Story URL: 
http://insight.zdnet.co.uk/software/applications/0,39020466,39208866,00.htm
Firefox: The alternative history
Ingrid Marson
ZDNet UK
July 19, 2005, 13:30 BST

Over the last year Firefox has taken the web by storm, stealing a
significant slice of the pie from Microsoft Internet Explorer (IE), and
grabbing more than 10 percent market share in some areas.

Web analytics firm OneStat.com reports Firefox quadrupling its market share
between May 2004 and April 2005, while IE's share dropped by more than 7
percentage points over the same period. Data from WebSideStory shows a more
moderate change, with Firefox doubling its user base in the US from June
2004 to April 2005, while the proportion of IE users fell by more than 6
percentage points.

Firefox appears to have grabbed even more market share in Europe, with 30
percent, 24 percent and 22 percent of Web surfers using Firefox in Finland,
Germany and Hungary respectively.

So, where has this new browser come from? It's public knowledge that the
Mozilla project originated when Netscape Communications decided to open
source its browser in 1998 but the intervening years up to the browser's
current success is less well known. And the project hasn't been without its
problems too, such as the challenge of handling a rapidly growing community
of contributors.

Asa Dotzler, the community co-ordinator at the Mozilla Foundation, was a key
player in organising the community around the open source browser, initially
as a volunteer and eventually as a paid employee of Netscape, and later the
Mozilla Foundation.

ZDNet UK recently made a trip out to the company's Mountain View, California
headquarters to quiz Dotzler about his role in thedevelopment of Firefox,
and how he and Blake Ross, the browser's creator, devised a community
marketing campaign that contributed to its growth.

January 1998: Netscape Communications announces plans to release the source
code of its browser to "harness the creative power of thousands of
programmers on the Internet".

March 1998: Netscape makes the source code for Communicator 5.0 available
for download from mozilla.org Web site.

Asa Dotzler started contributing to the Mozilla project early on. He had
developed an interest in open source software in 1995 while he was at Auburn
University in Alabama, where he was studying architecture and preservation.

"At university I had friends who were Linux fanatics, for example, the entry
system and the lights in their house were controlled from a laptop running
Linux. They kept telling me how great open source is. The idea of open
source fit in with my personal philosophy ‹ I liked the community side of
it," he says.

"A few years later I heard that Netscape was open sourcing its browser. I
wasn't a computer programmer, but wanted to find a way to get involved in
the project, so I started reading the Netscape news groups. Netscape 5 was
horribly broken, so I went to Bugzilla and reported some bugs. A developer
replied saying he needed more information. I left more information and a few
days later the bug was fixed," he continues.

As the number of people contributing to the Mozilla project increased,
Dotzler realised that developers were spending a lot of time communicating
with those filing bug reports, to find out more details about the problems
they had experienced. He began to help newbies with filing good bug reports,
to take some of the load off developers.

"Most people who were new to it weren't filing good bugs. I thought I could
help these people with filing the bugs. That spiralled and people started
saying, "If you want to get involved talk to Asa." I was soon spending 20 or
30 hours every week helping people."

At the time Dotzler was working for a market research company in Texas. His
wife, Deanna Pierce, worked different hours, so he would often work on the
Mozilla project in the evenings until she got home and on alternate
weekends, when she was at work.

After about half a year working as a Mozilla contributor, Dotzler realised
that there were so many new contributors to the project that he needed more
help teaching people how to file bug reports. "I started holding weekly
events on IRC ‹ Bug Days, where me and a group of deputies would help people
get involved," he says.

November 1998: AOL announces purchase of Netscape (completed in March 1999).

March 2000: Asa Dotzler wins an award "for his great work organizing Bug
Day, maintaining browser general bugs, and helping novice bug reporters
become experienced Bugzilla users," according to mozillaZine.

At the Mozilla award ceremony Dotzler set up a track for QA discussions,
where he and other contributors came up with a plan to handle the ever
increasing number of people filing bug reports. One of his main concerns was
that Netscape would find it too difficult to handle the volume of bug
reports and may decide to close source the browser.

"We discussed what we would do if Netscape got scared with high volume of
bug reports. We came up with plan ‹ if unknown and untrusted people filed
bug reports, the community would go through and triage these and pass them
onto the developers. We would form a front line to shield developers."

May 2000: Asa Dotzler starts work at Netscape.

After he got home from the Mozilla Award ceremony, Dotzler was offered a job
at Netscape by Mitchell Baker, the chief evangelist of the Mozilla.org
project at Netscape (now the president of the Mozilla Foundation). He
accepted this job and moved to California.

"I was paid by AOL, with responsibilities to the Mozilla project. The
management chain was a group of 10 people with Mitchell at the top. AOL let
us be, to do the open source thing."

Early on, Dotzler realised that working on the open source project within
AOL was unlikely to work out long term.

"There were conflicts and over time we realised that it wasn't going to be a
permanent solution to the open source project. We realised that we weren't
going to be the priority we needed to be, to achieve success," he says..

November 2000: Netscape 6 released, but criticised for containing too many
bugs.

June 2002: Mozilla 1.0 released. The all-in-one Internet application suite
included a Web browser, an email and newsgroup client, an IRC chat client,
and an HTML editor.

September 2002: Version 0.1 of the standalone Phoenix browser released.

May 2003: AOL agrees to offer Microsoft's Internet Explorer as its default
browser to subscribers of its proprietary online service for the next seven
years.

July 2003: AOL lays off 50 employees involved in Web browser development at
its Netscape subsidiary. The Mozilla Foundation starts, funded in a large
part by a $2m donation from AOL and $300,000 from Lotus founder Mitch Kapor.

When AOL started laying off people, Baker spoke to "friends in the industry"
to get support for an organisation that could carry on developing the open
source project, according to Dotzler.

The newly formed Mozilla Foundation decided to focus more on standalone
projects, such as the Firefox browser (then called Phoenix) and the
Thunderbird mail client (then called Minotaur), rather than on the Mozilla
Suite, which integrated all this functionality, Dotzler says. The decision
was taken to make it easier to maintain the project and create a browser
that appealed to IE users.

"By that point Phoenix was starting to get some buzz," he says. "We thought
the smart move might be to break it [Mozilla Suite] up as if we didn't have
the resources to maintain one of them, the whole thing would break."

"Also, by the time we time got to Mozilla 1.0, most of the audience had gone
‹ there were very few people still using [Netscape] Communicator. We had
taken on a lot of additional features ‹ it was a heavyweight suite of
applications and was weighed down by features such as the chat client. It
was difficult for users of other products like [Microsoft] Outlook or IE to
use."

Although within a few weeks, the browser was "twice as fast and half the
size", some people were unhappy that the Foundation was focussing its
attention on the standalone browser.

"In the early days there were a lot of people who thought this was a step
backwards. But Blake [Ross, the creator of Firefox] and I were saying we
need to make browser that doesn't target the current users ‹ the biggest
audience is IE users and they don't need an HTML authoring tool or an email
client. Lets just give them a better browser with pop-up blocking and tabbed
browsing," he says.

Some of the changes in the Firefox browser were minor, such as keyboard
shortcuts. For example, in IE the shortcut, Alt+D, is used to select the
address location bar, while the same feature required the shortcut, Ctrl+L,
in Firefox. Firefox developers changed this so both shortcut keys worked,
making the transition to Firefox easier for IE users.

"That little thing was a barrier to entry. Once we changed it IE users were
willing to play with it for a few days because it felt more comfortable,"
says Dotzler.

April 2003: Mozilla Foundation changes name of Phoenix browser to Firebird
due to trademark issues.

February 2004: Mozilla Foundation changes name of Firebird to Firefox, due
to a trademark dispute with another open source project.

September 2004: Firefox 1.0 PR is made available. Around the same time the
SpreadFirefox community marketing site launches, which helps the Mozilla
Foundation beat its 10-day goal of one million Firefox downloads.

Before the Firefox release Dotzler and Ross started thinking about how to
market the product. Initially, the main media coverage they got was through
blogs, but this soon spread to the technology press. They decided to try to
get the owners of blogs more involved in spreading Firefox.

"We spent one day looking at blogs and anyone who said something good about
Firefox was asked to put a [Firefox promotional] button on their blog. Out
of about 100 people, the overwhelming majority agreed. We thought, instead
of going to blogs, lets post a list of blogs and ask the community to read
them and if they're positive pass on the contact details [to us]. We then
wrote to the blog owners ‹ we thought it would sound better coming from the
project leadership.".

The success of this initiative led Ross and Dotzler to start SpreadFirefox
site, a community marketing portal that encourages and rewards people for
telling their friends, technical departments and schools about the open
source browser.

"We launched SpreadFirefox with preview release, with the challenge of a
million downloads in 10 days, we got a million in just over four days. In 30
days we had about 10 million downloads."

The SpreadFirefox community has grown considerably since the launch of the
Web site, with many users joining the affiliate programme ‹ where they can
add a Firefox button to their Web site or email signature and get points
every time someone clicks on the link, according to Dotzler.

"The community sprung from a couple of thousand people [in September 2004]
to 30,000 people by the time 1.0 was released. It's up to about 110,000
people now [June 2005]. A non-trivial percentage of these ‹ between a third
and a half ‹ are participating in the affiliate program."

October 2004: Mozilla Foundation calls on supporters to chip in to buy a
full page advert in the New York Times for the launch of Firefox 1.0 in
November. A quarter of a million dollars is raised in its 10-day ad
fundraising campaign, with donations from 10,000 individuals.

After the success of the Firefox preview release, Dotzler and Ross decided
they wanted to do something "even more ambitious" for the 1.0 release ‹ an
ad in the New York Times.

"The ad was not to go get Firefox, but was an ad celebrating Firefox. Our
gimmick was that if you contribute to this we'll put your name in the ad ‹
it would be celebrating our community of users," he says.

"We were both marketing the project and marketing ourselves. We were showing
what we could do, allowing us to compete with commercial organisations. Our
main competitor has no problem pumping 10 million dollars into a TV ad. We
wanted to show that grassroots marketing can be successful."

November 2004: Firefox 1.0 is released.

December 2004: New York Times  ad is printed.

Even though the New York Times ad ran later than expected, Dotzler does not
consider this a problem.

"Any community project is bound to have delays. Interestingly, some of the
press we had about delays resulted in the downloads going up ‹ people wanted
to find out what Firefox is," he said.

May 2005: IBM encourages its employees to use Firefox, by letting them
download it from the company's internal servers and getting support from the
company's helpdesk staff.

Dotzler was pleased with this news and says that it is likely to persuade
other companies to take the step. "It bodes well for other smaller
organisations to feel more confident about supporting Firefox," he says.

Dotzler says the first step that companies are likely to take when migrating
to Firefox is to offer users a choice of browsers, while they work to make
internal applications work on both IE and Firefox. Now Firefox has now
reached a significant market share, companies are more likely to make all
internal applications work on both Microsoft and more standards-compliant
browsers.

"I am confident that when companies embark on new systems, they will have a
dual browser strategy. When they have a virus that affects one browser, they
want to have two browsers. There is no doubt that people are working today
on planning the next generation of projects to be cross browser."



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