I'm Aza Raskin @azaaza. I make shiny things. I simplify.

I am the cofounder of Massive Health.

 

Will Chrome Kill Innovation?

A reporter recently asked me the following questions: “Many people think that Google Chrome could kill the innovation into the browser field. Does it mean game over? How is the internet user experience is going to change? Will there will be another browser war?”

As I get asked questions like this frequently, here’s my answer:

Mozilla’s mission—to ensue that the Internet is a global public resource that remains open and accessible—is enhanced by the release of Google Chrome. The more smart people are thinking about how to improve the open Web, the more innovation we’ll see. Expect the speed at which the web is improved to accelerate dramatically, not die away.

Competition is a cross-pollinator for ideas. In 2007, Mozilla Labs launched Prism, which lets users split web applications out of their browser and run them directly on their desktop. This feature made it’s way to Chrome and is slated for Safari 4. Chrome made significant advances in Javascript performance with V8, which will be leaped frogged in Firefox 3.1 by Tracemonkey. Competition is fundamentally good for the Web and for its users.

The next couple years will be a fruitful time for cross-the-board improvements. A couple things that the community has got brewing in Labs:

Weave

For the Touch Generation that’s never lived without the internet, having a continuity across all devices is key. You should be able to look at restaurant reviews on your computer, head out the door while continuing to make a reservation on your phone, and have your car automatically have that entered in your GPS. That’s the kind of experience that the Lab’s project Weave enables. Expect to see some exciting news on this front for Fennec 1.0 (i.e., Firefox Mobile).

Ubiquity

As the browser becomes smarter, it will be able to connect the Web with language. Ubiquity is an experiment in finding new user interfaces that could make it possible for everyone to do common Web tasks more quickly and easily. The web will move to empower users to being controlled naturally: With search, users type what they want to find. With Ubiquity, they type what they want to do.

When the browser understands who your friends are, and what your preferences are (all, of course, without having to tell your browser explicitly), all of the tedious parts of getting to information go away. What’s left is the core of the activity. You’ll be able to say things like “get me a flight on Thursday to Toronto, returning next Tuesday and email the itinerary to the Toronto office” and the browser will be able to present you with options, sorted by personalized metrics based on previous trips.

Ubiquity is an early prototype, but already people understand where it’s going and why connected the web with language is so powerful. We’ve had over a thousand commands written in a few short days — commands that fundamentally enhance the browser and the browsing experience. Imagine what’s possible when it becomes possible for millions of people to innovate on the browser level.

That level of innovation in community is unique to Mozilla.

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A reporter recently asked me the following questions: “Many people think that Google Chrome could kill the innovation into the browser field.

Did the reporter say which idiots think that?



Aza Raskin

@Paul: Hehe. Nope.



franco

“Ubiquity is an experiment in finding new user interfaces that could make it possible for everyone to do common Web tasks more quickly and easily.”

could i suggest an experiment about trying to fix +2 years old bugs? for example, firefox print selection? i’m getting blank pages more often than i would liked


@ franco: You certainly can — although that’s not the role of Labs. I suggest hoping onto Bugzilla and making your case there, or otherwise getting involved in the community!


“Did the reporter say which idiots think that?”

Haha, my thought exactly.



Dan

lol, that’s a pretty odd question.
“A new browser has just been released which has many innovative features – therefore innovation is dead” wtf?


Aza: Enjoyed your thoghtful post as always. My head spun a little at the last line implying Mozilla alone in innovation intensity in the space. Unsure if slams other contenders, misses upstarts, or you wish to recharacterize. Cheers, Bob



Janak Porwal

Just to illustrate that innovations will keep continuing and actually accelerate: a toolbar that lets you remember your web history cross platform, across all browsers/computers – Infoaxe – http://www.infoaxe.com



franco

@aza

“You certainly can — although that’s not the role of Labs. ”

mmm… i think that this issue is more pervasive that you think. It *will* affect you and Labs, because people *first* wan’t their basic work done.. and after that he will turn attention to “new user interfaces that could make it possible for everyone to do common Web tasks more quickly and easily:

if an user can’t do a basic thing like printing a web page ( for god sake! ) , you will lost many “followers” and potential users of Labs technologies.

“I suggest hoping onto Bugzilla and making your case there, or otherwise getting involved in the community!”

the case has been made in Bugzilla, there are lot of bugs related to printing ( just to a search at bugzilla )… not solved and veeeery old; this is a leadership problem. IMHO, someone at Mozilla ( with proper influence ) should stress the need to organize priorities.

An example: Chrome implemented “incognito mode” and now Firefox will copy this behaviour. We are losing the train in *obvious* improvements and putting effort in not valuable ones ( for example CTRL-TAB tab preview, due to next Firefox version ). We are becoming reactive and not proactive. The same goes to “one process per tab” feature; Mozilla should begin to plan how to re-engineer Firefox code base to achieve this ( firefox is behind IE8 and Chrome in this ).

Another killer feature that (if not implemented) could leave Firefox always as a second citizen in corporate environments: integration with windows policies or something like that, to make massive customizations an easy task to administrators ( this is *obvious*!!! ).

Another one: parental control ( *obvious*, like incognito mode… )

“otherwise getting involved in the community!”

i’m part of the community, since 2004!!! anyway thank you for your suggestion and keep the good work

P.S: don’t get me wrong, i’m making constructive criticism and my point is that anyone interested in Firefox future should “fight” to prioritize fundamental bugs fixing and *killer* features.


thnks
goooooooooooood
min:)


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