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Mozilla, the group that oversees scores of volunteer programmers collaborating on the free Firefox Web browser, hopes to attract more visionaries to help change the way people surf the Internet, a newspaper report said on Tuesday. (File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 5 (Xinhua) -- Mozilla, the group
that oversees scores of volunteer programmers collaborating on the free Firefox
Web browser, hopes to attract more visionaries to help change the way people
surf the Internet, a newspaper report said on Tuesday.
This week, the group's research
arm, Mozilla Labs, is calling for developers, designers and artists across the
globe to ponder the future of the browser and submit their creative ideas,
according to the San Francisco Chronicle.
"We just touched the surface of the potential on the
Web," Chris Beard, vice president of Mozilla Labs, was quoted as saying."Now we
need to turn up the volume and to get more people involved, explore what the
future could look like and inspire us to do it."
As part of the project, Mozilla Labs has teamed up
with San Francisco-based Adaptive Path -- the designers behind MySpace's
face-lift -- which created a series of concept videos that showcase the
potential browser of the future, the paper said.
In one of the videos, for example, users can push,
grab and lift all the objects in the browser, and surfing the Web feels more
like moving through a 3-D space, with Web pages semantically organized in
clusters. Users can also interact with each other on the Web page, easily
sharing data through the browser or a mobile device, according to the paper.
"We are trying to make people's interaction with the
technology more natural and more physical," said Jesse James Garrett, co-founder
and president of Adaptive Path. "Some of these things are right around the
corner, and some will take another 10 years to unfold."
Mozilla, in Northern California, hopes the project
also attracts other creative types.
"Traditionally, you would have to submit code, but
now you can just bring an idea, even a sketch on a piece of paper," Beard said.
Created in 2003 with startup money from America
Online's Netscape division, the group gained visibility when its free Firefox
browser emerged as a challenger to Microsoft's Internet Explorer.
In the past three years, Firefox's market share of
Internet users has grown more than 11 percent. In July, Firefox accounted for
19.2 percent of the market, compared with 73 percent for Microsoft, according to
Net Applications, an online measurement company.
Earlier this year, Mozilla set the Guinness World
Record for the most software downloads, with more than 8 million people
downloading Firefox 3 in one day.