Mozilla plans thank you surprise as Firefox growth continues

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The Mozilla group expects to run a thank-you ad in The New York Times by Christmas as new market share numbers showed continued progress against Microsoft.

The Mozilla Foundation, an open source group founded by Netscape Communications to develop its browser and spun off last year by AOL Time Warner, has been executing an unorthodox, volunteer marketing campaign. To mark last month's official launch of the Firefox browser, the group planned to take out a full-page New York Times ad thanking financial contributors.

That fundraising and marketing scheme inspired so many contributions that Mozilla volunteers ran into technical difficulties squeezing all their names onto a single ad. Now, with the unsolicited help of an Adobe Illustrator engineer, the group has surmounted those problems and submitted the ad to the Times for what volunteers expect will be a pre-Christmas run date.

"We're looking forward to getting this ad out so everyone can use it as an example of community marketing in action," said Mozilla volunteer Rob Davis, who is spearheading the ad effort. "It was nice to hear from the folks at Adobe and get the tweaks that made the process go faster."

Mozilla, which on Sunday marked its 10 millionth Firefox 1.0 download, has opted for a cheaper rate at the Times by giving the paper discretion to run the ad on any day in a two- to three-week window.

Mozilla promised both a surprise in the ad and a longer term goal of doubling the download number.

"Now it's done and we're pushing to get the ad out in the next few days, giving us just enough time to celebrate our 10 million download success before we make a move to double that number!" wrote a Mozilla volunteer on the group's Spread Firefox marketing Web site. "We'll let you know the day before the ad is set to run. You'll want to be sure to stake out a copy for yourself -- we've got a surprise for you!"

Firefox market share increases
While the group and its 10,000 donors wait to see their names in the paper, new numbers from Web site metrics firm WebSideStory indicate that Firefox's first month as a full Version 1.0 release boosted its market share by a point at the expense of Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser.

Firefox has won good reviews and a number of awards. But its biggest selling point up until now is that it isn't IE, whose reputation has suffered amid an ongoing series of security problems.

Firefox's "usage share" climbed from 3 percent to 4 percent since just before the launch of Version 1.0 in early November, according to San Diego-based WebSideStory, which sells Web site traffic monitoring software and services. Firefox appears to have taken that percentage point directly from IE, which slipped from 93 percent to 92 percent.

Another Web site metrics firm, Amsterdam, Netherlands-based OneStat.com, last month showed IE dipping below the 90 percent mark.

By WebSideStory's count, non-Firefox Netscape browsers accounted for 3 percent of the market, unchanged from the prior month, and other browsers -- which include the Opera browser and Apple's Safari browser -- accounted for 1 percent of usage.

On a daily basis, WebSideStory derives its global data from the travels of 30 million Internet users from more than 200 countries visiting more than 20,000 sites.

"Firefox's gains are clearly accelerating," Rand Schulman, WebSideStory’s chief marketing officer, said in a statement. "Much of it has to do with the release of Firefox's version 1.0 on 9 November, after several months of offering a preview version. Firefox's stated goal of gaining 10 percent of the market over the next year no longer seems unattainable."

Microsoft declined to comment directly on the new market share numbers, but acknowledged demand for competing browsers.

"While Internet Explorer is the choice of hundreds of millions because of the unique value it provides, we respect that some customers will choose an alternative," a Microsoft representative said in a statement. "We also know that choosing a browser is about more than a handful of features. Microsoft continues to make major investments in Internet Explorer."

In other Mozilla news, the group said it expected to mark the millionth download of its recently released Thunderbird email management software on Thursday.

Talkback

"Microsoft continues to make major investments in Internet Explorer"
No, it does not. In fact it does precisely the opposite and has stated so on this very news site.
Microsoft have discontinued development of IE as in the next version of windows codenamed longwait, sorry horn - longhorn the internet browser does not exist - all web browsing is 'done through the operating system'. I and the rest of the web design community dread to think what that means.

via Facebook 15 December, 2004 10:04
Reply

"While Internet Explorer is the choice of hundreds of millions because of the unique value it provides, we respect that some customers will choose an alternative," a Microsoft representative said in a statement. "We also know that choosing a browser is about more than a handful of features. Microsoft continues to make major investments in Internet Explorer."

What universe is this guy living in?

via Facebook 15 December, 2004 18:28
Reply

i really wish i could play the latest games on linux then bye to M$

usual corporate claptrap

via Facebook 16 December, 2004 09:16
Reply

http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp

According to these IE is under 72%

via Facebook 16 December, 2004 13:56
Reply

The Firefox rise is a double edged sword, one edge is about a browser that is more secure, the other is that for many, the American corporate gravy train has become hell bent on killing off competition in favour of it's own inferior products, and that's one step too far.

via Facebook 19 December, 2004 23:40
Reply

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