Archive for February, 2010

Open to Choice, accessibility, add-ons, Drumbeat, language packs, design challenges, Jetpack, help wanted, and more…

In this issue…

Open to Choice
Microsoft, working towards fulfilling its settlement with the European Commission, has started to roll out tests of the new Browser Choice Screen in parts of Europe. John Lilly and Mitchell Baker have written a short letter about why choices that we make matter greatly, and why browser choice matters now more than ever. “The choices we make determine the quality of our life, and how we see the world. The Web browser has become one of the most critical and trusted relationships in our modern lives — with nearly perfect knowledge of everything we do. It is the lens through which we look at the virtual world, and the medium by which we connect, learn, share, and collaborate. The browser you choose is responsible for providing you with the necessary tools to manage your online life, and to protect your privacy and security.” Read more at John’s blog and at the new Open to Choice website.

Accessibility and browser choice
Related to the Microsoft Browser Choice Screen, Marco Zehe has written a post warning screen reader users that not all browsers will work for them. “The only choice you have is to install Mozilla Firefox as an alternative to MS Internet Explorer. While you can, in theory, install the other browsers as well, and some of their marketing statements sound pretty shiny, none of them will work with your assistive technology! Please spread the word to your friends and warm them accordingly. You can help them avoid unnecessary frustration.”

About.com Reader’s Choice awards
There is still some time left to vote for Firefox in the 2010 About.com Reader’s Choice Awards. The nominations are in and Firefox is a finalist in the “Best Major Desktop Browser“, “Best Mac Browser” and “Best Mobile Browser” categories. You can vote through Feb 25 as many times as you would like, so please vote and tell your friends! You can also vote for your favorite Firefox add-ons in several categories — see the Mozilla Blog for more info and links.

Add-ons and private browsing mode
Ehsan Akhgari has written a blog post discussing changes to the AMO add-on submission policy to reflect that extensions should honor Private Browsing mode in order to be listed publicly on AMO. “While most extensions will not need any modifications for supporting Private Browsing (because they don’t record any data revealing users’ browsing activities), there are some which require some changes, and we appreciate that the change cannot happen overnight. We’ve tentatively decided to give a two-month grace period to add-on authors before we actively start rejecting extensions incompatible with Private Browsing mode.” Ehsan is also looking for help building a tool for checking Private Browsing compatibility in extensions.

Drumbeat: February update
Mark Surman has posted the February update for the Drumbeat project, outlining the progress that’s been made over the last month, including notes about participation, projects, events, and the website. The project is really picking up steam, with local drumbeats being planned, projects being proposed, and the community of contributors growing every day. Check out Mark’s post for all the news, and find out how to get involved.

“What is Open?” campaign
Chelsea Novak has written in about a new “What is Open?” campaign, in which we’re asking Mozilla contributors to think about and talk about why they care, why they participate, and why the open web matters. “As we work to grow the Mozilla community, we want to explain what you’re feeling to everyone — your neighbors, your co-workers, your grandparents. We want them to understand the open web and we need the help of the Mozilla community in making that story crystal clear. Tell us what an open web means to you and why you’re a part of the Mozilla project. We’re going to collect your words, photos and art to build a campaign to tell the world what open means later this year.”

“Once you’re done, spread the word about this project by sharing your words, art or even music on your social network of choice, tagging it with the #mozopen tag. We’ve provided a ‘tweet this’ option, but anything tagged with #mozopen will show up in the gallery.”

Language pack vs. official localization
The Mozilla Localization drivers team has written a quick post explaining that due to resource constraints they often prefer to promote smaller localizations as language packs. “Coordinating the release of 75 locales takes sizable human and machine time, and managing the outreach can seem like a full-time job for more than one person. Because we field many requests by volunteers interested in becoming an official localization, we have to find what is best for us and them. That can mean promoting smaller localizations as language packs on our add-ons website. It’s not bad to be a language pack! I get the sense that somehow contributors might think it is. We don’t diminish someone’s contribution to an arbitrarily lower level if they are not an ‘official’ localization.” Read more about this on Seth Bindernagel’s blog.

Home Tab design challenge voting
The Mozilla Labs Home Tab Design Challenge has moved on to its second round of voting. “In the second round we will once again ask the wider community to cast their vote — this time on three randomly selected concepts out of the top 10. Voting will be open until midnight March 1st. If you participated in the first round, you can use your log in for the second round voting. And to say ‘thank you’ again, all registered voters in the second round have a chance to be one of five lucky people to get a fat Mozilla swag-pack (this is independent from the five swag bags from the first round).” Head over to Mozilla Labs and vote now!

Resource Packages specification
Alexander Limi has posted an update about the Resource Package specification, which has “gone through multiple rounds of refinement and improvements, and is now ready to be handed off for an initial implementation in Firefox and other browsers. Resource Packages provide a backwards-compatible, simple, efficient way to bundle up resources in a single file to make transfers faster and reduce HTTP overhead.” For further details, see Limi’s blog post, the dev.platform thread, and the Resource Package specification.

Testers wanted: Thunderbird 3.1b1
The Mozilla Messaging team is looking for help. “We are going to release Lanikai (Thunderbird) 3.1b1. I’m looking for volunteers to work on a complete test using litmus.” To participate, send email to ludovic-at-mozillamessaging.com, telling him which OS you would use to participate and three areas you would like to test. See the original post for the list of areas that need testing.

Jetpack project status
The Jetpack team made plans for a cadenced reboot release cycle: Three weeks for development followed by at least another week for debugging, triage, doc and blog writing, preparation for release. “The purpose of the first reboot release is to demonstrate the framework Atul has built. It won’t offer any high-level friendly APIs, but it can be used to build honest-to-goodness extensions.” The target release date for 0.1 is March 1st, after which the team will do releases every month or so, with more high-level APIs introduced in each.

Refining the Mozilla.org homepage
Tara Shahian is looking for feedback on a proposed plan to reorganize the Mozilla.org homepage. “Last week John Slater held a brown bag to begin discussions around reorganizing the Mozilla web universe. As part of this proposed plan, mozilla.org would become the central hub connecting all other sites…meaning that mozilla.org will play a much bigger role in telling the story of Mozilla, who we are, and why we’re here as an organization. To do this, we’re working with the Foundation, and the community, to refine mozilla.org’s homepage with a light redesign — making sure that the appropriate content is captured and presented in the best possible way.” Tara is specifically looking for your thoughts on: “What is the key content?”, “What are the calls to action?”, and “What does mozilla.org mean to you?” Head over to Tara’s weblog to take part in the discussion.

Updating add-ons for SeaMonkey 2
The AMO team has posted an article about Extensions support in SeaMonkey 2 on the Mozilla Developer Center. “SeaMonkey 2 is a big improvement from previous releases in terms of add-on support, and Firefox extension developers will find that it’s easy, sometimes trivial, to add support for SeaMonkey in their extensions.”

Jetpack for Learning, phase 3
The Jetpack for Learning Design Challenge has moved into Phase 3 in which work will continue on the ten successful projects from Phase 2, culminating in the Design Camp at SXSW on March 10-12. Brian King has posted the list of projects that have been chosen and other information about the Challenge on his weblog.

Mozilla BiH logo contest!
“If you’re a graphic designer looking to get involved with Mozilla, here’s an excellent opportunity: the Mozilla Community of Bosnia and Herzegovina needs a new logo and has launched a contest in conjunction with the Creative Collective to help make it happen. Kerim Kalamujic has posted the details on the Mozilla BiH site, so be sure to check that out if you’re interested.”

Mozilla Philippines community
Gen Kanai writes, “In the span of a few months, the brand new Mozilla community in the Philippines is active and ambitious. A new Mozilla Philippines Community website, Five Years of Firefox in Manila, and check out the 2010 plans they have for promoting Firefox and Mozilla in the Philippines here: Mozilla Philippines Community 2010 Kick-Off.” There are also photos from the community’s kick-off meeting, where it looks like everyone was having a lot of fun.

Software releases
* Firefox 3.5.8 and 3.0.18
* Jetpack 0.8
* Prism 1.0b3
* Fennec 1.1a1 (fourth alpha) for Windows Mobile
* Processing.js 0.5
* SeaMonkey 2.0.3

Upcoming events
* Feb 25 – Labs Night @ Wikimedia
* Mar 5 – Learn how to testscript your add-ons
* Mar 19 – Improve the quality of QMO
* Apr 2 – Litmus 2 development review

Developer calendar
For an up-to-date list of the coming week’s Mozilla project meetings and events, please see the Mozilla Community Calendar wiki page. Notes from previous meetings are linked to through the Calendar as well.

About about:mozilla
about:mozilla is by, for and about the Mozilla community, focusing on major news items related to all aspects of the Mozilla Project. The newsletter is written by Deb Richardson and is published every Tuesday morning.

If you have any news, announcements, events, or software releases you would like to have included in our next issue, please send them to: about-mozilla[at]mozilla.com.

If you would like to get this newsletter by email, just head on over to the about:mozilla newsletter subscription form. Fresh news, every Tuesday, right to your inbox.

about:mozilla

Mozilla Developer Preview, add-ons, Personas, Getting Started, Lightning, mobile, Drumbeat, and more…

In this issue…

Mozilla Developer Preview now available
A Mozilla Developer Preview of improvements in the Gecko layout engine is now available for download. This is a pre-release version of the Gecko 1.9.3 platform, which forms the core of rich Internet applications such as Firefox. Please note that this release is intended for developers and testers only. As always, we appreciate any feedback you may have and encourage users to help us by filing bugs. For details, see David Baron’s post on the DevNews weblog.

The add-on review process and you
Jorge Villalobos has written an extensive post that explains the current add-ons review process, how review queues work, what the AMO Editors team is and does, and what the future holds for this system. “The add-on review process remains a mystery for many add-on developers. As a developer myself, I admit it feels like dropping your add-on into a bottomless pit and just waiting (and hoping) for something to happen. As the weeks pass by, patience runs out and you wonder what’s going on. Developers have rightly demanded more transparency in our review process, and the purpose of this post is to explain where we are now, and what we’ll be doing in the future to improve it for all add-on authors.”

57,000 Personas and going strong!
Ryan Doherty writes, “There are now over 57,000 personas on getpersonas.com. The past three weeks have been a blur for the Personas team and its contributors. We’ve seen millions of new users join our community and enjoy theming their Firefox. Thousands of designers created over 19,000 personas.” Other fun getpersonas.com stats include: 5,000,000 page views, 500,000 unique users, and over 700 new personas created every day. If you would like to get involved with the Personas community, you can join the Google Group, answer questions on support.mozilla.com, or become an approver by emailing personas-at-mozilla-dot-com.

Rethinking the Getting Started page
Laura Mesa has started to rethink the Firefox Getting Started page, which is one of Mozilla.com’s most viewed pages with an average of 525,000 views per day. “We know that a lot of the people that hit this page come to it accidentally hitting the link on the toolbar. We also know that even if they are coming to the page on purpose, they aren’t finding what they were looking for, with 95% of traffic bouncing right off the page.” Laura goes on to offer a handful of possible alternatives, and is looking for more ideas and feedback. For more details and to contribute to the discussion, see her full blog post.

Update mobile add-ons for 1.1a1
Caitlin Looney of the Firefox mobile team writes, “Attention Firefox mobile add-on developers: Please ensure your mobile add-on minimum and maximum version is compatible with both the Maemo and Windows Mobile platforms. We will be releasing our fourth alpha of Fennec for Windows Mobile very soon and we want to make sure users can discover and install your add-on directly from their device. If you update your add-on’s maxVer in the Developer Control Panel to ’1.1a1′, it will work with the latest version of Firefox for Windows Mobile.”

Automated testing for Lightning
After a lot of hard work by Merike Sell, the Lightning Estonian localizer, the Lightning Calendar project now has a suite of automated tests that work with Mozmill. “Underlying these tests are a basic set of APIs in the shared module testCalendarUtils.js. These APIs can help you do everything from fill in an event dialog to verify that an event is in the correct location on the screen in each view. Merike has written some excellent documentation for the API as well.” More information about this project is available on the Calendar project weblog.

Crashed plugin UI
Justin Dolske recently landed new UI changes for when a plugin crashes. “This builds on top of the fantastic Out Of Process Plugins (OOPPs) work from the Electrolysis team, which allows the browser to keep running even after a plugin dies. So, now that crashes from plugins like Flash, Java, Silverlight, and Quicktime don’t take down Firefox, we need to show the user something to indicate when a plugin has a problem and how to deal with it.” Dolske’s post includes more detail and a handful of screenshots.

Experimenting with add-on promotions
Pascal Finette, part of the Mozilla Labs team, has written about an experiment the team is running to improve user experience and the discoverability of add-ons. As part of the refreshed first run page for Firefox 3.6, a new section was added which highlights the benefits of Firefox add-ons and directs users to the Add-ons for Firefox Web site. The new pilot program expands upon this new format to include the promotion of certain Recommended Add-ons. “These recommendations will run in a rotation — there will be four promotions in total during the pilot (including two add-ons, the current general promotion for add-ons and a Thunderbird promotion).” The pilot is planned to run for 6-12 weeks, and after the results have been gathered and examined, the data will be released. See Pascal’s post for more information.

Firefox for mobile: keyboard shortcuts
Mark Finkle has blogged a quick tip listing a handful of the keyboard shortcuts that Firefox for mobile supports, including shortcuts for zoom in, zoom out, go to location bar, back and forward one page, new tab, and more. There’s even more information available at the Firefox for mobile knowledge base.

An improved experience for new Firefox users
The Mozilla Metrics team, working with the Firefox development team, have identified and solved a number of “pain points” in new users’ experience of downloading and installing Firefox. “Thanks to feedback from our users, and some resulting product changes, we can now safely say that there are no issues confronting new users when installing Firefox for the very first time.” Ken Kovash has posted a detailed look at the improvements that have been made and how those have had a beneficial impact on the first time user installation experience.

Drumbeat slides: feedback wanted
With Drumbeat gathering steam, a number of people have asked for generic slides that they can use to spread the word. Mark Surman has put together a first draft of some slides and recorded them with a voiceover. Mark is looking for feedback and has two questions for those who take the time to watch his video: Does this presentation provide you with a good intro to Drumbeat? Do the slides plus his voice over give you what you need to give a talk? You can grab the slides, view the video, and leave your feedback on Mark’s post.

Upcoming events
* Feb 19 – Testday: OS Testing with Mobile Firefox
* Mar 5 – Learn how to testscript your add-ons
* Mar 19 – Improve the quality of QMO
* Apr 2 – Litmus 2 development review

Developer calendar
For an up-to-date list of the coming week’s Mozilla project meetings and events, please see the Mozilla Community Calendar wiki page. Notes from previous meetings are linked to through the Calendar as well.

About about:mozilla
about:mozilla is by, for and about the Mozilla community, focusing on major news items related to all aspects of the Mozilla Project. The newsletter is written by Deb Richardson and is published every Tuesday morning.

If you have any news, announcements, events, or software releases you would like to have included in our next issue, please send them to: about-mozilla[at]mozilla.com.

If you would like to get this newsletter by email, just head on over to the about:mozilla newsletter subscription form. Fresh news, every Tuesday, right to your inbox.

about:mozilla

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