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Mozilla Developers Invited to Redmond
Posted by
Zonk
on Tue Aug 22, 2006 09:49 AM
from the dinosaurs-in-wa dept.
from the dinosaurs-in-wa dept.
savio13 writes "Sam Ramji, Microsoft's director of its Open Source Software Lab has invited 4 Mozilla developers to spend 4 days with Microsoft's Vista Readiness ISV team. The invite can be found on mozilla.dev.planning and was posted on Saturday (Aug. 19). Schroepfer replied by indicating that Microsoft and the Moz guys are already in contact via email and will follow up on the offer there. This is interesting because Sam posted the offer in a public forum (and indicated that he'd sent a PM, but was posting in case they had an @microsoft.com email filter). Sam also made a point of stating that the Vista ISV Readiness offer is typically only for commercial ISVs."
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Mozilla Developers Invited to Redmond
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It's a TRAP!!! (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.decarbonated.org/)
When Linus and RMS visit the Mozillaplex City: (Score:5, Funny)
One of the 4 Mozilla developers is leading a tour for them, talking causually:
"It's always been a danger, but it looms like a shadow over every-thing we've built here. But things have developed that will ensure security. I've just made a deal that will keep Microsoft out of here forever."
Suddenly, a door in hallway slides open... Horror! ...Bill Gates rises from his seat at the far end of long dining table...
Re:It's a TRAP!!! (Score:5, Funny)
(http://wellhellosailor.com/ | Last Journal: Thursday November 08, @03:23PM)
The Firefox team is herded into a giant enclosure lined with sand. At the other end they see another gaggle of pasty-faced geeks, who, judging by their ID badges, appear to be the Microsoft IE team.
From up on high, a whiny, nasal voice, belonging to Microsoft Chairman Ballmer, rings out:
"Remember where you are - this is Thunderdome, and death is listening, and will take the first man that screams."
One of the IE guys flinches at this, while the others exhibit lifeless eyes, dulled from too much Caffeine and long coding jags.
Ballmer cuts through again, this time louder:
"Two teams enter, one team leaves!"
The cry is picked by the watching multitudes:
"TWO TEAMS ENTER! ONE TEAM LEAVES! TWO TEAMS ENTER! ONE TEAM LEAVES! TWO TEAMS ENTER! ONE TEAM LEAVES!"
Re:It's a TRAP!!! (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.garlanger.com/)
Re:It's a TRAP!!! (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://www.tanningbeds4less.com/ | Last Journal: Sunday November 05 2006, @07:23AM)
You DO know that MS can simply READ the source code for Firefox, just like the rest of us? And come out with their own version (according to the license) without inviting anyone? And they have IE7 and don't want to?
And wtf exactly is a "M$ edition of Firefox"? Is this like Firefox, but it runs on Microsoft operating systems, like Firefox does now?
How do you claim better support for Firefox? Firefox is the CLIENT, it is supposed to support the protocols, not the other way around, right?
"a quality browser that supports m$ locked in content". Isn't that IE6/7, and not Firefox?
Seriously, I am saying this with love: Switch to decaf.
Future news splash: (Score:5, Funny)
Never forget what Kosh said! (Score:4, Funny)
(Last Journal: Monday October 02 2006, @08:42AM)
Re:Never forget what Kosh said! (Score:4, Funny)
(http://jo-ham.com/)
Sorry, have to do this (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sorry, have to do this (Score:5, Funny)
Mozilla guys walk into a big room.
Microsoftie: Hey guys, thanks for coming down here. We have a lot to talk about. Take a seat and we will get started.
Mozilla guys: Um, there are no chairs in this room?
Steve Ballmer breaks through the wall, armed with a number of vicous looking chairs.
Steve: Did someone want a chair...hahaha.
I imagine this sort of thing happens all the time at Redmond.
Re:Sorry, have to do this (Score:5, Funny)
(http://ak3ldama.blogspot.com/ | Last Journal: Monday October 29, @12:17AM)
Steve Ballmer breaks through the wall, armed with a number of vicous looking chairs.
I figured he'd break through the wall all pimped out like a pitcher of Kool-Aid!
Sense motive checks abound (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Gecko based IExplorer? (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.foobarsoft.com/)
Firefox works with Vista (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Gecko based IExplorer? (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://slashdot.org/journal.pl?op=list&uid=907337 | Last Journal: Tuesday August 07, @10:58AM)
embrace, extend, extinguish ...repeat as necessary.
Re:Gecko based IExplorer? (Score:5, Interesting)
Absolutely never ever ever going to happen. Even discounting the IE features that MS wants to keep, even discounting NIH syndrome, Microsoft owns the IE codebase (modulo a few patent trolls). Microsoft doesn't want to put anything in Windows that it can't alter at will. Yes Gecko's open source, but they don't exactly want to fork it and deal with the developer relations donnybrook that would ensue.
As for ActiveX, MS had already removed almost every AX control from its site, leaving only various update managers. And the Eolas debacle has pretty much tilted them all the way toward going 100% DHTML/AJAX for rich content. Underneath, it's still COM controls, sure -- Flash and even the Java "plugin" are actually ActiveX controls -- but anyone still beating on the ActiveX drum is showing they have no imagination with which to update their repertoire of trolling.
Firefox is big and important enough now that some folks at Microsoft want more familiarity, including making sure it doesn't break on Vista, because depending on how it breaks, it can make Vista appear broken itself (or yes, reveal where it actually is broken). The speculation you're reading about "traps" is just the usual grist for the Two-Minute Hate around here.
Re:Gecko based IExplorer? (Score:5, Interesting)
Sorry, but you are quite wrong, either intentionally or by just not thinking this through. You are using one narrow example (microsoft.com's current site practices) and somehow drawing the conclusion that ActiveX is no longer a concern internet-wide. This is totally incorrect.
Here's a quick example. We have a small, (unfortunately) somewhat autonomous group of people here that insist on using Microsoft's products Movie Maker and Producer to push out video of a colloquium that occurs every few weeks during the school year. The web page they end up with makes massive use of ActiveX - which of course means not only that it's IE+Windows only (yes, it claims not to be but it only works on IE+Windows), but also that anyone who uses IE with Active X turned off (e.g. all XP SP2 users) are badgered with popup after popup asking "Do you want to enable scripting?" Eventually many of these folks get tired of the popups and just turn scripting on across the board so they can watch the d*mn video.
If you've read the IT trade press at all, you'll be familiar with interview after interview where CIOs have said "We'd love to move to Firefox, but we've got too much invested in intranet/extranet systems based on ActiveX technology".
ActiveX will continue to be an issue until Microsoft stops selling tools that generate ActiveX-based code and end-products.
Re:Sense motive checks abound (Score:4, Insightful)
(Last Journal: Monday February 13 2006, @07:11PM)
Re:Sense motive checks abound (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://elmuerte.com/)
ObPython (Score:5, Funny)
(http://robvincent.net/ | Last Journal: Tuesday October 09, @01:55PM)
A Bruce Campbell quote for this... (Score:3, Funny)
Moz devs: Be sure to catch the tour! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wow (Score:4, Funny)
(http://www.zenwerx.com/personal/)
btw... Linux rulez, Micro$oft winblow$ drulez
Sun Tzu (Score:3, Interesting)
(Last Journal: Wednesday April 05 2006, @10:30AM)
Leveredge (Score:4, Insightful)
Living in Dreamland (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.keirstead.org/)
Pretend we're talking a year from now and MS is trying to roll out Vista and the 40% of the population that will be using FF by then balks because FF won't run properly.
Wow - food must taste better where you live too!
Re:Living in Dreamland (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Leveredge (Score:5, Insightful)
It may not be a representative sample, but all of the big corporations I have worked at or visited seem wedded to IE. Since corporations are going to be the slow movers on the Vista transition I think it's unlikely to be the explanation. Keep in mind, consumers are going to get Vista shoved down their throats because that's what will come installed on new machines.
The more likely reason is anti-trust. Microsoft is finally getting some serious competition again in the browser arena. Microsoft will have a tough time explaining things if Vista comes out and Firefox, the arch-rival to IE, doesn't work. Microsoft long ago lost the benefit of the doubt with respect to anti-trust regulators.
The benefits far outweigh the costs of helping the Firefox team out for a few days. In other words: CYA.
Vista modularity? (Score:5, Interesting)
--------------------
Steve Stites
Re:Vista modularity? (Score:5, Insightful)
There's a simple explanation: it's probably NOT working well, and they want to have a heads-up on what kinda complaint level they'll have. OR, they want to make sure to "break" certain firefox features so that IE looks better.
This is possible, but I don't think it is likely. I suspect the issue is slightly different. Vista's biggest competitor is going to be earlier versions of Windows. Many corporate customers are still using Win2K and many are also using Firefox. Why would they upgrade?
The Firefox crew is pretty sharp but they are techno-junkies. So MS invites the Firefox guys to see some of the whizbang new features of Vista that they can integrate with Firefox to make it better. Maybe they can even get these guys excited about the potential of something. The hope is that the Firefox people will add some feature that will motivate people to want to upgrade to Vista. Even if they just get a feature built into the core tree, maybe the older versions will become unsupported more quickly and for security reasons people will need to move to Vista to have a secure browser.
Remember, MS does not sell IE. They sell a bundle of IE and Windows. Every Firefox user on Windows has already paid them for IE, so using Firefox does not really cost them anything other than a minor strategic bump right now. People not upgrading to Vista costs them hard cash, plus a number of strategic bumps when they don't adopt all the new lock-in anti-features in Vista.
Re:Vista modularity? (Score:4, Informative)
One does not simply walk into Redmond! (Score:5, Funny)
(http://w33t.com/)
Re:Nice knowing you guys (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://www.theparticle.com/)
What -would- happen if MS offered them a $500k a year job to work on IE?... with a condition not to work on Firefox anymore.
Opera too (Score:5, Informative)
(http://my.opera.com/usability)
Maybe so but, (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Maybe so but, (Score:4, Funny)
(Last Journal: Friday February 10 2006, @02:51PM)
Arriving in Redmond .... (Score:5, Funny)
Ok ok... (Score:4, Insightful)
Ah slashdot... can't live with it, pass the beer nuts.
Re:Ok ok... (Score:4, Insightful)
Not to get too serious here, but this is a perfect example of a situation where MS can't win. Invite the folks up? "It's a trap! They'll steal your code, kill you, etc." Don't invite them up? "When is MS going to treat OSS developers like any one else, Firefox has many users, they should get the same respect as any other org."
Not to make a bad analogy here, but let me present a perfect example of a situation where J. Dahmer can't win. Find the body of a missing person in his apartment? "He's raping the dead." Don't find a missing body in his apartment? "He probably ate it and dissolved the bones in those acid vats."
The solution to this dilemma is don't spend more than a decade gaining notoriety by constantly screwing people over, breaking the law, and behaving unethically. People suspect the worst of MS, because MS delivers on a regular basis. That's not prejudice, it's experience.
That's It for Mozilla Then... (Score:3, Interesting)
(http://www.kickthebobo.com/erotech/index.html | Last Journal: Friday October 26, @11:51AM)
Sad. (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://firsttube.com/)
Microsoft has taken some serious steps to clean itself up over the last year or so. As a Linux/Apache/PHP/Python/Perl/MySQL/Postgres evangelist, I always root for open source, but I respect Microsoft's omnipresence in the tech world.
That said, it's really sad to see that 98% of the comments here are based on distrust, hatred, and bad jokes. This is a huge move: Microsoft, for once, finally understanding that open source has a place and that NOT working with them spells trouble for them.
So, please people, retire the lame wisecracks. This is one of many times you'll see Microsoft bent by the immense power and will of open source!
Re:Sad. (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft has taken some serious steps to clean itself up over the last year or so.
Really? You mean they are no longer illegally bundling IE? Oh yeah they still are. You mean they are no longer paying companies to spread FUD about security and performance? Oh, they're still doing that too. So they are not misleading people by overstating the security of Vista and the compliance of IE? Oh, they did that too. Well surely they aren't still illegally bundling their media player? Huh, they're doing that too. Have they stopped illegally tying their server and desktop to take over more of the server space with an inferior product? No, they are still doing that as well. How exactly have they "cleaned up?"
That said, it's really sad to see that 98% of the comments here are based on distrust, hatred, and bad jokes.
Trust is earned. After the fiftieth or sixtieth time someone punches me the kidneys when I'm looking the other way, it is not sad that I talk about how I suspect they might be trying again. If MS wants my trust they have to earn it and it will take years of ethical, trustworthy behavior before I'm willing to admit that this time they might not be maneuvering for another cheap, sucker punch. Not punching me when I'm looking right at them and a cop is paying attention does not earn them any trust.
This is one of many times you'll see Microsoft bent by the immense power and will of open source!
This is MS looking out for their bottom dollar, probably by trying to get new "Vista only" feature into Firefox to help motivate corporate upgrades either by selling that feature or by hoping it will hasten the demise of mainstream support for Firefox on old versions of Windows. Does this make me trust MS to any greater degree? Hell no, and nor should it.
I remember when Win2k code leaked....... (Score:5, Funny)
I wonder.......
Now gentlemen if you'll just look at the wall sized plasma screen over there you'll see "IE7 SOURCE CODE!!!!! That's right, IE7 source code! You have been contaminated and must now cease development of your precious Firefox product! MUHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!!!!!
What they really want (Score:4, Funny)
(http://slashdot.org/)
Non disclosure agreements? Bugzilla reports (Score:3, Interesting)
(Last Journal: Wednesday October 31, @08:33AM)
Mozilla good for Windows (Score:3, Insightful)
So perhaps MS is simply recognising this, and acting to support it ?
Great strategic move on Microsoft's part (Score:5, Insightful)
In my opinion, I think that Microsoft seriously does see the hand-writing on the wall and they do want to do more to ensure that their OS supports the programs that people want to use. Microsoft is going to trumpet their low support costs and ease of managability (think SMS, Group Policy, etc). They are going to trumpet the fact that they are the standard, and they are going to portray any group who doesn't want to work with the standard as being back-asswards and wasting time unnecessarily reinventing the wheel.
On another level, Microsoft is trying to avoid what happened to Novell in the 1990s. Netware was a great operating system but it got to the point where they barely had any third party support. The same thing could happen to Microsoft if enough developers decide that using Microsoft dev tools is a PITA and if enough developers decide that coding to the Microsoft OS is a PITA. The one incentive that Microsoft has left is their market penetration. They can still play the economic card, and that card is, "If you develop for the MS platform, you will have a market share of XX. And by the way, that market is already used to paying out the nose for software, so you stand to make money. Now do you want that, or do you want to go to the OSS world where everyone is doing it on the cheap with razor thin margins?" And if you think about it, that's a very strong position to come from. If you're trying to make money, do you want to go with the company that has already made itself (and numerous third parties) griploads of cash, or do you want to go with the other guys who are trying to redo what Microsoft has already done, but do it "less expensively and better"? I'm of the opinion that unless the OSS world comes out with some killer functionality that operates EXCLUSIVELY outside of Windows, they're never going to win. Given how much Microsoft has been investing in intellectual property, and given how much they have already developed (OS, Office, Exchange, accounting packages, CRM packages... basically all the tools that a business needs to function), it's going to be hard to end-run around the monopoly.
The one ray of hope is "standards" but as we've all seen, Microsoft will just ignore a standard until enough people want to use it. Then they'll offer support for it. You're seeing it now with IE7. For the longest time, MS didn't give two shits. Now enough web devs have complained loudly enough and they're finally getting what they want. IE7 might not nail it, but I'm willing to be IE7 SP3, or IE8 will. The problem with using a standard to fight Microsoft is that standards are very rarely proprietary. And as we've seen with the W3C, even "standards" are often times still works in progress.