Mozilla and Google's "Don't-Be-Evil" Bulldozer
An anonymous reader writes "Mozilla execs John Lilly and Mitchell Baker were interviewed at the WSJ's All Things Digital conference last week. In a wide-ranging conversation, they discussed the history of Firefox, proprietary versus Open Source development and the debut of Chrome and Mozilla's changing relationship with Google. A great interview. Well worth reading. There's video as well."
Yeay my life is fulfilled.
The question is, will we be able to look at ourselves when we've created the next Microsoft?
Can't See Comment Titles
Fix your damn code, slashdot.
Pull your head out of your GNU/Ass and fix your fucking code.
I'd like to thank Slashdot and Ron Malda for this opportunity. I'd also like to give a shout out to Signal 11 and Hot Grits man for the inspiration. I'd like to thank all of the Slashdot editors, without whose total failure at spell checking, basic grammar, and fact checking I would have long ago been too bored to keep reading this blog concentrator. And finally, props to fellow frost posters. Maybe you'll get 'em next time. Keep on reaching for the stars, and keep on keepin' on.
The bulldozer quote comes from the interviewer, not the Mozilla guys.
Sometimes it's best to make your own news.
"Walt: Why wouldn't it just be better for the consumer to go with the company that's hired experts to do its translations? Baker: How much software do you really think is great? Walt: Not very much. Lilly: But it's all written by experts. Walt nods, point taken."
Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
Censorship is not evil!!!! Worship GOOGLE!!!! Give us more money!!!!!
For many companies, the lack of easy deployment & management tools is the answer.
Yes, there are 3rd-party companies who do that. Should I trust them?
Buy why not a simple .msi direct from Mozilla?
Walt asks about the Firefox growth curve. Baker says the curve has been relatively linear after an initial spike. "Why don't people use Firefox?" Walt asks. Lilly says people just aren't aware. "Most people think of the browser as a pane of glass; they don't realize that it really effects the way they see the Web. Baker adds that many people fear their computers, and that might make them reticent to experiment with a new browser.
This last part really is a salient point. I think it's true that average end user really does come to fear the PC, and, in my experience, their local IT geek by association. "Leave the damn thing alone!" they cry, "I don't care about OpenOffice, or Foxit Reader, or Notepad++".
Bad experiences tend to be a motivator in this aspect, but sometimes it sends people the other way. After a spyware attack, say, people tend to go one of two ways: even more afraid of their PC or they become open minded to new things like Firefox. That's just my experience..
...that Microsoft has a quite different opinion on that subject,
I disagree with the slashdot summary. The article is really not that interesting at all. It's very shallow, and it's aimed at a general audience, not a geek audience. I didn't learn anything from it at all. Seriously.
Find free books.
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Also, as for Timothy's "not-a-transcript-but-better-than-one" heading: no. This summary in the text is not as good as a transcript, and the video is not as good as a transcript, because reading a transcript is faster, and is something I can do at work. (Yes, I know that it's Sunday).
And I know why.
TFA was seriously tl;dr
The "Don't be Evil" moniker is as much a bull-shitty marketing slogan when Google said it as when Mozilla Corporation utters it.
Only only need dig a little deeper to find the evidence: their ongoing "Data (tm)" initiative, mining installers with extra tracking to certain users, etc.
But most people don't; they're too busy clucking about whose JS engine finishes a test suite milliseconds faster and "OMG <video>."
Ok, this is a pet issue of mine. C'mon people, get it right.
The motto isn't "Don't Be Evil".
It's "Do No Evil".
Somewhere along the way someone in the geek news misquoted it, and other people started misquoting, and now it seems to have stuck. Which really bugs me, because not only is it wrong, but it doesn't sound half as graceful either.....
*sigh*....
Did google cut funding half way through Mitchell Bakers' haircut?
Or is the haircut open source, so anyone can come along and change it as they please?
I agree, bit.ly & such are good for texting, but not for publishing. lol
You know, they can even get altered like bit.ly did with http://bit.ly/h4PCD
but I'd rather hear [amazingkreskqin.com] Told reporters, What we'mve known
Pull your head out of your GNU/Ass and fix your fucking code.
Gimme the source code for lib0ass. I wanna compile my own.
...I'm lonely
Right here! On a sister site of Slashdot, no less!
Usenet. In 1Y995,
And what does the "Hope" button do?
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
You reported the problem with FireFox 3.0.10 on Windows XP, but it looks like a /. issue, rather than a browser issue.
The same behaviour is seen using Chromium 3.0.183.0, Epiphany 2.26.1, Firefox 3.0.10, Galeon 2.0.6, and Opera 9.64 (all running on Ubuntu 9.04). Comment titles are white when logged-in, but appear normal when not logged-in.
Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire