Mozilla Plans Mobile App Store
dkd903 writes "Mozilla wants to make it big in the Mobile world and has revealed its plans for a unique mobile app store in its annual report — 'The State of Mozilla,' which was released recently. Mozilla has already brought the desktop Firefox experience to mobile devices as the Fennec browser, which was initially launched for the Maemo platform on Nokia N900. Mozilla has designed a prototype of a mobile app store and plans to call it a 'Open Web App ecosystem.' The aim is to create an open app store platform that would consist of apps that can run on all mobile devices: — A 'Mobile Device Independent' App Store."
Mozilla users aren't used to paying for add ons...
If the developer opportunities are good, i'm in. Problem is, calling something an App Store doesn't really change things much if you're just giving people access to a web site. Maybe they're going to focus on local apps written in html+css+js?
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It's nice to see that I'm not the only one who cares about grammar.
I can see the use of promoting an app store to make it easier to purchase apps for Linux and maybe Windows, but cell phones are a different animal. Maybe it is just me, but cell phones seem to require more involvement by at least one party to ensure quality control. A cell phone company may not have to go as far as Apple in providing a sandbox, but it doesn't make sense to leave creating an app store to a third party.
Also, Steve Jobs will say no.
What I'm wondering is, are they going to have some sort of compatibility testing done, to ensure that the app will actually run on the phone? Rovio's going to develop a lightweight version of Angry Birds for slower phones; will there be some way of automatically testing the phone to see if it's compatible, or will there just be a whole load of programs that you'll never know if you can run or not? If it's the later, I can't see this venture being very successful.
Its called the frickin world wide web.
a billion "app stores" and more...
Seriously, stop making useless gimmicks and work on releasing this already, or IE9 is going to be Slashdot's browser of choice.
Cousin It actually has an annual report.
IOW, typo's are not a big deal, and life moves on.
I read TFA and all I got was this lousy cookie
I have a N90, a N95, and an N800, etc. I loved being able to write apps on my laptop, and transfer them over to my hand held device . . . even though that I can't program myself out of a paper bag!
I loved flicking the N90 so much, that my girlfriend said: "Quit playing with it! You might break it!"
Insert Beavis and Butthead text here.
So this MeeGo stuff has me all curious . . . just wait, don't buy.
Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
Can't agree more. Adblock Mobile would be more than welcome.
I'd be interested in seeing an app store moderated by a free software foundation. I think it could attract a lot of talented developers. It would free us from the walled garden and the android market is being drowned by a flood of low quality development. For example, if you look for a live wallpaper, there are hundreds of applications from just a few of the same developers. Developers should be restricted in the amount of applications that they slapped together which they are allowed to release. A foundation like Mozilla understands good software.
Cloud applications are making a good fight, but in reality local applications/games in javascript and webgl are the future. Both of these types of web applications could be distributed through mozilla. I'd be willing to part with the same 30% that Apple takes from my pie, if the store garners a decent customer base.
Great. Let's boil the ocean with an open source app store. How about actually shipping an open source mobile browser first on a platform that people actually use?
what the hell are you talking about? The only apps that have ads are those that you didn't pay for (try buy an app you like some time). If you're using Safari then it's not different that browsing the web with your desktop browser (although on desktop it's easier to block ads with plugins). There is no such thing as ad injection capabilities on iOS. You better get back under the bridge before you get hit by a car.
Mozilla would never do that, as they make money on ads. They'd also never include an open plugin system, as then apple wouldn't let it on the appstore.
If you want adblock on the iphone, jailbreak and install SBSettingsAdBlockToggle. It's one of several adblock apps on the cydia store, and it works fairly well.
And I'm sure being molested by the TSA doesn't matter to you either. Maybe you should fuck off so the rest of us don't need to live with the results of your apathy.
Free software will end the computer
thank you for your exceedingly humorous post.
Read radical news here
IOW, typo's are not a big deal, and life moves on.
Well, that depends on if you're using draconian error handling or not.
try send me some $$ some time, heh... (I've purchased few, that I really liked)
the point is that those 'free' apps that have those ads included ... some of them are just taking way too much of the iPhone screen 'area' and ...it becomes 'annoying' and at that point I'm not willing to depart from my $'s anymore. .... pls design the thing in a way that the ads won't be annoying ... BTW ... no such thing as ad injection ... dude... stop insulting, pls, have you ever tried to USE the safari browser on iPhone4 to surf freely and... you'll find out ... ads ...
- yea, I know that it's the way some dev's can actually make $, but
it's a sign-writer's apostrophe.
this looks like a normal apostrophe, but it's purpose is to warn the reader that an "s" is coming.
"an unique" is wrong, too. Unique begins with a y-sound. It should be "a unique."
O'rly and still they allow the adblock plus ... on FF
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It's nice to see slashdot eating < signs.
I'm sure Mozilla can do a good job, but there are already similar attempts underway - one is OpenAppMkt.
I guess Mozilla has an advantage in that they can bundle it with the browser, but to me it seems more like mobile users would be using such a thing than desktop users, and I don't know of any mobile devices that ship with Mozilla as the default browser.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Um, last time I checked making a typo wasn't illegal. As opposed to the TSA illegally molesting passengers for the audacity to buy plane tickets. I'm also unaware of any significant number of people with a legitimate cause for complaining about flashbacks induced by such a common misspelling.
< is the beginning of an HTML tag. Slashdot simply doesn't convert it into the < entity.
There needs to be a browser that exposes in JavaScript a common API for phone I/O: accelerometer, multi-touch, camera, GPS. etc.
I'd also like to see a store for apps (native or HTML+JS) that charged for apps but also (1), encouraged developers to make the source of their apps available, and (2), allowed other developers to sell altered binaries on the same store, with the original author getting a cut equal to what they originally charged, and so on down the line. This would open development, while ensuring those adding value are compensated. It'd be like a software VAT.
Actually, something such as this probably wasn't a typo. It was probably ignorance. Continuing to ignore this kind of ignorance creates a mass of people who can't write, can't spell and are very unclear in what they're trying to communicate. So I agree that it's worth calling attention to. We all make mistakes sometimes, and typos DO happen. But when you see "it's" over and over and over from people who think they're typing a possessive, they're not all typos.
It does matter to me, greatly. I buy a lot of plane tickets nowadays. I drive to the airport, park my car, go through security, and read a book. I don't actually board the plane though. I just like having TSA guys rub their hands all over me. Mmmmm....
Your turn.
Um, last time I checked making a typo wasn't illegal.
Make a typo on your tax return and get back to me on that.
Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
"... Firefox does not have memory management issues."
He's joking of course. Open a lot of windows and tabs, and Firefox will munch memory until it takes all the available memory, and then it will crash. Before that Firefox will be sloooow. The memory munching continues even when you aren't using your computer.
Firefox is the most unstable program in common use. The memory gobbling, CPU gobbling was reported more than 8 years ago, and still hasn't been fixed.
It's even better if you combine it with flash heavy websites.
I'll bet good money this will fail. One reason apps are so popular is that their user experience is so highly customised to their individual devices.
but also (1), encouraged developers to make the source of their apps available
How are web apps not open, ever? By definition if they run you can see the source, because the browser has to have the javascript/css to work...
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
From the first 2 opening paragraphs:
"Mozilla has already brought the desktop Firefox experience to mobile devices long back as the Fennec browser"
"Mozilla has designed a prototype of mobile app store"
GNU can take over the world, but beware the dreaded Engrish.
For in politics, as in religion, it is equally absurd to aim at making proselytes by fire and sword. - Publius
It's a fact, not a troll.
Sweeeeeet! Thank you!
My iPhone is jailbroken and unlocked.
When I got my first one, I was a loooong time Centennial Wireless customer and was very happy with their service. Very happy.
My son bought a new iPhone and gave me his 1st gen which I promptly popped my OLD Centennial SIM into (I had an old Nokia) then unlocked and jail broke it to work on Centennial. It worked like a charm though I had no wireless internet, never had it on the Nokia, never wanted it on the Nokia, it was too basic.
So I had internet in my house, McDonalds, etc.. Good enough for me.
My BFF dropped it and broke it though and I bought another one just like it and repeated it all over again. Everything still cool.
Then I got tired of the slowness of the 1st gen and bought a used 3GS in like new condition on ebay. Again, I jailbroke it and unlocked it with Spirit.
Still using the old Centennial / Nokia SIM. And still, no internet except via WIFI. Fine with me.
See, I have an awesome plan that they grandfathered me in on when AT&T (SUCKS) bought Centennial. For $29 a month I get 200 minutes a month outgoing and unlimited 24/7 incoming minutes. People can call and talk to me 24 hours a day and it doesn't cost me a cent. Why would I want to change that?
If I fess up to them that I have an iPhone they will force me into a new $100 a month plan that I do not want, can not afford and have no use for.
I do not need internet when I'm driving. If I need internet when I'm away from home I'll pull into a McDonalds and use their WIFI and have a burger and a diet coke in exchange. But pay $40 a month for a limited voice plan and another $40 a month for a VERY LIMITED internet plan, NO WAY.
They can KMA.
I love that my phone is jailbroken so that I can customize it in anyway I want. I'm not giving up my Tinkerbell theme for anyone, they can go to hell.
I'm still using 3.1.3 because I do not at all trust the new iOS4. I have heard they have a kill switch built into it to brick JB/UL'd phones.
I'm on Cydia however and I can not find the "SBSettingsAdBlockToggle" app.. :(
PhoneGap looks like it's a set of SDKs that allows apps written in JavaScript to run on a number of phone OSes; not a browser for each of these OSes that allow arbitrary websites to act like device-integrated phone apps.
Does anyone know of a browser app with PhoneGap capability? Would such an app be approved by Apple?
"...an unique..." should be "...a unique..."
"unique" is pronounced with a 'y' at the front, so the indefinite article should be "a", not "an".
has revealed it is plans?
I love the guys at Mozilla, but damn they're good at digging a hole for themselves.
All mobile platforms have stores that offer apps. Including web stack apps, as both for iPhone, Symbian and Android, *officially approved* SDK-s exists that compile cross-platform apps driven by the built-in WebKit (plus extra API-s exposed to it, to make it an app).
This means Mozilla will be creating a niche no one is asking for, and potentially shooting their chances of being on the iPhone, as Apple has shown it may approve video players and web browsers in some cases, but it'll never approve an App Store app.
Everyone *everyone* I have seen install Mozilla's browser on a mobile says the same thing: make it faster, make it more efficient. I guess they thought this is not fancy enough, so let's put an app store clone... Sigh.
I've not noticed any Firefox memory problems since 3.5, and 4.0 is even more robust.
Still not as tiny as SeaMonkey but a lot better than in the past.
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
Still not illegal. Sure they can audit it, but they have to prove that it was more than a typo. You'd have to pay plus a penalty, but what you've got there is a straw man.
..and their tendency to abuse every software paradigm.
As I see it, app stores / software centers are meant to unify application sources and updates. This implies to me, that there should be one of it and probably the best place is on the platform level: the OS.
If we start pushing in app stores on all other software stack levels (browsers, random websites, company specific app stores - I'm sure Adobe is working on something like that -, probably more will show up) then the whole idea misses it's point. Could as well go back to downloading random apps and installing it.
This is the same crap that happened with OpenID. Suddenly we had 16 different, incompatible OpenID providers, and it's hardly useful at all any more.
I picture the scenario where my uncle asks me for help over the phone and I tell him to please install app x/y from the software center.. and then I have to detail which one of the 15.
You're seriously comparing the TSA bs to a typo in a /. summary? Okay...
I read TFA and all I got was this lousy cookie
it's a sign-writer's apostrophe.
this looks like a normal apostrophe, but it's purpose is to warn the reader that an "s" is coming.
What are you talking about? Are sign-writers pathologically scared of the letter S because it's the first one in Spider or something?
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
Why go to all the trouble of creating something when you can wait for someone else to do it then jump on the bandwagon and make some "me too" money?
That's because you're still clinging to the idea that AAA games are the future. They're not even the present.
It's not AAA titles that really go after performance. It's the smaller developers, the indies, because they are not about making an engine that is simply good enough to carry the billion dollars of artwork to be delivered, indies are all about making an AMAZING game that often takes full advantage of some hardware features.
So you are exactly backwards in your thinking - AAA titles could live quite well in a world of javascript/webgl, and in fact they would obviously prefer to do so since it would mean lower development costs. It's the indies that crave uniqueness and platform performance, and why only the simplest of games will carry forth in the web world leaving the really interesting stuff to be native.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
IE9 hasn't even been ported to anything yet. It's a niche browser on a niche platform. Even if it ceases to become a merely niche browser on its platform, it's still limited to a platform that nobody uses anymore.
This is a common problem. People who don't use Firefox heavily don't notice the serious problems.
It's true, Firefox is better now than before.