Ian Bicking has confirmed that Mozilla has quietly shut down Mozilla Labs.
This development raises some interesting questions about the future of Mozilla and their products:
With Firefox's usage declining, with Firefox on Android seeing limited uptake, with Firefox not being available on iOS, with Thunderbird stagnating, with SeaMonkey remaining as irrelevant as ever, with Firefox OS suffering from poor reviews and little adoption, and now with a reduction in innovation due to the closure of Mozilla Labs, does Mozilla have any hope of remaining relevant as time goes on?
Will Mozilla be able to reignite the spark that originally allowed them to create products like Firefox and Thunderbird that were, at one time, wildly popular and innovative?
Is Mozilla still capable of innovating without Mozilla Labs, or will they slowly fade into irrelevance as the last remaining users of their products move on to other offerings from competitors?
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 21 2014, @03:30AM
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 21 2014, @12:21PM
No, he does believe in such things. You are the one who does not.
Equality means that one can express pro-homosexual sentiment as freely and without repercussion as somebody can express anti-homosexual sentiment. Harming people who express anti-homosexual ideas by, say, taking away their jobs is blatant inequality. It's just as bad as forcing somebody from his or her job because he or she is homosexual.
It works the same way for freedom.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 21 2014, @04:46PM