Mozilla Firefox 3.5 Released [Source: MozillaZine] Eric Shepherd: MindTouch 2009 progress report I’m still hoping that we’ll be able to upgrade next week; my goal is to have it done during Tuesday’s maintenance window. The next handful of days should determine whether or not that schedule will fly. MindTouch continues to assure me that they fully expect to release 9.02.2 by the end of this week.
Last time I blogged about this update, I listed a number of items that were of special interest, mentioning that many of them weren’t yet actually fixed. That’s changed; most of the stuff is now marked off as “fixed” in MindTouch’s database. This is very good news!
In addition, MindTouch has investigated the problem we’ve had with the editor’s user interface appearing in the wrong language (often in Czech or Polish for our English users, for example), and they believe this is a caching bug that is fixed in MindTouch 2009, so we should be in good shape there once the upgrade is done.
I continue to be very excited to get this upgrade out; I think the improvements will make a lot of MDC’s users very happy. Plus the cool new stuff we’ll be able to do building on top of the MindTouch application platform is going to be very fun to work on.
[Source: Planet Mozilla]Daniel Glazman: Taking micro-blogging to the next step #2 Let's say the project is divided in 5 parts. The first part is already done, the second is half-done. Stay tuned...
BTW, I just want to congrat again my former colleague Laurent Jouanneau for the SQLite-based XUL templates. I have just trashed roughly 120 lines of rather complex JS in favor of a rather simple SQLite-based template, and that way turned something potentially painful to maintain into something so automatic that there is nothing else to do. Wow. [Source: Planet Mozilla]QMO: Firefox 3.5 RC 1 Testday on Friday 5/29!! MozQA is holding a Testday for the rollout of Firefox 3.5 RC 1 which is as close to a release as possible! I don't need to remind everyone of how important this phase is, so we're going to need your awesome testing skills to make sure its as polished as possible. Our community representatives will be available through IRC Chat ( channel #testday on irc://irc.mozilla.org ), QMO forums as well as the dev-quality newsgroup to help with any of your questions/comments/suggestions.
For more information, check out the event page:
http://quality.mozilla.org/events/2009/may/29/firefox-35-rc-1-test-day
or join the facebook event:
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=84250567199&ref=nf
Hope to see you there,
aakashd [Source: Planet Mozilla]QMO Events: Firefox 3.5 RC 1 Test Day!!! Mozilla QA needs your help with Firefox 3.5 RC 1 Test Day!
Here's some of the ways you can help test:
[Source: Planet Mozilla]Mozilla Developer DevNews: about:mozilla - Design Challenge, Personas, Fennec, SUMO, Labs, Mobile, MozEdu, hybrid orgs, and more… In this issue…
New Labs Design Challenge!
The Mozilla Labs team has launched another Design Challenge. “In collaboration with IxDA and Johnny Holland, we once again invite designers, students and design-focused people from all around the world to develop new ideas and mockups for the future of the Web.” This Design Challenge is focusing on finding creative solutions to the question: “Reinventing Tabs in the Browser - How can we create, navigate and manage multiple web sites within the same browser instance?” Participating in the Design Challenge is easy: just create a mockup of your proposed solution (anything from a napkin drawing to a polished Photoshop masterpiece) and a short video explanation, upload those somewhere on the Web, then send an email with links to both to conceptseries@mozilla.com. For more information, see Pascal Finette’s original announcement on the Labs weblog.
Personas update released
Since the Personas project launched about six weeks ago, the team has been working with the community to improve the Personas user experience through three quick website releases and one extension update. Details about the changes can be found in Suneel Gupta’s post on the Labs weblog. “The Personas project will continue to evolve quickly with your ideas and feedback. If you have thoughts on how to make Personas better, please discuss and debate them in our discussion group or add a solution to our newly created support wiki.”
Fennec Alpha 1 for Windows Mobile
Fennec (aka: Firefox Mobile) Alpha 1 has been released for Windows Mobile 6 and is available for download by developers and testers. It’s important to note that this is an early developer release, and is not intended for regular use at this time. As with previous releases, Madhava Enros has created a video walk through of this release. For more information, including installation instructions and a list of known issues, see the release announcement.
SUMO: Part of Mozilla’s periscope
David Tenser, Mozilla’s SUMO project lead, has written an interesting article that talks about how SUMO is a vital tool in quickly spotting and dealing with emerging problems Firefox users are encountering. “The background of this story is the problem many Firefox users experienced with anti-virus program BitDefender a few weeks ago, where BitDefender would quarantine one of Firefox’s program files, treating it as a malicious trojan.” The team first became aware of the issue through SUMO’s Live Chat system, and the Release Rapid Response Team flew into action. In less than two hours, BitDefender released an update and the problem was solved. For the full story, see David’s weblog post.
Subscribe to the SUMO newsletter!
Chris Ilias writes, “The about:SUMO newsletter is coming! You can subscribe now. If you are not actively involved in SUMO, but are still interested in knowing what is going on in the SUMO world, this is a great way to keep in the know. Just use the online subscription form.”
New Labs discussion groups
The Labs team is constantly on the lookout for better ways to do things, better tools, and better infrastructure. Recently they realized that the project forum system wasn’t working as well as it could, so it has been replaced. With the new system, discussions can now be read via Web, RSS feeds and email, and responded to by email or on the Web. The hope is that this will make it easier for everyone to participate in and become part of the Labs community. A full list of the Labs discussion groups and RSS feeds is available on the Mozilla Labs website.
Mobiletesters mailing list
The Mobile team has set up a new mailing list to help coordinate and discuss Fennec testing. “In the mobile environment, there are several different operating systems, hundreds of different devices, and thousands of cellular networks across the globe. The only way we can begin to test these complicated real-world scenarios is with your help. We need you to check out our milestone releases, run them on your devices, and let us know what is working and what isn’t.” You can sign up for the Mobiletesters mailing list to stay informed about ways you can help test Fennec for the upcoming 1.0 launch. This is a great way to get involved in the future of the mobile web.
Growing the MozEdu community
Growing the community of people working on education in a Mozilla context is one of the primary goals of the Mozilla Education project. “Many of the lessons Mozilla has learned building world-class software products can be applied to how we enable and support those in education: be open, be collaborative, share in community, leverage the open web. Another lesson we’ve learned from Mozilla is that people contribute in different ways, and there is no one size fits all approach. The same is true for Mozilla and education.” David Humphrey writes about various ways the project is working to build the Mozilla Education community, discussing a number of things that we can each do to get involved and help with the project.
On hybrid organizations
Mark Surman, Frank Hecker, and David Humphrey have all been thinking about and posting about “hybrid organizations” lately. Mark started the ball rolling with his “What is a hybrid organization?” post, followed by “Hybrid orgs. What’s old? What’s new?” and “Why do hybrid orgs matter?“. Frank and David followed these with “Hybrid organizations and maximizing public benefit” and “Mozilla, Education…Hybrid“. If you’re at all interested in this sort of “meta discussion” about the Mozilla Project, these posts are a great way to get involved with this growing and ongoing conversation.
Personas: Art and the browser
Suneel Gupta has outlined a number of ideas the Personas team is looking at towards increasing the ratio of original art (vs. repurposed art) in the gallery, and providing the emerging community of Personas artists with better support and visibility. These “actionable concepts” include: adding a designer profile and dashboard, improving preview functionality, expanding the definition of a “popular” design, collaborating with other design communities, and working with other add-on authors. The Personas commuity has grown rapidly, and the gallery now contains over 5,000 designs from over 3,500 contributors. Get the full story from Suneel’s blog post.
Upcoming events
The Mozilla community is organizing an increasing number of events and meetups all the time, so we’re going to start including a list of these every week. If you have events you would like included here, send them along to: about-mozilla*at*mozilla.com.
* Wed, May 20 - Online - Firefox 3.5 launch workshop
* Thu, May 21 - Online - Test Dev Thursday
* Fri, May 22 - Online - New AMO site sneak peek and testing
* Tue, May 26 - Mountain View, CA - Add-ons Meetup
* May 30-31 - Copenhagen, Denmark - Mozilla Maemo Danish Weekend
* Fri, Jun 5 - Online - Website testing testday
* Wed, Jun 24 - Mountain View, CA - Testing Mozilla web properties
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 or announcements 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. [Source: Planet Mozilla]Doug Warner: New Site and Domain - No Long silfreed While I've owned (and will continue to own) silfreed.net for about 9 years now, I think it's time I reasses my online personality.
"silfreed" will probably be a part of me for a long time, but more and more in online and open source circles I'd like people to know who I really am, not some pseudonym. This will make it easier to communicate with people and make connections.
So, as of today, I'm beginning my migration away from silfreed.net. I'll probably the old domain for a long time, but I'm looking forward to the new personality I can offer from the new one.
As usual with these things, please let me know if you know anything broken. [Source: Planet Mozilla]Delphine: Women and Mozilla! Since I arrived in Mozilla last year, it has been impossible not to notice that women's presence is almost non-existent among the community, the employees, and in Mozilla and Free Software events. So I started wondering about this, and did a bit of research on women's implication in the FLOSS world.
The numbers I found astounded me: only 2% of women work in FLOSS communities, against more than 25% in proprietary software. In the development field, numbers are even lower: the percentage of Open Source women developers falls down to almost 1% (European Commission FLOSSPOL 2002-2005)
From that point on, I started wondering: Why? What are the reasons for this? And should Mozilla do anything about it?
I thought all these questions over, and made some more research. That's when I realized that many FLOSS projects already had women's groups: Ubuntu Women, PHP Women, GNOME Women, DrupalChix, and many others.
So I took the opportunity at the Paris Ubuntu party to give a conference about this. I wanted to engage a discussion with the audience, in order to gather their ideas and points of view about women's involvement and visibility in Mozilla as well as in other FLOSS projects.
Here is a summary of what I talked about:
Women's implication and visibility in Mozilla and FLOSS
Some numbers
* Only 2% women in FLOSS communities vs. 25% in proprietary software
* Slight increase in number of women since 2000, but too slow to be really noticeable yet
Famous examples of women in FLOSS
* Mitchell Baker (Mozilla Foundation and Mozilla Corporation, and who recently won this year's "Women of Vision Awards" delivered by the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology)
* Satoko Takita (Chair of the Board of Directors, Mozilla Japan)
* Women's groups: Ubuntu Women, DrupalChix, PHP Women, etc.
What about Mozilla? * There is no "Mozilla Women's Group" * Idea = instead of creating another women's group and dividing things up even more, maybe we should create a meeting point where women / men / existing women's group / anyone interested by project can join. This could be a mailing list, forum, blog, IRC channel ...
* More women also means more potential contribution in FLOSS communities and in Mozilla
Reasons why women don't participate as much in FLOSS
* Seems very technical on first approach, even if things have evolved a lot in last couple of years * Discrimination (sexist jokes, repeated flirting, stereotyped approach of their computer-skills)
Hey, just as an explicit example: check out what happens if you search for "girls linux" in Google (same thing happens in French, in case you're wondering), or again if you mistype LinuxChix (linuxchicks, I'll remember that one! ...)
However, when you type "girls mac/macintosh", "girls windows" or "girls maths", the first 10 answers aren't links with naked girls (and ridiculous fake Tux tattoos added with GIMP or Photoshop) ... I'm wondering if this doesn't reflect something ... * Communities are mainly composed of men. Therefore, women tend to approach them less naturally
Why a "women's project"?
* Online and software society is a product of its participants * If there are too many men : this (consciously or not) finally reflects in product. And product probably won't attract women * In order for the Web and computing to become even more open, and more representative of the entire population
Questions to the audience
* How can we incite more women to participate in FLOSS projects?
* What keeps you (women) from participating?
* How can we help women integrate an overly masculine field?
* In your opinion, is there something missing, and that could explain such a low feminine participation?
The audience gave great feedback, and a few people gave their opinion on all these questions.
Reactions ranged from one extreme to the other: from the ultra-feminist position, to the "we shouldn't do anything, I don't think there's even a problem" one. I must say that I feel in between the two: something should be done, but I don't think we should start a "women's only group". It would be great if it could stay something open in all senses. Women's group already exist, why start yet another one that might end up dividing us even more?
When I hear things like "*All* the girls I know just want their computers to turn on when they press the power button -and that's it. There's no need for a women's project in computing", that just proves to me that something should be done.
So if you think the same -or not!- please feel free to leave your comments and feedback here. I'm really curious to know what you think, in order to create a project that will make as much sense as possible.
Some pictures of the conference at the Paris Ubuntu party:

Picture taken by Maurice Svay

Picture taken by Maurice Svay [Source: Planet Mozilla]David Boswell: Meditating On The Future Of The Mozilla Store I’ve been spending some time helping with the Mozilla Store. It has been rewarding to work on making a wider range of community items available, but I’ve noticed that there are some issues with the store that go beyond adding one new shirt or other item.
 Clint, Nicole and David thinking deep thoughts about the store. Photo by David Rolnitzky
I’m interested in getting feedback about what we could be doing to make the store better and to find out what people like or don’t like about the current store. If you have thoughts, please comment (be honest—we know there’s room for improvement).
There are concrete things we can do to make the existing store better but it is worth thinking about some blue sky options too. For example, can we look at the vibrant community around Threadless and learn lessons that could build on how we’re engaging people on the Mozilla Community Store?
Note: Although I’m referring to the Mozilla store, there are three stores—one in the United States, one in the UK and a community store that features art posted by community members. One thing we could do to improve things is to clarify the roles of these different stores and make them feel more connected.
 [Source: Planet Mozilla]matthew zeier (mrz): How can IT reduce Firefox adoption/retention barriers? (Part II) Nearly a month and a half ago I posted my first post on trying to figure out how IT can reduce adoption/retention barriers.
Over the past month we’ve worked out a different path than I originally thought we’d take. Instead of targeting the Uninstall survey, I’ve been focusing my energies on point to explore #2:
2. How easily and quickly it is to get Firefox support using support.mozilla.com (is it too slow to be useful?)
I’ve been working closely with with David Tenser, Ken Kovash, and Seth Bindernagel (and all the l10n folks) to add a Kamplye survey to support.mozilla.com (SUMO). IT’s going to tag along with some survey questions David wanted to do. We hope to have something in place for June 1 (bug 489685).
I decided to target two major geographic regions (South America & Asia-Pacific) and have gotten help from our l10n community in translating the survey. You can follow our progress in bug 493096.
I’m including a sample mock-up below. I’m interested in any feedback you might have.
 [Source: Planet Mozilla]Dan Mosedale: Thunderbird 3 beta 4 added As discussed at a few recent meetings, we're adding a fourth beta to the Thunderbird 3 cycle. This will give us more baking time after GloDa search lands, and it will allow us to sand off some rough edges on various new features. We'll draw up a schedule for the rest of beta 3 and the subsequent work shortly after bug 474701 lands.... [Source: Planet Mozilla] Grey Hodge: Why APNG? APNG is a good thing. Some people think it’s not, that it’s just Mozilla carving its own course. It’s not Mozilla just being difficult, it’s that MNG missed the mark by a mile. Don’t believe me? Turns out other companies have encountered similar situations, as Raymond Chen explains why it’s ok to reimplement a subset of functions as a simple solution to a simple problem. [Source: Planet Mozilla]Meeting Notes from the Mozilla community: Places Meeting Minutes: 2009-05-18
Places/Status Meetings/2009-05-18
From MozillaWiki
« previous week | index | next week »
Places Team Meeting Details
- Mondays at 9:00am Pacific
- irc.mozilla.org #places
- Blockers (5, +4, http://tinyurl.com/dgbhmn)
- bug 489038 - Selecting and/or deleting tags in the Library causes Firefox 3.5b4pre to hog the CPU and become unresponsive (dietrich), has various patches to increase Library responsivness.
- bug 493538 - Crash in [@ nsNavHistory::RecalculateFrecenciesInternal(mozIStorageStatement*, int)] (mak), found cause, patches on the way, needs review edilee
- bug 490035 - “Script is busy” warning from places flush script on initial migration (mak), has patch for batch migration (make it really faster). Interrupt the thread work to allow UI updating could be hard though, helpwanted.
- bug 491719 - Ctrl+H and Ctrl+Maj+H both display an empty history (ddahl), ready to land
- bug 491520 - Tag autocomplete prevents changing the case of tags, when adding tags (mak), has new patch needs review/hints from gavin
- Blockers Nominations (1, +1, http://tinyurl.com/qdglq2)
- Needs branch landing (1, +1, http://tinyurl.com/c4droh)
- Wanted (33, -1, http://tinyurl.com/cg78qy)
- Possible Wontfix (45, -1, http://tinyurl.com/ajqgm7)
- Places bugs on m-c but not yet on 1.9.1 (39, +8, http://tinyurl.com/oxno27)
- Waiting for approval1.9.1 (9, +5, http://tinyurl.com/qbxnjy)
- Requiring tests (in-testsuite?) (83, +1, http://tinyurl.com/d3eqav)
- Tracy
- will get on track with verifying fixes as they land (next nightly)
- focus will remain on 1.9.1 branch ’til final release.
- sdwilsh
- bug 455555 - async location bar queries (just got more complicated [READ: threadsafety issues with stuff we use]. ETA unknown, but will update dependency tree)
- mak
- working on blockers (see above for status)
- done reviews
- bug 483980 - Allow history/bookmark observer components to register with a startup category. Looking into this, fixed leaks and a possible Places bug.
- bug 493538 - Crash in [@ nsNavHistory::RecalculateFrecenciesInternal(mozIStorageStatement*, int)]. Most likely blocker.
- bug 392193 - first run migration / import from ie, opera and safari browser can be slow, migration should use “run in batch”. Landed with awesome numbers.
- bug 488966 - Add a last_visit_date column with an index to moz_places. Need to prepare unbitrot patch for 1.9.1.
- adw
- bookmarks initialization is not fault tolerant bug 478912 - Posted another new WIP with a new approach. Next: tests.
- clear recent history/privacy blockers
- CRH deletes places, not visits bug 491883 awaiting Johnathan’s review. Patches are really simple.
- Places toolkit bug 491983 (removeVisitsByTimeframe) landed on trunk. Awaiting Dietrich’s review of 1.9.1 patch.
- selected option in privacy pref pane not sticky blocker bug 490199 - Landed on trunk and branch. (Follow-up bug 493527 nominated for blocking3.5…)
- clear recent history dialog polish - requesting review or approval1.9.1
- ddahl
- bug 491719 blocker - French Localization uncovered SQL binding issue: Patch up, needs tiny tweak, one final test where I alter the build’s locale file. Then check-in. Branch patch will differ by one colon char (i think)
- bug 492379 Good start on downgrade script for nightly users. I hope to be back on this (and finish) tomorrow.
- MDC
- the migration guide needs history api and dynamic container examples. (dietrich)
- the design documents linked from MDC need to be written. can probably cull from the old design overview docs.
- Documentation non-existent:
- dynamic containers (MaK77)
- will do as soon as they are working properly
- Needs porting from WMO to MDC:
- A Places (or non-Places-specific that we use for Places…) dashboard that shows live changes, bugzilla queries, graphs would be nice to have
- bug 489173 Issue with size of places.sqlite and Google Toolbar
[Source: Planet Mozilla]Meeting Notes from the Mozilla community: Mozilla Project Meeting Minutes: 2009-05-18
WeeklyUpdates/2009-05-18
From MozillaWiki
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Suneel Gupta writes in, “I’d like to nominate Toby Elliott and Donna Macomber (a personas community member) for their hard work in diligently filtering through submitted designs to the approval gallery and approving those that meet the community guidelines. thanks to Toby and Donna, Mozilla has welcomed over 10,000 pieces of art to the Personas gallery and over 7,000 new artists to the Mozilla community.”
Cheng Wang writes in to nominate “Laura Thompson, Stephen Donner, Trevor Hardcastle, and Eric Cooper for staying up past 3:30 (at least for Laura) working on pushing SUMO 1.0.2 to production. I know they didn’t get all the kinks ironed out but staying up ’till then and then dragging yourself into work the next day is MAD PROPS worthy if I’ve ever seen it.”
- RC freeze this week. We’re planning for Wed of this week as the freeze date, and will be discussing actual date during tomorrow’s dev meeting.
- Julian Seward, creator of Valgrind and bzip2 joins the Javascript team today. From his home in Stuttgart, Germany, he’ll be working on nanojit and making the tracing engine even faster.
- Blocker Status:
- 5 final blocker bugs left in content.
- 1 GFX final blockers.
- 2 Layout final blockers.
- JS with 13 blockers, 4 w/ patch. (Last week: 18)
- 35 noms needing triage.
- For weekly engineering meeting notes and other info see the Platform page.
- 33 total 1.9.1 blockers (last week: 57!).
Firefox Front End Work
Namoroka
- Thunderbird 3.0b3 schedule is still up in the air; we hope to nail it down shortly, after bug 474701 lands.
- We’ll be adding a beta 4 release after beta 3. The hope is that beta 4 will be significantly shorter than previous betas.
- Lots of infrastructure work
- major iSCSI storage firmware upgrades
- kernel upgrades
- crash-stats.mozilla.com database migration
- Datacenter clean-up trip
- Lukas starting tomorrow (canadian holiday today)
- production-master hiccup this morning; nightlies coming, still trying to figure out what happened
- wait times
- creating more build/unittest slaves this week, now that machines and new disks are coming online
- needed because expecting a spike in load before FF3.5rc1
Test Execution
Web Dev Testing, Metrics, Accessibility, Localization, Community
- Top Site Testing: Filed a number of new crasher bugs
- Web Dev Testing:
- Continued working on AMO version 5.0.6. Tested the new 0.4 version of the Add-ons Collections extension, in tandem with the Collections-management web scaffolding. Worked on automating testing of the different button states in AMO.
- Completed final SUMO version 1.0.2 testing and shipped!
- Helped test Get Personas version 1.3.
- Worked on Spread Firefox redesign 3.1 milestone testing.
- Worked on Mozilla.com Fastest Firefox upload page.
- Community:
- Accessibility:
- Trunk work on ARIA grid/ARIA tree grid implementation
- Firefox 3.5 work for HTML 5 audio/video element embedded controls exposure to screen readers such as NVDA landed on Friday and have all “survived” the weekend!
- Visited the SightCity conference in Frankfurt, Germany, on Thursday. Lots of low-tech stuff there this year. Nothing spectacularly new on the screen reader front. Handy Tech, a German braille display manufacturer, did show an iMac with VoiceOver and all kinds of Mac OS X applications. Unfortunately, they couldn’t show Firefox yet :(
- Did some initial testing of the new German Firefox community forum, which was just upgraded to phpBB version 3 and is going to receive both an accessibility upgrade of stuff that’s going to be in the phpBB 3.0.5 forum software update, as well as an Accessibility-related forum offering support to both screen reader users with Firefox, as well as web designers a place to ask questions about how certain things will be translated from HTML to a11y APIs.
- Project Metrics: Added/updated: Regressions time plot, code coverage “bubbles” timeplot, code coverage “bars” time plot. This is work in progress and primarily for finding ways to best visualize the data.
Test Development
No updates.
Firefox 3.5 Launch
- Firefox 3.5 Launch Workshops:
- May 20th:
- 9 a.m. PDT/16:00 UTC - Video
Mozilla Service Week
- New timing! We’ll soft launch on June 16th with the en-US site and build out the program and partners over the course of the summer. The actual service week will take place in mid-Sept.
Community Marketing Call
- Next Community Marketing call is Wednesday, May 20th, at 10am PDT. Dial-in Info: +1.650.903.0800, followed by 92# and then 7391#. Or you can use our toll-free number: +1.800.707.2533, followed by 369# and then 7391#. For those that can’t make the call or want to participate online, join us in #marketing on irc.mozilla.org. Please note the new the new Air Mozilla channel for all marketing-related activities.
PR
Events
- Mozilla Party JP 10th Anniversary, May 30th, Tokyo, Japan: The Japanese Mozilla community, Mozillagumi, is celebrating it’s 10th anniversary this May 30th in Tokyo at Belle Salle Nishi Shinjuku. Guest speakers include Asa Dotzler from Mozilla and Bob Chao from Mozilla’s Taiwan community.
- The 2009 MSC Malaysia Open Source Conference, May 31 - June 4, 2009, Kuala Lumpur: Gen Kanai of Mozilla’s Evangelism team will be on a panel discussion on breakthrough innovations via open source software. Gen will also present on the upcoming Firefox 3.5 release as well as other Mozilla efforts.
- eLiberatica Open Source and Free Software Conference (Bucharest, Romania) - May 22-23:
- Gandalf and William to present
- Special “Mozilla Community Booth” will be set up for presentations and contributor sign-ups
- Full details here
- Mozilla-Maemo Danish Weekend (Copenhagen, Denmark) - May 30-31:
- 2-day workshops focusing on Mozilla, Maemo and Mozilla-Maemo projects
- Details
- We’re now using the new Sphinx search engine on SUMO!
- Working on the upcoming about:SUMO newsletter
- Currently surveying Live Chat and Forum contributors to get a better understanding of what’s working well and what needs improvements to make helping users on SUMO easier and more fun
- Documentation
- Mouse gesture events are now documented.
- Continuing to prepare to upgrade to MindTouch 2009, hopefully next week.
- Added a new template,
embed_text that lets you embed a text file attached to the article into the body, with optional syntax highlighting. This can be used to let the same code appear in the body and be downloadable without having to maintain both separately.
- As usual, final updates for Firefox 3.5 are ongoing.
- 35 days - going to sort out dates this week - expect mail from me
No update
Firefox 3.5
- Opt-in thread now open, please opt-in by Wednesday, May 20th, noon UTC.
- 43 green locales so far, and counting
- 9 opt-ins so far. Localizers: please opt in.
- 9 new strings to translate since beta4
- 6 strings landed after beta4
- 1 more string to translate mass-landed by Stas on Thursday, May 14 in
toolkit/chrome/global/videocontrols.dtd: <!ENTITY scrubberScale.nameFormat "#1 of #2 elapsed">
- 2 strings landed on Friday, May 15 in
browser/locales/en-US/chrome/browser/browser.properties (diff, newsgroups message)
Web
- Mozilla IT survey: bug 493096
- Mozilla’s IT team is investigating the need for a data center in South America and in Asia-Pacific.
- Locales:
pt-BR (done), es-CL, es-AR, ms, ta-IN, ta-LK, th, jp, hi-IN, id
Tools
Please join me in welcoming 2 new interns who just started today:
- Simon Krueger will be working in the Metrics group
- Mark Hahnenberg will be joining the Web Dev team
- Moving Weekly Update meeting to 11 AM Pacific?
- Please add your thoughts to the news group: mozilla.dev.planning “Moving WeeklyUpdate meeting to 11 AM Pacific?” or the respective google group
[Source: Planet Mozilla]Melissa Shapiro: A year in the life... Updating some Mozilla slides from just about a year ago.
Last year, Firefox had 175+ million users. This year, Firefox has 270+ million users.
Last year, Firefox was in 45+ languages. This year, it's 70+.
Last year, there were 500 million downloads. This year, we're upwards of 800 million.
The momentum is truly astounding. It's easy to get in the flow of things and focus on what's ahead but it's really amazing to peak back every so often. :) [Source: Planet Mozilla]
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