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Introducing Raindrop Learn more about our open experiment in messaging on the web. Design Philosophy An overview of our philosophy in designing a product for today’s messaging habits. Guiding Principles Our core beliefs that form the backbone of the raindrop development project. Raindrop is a new exploration by the team responsible for Thunderbird to explore new ways to use open Web technologies t
Today we’re introducing Raindrop, an exploration in messaging innovation being led by the team responsible for Thunderbird, to explore new ways to use Open Web technologies to create useful, compelling messaging experiences. We hope to lead and spur the development of extensible applications that help users easily and enjoyably manage their conversations, notifications, and messages across a varie
Weave Sync is a prototype that encrypts and securely synchronizes the Firefox experience across multiple browsers, so that your desktop, laptop and mobile phone can all work together. It is part of the Weave project, which aims to integrate services more closely with the browser. Major Features What is Weave Sync all about? In short, Weave Sync lets you securely take your Firefox experience with y
An experiment into connecting the Web with language. It Doesn’t Have to be This Way You’re writing an email to invite a friend to meet at a local San Francisco restaurant that neither of you has been to. You’d like to include a map. Today, this involves the disjointed tasks of message composition on a web-mail service, mapping the address on a map site, searching for reviews on the restaurant on
Get it now!Download Ubiquity Experimental beta version! Firefox Add-on for Windows, Mac, Linux Ubiquity is a time-saving Firefox extension that simplifies common web activities by letting you give commands to Firefox. Ubiquity includes about 80 commands for speeding up common web activities (searching, translating, mapping, emailing, etc.), but also provides an API so you can write your own comman
Mozilla Weave enables you to have incredibly rich, personalized experiences across the web. As the Web continues to evolve and more of our lives move online, we believe that Web browsers like Firefox can and should do more to broker rich experiences while increasing user control over their data and personal information. Weave is a Firefox add-on that is aimed at exploring this opportunity. Some of
We released the first prototype of the Open Web Tools Directory just over a week ago. The goal is to allow the community to track the landscape of tools. The landscape is large, and you have already stepped up to help flush it out. Within a couple of days we received about 200 additions to the tools database, and it continues to grow. In the current design, you can slice and dice the data based on
Jetpack is an experiment in using open Web technologies to enhance the browser, with the goal of allowing anyone who can build a Web site to participate in making the Web a better place to work, communicate and play. Aligned with Mozilla’s goal of enabling open video and audio on the Web, we are pleased to announce the release of Jetpack 0.4, which includes experimental support for recording audio
Today Mozilla Labs is happy to announce the release a major upgrade to Ubiquity. This release, Ubiquity 0.5, focuses on making the instructions you give to Ubiquity feel more natural and human, as well as bringing Ubiquity’s power to many more languages. This release brings: The first internationalized Ubiquity, where even non-coders can help bring Ubiquity to their language A more natural, human,
Today Mozilla Labs is releasing a preview of the next major version of Ubiquity. Ubiquity 0.5 brings a slew of new features like localization and more natural command names (along with the inevitable new bugs). Before we release Ubiquity 0.5 proper, we first need your feedback on the new features and your help with testing and finding bugs. Download the extension here. Works in Firefox 3.0 and 3.5
The labs team is happy to release Jetpack 0.2, which adds an experimental new UI element to Firefox as well as a number of useful APIs. In the short few weeks since launch, we’ve already seen an amazing amount of generativity. People have Jetpacks that do everything from extending the capabilities of the web to adding a Cylon to the browser; from taking snapshots of the current page to controlling
Exploring new ways to extend and personalize the Web. The add-ons community for Firefox is arguably one of the largest, most vibrant sources for innovation on the Web today. If you want to affect people, to reach them and make a difference in their daily lives, the Firefox add-ons platform is hard to beat, with over one billion installs of Firefox add-ons to date. However, we’ve only scratched the
Welcome to Mozilla Labs. The future is here. This is the space for our latest creations, innovations, and cutting-edge technologies for the greater good.
Eighteen months ago, we introduced an experimental project called Prism with the goal to “to bridge the divide in the user experience between web applications and desktop apps and to explore new usability models as the line between traditional desktop and new web applications continues to blur.” Today we are pleased to announce the release of the beta version of Prism 1.0. It’s the culmination of
The current state of identity on the Web is not so great. Much of the ongoing discussion and efforts around user identity on the Web focuses on tying identities to new or existing networks and using various protocols for federating it. User experience in general suffers as protocols for federation (e.g. OpenID) involve complex redirects which jump the user from page to page and leave them open to
As a user experience exploration, Ubiquity has been incredibly successful. Over a million downloads have highlighted the need for the web to be connected more tightly with by the power of task-based interfaces. Due to the passion of users, the user tutorial has been translated into ten languages. Similarly, the thousands of commands written for Ubiquity illustrate a latent desire to be able to wri
We’ve been iterating quickly over the last couple of weeks to define a potential new tab screen for Firefox. The feedback for the last major iteration was largely positive, and it seems like we are on the right track. But we ran into a paradox. We believe that the new tab screen should have two main functions: (A) To show you the sites you are most likely to be interested in going to, and (B) to n
They say Marc Andreessen, co-founder of Netscape and co-author of the Mosaic browser, once said: [An operating system] is just a bag of drivers. People have been fantasizing about the web as application platform for as long as we’ve had it. Nearly a decade later, we’re really just getting started at realizing this vision–of truly reproducing the power of traditional operating system APIs inside of
Since releasing an experimental new tab page for Firefox a week ago, we’ve got a lot of great feedback. For the past week we’ve been using the feedback as a springboard for designing the next iteration. If you’d like to watch the design iterations as they happen, follow #mozconcept on Twitter. Current Design We’ve done away with the thumbnails as they just didn’t seem to be providing large amounts
Every time you open a new tab, you are opening it to go somewhere. Sometimes it’s to do a search. Sometimes it’s to type in a new URL. Sometimes it’s to check an address you just selected. The only thing you are guaranteed to not want is a blank page. From the feedback from the last two rounds of new tab concepts, we know that the page needs to load instantly (even a small wait breaks user experie
Bespin is a Mozilla Labs experiment that proposes an open, extensible web-based framework for code editing that aims to increase developer productivity, enable compelling user experiences, and promote the use of open standards. View Introduction to Bespin The Initial Prototype As part of this announcement, we’re also releasing an early experimental prototype to demonstrate some of the concepts
As we strive to evolve the Open Web as a robust platform for application development, we believe in the potential for web-based code editors to increase developer productivity, enable compelling user experiences, and promote the use of open standards. Today we’re launching Bespin as a project within our Developer Tools Lab to focus on this exploration. Just as Mozilla enables massive innovation by
User Interface Personas Personas for Firefox is a extension that adds lightweight theming to your browser. It’s an experiment in personalizing. You can download it or read on for more information. Personas builds upon the ideas that: themes today are too hard to find, install and use graphic designers should be able to style the browser without having to code browsers can be more than just deskt
User Interface Ubiquity An experiment into connecting the Web with language. Motivation You’re writing an email to invite a friend to meet at a local San Francisco restaurant that neither of you has been to. You’d like to include a map. Today, this involves the disjointed tasks of message composition on a web-mail service, mapping the address on a map site, searching for reviews on the restauran
Welcome to the first issue of about:labs, a new weekly newsletter that showcases innovation across the Mozilla community. In the coming weeks we’ll adopt the same infrastructure as the popular about:mozilla newsletter. Concepts of the Week Here’s some ideas we’ve found that have sparked thoughts in our minds from the Concept Series and across the Web; we hope they inspire you, too. Please do join
Mozilla LabsGeode: Welcome Thansk for installing Geode, an experimental Firefox add-on to explore geolocation in Firefox ahead of its implementation in a future product release. Geode provides a rudimentary implementation of geolocation for the current version of Firefox uses a single hard-coded location provider to enable Wifi-based positioning conforming to the W3C Geolocation specification so
Always know where you are. You’ve arrived in a new city, a new continent, a new coffee shop. You don’t really know where you are, and are looking for a good place to eat. You pull out your laptop, fire up Firefox, and go to your favorite review site. It automatically deduces your location, and serves up some delicious suggestions a couple blocks away and plots directions there. In order for this t
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