• How do we scale the Mozilla localization community?

    June 5th, 2009 by seth bindernagel with 3 comments »

    Between the release of Firefox 3 and the upcoming release of Firefox 3.5, Mozilla will add twenty-six new localizations to the Firefox’s list of localized versions.  It’s likely that we will ship Firefox in seventy-four locales, not including the en-US version.  What does it take to scale our community and increase our locale count by over fifty-four percent?

    It turns out that many who learn about our growth often ask if we can articulate any of the magic behind this scale.  It’s not really magical, and it’s pretty straight forward.  In fact, I’ve been meaning to write something on my blog about our process to describe the many things that make this possible.  Coincidentally, Greg Bell, who helps run the website Open Logic, learned of our growth and asked me if I’d answer this very question in a post for his site.  This seemed like the best opportunity since Greg provided a deadline that would force me finally to write it.  He and his staff titled the article Go Local, Be Global: Scaling the Mozilla Localization Community and they wrote a very nice introduction about Mozilla.  I hope you find time to read it.

    Of course, it’s quite easy to write a piece like this when we have a remarkable community of contributors.  Special thanks has to go out to the l10n community and l10n-drivers team who have been building for years the foundation that has made this scale possible.  Most of all, Axel Hecht and Pascal Chevrel have been the two Mozilla employees most responsible for our global growth.  Hats of to them.

    Finally, many thanks to Greg for offering me the opportunity to write.  He caught me at the height of our Firefox 3.5 release work, so it took me a few more weeks than expected to write it. Luckily, he let me slip my deadline twice until I finally got this together.