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07.17.09 - 08:08pm
“We’re a tiny company. We’re 250 people and we’re competing with Apple, Microsoft, [and] Google.”
- John Lilly
You know, I’d heard the above statement made in a bunch of different ways, but never quite in that order and so it never had the impact it did when put just so. Two hundred and fifty people, that’s it. That’s Mozilla Corporation. We might as well be Spartan’s with the kind of odds we’re up against, but the atmosphere here just never, ever portrays that. And I don’t mean that in some arrogant way, but it’s kind of crazy that we’re so brazen. I mean, we’re confident of course because we’re winning, and so that’s not too crazy, but I guess the crazy part is just that; how disparate the circumstances are from the odds. It’s crazy that we exist almost. It’s crazy that we’ve been able to leverage the efforts of 250 people and a few thousand volunteers against something that’s so big and dominant and has the resources it does — and win. That we made something, all of us, something good enough, something people care about enough to go out of their way to get. Think about that for a second. How often does anyone go out of their way for anything, really, let alone a web browser? And a lot of you reading this will be doing so from Internet Explorer, or Safari, and a few of you from Chrome or Opera, but that just illustrates my point so beautifully. You don’t need us to log in to your banking website, there isn’t a blog out there that works only with Firefox, and Google and Facebook work just fine in whatever browser came with your computer. There’s no reason to get and use Firefox other than the reason you, as an individual, come up with to do so. It’s a personal choice, and one that nearing 25% of Internet users have made in which they declared that, yes, actually, Firefox is worth the trouble. And that’s just amazing, to me.