Go for launch
01.23.10 - 11:18am
Launch days at Mozilla are always inspiring for me, and the launch of Firefox 3.6 was no exception. You might think that it would be hard to drum up excitement for a product that we’ve all used internally for months in advance, but experience has shown it to be just the opposite. In fact, come release day, it almost couldn’t be more easy. Getting Firefox out to the ever larger concentric circles that represent our users — first via nightly builds, then betas, and finally release candidates and the final — is something a bunch of people put a bunch of work into, and launch day is when we all get to celebrate that work turning into something that actually makes the entire Internet better.
We’ve had 3 major launches in my short time here, and each one was a milestone. Firefox 3 brought intelligence to the location bar and much improved memory management, 3.5: super-fast JavaScript and open video, and now 3.6 is bringing lightweight themes and plug-in checking to the masses. They all did a bunch of other things too, of course, but I think that what’s most impressive isn’t actually a feature that any particular version of Firefox introduced, but how far the bar has risen in that short period of time and how hard Mozilla itself has pushed to help raise it. Firefox 3, for instance, was actually really fast for its day — it’s still faster than any version of IE — but 3.6 is so much faster that when the two get compared you can only ever talk about the speed improvements in multiples. It’s so fast in fact that its performance can only really be likened to browsers like Chrome, or Safari, who’s primary focus is on speed at the expense of functionality.
That’s Firefox’s real killer feature, though. Not that it just keeps getting better, but that it gets better in ways that pressure everyone else to get better. Because it doesn’t just take a better Mozilla browser to bring about a better Web, it takes all the browsers getting better — if only to keep up.