone telling others what they can do.

      2) The intended use of the products differs greatly, so while both are software, used on a computer, one is a database and the other a viewer for web pages, no overlap involved. (While Mozilla may use a DB backend to store settings, and PhoenixSQL may incorporate some HTML parsing, they aren't close to overlapping functionality.)

      #2 is obviously the more reasonable. Not only because it involves you acting like an adult and getting on with things, but because it suggests you have a right to the name Firebird without stepping on someone else's toes. I mean, it's not like you guys really used your imagination coming up with a new and unique name.

      Try sending apologetic email to the Mozilla crew, for being a total cock-goblin, and invite them to use the name Firebird. Offer to make a "If you're looking for the web browser, click here" link and politely ask that they do the same. They're adults, they'll forgive you.

      And hey, people going to download the browser, probably *thousands* of times more people than use your database, will see the link "FirebirdSQL" and think "Hey, I've been meaning to get that database installed..." and will check you out. Otherwise they'll simply head off to PostgreSQL, MySQL, or something else they've heard of.

    23. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by WNight · · Score: 1

      Would it have been so unreasonable for one guy from FirebirdSQL to send *one* email someone at Mozilla, maybe CCing a few other people there, and ask that if they take the name they put a "If you meant to find FirebirdSQL, the database, click here" link on the download page?

      Currently in the top-ten on Google, searching for Firebird, there's the database, a drag-strip, Pontiac, a book store, a rock-and-gem store, and more. If the FirebirdSQL guys didn't want to get confused with someone else maybe they should have picked a distinctive name. Here's hint #1, if you see more than a million hits for that name on google, even if none are for an identical product, maybe you should pick a new name. If a product has ever been advertised on TV with the same name (even in a different market) you should pick a new name. If you fail to do this, at least have the decency to not bitch about the number of other people using the same name.

    24. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      my use of the term 'firebird' to name my cat shouldn't infringe upon your ability to use it for your DB; your DB shouldn't infringe upon someone else using it for a web browser.

      So Microsoft's use of "Access" for a database shouldn't infringe upon me naming a photo-editing program that?

      Besides, nothing seems so childish as "he took my name, I was using it first". This is the mentality that has tied up the WIPO and caused all kinds of lawsuits.

      No, that is the mentality that created the WIPO. They're not "tied up", they're doing the job they were intended to. What you call childish is the basis for legions of grown-up laws.

      Many "intellectual property" rights are of arguable value, but trademark protection is the most defensible of them. If you disagree with the concept, then you've got a high burden of proof to explain why.

    25. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by synx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hi,

      Yet another opinion, but since you expressed yours freely, I shall express mine freely as well.

      First, I'm sort of confused, you claim that the word 'Firebird' is hereby permanently owned by the 'Firebird SQL' project for all Software projects? Even if you had a trademark on 'Firebird' in the US, the trademark office would probably still grant Mozilla/AOL the ability to use that word to describe their product. Why? Databases and Browsers don't compete, they aren't in the same functional area by far, and there is no way a 'reasonable person' would confuse a database and a web browser.

      Most of your arguments seem to rely on "we wont be #1 in google anymore" complaints. You seem to be fixated that by naming their browser the Mozilla Firebird browser this somehow dilutes the FirebirdSQL project. I don't see how, and I think a reasonable person would either.

      I think there is something deeper here.

    26. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Don't have to, everyone will call the web browser Mozilla Firebird.

      No they won't. "Mozilla Firebird" is too many syllables to use in everyday speech, just like people don't say "Microsoft Powerpoint" much either. It's too long to put on "Start" menus or window titlebars. The browser will inevitably be abbreviated to just "Firebird". In the prior version of that web-browser, "Phoenix" was always used instead of "Mozilla Phoenix", both in speech and on the web- why will it be different after the renaming?

      A simple google search for Firebird + Security NOT "Mozilla Firebird" will bring up all the relevant issues for the Firebird database.

      Thus imposing a new cost on all users of the pre-existing SQL project. That's what trademark protection is supposed to avoid.

      Everyone knows what a web browser looks like. The icons for these applications will be very different.

      Assuming they have icons, how could they really be different? Both will show a reddish bird-thing. What else can they do?

      The answer I got was as long as a software product wasn't competiting directly with another software product in the same market (hence, the web browser market or database market), then it is ok to have similar names.

      That is incorrect. Trademark interference is judged based on likelihood of producing confusion. SQL products and web-browsers may not be in the same market in terms of competing for customers, but they are in the same marketplace in terms of how the programs are distributed and supported.

      Pick up the latest software catalog and see how many names are the same or very similar.

      Very, very few. In fact, the only examples I can find are related products from the same vendor.

      Mozilla users? Any Mozilla user knows that http://www.mozilla.org is the Mozilla web site. The media and all download sites correctly link to the Mozilla web site whenever talking/promoting the product.

      The new users that "Mozilla Firebird" wants to get won't think of themselves as "Mozilla" users, they will be looking for "Firebird web browser". Browser-users don't have the same level of sophistication as SQL operators, so many of them will stumble upon the websites firebird.org, firebird.com, and the sourceforge FirdBird SQL project. A small fraction of them will submit bugs to the tracking system, and send angry messages to the mailing lists complaining that the web-browser is hard to install.

      Since Mozilla spinoffs will tend to have large numbers of unskilled users, those annoyances can be significant. Responding to all those misdirected messages will slow down the developers of the original project, and make them less willing to contribute to Open Source. I expect that after getting flooded like that, they'll change the name or create prominent links on their homepage to the "other Firebird".

      A large, popular project can be a latecomer to a name, and will wind up shoving aside the little guys who had been using it longer.

      It was wrong when Microsoft did it to InternetExplorer.com (until they paid it off), when Digital did it to altavista.com (until they paid too), and when etoys.com did it to etoy.com (until the judge smacked them). When 2 Open Source projects (one backed by a huge corporation) do it to each other, it's still wrong.

    27. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by version5 · · Score: 1
      6. Web applications often include browsers and databases. Scripting languages often support both , so what will something like PHP with Firebird support mean. My feeling is after a year, noone will remember it was a database.

      Scripting languages very rarely include explicit support for particular browsers. If they do, they would probably refer to either Mozilla or Gecko, not Firebird.

      Also, did you ever consider renaming your product to something less generic? As others have mentioned, Firebird is pretty common name for software. You could take the opportunity to have Phoenix renamed to Mozilla Firebird while you went with something like FirebirdSQL, which is a name you are already using.

      Valid points aside, your people made a grave mistake in assuming malice and then throwing a tantrum. Whenever I hear the Firebird DB name, it will conjure up memories of whiny children, and I know I'm not alone.

      --

      "It's Dot Com!"

    28. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Kupek · · Score: 1

      I agree with your point - it could be confusing - but I get rubbed the wrong way when you call it "our name." This is probably just habit on your part, but there's nothing about the word "Firebird" that you own. It was a car long before it was a relational database, and it was part of mythology long before it was a car.

    29. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Kupek · · Score: 1

      Had I not seen that sentence in the context of this story, I would have thought he was going to a conference on Pontiac Firebirds.

    30. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by fname · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I mis-typed. I meant to say that there aren't other software projects called Firebird, or at least popular ones. I figured there'd be a bunch, but there aren't.

      As for not getting a trademark, well, that's the way it goes. Open source still lives in the world controlled by governments, not in a world controlled by those willing to resort to DoS attacks in the name of justice. For that, I'm grateful.

    31. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by philipx · · Score: 1
      No they don't. "Mozilla Firebird" is too many syllables to use in everyday speech, just like people don't say "Microsoft Powerpoint" much either. It's too long to put on "Start" menus or window titlebars.

      No they won't. In my Start Menu it clearly says Microsoft Powerpoint, Microsoft Word, etc. And so does the title bar of the app. IE clearly appends Microsoft Internet Explorer to the title of every page... check your IE titlebar.
      I suggest you double check before making any unadvised remarks and spreading any more FUD.

      they will be looking for "Firebird web browser". Browser-users don't have the same level of sophistication as SQL operators, so many of them will stumble upon the websites firebird.org, firebird.com, and the sourceforge FirdBird SQL project.

      Please do a search on Google for "Firebird web browser" and let me know on which position you'll find any form of link to the Firebird DB.

      --
      __________
      Don't belong. Never join. Think for yourself. Peace!
    32. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1
      I suggest you double check before making any unadvised remarks and spreading any more FUD.

      And I suggest you look up "FUD" in the dictionary before tossing out accusations. (I'll help: "Fear, Uncertainty, Doubt". Nothing that has bearing to this discussion)

      No they won't. In my Start Menu it clearly says Microsoft Powerpoint, Microsoft Word, etc. And so does the title bar of the app. IE clearly appends Microsoft Internet Explorer to the title of every page... check your IE titlebar.

      Apparently just because names are too long to be useful doesn't stop Microsoft from printing their brand in front of everything. Does this really mean the taskbar is like this?

      • [Microso...][Microso...][plans - Mi...][Microso...][letter - Mi...]


      I know that Windows 98(tm) did that, but I'd assumed it was fixed by now. If not, you have my sympathies. But regardless of how Microsoft marketers chose to clutter their onscreen displays, the fact remains that human beings will not tolerate using the longer names in speaking or casual correspondence.

      (Microsoft relies on this effect. When they pick a name like "Microsoft Windows", "Microsoft Paint", "Microsoft Word", "Microsoft dot net", or "Microsoft Document", they do it with the expectation that everyone will be forced to drop the corporate prefix on the name. In this way they essentially trademark generic terms. I can no longer tell someone to send me a picture as "a bitmap format" without explaining to him that this in no way implies *.BMP)

      Please do a search on Google for "Firebird web browser" and let me know on which position you'll find any form of link to the Firebird DB.

      That query isn't what people wanting to try a new browser will type in. Search for anything like "firebird download" to see what'll really happen.
    33. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      Would it have been so hard for Mozilla to do that before announcing their new name?

    34. Re:Why bother to take another projects name? by WNight · · Score: 1

      Mozilla wasn't paranoid about someone else having a similar name, obviously.

  71. "FirebirdSQL" and "Mozilla Firebird" can coexist by yerricde · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Semi-generic names suffixed with "SQL" have already coexisted with other projects. For instance, there's a "MySQL", a "MyMP3", etc. So just call the database "FirebirdSQL" and the web browser "Mozilla Firebird". You don't see the maintainer of xstep going apedung on the other xstep, do you?

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  72. lizzardlite? by cosyne · · Score: 1

    Although I agree that the database people are being way to whiny, I would have thought that after all the problems with Phoenix, the Moz team could have come up with something that returns zero results on google. My suggestion is lizzardlite. Or tinymoz. Or somethning. I realize that there aren't very many people who a) would use mozilla or it's variants b) have heard of firebird the database and c) are likely to confuse them, but there may be people who aren't so computer savvy for whom it's a problem. I'd just think that after all the previous headaches, it would be worth choosing something which wouldn't cause namespace collisions.

  73. I beg yer pardon? by Captain+Beefheart · · Score: 1

    If you call it Mozilla Firebird, there's should be no dispute...which is why AOL legal approved it, I'll betcha. If you call it just "Firebird" then of course, that would be stupid. But they didn't. They named it Mozilla Firebird. Is this really that complex? If Konami came out with a game called Apache, should they be sued by the people who make the Web server software?

    1. Re:I beg yer pardon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you talk about "Excel" or "Word" or about "MS Excel" or "MS Word" all the time?

      --
      Martijn Tonies

    2. Re:I beg yer pardon? by Steven+Blanchley · · Score: 1
      Actually, I always say MS Word (or Microsoft Word), as do most people I speak to about it. If one speaks about the browser as just Firebird, then I would imagine he is speaking of it in a context where there is no confusion. Would you think someone who says 'my browser of choice is Firebird' is talking about the SQL database?

      The only real room for confusion is on discussion groups with one of the Firebirds as the topic, and if they use the formal name in the title (i.e. Mozilla Firebird or FirebirdSQL), then there is no problem.

    3. Re:I beg yer pardon? by Captain+Beefheart · · Score: 1

      Respectfully, verbal or casual references won't matter. All that matters is how the company and its affiliates refer to the software. Because it can be referred to as Phoenix doesn't mean it's illegal to use the term. That's ludicrous. You can't hold a company responsible because the user isn't respecting IP during a discussion. The best you can claim is dilution of trademark, but I believe that only applies when you're using the trademark generically, like saying "Xerox" as a veb for "photocopy."

  74. A better idea- by Pettifogger · · Score: 1, Funny

    Why not pay some consulting group millions of dollars to come up with one one of those new fangled names that isn't quite a name or even word? You know, like Accenture, Altria, and all the rest. It would be just one more step towards making OSS just like the corporate giants.

    --

    IAAL

  75. Shoulda named it "The" by diggem · · Score: 2, Funny

    Nobody can claim rights to "The." It's a freakin article! Except maybe "The The" or something. Either way, when you talk about it you'd be talking about "The Browser". Which it really is the only REAL browser, no? :)

    1. Re:Shoulda named it "The" by Steven+Blanchley · · Score: 1
      An even better name for the browser would be What.

      "My favourite web browser is What."
      "I don't know, you tell me!"
      "I already told you; What it is! What is compliant with the latest HTML standards, loads pages quickly, and has options that allow you to block popup ads!"
      "I don't know, but how could it do all of that at once?"
      "No, How can't do any of that, because How is a mail and news client written in XUL!"
      "I have no idea, but I couldn't write one in anything! What's XUL, by the way?"
      "Yes, actually, What is written in XUL also. That's why it's cross-platform."
      "What are you talking about?!"

  76. Inventive names by Compuser · · Score: 1

    I wish Moz people were more innovative in their
    naming. I mean Konqueror is distinct why can't
    Mozilla have something as good. How bout
    Mozilla Surfage.

  77. SeaMonkey Anyone? by levell · · Score: 1

    Mozilla's current suite is SeaMonkey. If there was another OSS project called SeaMonkey, there would be no confusion as outside the Mozilla development community, you never hear the word Seamonkey in relation to Mozilla.

    Once the suite is split, it'll still be referred to as Mozilla and Mozilla Mail by Joe Bloggs.

    But even if you disagree and think there would have been confusion about the name "SeaMonkey", it'll be free now so I'm sure we'll get tons of projects flocking to such a cool name...

    --
    Struggling to find a day everyone can make? WhenShallWe.com
  78. Re:Give me a break. by mabinogi · · Score: 1

    ok, so someone says "Firbird crashed"

    which one was it?

    --
    Advanced users are users too!
  79. Retal by Niadh · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    IBPhoenix have now declared this shock-and-awe stage of their campaign over, heralding it a success.

    "We where not expecting this attack at all", stated Mitchell Baker of the Mozilla team. "In fact, we didn't even know we where under assaulted until it was over. I got like, four emails myself and I think a couple other members of the development team got one. At first I thought they where trying to sell me Viagra or something, but as it turns out they where actual pissed at us for naming a web browser the same name as their database."

    Later today the Mozilla team unleashed a massive counter offensive consisting of email filter, newsgroup filters, and submitting a story to slashdot.org with links to InterBase web servers. "We figure by this time tomorrow InterBase should be fully neutralized by 'The Slashdot Affect' stopping their waves-- err, wave of emails and general greediness over the name 'Firebird'."

  80. Too late by Vampyre_Dark · · Score: 0, Troll

    It's too late guys, I emailed Microsoft about this matter this morning and Bill went down there in person this afternoon. After allot of hair pulling and name calling, Microsoft now owns it. They have renamed it Mircosoft Dead Bird (The name of a biker in Whistler,BC who frequents the Longhorn Lounge). It's already been severly broken and it's being included in the next windows service pack to make Internet explorer look that much better.

  81. Re:They should call it... by eyeye · · Score: 1

    Your post made me laugh :-)

    I seriously think new projects should actually make up words, it really helps when searching the web if the name is unique.

    --
    Bush and Blair ate my sig!
  82. Re:Hmm... by mabinogi · · Score: 1

    DoSing Open Source is not fun * "

    You are aware that Firebird is an Open Source project too, are you not?

    One that has been around for a few years...

    It's the result of Borland opening it's InterBase code. (And is not related to Borland, since they pretty much opened the code, then abandoned the community)

    --
    Advanced users are users too!
  83. Morons... by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

    Have Mozilla change the name to Bat Guano or Komodo or some shit...

    Doesn't anybody have anything better to do than argue over names for totally dissimilar products?

    Morons...

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    1. Re:Morons... by Zigg · · Score: 1

      Oops! Komodo is ActiveState's IDE, based on Mozilla tech.

      Nobody in their right mind is going to name a project after guano, though. You may be on to something there.

  84. thats pretty crazy though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the part about the open source sql group suggesting they should like slashdot slashdot.

    isn't that weird?

    -chris

    1. Re:thats pretty crazy though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah dude. thats a trip, man.

  85. justification by ztwilight · · Score: 1

    I find this very funny: quoted from the firebirdsql letter on MozillaZine, "A browser is very much like a database". Wow, that's definitely what I was thinking too. Come to think of it, a database is also a lot like a car. They have been infringing on the Pontiac FireBird all this time! Call the lawyers!

    --
    Who moved my sig?
  86. one less phoenix can't be bad by Trejkaz · · Score: 0

    It's bad enough having to work in a job where you use two pieces of software called Phoenix. Here's what happens: John K. Developer logs onto my machine through SSH to check out what's happening with our Java server, which is called Phoenix. John then kill -9's every process with 'phoenix' in the description, including the browser, which I'm currently using.

    I think the real thing here though is that FirebirdSQL is "FirebirdSQL", not "Firebird".

    --
    Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
  87. A new level by davmoo · · Score: 1

    I have a fealing that, now that this story is posted on Slashdot, that those who advocated the assault on anything Mozilla connected are going to find a new level of "shock and awe" when they also learn the meaning of the term "Slashdot effect".

    FirebirdSQL needs to go, in the words of Clint Eastwood, piss up a rope.

    --
    I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
  88. Well, how about this naming scheme: by mlafranc · · Score: 1
    Browser: Phoe (pronouced: Foe)
    Mail/News: nix

    That way we can keep calling it whatever we want.

    Or perhaps: WAP (We Ain't PhoenixBios)
    Or perhaps: IMAP (Is Mozilla A Pontiac?)

    I also like Feenix, that might work nicely.

    Oh what fun.

    Credentials:
    Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Win98; en-US; rv:1.4a) Gecko/20030411 Phoenix/0.5

  89. Let me get this straight... by RighteousFunby · · Score: 1

    Free software site slashdots....Slashdot. Has the world gone yvrut yspot?????

  90. FirebirdSQL by MCZapf · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's called FirebirdSQL. Who's going to confuse that with the web browser Firebird?

    1. Re:FirebirdSQL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People like you! Because it's Mozilla Firebird. If you drop the Mozilla, why not drop the SQL? What's left?

  91. SPAM'ing a project back into existence? by linux11 · · Score: 1
    It seems like they are trying to use a simple mistake on the part of the Mozilla group as an excuss to market their own existence instead of trying to take care of this approbately.

    They even admit
    our advice is that the law is on our side


    However, most people that I have met that truely believe the law is on their side don't feel the need to seek out every possible forum to make their point on.

    Their prospective gets better:

    Legal issues notwithstanding, we take this as a slap in the face to the entire open source community.


    Ok. Good! The entire OSI community and the followers of ESR have been needing a slap in the face just as they slapped Free Software/RMS in the face.

    The hard route, which we sincerely hope to avoid, will be Mozilla proceeding with this, losing its Open Source cred and goodwill and taking the risk of making its product untouchable by the distributors.


    Untouchable by distributors in favor of what replacement?? Maybe at some point distributors of GNU/Linux systems will favor konqueror (as Apple has) but that choice won't be made because they accidently didn't properly recognize the existence of FirebirdSQL. The reality is that it is FirdbirdSQL that is untouchable by distributors because of it's "OSI" license which falls short of CopyLeft ideals. Why distribute an OSI FreebirdSQL when there is Free Software MySQL and PostgreSQL to choose from? While FreebirdSQL is still under a MPL-like license, Mozilla is Free Software which makes it much more touchable by distributors of a GNU/Linux system.

    We are dismayed that Firebird was not contacted before Mozilla's decision was finalized.


    The FirebirdSQL MPL-like IBPL-covered work did not even appear on the radar scope. To us Free Software users, the FBSQL project doesn't even exist. While the shock-and-awe campaign has made me aware of your existence, you still fail to provide anything worth tainting a perfectly good GNU system with. If you so badly need someone to acknowledge what you have accomplished under your crappy license then why don't you go cry to ESR.

    But I am now convinced that Mozilla should avoid the name Firebird for any of their works. After all, anything that now uses that name might be mistaken for being covered by the IBPL instead of a true CopyLeft Free Software license.
  92. Phallus? by starvingartist12 · · Score: 4, Funny

    How about Phallus? I don't think anyone else will fight for that project name.

    I hope.

    1. Re:Phallus? by dkh2 · · Score: 5, Funny

      I can see the promo now...

      Mozilla Phallus It's one F#(%ing fast browser!

      Bummeroskies, Dude. The folks at slashdot have eliminated my ability to use a style="" in my <div>.

      --
      My office has been taken over by iPod people.
    2. Re:Phallus? by zerocool^ · · Score: 1

      The Metal band GWAR produced a movie called
      Phallus in Wonderland.

      --
      sig?
    3. Re:Phallus? by macrom · · Score: 1

      I think that would be bad since Phoenix is supposed to be smaller and leaner than Mozilla.

      But then again, size doesn't matter, right?

  93. Call it Quetzl... by leonbrooks · · Score: 2

    ...after Quetlzcoatl, the (South American) Toltec firebird/thunderbird. Cool name, no conflicts.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Call it Quetzl... by Bander · · Score: 0

      Um, no thanks. Quetzel is a character from the children's cartoon "Dragon Tales". Some kid's cartoons are quite enjoyable, but DT is remarkably banal and insipid.

      What about "Geckzilla"? 0.5 :^)

      -- Bander

  94. Question... by RedBear · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How exactly are we all expected to remember that Thunderbird is the browser component and Firebird is the e-mail client?

    There's a little joke there for those "in the know", but it's really not a joke. The problem is that you *do* have to be "in the know". About a third of the people reading this post probably didn't realize there was supposed to *be* a joke there. I'll bet even a bunch of the "in the know" folks missed it. Didn't you?

    That's because the names Firebird and Thunderbird are absolutely meaningless to most of us. There's no context. There's a reason the Firebird relational database is called FirebirdSQL most of the time, to help give it some context. Somebody on that team realized that Firebird all by itself wouldn't necessarily mean anything to anyone, until or unless it was built into a big name with tons of publicity.

    If the Firebird/Thunderbird/Mozilla/Phoenix people actually want real humans to learn about and use their software, they really need to come up with some better, more relevant, more original names. Otherwise only the geek community is going to know what the hell we're talking about whenever we mention those products. There are still very few people who have even heard of Mozilla outside the geek realm. It shouldn't take a government study to realize that part of the problem is the cute, meaningless name. Every time I mention Mozilla I have to explain that it's a web browser. I shouldn't have to explain that it's a web browser, but only that it's a *good* web browser. Something about the name should already have told them, at least partially, that it was a web browser.

    "Internet Explorer" may not be cute, but by gosh nobody is going to be confused about what a product with that name is supposed to do. I'm really kind of flabbergasted that the Mozilla community can't come up with something, after months of discussion, that's better than Firebird/Thunderbird. Two mythological names that tell me absolutely nothing about the software they refer to, and furthermore are so similar that it will be difficult even for us geeks to remember which part they refer to. "Now, does fire remind me more of the Internet, or of e-mail? Hmm..."

    C'mon people. Surely the whole community can come up with something inbetween these useless "cute" names and the mundane dry clearness of the "explorer" and "navigator" names, and have something that's original, informative and catchy enough for non-geeks to use without feeling ridiculous. I mean, good God, OpenEmail and OpenBrowser would be better than what they've come up with.

    Here's hoping the right people will read this, have the same thoughts and run with it...

    1. Re:Question... by RedBear · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Replying to my own post, here's some feedback I received from a non-geek friend who just read the parent post. This person is very intelligent but isn't "in the know" when it comes to geek terms and names that most of us who frequent Slashdot would identify immediately. Here's what she has to say:
      "You sure hit the bullseye in your treatise about naming software. What you said is true. The first time you mentioned Mozilla to me, I thought of Godzilla. And now that you mentioned Firebird, I confused it with Firewire for awhile there. For those of us not 'in the know', we don't really want to try those strange-sounding softwares lest it be too technical or too strange to understand. A lot of people I know would raise their eyebrows when I suggest that they try Opera as a web browser."

      Yet another fine example of my point right there. "Opera? What the hell is that? Why would I want to browse the web with an Opera?"

      Welcome to the real world, folks. And this isn't even Joe User. This is a smart user. Joe User is the one who does confuse bananas and bread. Two words: "banana bread". (Another little in-joke there for those who RTFA.)
    2. Re:Question... by moncyb · · Score: 1

      How would you really know what "internet Explorer" and "Outlook Express" do if you never heard of them. Yeah, you might suppose IE has something to do with the internet, but the name doesn't tell you it's a web browser. What does the word "outlook" have anything to do with email? ,p>How would you know what "Quake" was if you just saw the name? Wouldn't you think it was some sort of earthquake simulation software? What about "Windows"? If you were a heavy Unix user and knew nothing about the Microsoft world, you'd probably think it's some sort of window manager for X11. If you knew nothing about computers, you'd have no idea. In fact, quite a few casual computer users don't even seem to have a single clue what "Windows" really does.

    3. Re:Question... by RedBear · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't most people think that an "Internet Explorer" would be something with which to explore the Internet? Seems pretty clear to me.

      Sure, names like "Outlook Express" and "Entourage" (the Mac equivalent) are kind of meaningless, but they both have a sort of suggestion about them that lines up with the actual use of the product. But you see Microsoft doesn't even have to worry about having meaningless names. They have the monopolistic and marketing muscle to make "Outlook" a household name in a matter of weeks.

      That's ignoring all the other examples of Microsoft programs that have clear names, like "Paint", "SQL Server", "Internet Information Server", "WordPad", "Notepad", "Publisher", "Word", "Photo Editor", "Calculator", etc. Pretty damn hard to figure those out. Even names like "BackOffice" which is pretty obscure still tells you it has something to do with whatever goes on in the back office, right. If they had named it "Mugwump" no one would have had a flippin' clue what it was for, so they didn't. But they could still do something like that, because of the power of their immense publicity and marketing departments.

      The Open Source world not only doesn't have that, it also doesn't have a lot of visibility in the common mind, so choosing meaningless names is like putting up a force-field that helps fend off all the non-geeky people in the world who otherwise might find it a great product, if it appeared under a different name. It's just another hurdle for the common mind to get past. It's called marketing, and a carefully chosen name can sometimes make or break a product. At this point "Firebird" and "Thunderbird" don't even stand out in my mind, and I'm a geek! I'm getting confused about what does what in the Mozilla family, even though I read Slashdot every day! That raises alarm bells in my mind when it comes to how the non-geek world is going to look at that set of software.

    4. Re:Question... by MichaelJ · · Score: 1

      Obviously they should not be Firebird and Thunderbird. The two make no sense together: one's a Ford, one's a Pontiac/GM.

      --

      Michael J.
      Root, God, what is difference?
    5. Re:Question... by moncyb · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't most people think that an "Internet Explorer" would be something with which to explore the Internet?

      Isn't that what I said? My point was it doesn't say anything about being a web browser. The web is only part of the internet. You can't fully explore the internet with IE. How do you explore a MUD with it? How do you explore usenet with it? (not just a web gateway for usenet, the real thing) How do you explore IRC with it? If they caled it 'WWW Explorer", then you would be right.

      That's ignoring all the other examples of Microsoft programs that have clear names, like...

      You have a point there, but notice they trademarked some of those generic names. Part of Microsoft's strategy has been to claim a generic term as their own. I think this is dishonest. I lost count of the times my roommate has assumed MS came up with things like Standard Query Language (they didn't) and the "fun" discussion I have when talking with him about some other database sever. "Ahhh, but DBXYZ can't possibly use SQL. Microsoft owns it."

      It's called marketing, and a carefully chosen name can sometimes make or break a product. At this point "Firebird" and "Thunderbird" don't even stand out in my mind, and I'm a geek!

      You do have a good point here. Maybe everyone should refer to them as the Firebird web browser and Thunderbird mail client. I don't think they should be called "Web Browser" and "Email Client." One thing, it's confusing. "When you say 'email client', do you mean any old email client, or the Mozilla project's Mail Client?" For another thing, I think it just sounds dumb.

    6. Re:Question... by Nameles · · Score: 1

      Counterpoint: Pegasus mail client. They call it Pegasus Email for a reason, because Pegasus reminds me nothing of email.

      Firebird Browser
      Thunderbird Email

      Whoopededoo!

    7. Re:Question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My point was it doesn't say anything about being a web browser. The web is only part of the internet.

      You and I know that, sure, but to the people you're talking about in this discussion, the Internet is the web (and maybe some email, if you're lucky).

    8. Re:Question... by mark.odonohue · · Score: 1
      There's a reason the Firebird relational database is called FirebirdSQL most of the time, to help give it some context. Somebody on that team realized that Firebird all by itself wouldn't necessarily mean anything to anyone, until or unless it was built into a big name with tons of publicity.

      Yes, exactly the point why we chose FirebirdSQL. for our "formal" branding, web site etc - and it only took us a year to figure it out.

      Cheers

      Mark

    9. Re:Question... by samdu · · Score: 1
      How exactly are we all expected to remember that Thunderbird is the browser component and Firebird is the e-mail client?

      Uh, Firebird is the browser component and Thunderbird is the e-mail.

    10. Re:Question... by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1
      Surely the whole community can come up with something inbetween these useless "cute" names and the mundane dry clearness of the "explorer" and "navigator" names, and have something that's original, informative and catchy enough for non-geeks to use without feeling ridiculous.

      This problem has a lengthy history in the free software movement.

      In fact, it reaches all the way back to the naming of the GNU project. I can hardly think of a name that would be more hostile to a non-technical enduser.

      • "Hey, it says I should try installing a 'New' library"

        "Oh, how do you pronounce that again?"

        "And does that stand for anything?"

      (For those unfamiliar, "GNU" is an "infinitely recursive acryonym", a term that'll elicit chuckles from maths students and confusion from anyone else. It stands for "GNU is Not Unix")

      RMS is infamous for complaining that "Linux" was used to describe systems that should've properly been called "GNU"- but he has only himself to blame. Compared to "GNU", "Linux" is vastly easier for the average person to pronounce and to distinguish from other words. I just don't think a TV anchor could read "GNU" on the air- and if one did, few of the viewing audience would manage to punch it into a search-engine.
    11. Re:Question... by Perky_Goth · · Score: 1

      That was the joke he was reffering to in his post

    12. Re:Question... by cpeterso · · Score: 1


      The product name "Microsoft SQL Server" is pretty clear, though "Microsoft BizTalk Server System .NET 2004 Limited Enterprise Edition for Itanium Workstations" is less clear.

    13. Re:Question... by waveclaw · · Score: 1

      The product name "Microsoft SQL Server" is pretty clear


      I got one word for those of you who whine and complain about poor program names:

      Excel

      Outside of some xspreadsheet programs and VizCalc, I really don't know of too many functionally named spreadsheet apps. Names like Lotus123, et al. seems to be standard. Its all about what people think they should call things - a theme if you will. Browsers are similar to speardsheet systems and unlike database systems in this matter. People seem to expect fancy names like 'Mosaic' or 'Galleon' rather than 'browser' or 'webpageViewer.' (Even if they use generics when describing them.)
      --

      "You cannot have a General Will unless you have shared experiences. You cannot be fair to people you don't know."
    14. Re:Question... by moncyb · · Score: 1

      So why would anyone want to confuse them more by calling a web browser "Internet Explorer"?

    15. Re:Question... by thinduke · · Score: 1
      If the Firebird/Thunderbird/Mozilla/Phoenix people actually want real humans to learn about and use their software, they really need to come up with some better, more relevant, more original names.


      You see, for non english speakers, program names like "windows", "word", "notes", etc., do not mean anything. Yet they are popular.

      It seems you belong to this current trend thinking users will never be anything more than "learning monkey", and who slaughtered the once brillant Gnome 1 into this tetraplegic Gnome 2.
    16. Re:Question... by RedBear · · Score: 1

      Seems pretty clear to me. The words are mostly plain English. But you're comparing apples to coconuts. How many users do you know that have a need for installing or even knowing what "Microsoft BizTalk Server System .NET 2004 Limited Enterprise Edition for Itanium Workstations" is? The word "enterprise" should be a tip-off there. The few technical people that require such a thing will be able to immediately identify what it is, whereas if it was named "Microsoft Rowrbazzle" even the techies wouldn't know what it is or why they should want it.

      On the other hand, almost everyone who uses a computer uses a web browser and an e-mail client, and we would like as many of those people as possible to have access to these Open Source browsers and e-mail clients. Giving them cool names that tell them nothing and are too similar to keep apart does not help in any way.

    17. Re:Question... by RedBear · · Score: 1
      It seems you belong to this current trend thinking users will never be anything more than "learning monkey", and who slaughtered the once brillant Gnome 1 into this tetraplegic Gnome 2.

      I guess you didn't see my reply to my own post. We aren't even talking about Joe Dipstick User here. We're talking about the smart non-technical users, who repeatedly hesitate to try many Open Source products because of the weird-ass names that make them think those products are solely designed for the geeks who already know what the names mean. See here.

      BTW, this is completely OT but I never have understood what was so "brilliant" about GNOME. I've used many different types of desktops over the last decade: several Macs, every version of Windows since 3.0, BeOS, KDE1/2/3, IceWM and several other things, and never had problems understanding how to use them within a few minutes. Yet every time I stepped into GNOME over the years I was lost. Since I never had a problem with those other desktop systems, that makes me think there wasn't anything brilliant about it. I've never understood what the appeal of GNOME was, besides politics. So I always left after 30 minutes or so of struggling to configure things, and started up KDE again, where I was happily changing this-that-and-the-other-thing within minutes of first starting up KDE1/2/3. And no, my KDE desktop looks and behaves almost nothing like a Windows desktop.

      GNOME2 doesn't seem to be much of an improvement. It's simply designed by people that think differently from any other desktop system I've encountered. Very strange.

      YMMV, AFAICT, FWIW, HAND (have a nice day)
    18. Re:Question... by panserg · · Score: 1
      "Internet Explorer" may not be cute, but by gosh nobody is going to be confused about what a product with that name is supposed to do. I'm really kind of flabbergasted that the Mozilla community can't come up with something, after months of discussion, that's better than Firebird/Thunderbird.

      I like Chatzilla and other 'zillas. And I wonder why not rename Phoenix to Browzilla, while calling email program as Mailzilla? No one will have any doubts what program is doing as well as what technology it is based on.

      --
      "I shall explain this by waving my hands about in an appropriate manner." -- Cambridge University Math Dept.
    19. Re:Question... by Kallahar · · Score: 1

      yeah, what's a "Buick" or a "Ford Contour"? They should just name them "Red Car" or "Fast Automobile". :)

      Travis

  95. Shock and Awe - show some respect by doctor_oktagon · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    .... to both the people of the middle East and your own Armed Forces by not misusing a piece of military terminology before people have even stopped dying, on both sides.

    Don't be arrogant - that's why the Arab world hates the US (and probably now the UK as well) so much.

    Yes, this [i]is[/i] on topic.

    1. Re:Shock and Awe - show some respect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On topic? I think not, you fucking tool.

  96. Stick with Phoenix, *everyone* uses phoenix by B747SP · · Score: 2, Interesting

    'Phoenix' is like the 'Jane Smith' of the corporate world. Every company that ever went under, got bought out by the employees, and 'rose from the ashes' got names phoenix. Someone challenges you for using 'phoenix' as a name, and you cite 27,000 other people doing exactly the same thing, and tell them to take a hike. Beats being spammed to hell by a bunch of childish database wankers!

    --
    I find your ideas intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
  97. Synonyms by affenmann · · Score: 2, Funny

    I just looked up `phoenix' at thesaurus.com and it returns `phoenix` as synonyms for `ideal', `jewel', `monster', and `perfection' :-) It's a shame they can't use that name anymore.

  98. strange twists in time and space... by stonedCoder · · Score: 1

    For old timers (and emulator users I guess) - don't forget Firebird software from BT in the 80s - and they're also a dinosaur of a company :))

    ...and it's not like they don't try - remember their claims over hyperlink technology? here and here . (thanks google for a big 2 links)

    (yes, I'm joking)

    --
    ermmm... don't take any notice of me... I'm too old...
  99. Re:They are 100% right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well then maybe we need OO style namespaces for real life? You can't confuse Browser::Firebird and Datbase::Firebird now can you?

  100. This is so pointless... by miketang16 · · Score: 1

    Just change the damn name, and get to work on it already! Btw, anyone else find IBPhoenix acting qite immature?

    --
    -------
    "In times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act."
    -- George Orwell
  101. Suggestive naming... by Art+Tatum · · Score: 2

    How about 'Best-Damn-Browser-on-the-Planet'? It's very unlikely to have been used before, and it's appropriate suggestive to potential users.

    1. Re:Suggestive naming... by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Opera is "the fastest browser on earth", so it is dangerously close to that. :)

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    2. Re:Suggestive naming... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or maybe "Most frequently renamed Browser on the planet?"

    3. Re:Suggestive naming... by Art+Tatum · · Score: 1
      Darn! Everything's been taken then, I guess.

      We need a recycling program for trademarks. They're more scarce than paper or plastic...

    4. Re:Suggestive naming... by Art+Tatum · · Score: 1
      Or maybe "Most frequently renamed Browser on the planet?"

      It doesn't have the same punch, but it fits.

  102. Who cares? by darnok · · Score: 2, Insightful

    First, we're talking about a browser and a database. They're hardly interchangeable.

    I never really stopped to consider I was using "Mozilla" even though it's obviously derived from crappy Japanese movies, or "Phoenix" with its "born from the ashes" undertones; if they'd been called "Cuttlefish" and "Rob Schneider", I wouldn't have cared less.

    Since it seems to have come along later, change the name of the damn browser and let's get on with life. If there's some mysterious proof that the browser came along before the database, change the name of the database.

    If they'd been called "Lilo" and "Stitch", everyone would have been up in arms if/when Disney came along with a "cease and desist" note. They're not; it's all OSS, so let's all get along nicely like good anarchists should.

  103. Re:wrong by twistedcubic · · Score: 2, Interesting


    From what I've heard, Mozilla changed the name knowing FULL WELL there was another piece of software with the name.

    I'm not saying this isn't true, but I would like to know if it is. Can you give any evidence?

  104. behaving like adults by klokwise · · Score: 5, Interesting

    if you'd like to see how sensible people handle this sort of thing, check out the two gentoo's:

    http://www.obsession.se/gentoo/

    http://www.gentoo.org/

    looks like so many problems would be solved if people just had some better manners.

    1. Re:behaving like adults by cenonce · · Score: 1
      This may be a solution if you have already invested a lot in your brand name, but since OSS software has no other means of protection (i.e. copyright), the brand is everything. People use a distro because of its brand. People like Red Hat RPM or they like Debian .deb or they like Mandrake because of the quality of those distros. Thus, these distros wisely trademarked the name.

      The problem is that if these companies used the name first, the project is giong to get cease and desist letters and will lose if it ever comes down to litigation. Gentoo may be a rare example of "civility", but frankly, I would never want any company using a similar brandname in my industry. As far as the law is concerned database software and a web browser are similar enough that there is a likelihood of confusion.

      Gentoo and Mozilla and other OSS, due to the importance of the brand name are better off researching a decent brandname upfront and then filing for a trademark registration. I am sure Mozilla is wishing they had spent the money on coming up with some decent brandnames now, because they are probably back at square one, along with the aggravation of a childish spam campaign.

      Just because OSS is copyleft, doesn't make it wise to be "trademark-left"

    2. Re:behaving like adults by PalmKiller · · Score: 1

      that dont solve it at all, one mentions the other but not vise versa its a one sided solution in the case of gentoo. So the confusion can be there.

  105. Why not email flood IBPhoenix? by User+956 · · Score: 0

    Using IBPhoenix's own logic, why doesn't someone flood them with email, for "stealing" the name from Phoenix Technologies?

    That's right, because nobody's going to confuse a database with a browser. Oh, wait, nevermind, I guess they do.

    --
    The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
    1. Re:Why not email flood IBPhoenix? by Rastor · · Score: 1
      why doesn't someone flood them with email, for "stealing" the name from Phoenix Technologies?
      A. Because that would the kind of immature retarded behavior someone would expect of an 8-year-old Slashtard.

      B. Because they didn't. Their database is called "Firebird", not "Phoenix". If you had any reading comprehension skills you would know that from reading the story.
    2. Re:Why not email flood IBPhoenix? by User+956 · · Score: 0

      Their database is called "Firebird", not "Phoenix". If you had any reading comprehension skills you would know that from reading the story.

      Their organization is called "IBPhoenix", and the browser is called "Phoenix". If you had any reading comprehension skills you would know that from reading their website.

      The database is called "FirebirdSQL", not "Firebird. If you had any reading comprehension skills you would know that from reading the story.

      --
      The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
  106. just call it... by g4dget · · Score: 1

    It's debatable whether Phoenix-the-BIOS-vendor really had a good justification for requesting the name change in the first place. But, OK, so call it Butthead Bios Vendor (BBV).

  107. Feel free to spam them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My email to them:

    To : press@firebirdsal.org
    Cc : foundation@firebirdsql.org
    Attchmnt:
    Subject : Complaints
    ----- Message Text -----
    I had heard of your SQL project before you started the assinine complaints to the Mozilla development team for using the term "Firebird" they you have stolen from a car manufacturer. The car name has even been immirtalised in song, yet you still believed that you had all the rights necessary to do so.

    Why then you wish to deny the right of another non-competing projet to use the term "Firebird", and even exhort the admittedly small public following to "spam" messages of complaint to the developers.

    Your site and email address even use FirebirdSQL, rather than just Firebird, so your complains is really someone who is not competing with you from using a *part* of your trade name in their project name.

    Will you therefore be removing "SQL" from your trade name so that you will not fall foul from Microsoft's "SQLServer"?

    Please grow up.

  108. or the "Source that is Open Browser"... by interactive_civilian · · Score: 1
    so we can just call it the SOB for short.

    :)

    --
    "Empathise with stupidity, and you're halfway to thinking like an idiot." - Iain M. Banks
  109. Phallus was already suggested by dereklam · · Score: 5, Funny
    How about Phallus? I don't think anyone else will fight for that project name.

    In fact, it's already been suggested: Most People Agree: Phallus is a Really Bad Name for a Browser 8-)

  110. Lousy attitudes. by Accipiter · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Judging by their whiny, pithy attitude, I hope usage of their product (no matter how good it may be) drops even further. From the FirebirdSQL main page:

    Our marks are not there for the taking and our advice is that the law is on our side: we have nearly three years of widespread international use of our mark.

    What incredible arrogance to claim ownership of the word "Firebird" implied by the statement "Our marks are not there for the taking." Give me a break. That word wasn't theirs to begin with.

    Plus, while they don't come right out and say that they'd threaten legal action, they're certainly hinting at it by claiming they believe the law is on their side. Of course, that's a bullshit scare tactic at best, and a weak one at that.

    This is childish whining in every sense.

    --

    -- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
    (If you can't figure out how to E-Mail me, Don't. :P)

  111. Modding of parent post by horza · · Score: 1

    I would have modded that post as Insightful rather than Funny. I think "Browse" or "Browser" is a really good name. Look at Microsoft: Internet Explorer. Simple, says what it does, and close enough to generic to give it a chance of becoming a household name.

    Phillip.

  112. Good to see FirebirdSQL get some /. coverage by GeorgeTheNorge · · Score: 1

    Okay fellow programmers:

    Here is a full featured robust SQL database that has been around for many years, has a very lean footprint, runs on all kinds of OS'es, requires almost zero administration, and is free.

    Support on the users groups is top notch.

    As far as the FirebirdSQL people launching an attack - Give them a break. They have really put their hearts into getting this project rolling after Borlands *interesting* management of it.

    If any project deserves the name Phoenix and/or firebird, it would be this one, because they have really risen from the ashes, and done so many times.

    --
    If you got a $100 bill, put your hands up...
  113. The answer is obvious... by metamatic · · Score: 1

    The SQL database people should rename their database AOL.

    Seriously, though, I came up with the name "Mozuki" for a hypothetical cut-down version of Mozilla shortly after the Mozilla project was launched. (I suspect you'll find mention of it on the mailing list archives.) As far as I know, the name is unused and available. C'mon, guys, you know it makes sense.

    --
    GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
  114. It was rude. by trats · · Score: 1

    It's disgusting that some Mozilla fans cannot take any critisisms of the project, and that they can't accept the fact that it was simply rude to choose someone else's name like that.

    It will be less painful to pick another name now while it's hot, rather than ignore the critics for eternity.

  115. Shot themselves in the Foot by neurostar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This could also be just a smart move by the FirebirdSQL team.

    Well, that depends... I for one have no intention of using a program where the developers and supporters resort to spamming and flooding other projects with derogatory comments. It shows a great level of immaturity. Therefore, I have no interest in using FirebirdSQL. I'd never heard of it before, but the only things I've heard about it so far are that the developers and supporters are basically jerks, flooding places with messages as opposed to openning up a positive, constructive dialog to resolve the differences.

    IMHO, they've shot themselves in the foot.

    neurostar
    1. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Lost+Canadian+Abroad · · Score: 1

      Well, that depends... I for one have no intention of using a program where the developers and supporters resort to spamming and flooding other projects with derogatory comments. It shows a great level of immaturity.

      And you've never contaced a company or orgaization to show your displeaure over something? The Firebird DB community is attempting to stand up for what they believe in. So in doing so you brand them jerks and dismiss them. Great. So their knee jerk reaction has now forced your knee jerk reaction to dismiss them out of hand.

      If you take the time to follow the entire situation up till now, you would probably see that a number of us jerks tried using the open existing channels of communitation with the Mozilla people. We were told flat out that nobody could possibly mistake a browser for a database and that we should stop whining. We had no choice but to try and raise the awareness of our displeasure with the rest of the Mozilla project leaders.

      I, for one, know a lot of people, who don't know alot about computers, who could very easily confuse Mozilla Firebird for the Firebird DBMS. They would see the word Firebird and assume that it was the one they were looking for. You can't tell me that you don't know anyone could do the same.

    2. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are a dumbass bitch winny canadian, fuck off aye

    3. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by bjorkmann · · Score: 1

      I, for one, know a lot of people, who don't know alot about computers, who could very easily confuse Mozilla Firebird for the Firebird DBMS. They would see the word Firebird and assume that it was the one they were looking for. You can't tell me that you don't know anyone could do the same.

      Why would people who don't know a lot about computers be using a DBMS anyway?

      And (without having looked at it at all) I'm going to assume that (if it's like the majority of open source apps) it would be largely unusable to a novice user anyway.

      They generally prefer MS Access.

    4. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of other ways to 'riase the awareness of our displeasure' than resorting to such immature and petty actions as encouraging what is in effect a hate campaign against those guys.

      Sure, you think you have a valid complaint against them from their initial response, but your next step should have been to contact the press and community sites to bring the issue into the public domain.

      I wonder that you didn't do that either because you thought the community would agree with the Mozilla group, or because the ability to start the hate-campaign was somehow 'l33t'.

    5. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Lost+Canadian+Abroad · · Score: 1

      Why would people who don't know a lot about computers be using a DBMS anyway?

      That's just the thing though, They wouldn't know what a DBMS is. As far as they would be concerned it would be just another part of the name, like Mozilla.

      I develop a lot of applications using the Firebird DB and I can just see someone who isn't paying attention downloading the Mozilla Firebird package and finding a Firebird entry in their Add/Remove Programs list and uninstalling the database engine or client tools. For alot of non-techie people the computer is a very visual tool. They go by what they see listed or shown on their screen.

    6. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Lost+Canadian+Abroad · · Score: 1

      but your next step should have been to contact the press and community sites

      We did, check out LinuxWorld Australia and news.com.

      I also tried submitting an artical on /. yesterday or the day before. My artical got rejected. As my writing skills lack polish I just assumed that it wasn't clear enough for the editors.

    7. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suspect that those confused people would have an awful hard time surfing the web with a DBMS. Plus, I think the prominently displayed line at the top of the FirebirdSQL web page that says "Relational Database for the New Millennium" would be another clue to them. Also, if they are that clueless about computers, I would suppose they would be happy with IE to start with, they probably never heard of any other browser besides Netscape, and on the off chance they wanted to find the Firebird browser, searching for it by name will bring up many different "Firebirds" that they would have to sort between.

    8. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Ronin+Developer · · Score: 4, Informative

      You have to understand the history of the Firebird DB project in the first place to understand their displeasure.

      Firebird DB draws its codebase from Borland's InterBase. Borland was going to kill InterBase and let many of their developers go. Those developers decided to resurrect InterBase as an open source product. There was a lot of talk and Borland was going to release the full source code and rights to them so that this could happen. Then, the talks broke down and InterBase Corporation got screwed. InterBase became a commercial product again with substantially higher licensing fees than before.

      So, they (IBC) took what source they DID have rights to and expanded the product and offer it as an OS solution. Because it essentially arose from the ashes, it was named Firebird (and the IBPhoenix support group was born).

      Firebird is a very robust and powerful SQL 92 compliant database. It's adoptance by the OS community has been slow because most people remember it only as the commercial InterBase product. But, it's a very powerful, cross platform, database solution. I've used both InterBase and FireBird in my work I'm predominantly a Delphi developer..but do a fair amount of Linux work on the side). InterBase licensing costs are high. FireBird is free.

      I suggest that you take a look at what Firebird (the DB) has to offer. I think you'll be pleasantly suprised. And, now that you have an understanding of where the name came from for the project, maybe you'll have a better appreciation of their fight to retain it.

      RD

    9. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by neurostar · · Score: 1

      And you've never contaced a company or orgaization to show your displeaure over something?

      I've definitely contacted companies over stuff like this. What I haven't done is flooded message boards with rhetoric that is attacking their company.

      you would probably see that a number of us jerks tried using the open existing channels of communitation with the Mozilla people.

      When I said 'jerks' I was refering to the people who flooded inboxes and message boards with trash. Those people are jerks. I applaud you and the others who tried to open valid communications with mozilla.

      neurostar
    10. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by neurostar · · Score: 1

      ...And, now that you have an understanding of where the name came from for the project, maybe you'll have a better appreciation of their fight to retain it.

      I have no problems with their fight to retain their identity. However, I highly object to the methods that many of the people in their community used to express their displeasure.

      neurostar
    11. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      Oh yea use mysql instead. Now there is a mature user base that never get involved in flame wars.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    12. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I for one have no intention of using a program where the developers and supporters resort to spamming and flooding other projects with derogatory comments. It shows a great level of immaturity. Therefore, I have no interest in using FirebirdSQL.

      Indeed, I have to wonder how well such immature people can code. Sounds like a bunch of whiny junior high kids who couldn't hack it as script kiddies.

      So, FirebirdSQL people, now I've heard of you, but I have the impression that you first picked up a compiler sometime last week. If you can prove that you can do better than any other DB team, then this was a good move. Otherwise, buh-bye. thank you for playing.

    13. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by neurostar · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid I'm not aware of their flame war history. Care to englighten me?

      (I'm being serious here)

      neurostar
    14. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by platypus · · Score: 1

      Search for firebird at goole. the db comes up very often. mozilla going firebird results namespace pollution on google and it will it make much harder to find anything related to firebird, the db.
      ALso it makes conversation really hard "Hey, IT Guy, thought about using firebird in your shop" "Nah, IE6 is enough for me.."

      Nobody can argue that this will not be an inconvenience for the firebird(db) guys, but this is what the mozilla guys (as I read here) reportedly did.

      They are wrong.

    15. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by MrResistor · · Score: 1

      A DBMS is a professional product, and if you want your project to be taken seriously you need to conduct yourself in a professional manner. A mass posting campaign is on the same maturity level that an organization like Earth First operates at. Guess how much respect Earth First gets in the typical corporate boardroom? That's the real problem with these kinds of tactics; you might win the name game, but at the cost of your reputation. Anyone who's willing to make that trade certainly sounds like a jerk[1] to me.

      I totally agree that you had an obligation to raise awareness, but it needed to be conducted in a more mature manner. Personally, if this is the manner in which the Firebird DBMS community conducts itself, I will never use it.

      Finally, we both know that even if someone did download the wrong Firebird, the mistake would be immediately apparent when they first tried to start it up. The real issue here is confusing the communities. People calling up IBPheonix and demanding support for Mozilla Firebird, people asking FirebirdSQL questions on Mozilla Firebird discussion forums, that sort of thing. The issue, I think, is not one being mistaken for the other, but rather thinking that the two projects are somehow associated or linked in some way.

      That said, Firebird is a stupid name for a browser, and so is Pheonix. They should have stuck with Chimera.

      [1] I mean that in the New York sense (idiot), not the California sense (mean person)

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    16. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...And, now that you have an understanding of where the name came from for the project, maybe you'll have a better appreciation of their fight to retain it.

      Nope. Not really. Borland technology is so 1982. I attempted to use their stuff delphi, interbase, C,J Builder only to discover extremely wierd unpredictable behaviour. Its not really their fault they didn't have much of a chance when their main competitor controls the development evnioment. I think I'll stick to the widley supported solutions such as postgress and mysql for now. Even if it is good, I don't want to be burned by being an early adopter. But seriously they are acting like 5 year olds that called the front seat, but lost it because its easier for grandma to get into.

    17. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes but now I have a good reason to never use it, regardless of its features and power. Their developers are immature and annoying.

    18. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is exactly the ploy they used when they broke from Borland. They continue to claim that Borland hates them, etc., but Borland lets them use Borland copyright technical documents on their site and even lets them use the InterBase name on their site. Borland never bad mouths them in public, but the Firebird people never miss a chance to bad mouth Borland. It makes for good press. These are talented, dedicated people on the Firebird project and I can see why they're p/o'd at Mozilla. I think its great that they're playing it for all the PR they can get.

    19. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so you're going to stop using linux, then?

    20. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This gives them absolutly no right to bright down my 486 mail server and SPAM 2 of my Mozilla developer accounts. I hold them responsible for the downtime and all the headaches caused.

      And listen.

      They are "FIREBIRDSQL", which would also be their packaging name in Debian aand anything else. You ever see mysql and postgresql dropping the sql at the end and suing people and demanding terrorist action against projects they dont like or would like to get publicity from?

    21. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by DarkEdgeX · · Score: 1

      Well when your name is hijacked, it's just as rude as being spammed, except worse really, because your identity is being stolen, rather than your inbox being inconvenienced.

      But to each their own, I hope the SQL guys can keep their name and that the Moz folks will find something more indicative of their project (a small robust browser without all the bloat of the full Moz project). I never did quite understand how Firebird or Phoenix were supposed to indicate 'small, compact, anti-bloat'. But whatever.

      --
      All I know about Bush is I had a good job when Clinton was president.
    22. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      Do a google search on mysql VS Postgres.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    23. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by neurostar · · Score: 1

      so you're going to stop using linux, then?

      Oh... you mean because linux users have flooded Sun's and Microsoft's support forums with useless shit? Ya right. Go back and look at what I said. I said flooding, not advocating.

      neurostar
    24. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by neurostar · · Score: 1

      Well when your name is hijacked, it's just as rude as being spammed, except worse really, because your identity is being stolen, rather than your inbox being inconvenienced.

      I agree completely. I wasn't justifying the mozilla project. I was merely pointing out, that imho, the publicity the SQL project was getting was bad, because I didn't think they presented themselves well to the community by lashing out like that.

      neurostar
    25. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by WNight · · Score: 1

      How about all those poor users who would mistake a Pontiac Firebird for a RDBMS?

      This may astound you, but the world is full of similarly named yet completely different products. People are able to cope. People know it's the Pinto *car* that explodes, not the pinto *bean*. (Well, those explode, just later...)

      You seem to think that people will be hearing great things about Firebird, but have no idea what is it. "Wow, that Firebird sounds *amazing*, I don't know if it's an experimental new plane, or a tooth-whitener, but I've got to try it!"

      Really, people hear things like "We installed that Firebird database", "You've got to use Firebird for you web browsing", "This Firebird energy drink is amazing", and other contextual uses. They know not to go looking at 7-11 for a database, or at Source Forge for an energy drink.

      Admittedly, if they google for Firebird and hit "I Feel Lucky", they may get the wrong site, but that's easily taken care of by trading "If you meant to find Firebird the (Browser|RDBMS) click here!" links. Any of those people who made a mistake, either way, would have learned about a new product to try, and been able to find the one they were looking for.

    26. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by WNight · · Score: 1

      And this idiot is going to have installed a high-end RDBMS? I doubt it.

    27. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by DarkEdgeX · · Score: 1

      Possibly, but as was pointed out earlier in this thread, their usage statistics have jumped up a ton seemingly since this all happened. (And not just page hits, but actual downloads.) But either way, glad we seem to agree. =)

      --
      All I know about Bush is I had a good job when Clinton was president.
    28. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      I also tried submitting an artical on /. yesterday or the day before. My artical got rejected. As my writing skills lack polish I just assumed that it wasn't clear enough for the editors.

      Maybe you just used vocabulary skills that required at least a 10-year old's reading capabilities?

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    29. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      to be taken seriously you need to conduct yourself in a professional manner. A mass posting campaign is on the same maturity level that an organization like Earth First operates at.

      What about dropping butterfly flyers all over the city and spraying the same pattern all over walls and crap? Is that acting professionally?

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    30. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      I never did quite understand how Firebird or Phoenix were supposed to indicate 'small, compact, anti-bloat'.

      Why don't they just call it Miatta? That would indicate small, compact, and anti-bloat.

      Especially since the beginning Mozilla hasn't exactly shown a lot of originality. Great programming, apparently, but original? Let's see, XPCOM is modeled after MS COM, then we've got a huge fire-breathing lizard named **zilla. Except it's red, not green, and it didn't climb up out of the ocean to terrorize Japanese cities, instead it can be said to be trying to climb up out of the ocean to terrorize cities in western Washington.

      Don't misinterpret me, I LOVE mozilla. But especially after seeing the story of how FirebirdSQL got their name, I wonder why Mozilla can't adopt it for the same reason? I mean, really, Netscape was going under getting stomped by the big bad Microsoft, so they thrust their product into Open Source to give it new life. Can you say.... Firebird?

      Except the FirebirdSQL guys did it first, and if Mozilla does it now, well, it'll cause problems for the FirebirdSQL guys.

      It's a stupid fight, but at least they're not namecalling. :) (note: I haven't taken sides, because "that which we call a rose" and all that)

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    31. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Ronin+Developer · · Score: 1

      Just for the record, Microsoft and Borland have a very good working relationship that has improved greatly in the past several years (especially i the .Net arena). As a Delphi developer since 1996, I have only seen improvements in the product and with it's interactions with the OS. But, I'm digressing.

      The issue is whether or not they, the Firebird team, has acted badly or not. Mailbombing certainly isn't nice behavior. But, then again, neither is "stealing" another project's name recognition and "officially" announcing it on ./

      Given the wide dissemination of information that ./ provides, the Mozilla team effectively attempted to force the issue. That's not exactly in the spirit of OSS either. I'd have to say both camps acted rather badly.

    32. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by rsidd · · Score: 1
      They are "FIREBIRDSQL"

      No they're not. The domain name www.firebirdsql.org is probably because www.firebird.org was already taken, or something.

    33. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by Lost+Canadian+Abroad · · Score: 1

      And this idiot is going to have installed a high-end RDBMS? I doubt it.

      Have you ever installed Firebird? It's almost as easy as Mozilla is. Doesn't take brains to click OK, does it?

      And how do you know I'm an idiot? I've never told you.

    34. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by WNight · · Score: 1

      I mean, why would an idiot install an RDBMS? I don't doubt that it installs easily.

    35. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by jejones · · Score: 1

      He's referring to the hypothetical person who deletes the wrong package that you brought up, not to you.

    36. Re:Shot themselves in the Foot by MrResistor · · Score: 1

      What about dropping butterfly flyers all over the city and spraying the same pattern all over walls and crap? Is that acting professionally?

      No, but MSN isn't being marketed as a professional service, and IBM has professional reputation to burn. IBPheonix is not in either of those positions.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  116. Mozilla Junk Mail Filtering by buford_tannen · · Score: 1

    I bet those guys on the team are glad that they incorporated Junk Mail Filtering in the latest releases of Mozilla.

    (Now that I think about it, maybe that is why they added that feature.... ;) )

    --
    Buford "Mad Dog" Tannen
  117. I agree... by cjpez · · Score: 4, Funny
    This is getting very interesting!
    I agree. If by "interesting" you mean "stupid."
  118. I think the solution is really simple by fredrikj · · Score: 1

    The formal name of the browser should be (and probably is) Mozilla Firebird or even Mozilla Firebird Browser.

    That makes a clear difference from a stand-alone Firebird. Of course, people will say Firebird for ease and comfort, but that's how we do with everything else already.

    Who says Microsoft Internet Explorer and not just Internet Explorer or even Explorer? See.

  119. The easy solution! Everyone wins. by gosand · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I just thought of the simplest solution that would please everyone. The Mozilla team simply puts a link on their website to the Firebird SQL site. Put it under a heading "Firebird browser is not affiliated with Firebird SQL" with Firebird SQL's logo.

    Firebird SQL gets more visibility, Mozilla clears up any potential confusion (?). They both get to keep their project names.

    Why does everything need to be such a big deal? Can anyone come up with a good idea why this won't work?

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    1. Re:The easy solution! Everyone wins. by Nameles · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Back when Squaresoft and Enix were seperate companies, even before it was Square Electronic Arts and Electronic Arts Square (one based in US, one in JP), I searched for "Square" on the net because that's what they were known by. I got a business site (that apparently no longer exists) that had a big line of text near the top "We do not do videogames. You are looking for Squaresoft" with a link to their page. Why can't it be as simple as that?

    2. Re:The easy solution! Everyone wins. by roca · · Score: 1

      We (Mozilla) have offered that.

    3. Re:The easy solution! Everyone wins. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Everyone wins"? Ugh ... what a load of crap.

      Fact: when Mozilla Firebird will be released, it will be a high-profile product and more people (websites) will be linking to it, making Firebird - the database engine - much harder to find. Not only the main page, but fan-pages, forum pages, errors, security issues, tips 'n tricks and so on.

      You are completely right if this isn't a problem NOW, but it will be in the (near) future.

      How does searching for a Firebird - the database engine - error benefit from a link (to the main site of the database engine project) help the searcher?

  120. Erm.. It's immature, unprofessional and unhelpful? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    Resorting to things like e-mail flooding is childish at best, and downright damaging (and hopefully illegal) at worst.

    This is the 21st century and we're supposed to adults. There are better ways to deal with disagreeing viewpoints than "My server's got more bandwidth than yours, so nyeeeah!"

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  121. Childish whining by trats · · Score: 0

    It's childish and irrelevant to brand their words as childish.

  122. YOU are missing the point! by stewby18 · · Score: 1

    It isn't that the Mozilla team couldn't keep the Firebird name - it's that they shouldn't. It isn't that anyone will confuse a web browser with a RDBMS, it's that it's a completely unnecessary risk that anyone could.

    What are you talking about; there is no risk of confusion, as you said yourself, which is exactly what makes this so stupid. There is, as another poster pointed out, little more chance of the two being confused as there is of confusion with the car. Anyone who does confuse them is too stupid to use a browser, much less a DMBS

    It's about essential respect in the open source community.

    I definitely agree: this is all about how the people behind this campaign have demonstrated a total lack of even basic respect for anyone else. Nasty emails and posts all over make them look like spoiled children, not people who should be taken seriously. I wouldn't be surprised if people are less likely to give this system any consideration, since most people would prefer software written by professionals to software written by children.

    Go read about how Hyatt, who's isn't even involved with the project anymore, was mailbombed to the tune of hundreds of messages per day. Then come tell us about how these vandals have the moral high-ground.

    1. Re:YOU are missing the point! by Rastor · · Score: 1
      What are you talking about; there is no risk of confusion,
      No risk of confusion??

      Part of the Firebird SQL project is a data browser, to browse the database. You don't see a possibility of confusion with the "Mozilla Firebird Browser"??

      What if someone develops an application with Firebird SQL as the backend database and Mozilla Firebird as the client? "Wait, now I install Firebird? I thought I already did that!!" Sounds like confusion to me.

      Suppose one day it is announced that the Slash system now supports Firebird. Wait, what does that mean? Does it mean that the database backend can now run on Firebird SQL? Or does it mean that Slash can now be browsed with Mozilla Firebird? Result: confusion.

      What about the package maintainers for the various Linux distributions? If someone installs the "firebird" package, are they getting a web browser or a database? More confusion.

      The Firebird SQL team has legitimate reason to complain.
  123. Big Deal? by budGibson · · Score: 1

    I just went over to Firebird forums on mozilla. Well, there is one topic in the general Firebird forums regarding this issue, and it has a grand total of 43 posts, most of which are an argument between two (2) people about whether it would have been more polite to ask the firebirdSQL folks first.

    So, while the firebirdSQL folk are unhappy on their site, the real impact of this seems limited from a practical stand point.

    The more interesting point is that trademark law forces you to defend your trademark or lose it. However, you cannot claim a universal trademark, so it is okay to have a car and software named the same thing. Are two software products that do very different things but have the same name similar enough for this to be an issue that would lead to confusion?

  124. And we wonder... by Wubby · · Score: 2, Funny

    why the internet community has trouble effecting any real change in the world! Like anyone would take us seriously! I sure as hell don't.

    --
    Sig
    Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars
  125. Mozilla and . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure this has been suggested before, but the obvious name for a stripped down version of Mozilla is . . . Less-zilla !

  126. So nice to see such unbiased reporting on /. by Josh+Mast · · Score: 1

    This article came out a little onesided in favor of mozilla (hail the company), but I hardly expect unbiased news reporting from the internet, or anyone for that matter.

    All in all, I think it was a fairly bad decision on the part of the mozilla people. It's like they didn't bother to think about the fact that an already prominent OS project existed with the same name and the confusion that's going to cause.

    This is just another problem that happens when you start using wacky codenames for your product instead of coming up with an original name that actually somehow relates to your product and defines what it does.

  127. Hypocrites by essdodson · · Score: 1

    So IBPhoenix requesting that their userbase express their feelings to mozilla developers is immature. Yet slashdot advocating spamming spammers isn't? Grow up kiddies.

    --
    scott
  128. Re:I was hoping they would wait. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You ever trip over something small in the dark? That's what happened to you. I don't think AOL or Mozilla or 90% of the IT industry knew you existed. By the sound of the yelp, I'd say that the Mozilla folks accidently stepped on IBPheonix's little "puppy".

  129. First use of Firebird in Computer name by Ciderx · · Score: 1

    I believe this belongs to British Telecom, who had a software label called Firebird many many many moons back (the only software I significantly remember being released by them was Elite on the post-Acorn 8-bit comptuers such as the ZX Spectrum and C-64). Obviously, that is dating back to mid-80s so I doubt they still have any claim to the Trademark, but still...

  130. Sept 11th suits the words better by ianscot · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I'll second the parent's motion: PLEASE MAY THIS EXPRESSION NOT GAIN WIDER ACCEPTANCE. (Those of us who used to work in bookstores are dreading, dreading, the first "Management" section book with "Shock and Awe" in its subtitle.)

    I bet that would stop anybody else from using it.

    You probably bet wrong. Hey, Rummy went ahead with the expression even when the comparison to Sept 11 was freakishly obvious. Which event had more "shock and awe" to it -- 9/11, or a sustained cruise missile attack Donny R had been talking up for months beforehand?

    Terrorism on the Bin Laden scale is ABOUT shock and awe. Apparently Rumsfeld's a little jealous of the effect...

    --
    "Fundamentalism" isn't about divine morality. It's about human authority.
  131. Speaking of Shock and Awe by Niles_Stonne · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't Shock and Awe be a good name for a web browser and e-mail client?

    Awe - Web Browser, it's got all those neat-o plug ins, right?
    Shock - e-mail client - I know some of the spam I've recieved is rather shocking!

    --
    Sticks and Stones may break my bones, but copyright will always protect me.
  132. Why not just call it "Browser?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bet nobody's named their browser "Browser" before.

  133. If it's a stand-alone stripped version then why .. by cl · · Score: 1

    --not call the thing:

    Modzuki?

    Mozilla = Godzilla (Big bad ass Japanese Monster)
    Modzuki = Godzuki (Smaller Japanese Monster and maybe Godzilla's sun)

    -CL

  134. Its obvious, Prince did it by unDiWahn · · Score: 3, Funny


    We just need to give the browser a symbol from some obscure font, and start referring to is as "The Browser formally known as Phoenix"

  135. Re:They are 100% right. by stubear · · Score: 1

    "The same is not true of the Firebird SQL software. They are in differant spaces and in my opinion are not likely to be confused."

    You are forgetting the implied connection between the dB and browser. If one starts to suck it could harm the reputation of the other. It's not as simple as "are they the same thing? No? Then no one should confuse them."

  136. Phoenix - Dictionary - Firebird by fbg111 · · Score: 1

    Uh, they can't name it Phoenix so they name it after the dictionary definition of Phoenix? That's like renaming "Windows" to "Transparent Walls", or "Opera" to "Italian Musical Performance". They're trying too hard to keep the theme of "great bird that consumed itself in fire,then rose again from the ashes". Time to move on and find a new theme, fellas.

    --
    Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
  137. free advertising by dkeav · · Score: 1

    hey all this hubub about the name is just free publicity, and no publicity is bad publicity, maybe more ie ppl will check it out and get their eyes open to tabbed browsing and popup blocking(without shareware programs, trying to sell you something and selling your email addy)

  138. FirebirdSQL License by atallah · · Score: 1

    Does anyone else find it as amusing as i do that FirebirdSQL uses the MPL (Mozilla Public License). Yeah i know that it is somewhat popular these days, but i think it is funny considering the circumstances.

  139. why don't they just call it... by muddy_mudskipper · · Score: 1

    Mozuki?
    seeing as how it's a "smaller version" of Mozilla...

    1. Re:why don't they just call it... by EllF · · Score: 1

      Is "uki" the diminutive in Japanese? If so, that's a really cool idea for a name -- worth passing along to the mozilla devs, at least.

      --
      We who were living are now dying
      With a little patience
    2. Re:why don't they just call it... by muddy_mudskipper · · Score: 1

      oh man, this is weird...

      my own moniker is in there original list as a candidate:

      http://end.at/phoenixnames

      "Muddy Mudskipper"

    3. Re:why don't they just call it... by W+Parasyte · · Score: 1

      You've just given me nightmares of using a web browser called "Moz-chan."

      I hope you're happy.

      --
      -- Your IP is showing
  140. Nothing to see here, move along... by Xenophon+Fenderson, · · Score: 1

    What is so interesting about gossiping about a bunch of purile weenies whining about names? I thought we were hackers, that we transcend all this foolishness. I could understand it if there's a serious flame fest going on over design and implementation---hell, I'd even understand "Emacs vs. VI" or "Mac vs. PC", but names? Not to mention the fact that the tactics used are nothing short of immature (I mean, mail bombing? Good God that's lame!). This is so unprofessional.

    (Although, amusingly, it does remind me of a sci fi novel [I forget which, except that it wasn't very good]. In this novel, they had run out of Greco-Roman names for in-system objects [asteroids and stuff], so they started using names from other mythical sources, such as the Hindu.)

    --
    I'm proud of my Northern Tibetian Heritage
  141. Yet another Firebird (sort of) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  142. Newsflash: new name decision! by autophile · · Score: 2, Funny
    Slashdot: April 25, 2003:

    The mozilla.org team has decided on a new name for their browser component that will avoid name conflicts with other groups. The new name, announced with little fanfare, is "Mozilla". mozilla.org management promptly started an e-mail campaign to the mozilla.org developers, claiming that the "Mozilla" name was in use by mozilla.org way before mozilla.org selected "Mozilla" as a name, and that an alternate name should be chosen.

    --Rob

    "As well, some of the young rats are playful and like to jump on to the platform when an older rat is drinking, with the result that the water pours down on the drinker's head." -- Ratman's Notebooks (1968)

    --
    Towards the Singularity.
  143. email campaigns can work both ways. by JDizzy · · Score: 1

    Targeting a large group of developers with an organized email attack seems almost perfect grounds for a law suite! (hint hint) Besides, I've never heard of the opposing project before, yet it doens't mean it doesn't have a large group of supporters... I suspect that it doesn't compare the the numbers of Mozilla users who might be equally motivated to fire up their email-spewing perl scripts. Heck, 5 minutes of my time to send 500,000 emails their way is worth the warm fuzy feeling it would bring for even mentioning an attack on Mozilla (thinking about it even). =)

    --
    It isn't a lie if you belive it.
  144. Not a big deal by Elbows · · Score: 1

    Since phoenix/firebird is going to become the default mozilla browser, this is all a non-issue. Firebird is basically just going to be an internal codename -- pretty soon everyone will be calling it Mozilla, or Mozilla Browser.

  145. Slightly immature? by phatlipmojo · · Score: 1

    That spam campaign is easily the bitchiest, most petulant single act of any open source project that hasn't yet burst under the weight of its own self-importance.
    Christ. Get the fuck over yourselves. The 15 people who care about your database project aren't going to confuse it with a browser.

    --

    Nice things are nicer than nasty ones.
  146. Free Bird! by Mosasaurus_Maximus · · Score: 1
    I propose "Freebird". (after all, it is free)

    It will be very popular down here in The South. (=

    1. Re:Free Bird! by Spellbinder · · Score: 1

      ... you missed one step ...
      first call it french bird and then something with free or liberty ....
      it's teh (new) american way ....

      --


      stop supporting microsoft with pirating their software!!!!!
  147. What am I missing here? by frdmfghtr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Am I missing something, or is everybody failing to see the forest with all the trees in the way?

    The issue appears to be what to call the stand-alone Mozilla browser. Why not call it simply...

    MOZILLA BROWSER?

    It's very clear what the product is, conflicts with nobody, and ends all this wasteful bickering. The solution is so frikking simple though that I MUST be missing something.

    --
    Government's idea of a balanced budget: take money from the right pocket to balance...oh who am I kidding?
    1. Re:What am I missing here? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Am I missing something

      Yes, you are missing the fact that "The Mozilla Browser" and "The Browser formly known as Phoenix" are separate entities.

      Both of them use the "Mozilla Web Client" libraries internally, but to the user, they are different pieces of software.

    2. Re:What am I missing here? by X-wes · · Score: 1

      More specifically, both projects share the Gecko rendering engine.

      Mozilla is a browsing suite. Mozilla Firebird is a standalone web browser. The two differ in their approach to most issues; they even have different user-interface engines.

      Firebird is not a stand-alone Mozilla browser. It is the Firebird browser.

      ------

      Microsoft owns a large portion of Apple. Why not call it simply...Microsoft OS? No more complaints from pesky apple-growers

    3. Re:What am I missing here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The current monolithic bloat of the Mozilla suite is slated to be broken down into a group of leaner, standalone apps. Firebird will be the browser app in this group.

      What this means is: yes, Firebird will eventually be the Mozilla browser. He's not missing anything. Quit being such arrogant pricks and mix in some actual subject knowledge now and again.

  148. Sorry I disagree by bogie · · Score: 1

    "The browser Phoenix had a legitimate beef, I mean you have two browsers of the same name. That is really confusing. However the SQL Firebird people need to sit down and shut up.

    Firebird is NOT an orignal name by any strech of the imagination. I can easily name one Firebird that predates both of them: the Pontiac Firebird (a car). When you pick a popular name, you need to be prepared for other people to use it as well. Also, if you aren't the first to use it, you certianly have no right ot bitch when someone else picks it up as well."

    Its about respect. Who cares if there is a car, a bird, and a tv set called Firebird? Those are NOT Opensoure projects. Here in the opensource world we are supposed to show respect for fellow opensource projects. Mozilla.org did not do that.

    They were made aware several times that Firbird was the name of an Opensource project and that it was bad policy to take the name of a fellow Opensource project. They choose not to care. They also proved their guilt by not contacting the Firebird DB team prior to the announcement. What kind of opensource project doesn't contact another opensource project when what they are about to do will have a Major impact on it?

    Mozilla is in the wrong here and the fact that Firebird is also a billion other things doesn't mean shit. The fact that its the name of a another Opensource project does.

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
  149. Why not just call it Mozilla LT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't understand why search for a name in the first place. Phoenix, Firebird, whatever. Call it Mozilla and put something after it just to differentiate.

  150. Yet another lame Firebird joke by plopez · · Score: 1

    Maybe they should name it the "Bitchin' Firebird Web Browser", download now and get a free set of fuzzy dice. Just what you need to cruise the net...

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  151. Mozilla Browser and Mozilla Mail by javajeff · · Score: 1

    Mozilla Browser and Mozilla Mail should be candidates for the name of the software.

  152. Oh Hell, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just call it Internet Explorer and be done with it.

  153. Re:I was hoping they would wait. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I agree. I don't think Mozilla did this to spite you. I had never heard of you until your childish email campaign.

  154. I can see why this is a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since the FirebirdSQL code is released under the Mozilla Public License (MPL), they should really be calling themselves Mozilla/FirebirdSQL anyway.

  155. Re:wrong by cHiphead · · Score: 1

    fire lizard? why not just call it Red Dragon or something dragon related?

    --

    This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  156. I miss Usenet flames. by nolife · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's to hard to track and read various blogs, email reposts and the like during a flame war. I miss the good ole days of flaming in alt.fan.*

    --
    Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
  157. Re:Nage by Alan+Cox · · Score: 1

    Edrychwch chi ar http://www.gwelywiwr.org/ a http://www.kyfieithu.co.uk/

  158. IBPhoenix is a bunch of masterbaters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wankers they are.

  159. No need to register trademarks -- and other info by Tom7 · · Score: 3, Informative

    You don't need to register trademarks, you just need to engage in trade using the mark. If the Firebird SQL folks haven't engaged in (interstate) commerce (since they are free software, maybe they haven't...), and haven't registered the mark, then it's possible they don't have any legal claim to the name at all.

    However, you do need to defend a trademark (or else it can lose protection by becoming a generic term, like "kleenex"). To do this, they'd need to convince a court that there is likelihood for confusion among relevant consumers (are there any?) -- that a consumer might believe that the Firebird browser and the Firebird SQL engine come from the same place, or are somehow associated. Since they are both pieces of computer software, it's possible that a court would find them confusingly similar. (There is an actual list of types of trade for which you can register a trademark. I think you can get this from the PTO online. It's unlikely that "web browser" and "database" are on there!)

  160. it is not about oss, it is about going after AOLTW by Enzo1977 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I'm surprised people haven't realized that there is so much going on over the naming of phoenix and firebird because of their association with AOL/Time Warner. Sure it is a not-for-profit project but really, who is backing their pursuits so the code can be implemented in their own products other than AOL & Netscape. Lets be realistic, no matter how big their net losses were the AOLTW conglomerate is worth billions. It appears as if everyone with a preexisting product with an even remotely close name to that of mozilla (remember when the Godzilla people threatened suit?), phoenix (phoenix bios in my laptop?), thunderbird (pre-release name of microprocessors?), firebird (insert any product/project by name of firebird here). Do you get the point? They are all going to threaten mozilla to change their product name or be sued.

    All hail the mighty dollar and the sleaziest as possible, yet legal way to get more if it.

    --
    I hate all sigs, even this one.
  161. They never considered... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    ... that the Mozilla team probably never heard of them, just as many Slashdot readers haven't. They just assumed that this was a deliberate insult. This is the first time that *I* have heard of Firebird SQL and, given the type of people they seem to be based on their actions so far, I hope I never hear of them again.

    As for the Mozilla team, if they want new code names they can always continue with their original Japanese monster theme, e.g. Modan, Mhidra, Moamera, Momothra ("please return the source code to us!"), and so on.

    Or they might go the message board route, with names like Offtopic, Inflammatory, Inappropriate, Illegal, Offensive, Troll, and Flamebait.

    --- Brian

    1. Re:They never considered... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Brian,

      They DID know about the Firebird database engine project.

      --
      Martijn Tonies

  162. I got a good one! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about "Intranet Explorer"???

  163. The Phoenix Browser People are UNCOOL by bwt · · Score: 2, Informative

    It is extremely uncool of the Phoenix project to have create this mess. They need to back off and reverse their horrendous decision to rename their project to "Firebird". That name is taken. Period. "Our lawyers said it is OK" is just not accepatable.

    Frankly, if Phoenix-Firebird does not reverse course, this is going to get very ugly. I would suspect that the fallout will severely damage both projects. The open source community needs to not allow this to happen. Phoenix-Firebird created this mess and ONLY they can get out of it. The open source community needs to pressure them to not continue down the road to conflict and discord.

    1. Re:The Phoenix Browser People are UNCOOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. The name is NOT "taken". Two completely different products.

      Now, do you want every other product named "Firebird" to jump your ass about some trivial little database?

      Boy, I was driving a Firebird BEFORE you were born!

  164. Why not... by Phil+Ulrich · · Score: 1

    Why not just call it 'BigRedLizard' and get it over with? I know I'd use BigRedLizard (and it's mail/news brother, BigMailLizard).

    --
    Prepare to be burninated!
  165. My highschool's sports teams... by Jester99 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    have been the Firebirds since I think the 1960s. Therefore, we're going to have to ask IBPhoenix to change their product's name too. Damned confusing, an SQL engine and a basketball team you know.

    Seriously. Who's going to accidentally end up downloading or think they're discussing a web browser when they're talking about SQL? And vice versa? Lighten the hell up already, IBPhoenix.

  166. what's in a name? by LifesABeach · · Score: 0

    why not call the browser 'couger'?

    lets face it, cougers feed on billy goats all the time. ;)

  167. solution by rembo · · Score: 1

    The discussion shouldn't be if mozilla can legally name it's subproject firebird.

    I think it's pretty clear to everyone that using the same name will probably cause all kind of troubles. Think of url's, sourceforge projects, registry setting, package names, user confusion, directory names, explaining what you mean every time you talk about firebird etc. etc. etc.

    The only party in this conflict to provide a solution to this is the mozilla crew. You can't reasonably expect the firebird crew to change their name every time someone wants to use it.

    I saw the list of votes. Sphinx was the nr 2 with only 7 votes between them. Why not see if this name is without problems and use that, or do a revote? It is not like the mozilla crew loses anything by doing this. It seems the most practical and reasonable solution

    1. Re:solution by Greebz · · Score: 1


      Damn straight.

      But it appears they've got the "we're bigger and we're gonna do what WE want" attitude...

  168. New "Shimmer" by smagruder · · Score: 1


    "New Firebird is a browser. New Firebird is a database.

    It's a browser. No, honey, it's a database.
    It's a browser! It's a database!
    It's a browser!! It's a database, you cow!!!

    Hey hey hey, no need to fuss.
    New Firebird is a browser _and_ a database. {big laughs}

    New Firebird can be used to store data in a relational manner.
    And just look at it render HTML!"

    --
    Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    1. Re:New "Shimmer" by MagusX · · Score: 1

      It's a floorwax *and* a dessert topping!

  169. what? by Suppafly · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one that prior to this incident has never heard of FireBirdSQL?

  170. better than legal battles by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 1

    If on the one hand you have hordes of lawyers yelling "trademark infringement" and on the other hand you have mass e-mail campaigns and public outcry to force the hand of the offending party, I for one vote for the public outcry, not the hordes of lawyers.

    --
    MORTAR COMBAT!
  171. Re:They should call it... by smagruder · · Score: 1

    I was thinking of writing some software and giving it the acronym "GD-CRAP". (what the letters means is a trade secret :) )

    --
    Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
  172. keep the branding: firezilla and thunderzilla by Khopesh · · Score: 1

    bennu isn't as recognizable;
    they might as well make up a name for a similar effect.
    (though i love ancient egyptian names, like mine for instance.)

    i still like the minotaur name and its slogan "half man, half bull."
    perhaps Argos and Minotaur would be a better solution
    (Argos being the name of the ship sailed by Jason in his search for the Golden Fleece).
    there are no OSS projects named argos, but there is an accounting software company with that name.

    *zilla names seem to have been phased out. whatever happened to the Godzilla vs AOL battle?
    assuming it wasn't lost, i would much prefer a suggeston posted to mozillazine
    to use Firezilla and Thunderzilla,
    which would pave the way for other forces of nature such as
    smokezilla, icezilla, quakezilla, and tidezilla.

    --
    Use my userscript to add story images to Slashdot. There's no going back.
  173. Mozilla by ee96090 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How about...

    Mozilla!

    I bet noone has thought of *that*! :)

    Seriously, mozilla has a name, why not keep it? Mozilla as we know it will cease to exist anyway (split GRE, mailnews, browser), so why not call the browser simply mozilla?

    --
    Gustavo J.A.M. Carneiro
  174. Re:They are 100% right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Different spaces? They're both _software_, and PHB's *will* confuse them!

  175. I think they should use the name by ripetersen · · Score: 1
    kjasdfhipauwyr8923

    I don't think it is in use by anyone.

  176. Fork by bwt · · Score: 1

    If Phonix continues on this path, I hope that someone will fork their project, just to change the name.

    I for one, would use the forked version.

  177. Re:I was hoping they would wait. by Skjellifetti · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From one AC:

    You ever trip over something small in the dark? That's what happened to you. I don't think AOL or Mozilla or 90% of the IT industry knew you existed. By the sound of the yelp, I'd say that the Mozilla folks accidently stepped on IBPheonix's little "puppy".

    We have a winner for best explanation of how this all happened.

    And from another AC:

    I don't think Mozilla did this to spite you. I had never heard of you until your childish email campaign.

    And another winner for best description of FirebirdBrandSQL's response.

    Sorry, no mod points, but both of these ACs needed to be heard.

  178. Re:They should call it... by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well, more to the point, they should call it Internet Explorer. Didn't Microsoft go to court and prove that "Internet Explorer" is a generic term and thus not subject to trademarking?

    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  179. Re:I was hoping they would wait. by Greebz · · Score: 2, Interesting


    Yeah, and they did a really exhaustive search...

    I put the word "Firebird" into google.

    Top "hit" was:

    "Firebird - Relational Database for the New Millennium".

    There was also a paid ad for the "Firebird SQL Conference".

    Hard to find, huh?

    Something else I've noticed is that people's reactions on this subject are mostly based on their feelings for the product -- had a commercial company decided to launch the next generation of IE or whatever under the banned of Firebird, I guarentee you there'd be much screaming from the open source fans about how evil said company was to do that.

    But I guess those that use Phoenix feel that it doesn't matter who had the name first...

    -G-

  180. Mozilla FUD smells like the establishment to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK, so everyone knows that slashdot is not real journalism, but when a lead article is so badly slanted towards one point of view in an obviously heated issue, one wonders what their objectives are (and don't give me this crap about "we don't write the articles, we just post them" -- that's a BS excuse to hide behind).

    The fact is that Mozilla not once but twice hijacked somebody elses name. The first time, the commercial entity whose IP they encroached upon had at least the threat of legal resources to fight them, so they backed down and victimized a non-commercial open source project instead. Now when the project does exactly what the open source community has always done -- react with the only tools they have -- mozilla (and their supporters which include slashdot) start their FUD campaign against Firebird (the database), depict them like immmature loose cannons, and declare their tactics (the same tactics slashdot and the open source community have succesfully used against other evil entities) inappropriate. Nice.

    Mozilla is showing their colors, and so is the slashdot community. What they did is wrong -- not because the name "sucks for a browser", but because it violates the principals of the Free Software community, and as far as I can tell, the Open Source community as well. I'd be very interested in hearing what some of the leaders in this space (people like Bruce Perens and the like) think about any of this. I'm also interested in finding a way to make this entire post a single run on sentence.

  181. Re:I was hoping they would wait. by platypus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You ever trip over something small in the dark? That's what happened to you. I don't think AOL or Mozilla or 90% of the IT industry knew you existed. By the sound of the yelp, I'd say that the Mozilla folks accidently stepped on IBPheonix's little "puppy".

    How hard could that be to find out?
    http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&q= firebird

    Look at the first result. The FIRST!!!
    If mozilla will use firebird, these guys will be quickly pushed back to result 10-1000, so nobody say that this won't hurt them.

    IOW, AOL/the mozilla guys fucked up.

  182. And I should care...why again? by Zed2K · · Score: 1

    Why should I care about some SQL product that no one has heard of? Its not like the mozilla team named it IBM or Apple or Internet Explorer or something. The only confusion will be the SQL people who can't understand the difference.

  183. Web-Lizard and Mail-Lizard by RabidChipmunk · · Score: 1

    We need something that will satisfy both camps, something meaningfull AND cute.

    How about WebLizard and MailLizard.

    (or "Web Lizard" and "Mail Lizard" with a space.)

    --
    This is not a political statement. This is not legal advice. It's a frick'n Slasdot post. However: I'm Running For
  184. Re:If it's a stand-alone stripped version then why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gozilla is the name of the fictional creature in movies.

    Miniras is the name of his son.

    None of these have direct spellings in the English language, so anything close is probably OK.

  185. Weapons of Mass Destruction by Synic · · Score: 1

    IBPhoenix representative Donald Humpsfeld spoke with reporters yesterday, informing the world that the United Softwares of America would not tolerate GNU nations creating and hiding weapons of mass destruction. Their preliminary plan was to "shock-and-awe," but several publications reported that witnesses to the plan-in-action were bored-and-stiff.

  186. go for a Douglas Adams reference or Monty Python.. by The+Lynxpro · · Score: 1

    Mozilla's "42"... or Mozilla's "Tim"... I like either for the next edition of Phoenix...

    --
    "Right now, somewhere in this world, Scott Baio is plowing a woman he doesn't love," - Peter Griffin, *Family Guy*
  187. If they really had a sense of the dramatic by leed_25 · · Score: 1


    they would have named it Explorer

  188. name change should have accompanying RELEASE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't see why the name would be announced before
    a release of the Firebird was ready. Strange.

  189. Okay, this is now getting *OLD*. by jonadab · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First it was Mozilla. Then it was Netscape. Then it was Navigator.
    Then it was Communicator, which contained Navigator and was produced
    by Netscape. Then it was Mozilla again. Then it was SeaMonkey.
    Then it was Mozilla again. Then they decided to split it up into
    Phoenix, Minotaur, and so forth. Then they renamed them to Firebird,
    Thunderbird, and who knows what. Now the name Firebird is in
    dispute... *ENOUGH*. No more name changes. Just call it "the
    Mozilla.org browser", "the Mozilla.org mailreader", and so on, and
    that'll be fine.

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  190. Both sides are in the wrong by PolyDwarf · · Score: 2, Informative

    Disclaimer: I'm a developer actively using Firebird-The-Database-Engine. I use Mozilla-The-Browser.

    OK, after reading throught he morass of crap that people have posted, it seems that people fall into a few different camps.

    Camp 1 is "Screw FirebirdSQL, they're a bunch of nutbars." An offshoot of Camp 1 is "Screw FirebirdSQL, they're a bunch of children and don't merit a response."

    Camp 2 is "Screw FirebirdSQL, they don't have trademark/copyright/a legal leg to stand on."

    Camp 3 is "Screw Mozilla, they're a bunch of nutbars."

    And Camp 4 is "Jesus Christ, everyone is a bunch of friggin immature morons."

    Personally, I'm of the opinion that, while it doesn't seem there is a legal leg here, the Mozilla team should have done the polite thing, and not even named the new browser Firebird. Someone pointed out "What would happen if MS renamed Powerpoint to Microsoft Mozilla?" Everyone would decry MS as being an evil monopolist corporation.. Wait, that already happens. Anyways, everyone would be flaming Microsoft up one side and down the other. The only difference in this situation is that Microsoft would ignore all of the flame and move on, while the Mozilla people seem not to be.
    How is this any different? You have a group of opensource developers (The FirebirdSQL people) who feel that they've been wronged (Legitimately, in my mind. And yes I realize it might be legal, that doesn't mean it's right).
    I looked at the "slightly immature request" on the ibphoenix website, and you know what it amounted to? It is almost exactly what anyone around here posts when you say "Mail your congressman!" My God, no!!! Did you realize that you are being "slightly immature" when you "participate in mass posting campaigns" to your congressman? Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't a forum to .. uh... Express your opinions? If you don't like something, don't you try to get a group of like-minded people to go and express their opinions as well? I fail to see how what IBPhoenix did is any different than "mail your congressman" type of things that are here. Note, I haven't looked at the actual messages. If they were flames and immature post, that's a different story, but the simple request on IBPhoenix of "Go here and tell them what you think about Mozilla changing the name to Firebird" doesn't seem out of line at all to me.
    Another point is that Sourceforge already has a project named Firebird (The aforementioned FirebirdSQL). Curiously, Mozilla seems to appear on Sourceforge as well. Don't you think the Mozilla people might want to avoid problems on Sourceforge, if nowhere else? Generic names aside, Firebird is a registered project, and has been.
    And, what will happen if (when?) AOL Legal decides to get a bug up its ass and sue FirebirdSQL for some name infringement? Will we say then "Tough, FirebirdSQL, you shouldn't have chosen a generic name" while forgetting that they had that name long before Mozilla Firebird?
    This situation is making me sick. Mozilla has acted like a bunch of children, with their only defense being "Well, it's legal" while forgetting the question "Is it right?" No, it isn't right, and I think the Mozilla folks should be changing the name from Firebird to something that is at least unique (and non confusing, so we don't get Mozilla FyreByrd) on Sourceforge, if nowhere else.

  191. Just call it "Camaro" by adrew · · Score: 1

    If they like crappy GM cars so much, why not call it Camaro?

    (This'd require the traditional mullet and wife-beater.)

  192. Re:I was hoping they would wait. by Archfeld · · Score: 1

    BINGO, I can't say as the response was very professional but you are correct. I am sure the MOZ folks just gathered and took submissions till they found one that sounded cool. I am just as suer they did not intend to step on anyone toes, certainly not another OSS project from SourceForge. This is just overreaction and when the dust settles, firebirdSQL will have their name, and the Browser formerly named Pheonix will find something new, how about NEWT :)

    --
    errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
  193. a new name by nafeger · · Score: 0

    wilson: This is the switchblade.
    [visual of plane]
    murphy: It looks like a leafy bug. Yeah the leafy bug.

    I say Leafy Bug.

  194. Immature? Where? by PalmKiller · · Score: 1

    Where is the statement immature when all they are doing is stating their opinion which is quite viable (I personally would get pissed if I was looking for firebird database stuff and ended up with mozilla all over my google search...you say you could say -browser, but maybe I am searching for something database related to a browser). I see nothing immature about the following, please explain the immaturity in the statement below:

    Mozilla browser becomes Firebird
    Today the Mozilla organization announced that the new name for their browser would be Firebird.

    We at IBPhoenix think that having a browser and a database with the same name in the same space will confuse the market, especially as browsers and databases are often used in the same applications (thank you Lester Caine). What can you do if you too are unhappy about this decision?

    First, let other people know. If you have a Firebird related website or newslist, explain the problem or point people to the IBPhoenix site.

    Let the Mozilla forums know how you feel. They've already taken some heat in forums on their website. To join that fray, you must register. Check
    http://www.mozillazine.org/forums/index.php
    and
    http://www.mozillazine.org/talkback.html?ar ticle=3 075
    for the discussion.

    You might also send mail to the following people and groups:

    Asa Dotzler - he made the announcement and has been defending the Mozilla intellectual property lawyers by saying that no one could confuse a database with a browser.

    drivers@mozilla.org - drivers are the project managers of Mozilla, they keep the project stable and moving forward. They should know what effect their new name has on another open source project.

    These people are the technical project leaders of Mozilla. They too should be aware that the possibility for confusion exists.

    hyatt@mozilla.org,varga@netscape.com,mkaply@us.i bm .com,jaggernaut@netscape.com, hewitt@netscape.com,dean_tessman@hotmail.com,chani al@noos.fr,blakeross@telocity.com

    For more information about the Mozilla organization, look at:
    http://www.mozilla.org/about/stafflist.html
    and
    http://www.mozilla.org/about/roles.html.

    Here are the staff email addresses.

    Mitchell Baker,
    Chris Blizzard,
    Scott Collins,
    Asa Dotzler,
    Brendan Eich,
    Dawn Endico,
    David Hyatt,
    Gervase Markham,
    Myk Melez,
    Daniel (Leaf) Nunes,
    Seth Spitzer,
    Peter Bojanic,
    Frank Hecker,
    Marcia Knous,
    Dan Mosedale,
    Mike Shaver.

  195. puts on aussie accent by ozric99 · · Score: 1

    I'd have called it a chuzwazzah...

  196. How about changing the name to Flaming Pigeon? by Matt+Ownby · · Score: 1

    The pigeon has long been recognized as a noble bird, a symbol of freedom and justice. And a flaming pigeon would just be that much better.

    If Mozilla doesn't leap upon this idea, then I am going to go ahead with my original plan of starting the new FlamingPigeonSQL server.

  197. I have but one comment: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whiny little bitches.

  198. Change Phoenix to Windows... by samdu · · Score: 1

    Maybe they should change the name of Phoenix to Windows. :) Didn't Microsoft just lose a suiit based on the idea that Windows is a generic term?

  199. what about "a-splintery-stake-through-redmond" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    or "a-aplintery-stake-through-internet-exploder"

  200. Re:wrong by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 1

    Wish I could remember, but I've seen it in several places online. Possibly Metafilter?

  201. Re:Clueless not insightful by PalmKiller · · Score: 1

    1. Phoenix is not the name of the firebird database. It is just the name of a support website which advocates firebird, so why would they object to use of phoenix exactly?

    2. And neither did linux trademark their name for a while until they were forced to by some idiot.

    3. Yes, this will irritate me when I am looking for stuff related to one or the other.

  202. INTERNET NAVIGATOR by bartok · · Score: 1

    How about Internet Navigator? It's nice, it says what it does and AOL already has the copyright to the Navigator name.

    1. Re:INTERNET NAVIGATOR by SocialWorm · · Score: 1

      A small nitpick, but names are trademarked, and creative works are copyrighted.

      --
      My Blog: http://nic.dreamhost.com/
  203. How can you NOT know what that means? by ionpro · · Score: 1

    "Internet Explorer".
    i.e. something to explore the internet. Duh. My six-year-old cousin can figure that one out.

    As far as Microsoft Outlook goes, it is only partially an e-mail client. It's also a groupware application. It keeps your appointments, to-do list, and (coincidentally) e-mail. It keeps you on the "look out" for new stuff coming in (e-mail) and then notifies you about other things (a lookout in the traditional sense). So it may not be immediately obvious, but it could easily be inferred from virtually any sentence with context (except the ubiquious one on Slashdot, i.e. "Outlook sux0rz"). Now, consider Thunderbird. "I went to check my e-mail in Thunderbird." If I *didn't* know what Thunderbird meant, I would probably think they drove somewhere in their nice muscle car and got on a computer to check their e-mail. I don't know what I'd think if some said "Sent it to my firebird."

    Naming at least 50% of the battle here, folks. Think of something original that implies contextual meaning.

  204. Unimaginative by nrc · · Score: 1


    Are open source developers really so unimaginative that they have to argue over two such mundane names?

  205. Re:YOU FAIL IT AGAIN! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    4? wow, what a pathetic failure you are.

    PATHETIC!

  206. Fhqwgads by intermodal · · Score: 1

    it may be the name of an enemy in an old video game, but i doubt the company would mind the attention if anyone remembered where its from...

    --
    In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
  207. I agree 100% by sharph · · Score: 1

    If i had mod points right now, I would mod you up insightful....

  208. I can see it now by Sanga · · Score: 1

    Moz::Phoenix/FireBird has a passphrase for a back door:

    "FireBirdDB/IBPhoenix/InterBase developers are weenies"

    tee heee

  209. The real reason IBPhoenix is not happy... by nacs · · Score: 1

    The Firebird DB team is beating around the bush on this one. The real reason they're going insane over Phoenix's namechange to Firebird is because they know they're going to lose the coveted #1 position in Google for the term "Firebird" very soon.

    As soon as the Phoenix browser is released with the new name, it'll be linked through slashdot and hundreds of other weblogs, Mozilla fansites and news agencies. Then BAM! Google does it's dance and Firebird DB's position drops to #2 (or worse) in the Google search results.

    I'm sure something like this would make anyone jealous. :)

    --
    "I filter at +6, and have yet to miss out on an important comment." (#822545)
  210. Can't think of a name? Use the palm-squash method by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just do what my brothers do when they can't solve a problem with their computer - smash your fist into the keyboard...you are sure to come up with something for a name...

    Examples:
    1. mjjnhmhyjjuh
    2. xoilew
    3. dfefdejmk
    4. ikujoli

    Number's 2 and 4 are my fav's :)

  211. Re:I don't get it. by amlutias · · Score: 1

    sorry.

  212. Is this a popularity contest? by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

    So, just to compare "legitimacy", does anyone know the montly download statistics for the Firebird BBS, whose name the Firebird Database project so blithely adopted?

    http://www.firebird.org.tw/

    If I were somewhat cynical, I might observe that there is no honour among thieves. If I were more cynical, I might suspect that Firebird BBS was ignored because its development community speaks/writes Chinese.

    1. Re:Is this a popularity contest? by wuice · · Score: 1

      Or maybe it was ignored because, unless I'm ignorant of the facts, the Firebird BBS people did not object when the Firebird database came into being. Maybe they didn't object because they didn't see a source of conflict or confusion. Maybe they didn't object because Firebird DB wasn't a big enough project to notice. Whatever the reason, they didn't object.

      The Firebird DB project people did object to Mozilla's name change. The Firebird DB project people know that it will cause confusion. To say it won't cause confusion ignores the nature of the internet completely. I wouldn't be surprised if the Firebird DB project's resources haven't already been hit by things like erronious bug reports and whatnot.

      I am a huge fan of Mozilla (I am writing this in Mozilla right now) but there are a million names out there which wouldn't have caused this debate, and their unwillingness to use something else in the first place (because I remember the objections even when the name was getting kicked around) as well as their unwillingness to even consider changing names to something that isn't so damaging and confusion-prone to another project really disappoints me. This is a conflict that could easily be averted by just adopting a better name.

  213. #1 is google search by potmos · · Score: 1

    I figure as long as Firebird Database is #1 on a google search then they should have nothing to cry about. Pontiac is #3.

  214. Database != Browser by rueba · · Score: 1

    Hence no confusion.

    Nuff Said.

    --
    The only reason all cover-ups appear to fail is that you never hear about the ones that succeed.
  215. How about Trans-Am? by GoldMace · · Score: 1

    Why not just name it Trans-Am then? They seem to like naming it after Pontiac cars for some reason. In case some of you forgot, there was a Pontiac car named the Phoenix in the late 1970's and early 1980's. A picture of one is here: http://www.geocities.com/MotorCity/Pit/1215/phoeni x.htm

  216. Copy of Mail we sent. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We at "Broken Dreams : Sound DB" are protesting your
    terror acts against the Mozilla foundation, users and
    releated community.

    Broken Dreams has been a long time Interbase user, we
    switched to FirebirdSQL only recently, but your
    current tactics has made us question our switch and
    review other opensource databases. We are in the
    process of switching over to postgresql.

    Thus, I'd like to urge you to stop these terror
    attacks against other opensource projects.

    Thank you.

    Shawn from Broken Dreams : Sound DB

  217. They could name it after the FIrebird logo... by M$+Mole · · Score: 1

    Call it: Flaming Chicken

    --
    Karma: Non-existant. Due mostly to the fact that you smell funny and nobody likes you.
  218. Garuda by thelexx · · Score: 1

    The Remover of Obstacles. After defeating all the gods except Vishnu, who had attacked him for covering the moon, he gained immortality, became the mount of Vishnu on his travels and is regarded as the King of Birds. He's also familiar to a significant portion of the worlds current population (India, Indonesia, SE Asia, Buddhists in general...).

    --
    "Gold still represents the ultimate form of payment in the world." - Alan Greenspan, 1999
  219. Odysseus... by Gothmolly · · Score: 1

    Wasn't he a sailor?

    If you get this, etc. etc.

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
  220. Re:Nage by Threni · · Score: 1

    There's lovely!

    Hey, check out:
    http://www.llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrnd robwll llantysiliogogogoch.co.uk

    I mean, the boyos are having a bit of trouble getting it working, but according to this site:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/602246.stm
    its rather amusing.

  221. It's Mozilla by vesamies · · Score: 1

    I will always call it Mozilla. Not matter what fud they give about new components. This is not a super-internet-platform, it's just a browser. BTW, I really like the browser-news-mail integration in Mozilla....
    --
    I pity everyone reading this message

  222. i dont see the problem... by hitmark · · Score: 1

    why od they mess around like this?

    the main packages is still called mozilla, and that is the name most people will use outside of development...

    as for package naming, this would do the trick:

    mozilla-firebird
    mozilla-thunderbird
    mozilla-" whatever"bird

    --
    comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  223. Re:They are 100% right. by belroth · · Score: 1
    To which I say: who cares? As long as people (managers) will be confusing the things. (Like: "Firebird DB? Must be from the same guys that do Firebird Browser. I tried that, didn't like it. Hence - we are not using the DB." etc...).
    Yeah and they're obviously both writen by FirebirdSoftware ?
    No? Well how about Firebird Web Design
    Or how about Pontiac ? oh my mistake.
    Still you can get a mortgage from Firebird , who incidentally have a database .
    Or a hosting solution from Firebird Networks .
    There was even a firebird joystick - so your point was?

    FirebirdSQL may be top of the search results pile now, but they took that position from someone else too....

    --
    I hereby inform you that I have NOT been required to provide any decryption keys.
  224. Re:Erm.. It's immature, unprofessional and unhelpf by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently, in this 21st century of yours, you've never heard of a rhetorical question.

  225. Postgresql + Sapdb by justins · · Score: 1
    The project should get more attention anyways, it's up there with Postgres (or maybe better) as a high-quality enterprise database (formerly SAP DB).

    I read this as saying PostgreSQL was formerly Sapdb, which is entirely incorrect. It's hard to imagine what gave you that idea. They're two separate products.

    www.postgresql.org
    www.sapdb.org

    Sapdb was formerly a commercial database, named Adabas.
    --
    Now before I get modded down, I be to remind whoever might read this that what I am saying is FACT. - bogaboga
  226. I got one. by blair1q · · Score: 1


    Call it "Aohell Nutscrape".

    I don't think the current owners would mind.

  227. It's kinda ironic how.. by bakeman · · Score: 1

    SQLFirebid is crying foul over a name, when it took the likeness of it's logo from the City of Phoenix(which is a very good and clean looking logo, IMO) and IBPhoenix. Can't any of these groups come up with something original? The Phoenix/Firebird name and look is a little over used, and way to ambiguous. Why not use the name "BurningBird" (Moderatly used name) or "FoulFire" (I don't think there is any products using this one) or even "ChickFilet" (oh, never mind)? They all mean the same thing, which has absolutely nothing to do with the product. Over all, I thinks this is a non-issue.

  228. haha by Kircle · · Score: 1

    I find it funny and sad how FirebirdSQL is trying to bully, of all organizations, Mozilla/Netscape/AOL.

    --

    -- Kircle

  229. Sweet Zombie Jesus! by LPetrazickis · · Score: 1

    Hmm, didn't Futurama name Popplers with dialogue identical to the one in the parent post? Sweet Zombie Jesus, it's an Alien Conspiracy!:)

    --
    Is this a sigs-optional kind of place? 'Cause I am totally down with that if you know what I mean.
  230. Re:I don't get it. by moncyb · · Score: 1

    Well, I probably should have been more clear. I should have used <sarcasm> tags. Sorry for the confusion.

  231. Re:Erm.. It's immature, unprofessional and unhelpf by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    Oh goody, an AC slashbot who thinks they're clever because they can use a word with more than two syllables and link to a definition of the term, just in case I'm so illiterate that I don't understand it. How terribly original.

    I'd love to think this was intended to be a rhetorical question. I might have hoped for it to be so, but in case you hadn't noticed, we're actually in a thread discussing people who are committing this particular fuckwitticism.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  232. Firebird? WTF?? by Wolfier · · Score: 1

    If you must pick the name of a car, at least pick something half decent, like "RX-7" or something. Firebird??? Bah.

  233. Re:I was hoping they would wait. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I put the word "Firebird" into google.
    Top "hit" was: "Firebird - Relational Database for the New Millennium"."

    And a hell of a lot of good that does for the poor slob looking for car parts. I'd wager that millions of people have heard of the car and that until now, only a handful had heard of the database.

    Sounds to me like "somebody" paid Google to be listed first...mmmmmmm?

  234. HTTPClient.app and EMailClient.app by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    are fine by me ... the *.app extensino is for MacOS/X bu the rest is good ..

  235. How about this name? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about calling it "Internet Navigator"? :-)

  236. StarOffice Did This Years Ago by Christopher+B.+Brown · · Score: 1

    It's not as if this sort of thing is new.
    The makers of StarOffice showed similar disrespect when they called their presentation software Impress, conflicting with Chris Cox's presentation software package of the same name.
    Nobody spammed Slashdot over this; there were no boycotts of StarOffice over it. And the situation remains, to this day.
    Why does the FirebirdSQL group think they should expect better treatment now?

    --
    If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate.
  237. Sad, mozilla.org used to be the good guys... by Nicopa · · Score: 1
    I've been following Mozilla for many years and I got used to them being the good guys in nearly all matters (standards, attitude towards development). Today they are being the jerks crushing a smaller project.

    It's so obvious to me that they are wrong... The only right thing to do for mozilla.org is to assume their mistake and rename the browser. For god sake, they haven't even released a version with such a name. That month of research sounds like bullshit when you consider they didn't even go to to google to find out that the name was already taken but another free-software project, not a grocery, not a car, not a company name.

  238. Firebird Sql Browser by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It would be interesting if the two projects decide to do something together like a browser which stores its information in a database :) Or better SQL server which generates web pages. Or best an integrated cross platform suite for web programming. I think open source projects should try integrate closely. That's what Microsoft is better in.

  239. Phoenix ? Phuxorix? Feniks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is curious that the people behind Asterix and Obelix didn't sue them for using a name ending in ix.

  240. Let's see... by jejones · · Score: 1

    ...a Google search turns up Firebird Software Ltd., Firebird Web Design, Financial Firebird, Gravis's Firebird joystick, Firebird Networks, the Firebird BBS, and the Firebird Jr. video editing package. (I stopped looking at that point.) Have the IBPhoenix people run spamming campaigns against them?

    1. Re:Let's see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Firebird Software LTD - active in the 80s -> not relevant.


      Firebird Web Design - company name -> not relevant.

      Gravis Firebird Joystick - hardware -> not relevant.

      Firebird Networks - company name -> not relevant.

      Firebird BBS - was there before Firebird, the database engine. No comments from them -> not relevant.

      The Financial Firebird can be somewhat relevant, but the product name is "Financial Firebird", which makes them the same as Firebird BBS.

      The problem with Mozilla is that the lightweight browser product is called Firebird (note: officially Mozilla Firebird, but both you and I know this won't stick).

      Relevant:
      How many people do you see searching the web for financial firebird security errors?

      How many people do you see browsing the web looking for a Financial Firebird installer?

      How many fan-pages do you know for Financial Firebird?

      See the difference already?

      --
      Martijn Tonies

  241. I Think of Bias by X-wes · · Score: 1
    All in all, I think...

    You think, hence this is your opinion. I see you're very unbiased as well.

  242. I Agree�But No by X-wes · · Score: 1

    I do believe that this mess will hurt both open-source projects. In fact, it already is. However, FirebirdSQL has a lot more to lose than Mozilla Firebird.

    I am an open-source advocate. I do not favour one project over the other. However, I believe that, even if FirebirdSQL is morally correct, they are fighting an infinitely uphill battle.

    1. Re:I Agree�But No by bwt · · Score: 1

      What is FirebirdSQL !?!?

      Is there another open source database besides Firebird?

  243. In a Word� by X-wes · · Score: 1

    Who has?

    Publicity stunt or not, they have created a reputation. Not one I'd be proud of, personally, but YMMV.

  244. Re:go for a Douglas Adams reference or Monty Pytho by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Eric the Half a Browser?

  245. Re:I was hoping they would wait. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... or perhaps it's just that search engines inherantly favour computer related "stuff" like software 'cause there's a hell of a lot of it on the 'net.

    Careful, don't let the tin-foil beanie fall off your head...