Mozilla VP Talks the State of Firefox
lisah writes "As Firefox downloads pass the 200 million mark, people are talking about how its security features stack up against IE7 and protect against malware. Mozilla VP Mike Schroepfer told NewsForge's Joe 'Zonker' Brockmeier that security will continue to be an issue 'for anything written in native code' but Mozilla intends to meet the challenge by including JavaScript 1.7 with the browser's 2.0 release. Schroepfer also talked about the timeline of future releases and offered just enough information to wet our whistles for 3.0."
It's spelled "whet." Either way the 3.0 stuff is interesting.
As long as people are running programs from administrator accounts, there will be far more security problems than there should be.
Maybe when Vista comes out (circa 2020 AD) and becomes widespread, this problem will be alleviated a bit. Those of us using other OSes (Linux, MacOS, etc.) are fine at the moment.
Registered Linux user #421033
As Firefox downloads pass the 200 million mark, people are talking about how its security features stack up against IE7 and protect against malware.
Protect against malware? They're bundling with it!
The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
Isn't that near Nevada? Or maybe Montana -- my geography's not good.
GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
Security is no longer a concern with the Firefox installs I've set up for various family members. Firefox updates itself now, painlessly and seamlessly, and often within a day or two of serious security alerts. I wouldn't be surprised if some exploit gets announced over the weekend and everyone is on 1.5.0.7 by Tuesday morning. That is still way better than Microsoft.
it's a blue bright blue Saturday hey hey
I've lost count of the number of times I've downloaded Firefox, but I can also say that each Windows download has gotten installed on roughly 10 different computers. So you subtract some, and you add some, and eventually you lose any hope of having a useful estimate.
The downloaded count is a simple metric that tells you that there's still a lot of interest int he product. It's easier to determine than the number of times it's been installed, the number of copies in use, or the number of users.
The number means what it means. Trying to translate from #Downloaded to #InUse is pointless.
(Incidentally: no, automatic updates are not included in the total. And IIRC there was some effort made to avoid double-counting manual updates, like not counting downloads made using Firefox. I don't remember exactly.)