Interviewed by CNN on 28/09/2011 13:40, Sailfish told the world:
> My bloviated meandering follows what David Wilkinson graced us with on 
> 9/28/2011 5:35 AM:
>> It seems that Windows 8 will have an entirely new mode of operation 
>> called Metro (alongside the traditional desktop). Although primarily 
>> targeted to tablets using touch, Metro will also be available using 
>> mouse/keyboard on regular desktops and laptops.
>>
>> Metro apps are sand-boxed and are written in a new runtime called WinRT, 
>> using C++, C#, VB.NET or Javascript.
>>
>> The developer preview already has a plugin-free Metro version of IE 10, 
>> and they seem to be working on Live Mail also.
>>
>> So where does this leave SeaMonkey/FireFox/Thunderbird? Is Mozilla just 
>> going to concede the Metro experience to Microsoft?
>>
> Unless Microsoft seriously changes their Win8 design from what I've seen 
> on the Dev release, I predict they will be as successful with it as they 
> were with Kin/Win Phone 7/Vista.
> 
> I personally wouldn't worry about it until they produce something that 
> looks innovative and gives people a reason to consider it.
> 

I think that's the wrong attitude to take...

First, you have to take into account that the reason people rejected
Vista was not design -- most people had no serious problems with the
design. Even the annoying UAC prompts weren't the real problem. The
problem was the horrid performance in 2006-era machines -- I remember
seeing new computers sold with Vista and *512 Mb* of RAM, barely enough
to boot it (in ten or fifteen minutes, that is). Windows 7 is not
actually THAT much better resource-wise (it is a bit better, though),
but by 2009, the standard computer was powerful enough to deal with it
comfortably. The MS people are not that stupid; they will make sure this
time around that Windows 8 is able to run adequately on available
computers -- not that hard a task, considering that a dual-core, 4Gb RAM
is a reasonable assumption now, and a quad-core one might be it in one
year. And they are aiming for low-powered form-factors too, which should
keep the kernel guys from going too wild with resource consumption --
even if the "Windows 8 tablet" is a bust, this effort should keep the
desktop version from growing too fat.

Second, you may dislike it (and there's plenty to dislike), but Windows
still dominates on desktop and notebook computers, by a very large
margin. Computer makers are actually glad to see a new version of
Windows -- particularly one like 8, which features very big a piece of
hardware people don't have yet -- because it gives them something to
sell: "New computer! With Touchscreen and Windows 8!" So, unless there
is a very strong consumer resistance, they WILL bundle Windows 8 with
new computers by default.

So, by early 2013 there will be quite a lot of Windows 8 machines
around. How many, it's hard to say. But many. And not having anything to
offer to those people strikes me as a Very Bad Idea. Well, existing apps
should work fine in Classic mode -- but not offering anything for Metro
is likely to make the Mozilla stable of products look hopelessly dated.
Macs are moving to touchscreen interface too; eventually, someone will
add that to Linux. It's not just a Windows problem.

The better question to ask is, "How viable is to adapt
Firefox/Thunderbird/Seamonkey to Metro/Lion?" Perhaps starting from the
existing UIs, designed for point-and-click WIMP interfaces, is the wrong
approach. Oh, they will run fine in "Classic" mode, but the idea is
having a version for the touchscreen interface. The work being done in
the tablet version of Firefox might be illuminating -- it might be
easier to use the Fennec tablet UI as a starting point for Windows
Metro/Mac Lion than the existing WIMP UI.

-- 
MCBastos

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