The Future Of Firefox
Mozilla CEO talks about her vision for the future of Firefox

Behind the browser: Mitchell Baker, CEO of the Mozilla Foundation,
has taken Firefox from nothing to a $US55million per year business
Mozilla’s CEO, Mitchell Baker, has been making the press rounds lately to drum up support and interest in Firefox, the company’s popular open-source web browser. Firefox is currently at a kind of tipping point, with a market share edging over ten percent—just shy of breaking out and becoming a dominant force in the browser wars.
In this one-on-one interview with APCMag.com, she talks about where Firefox came from and where it’s going.
The interview is over 8,000 words long, the’ve broken it up into sections to make it easier to navigate.
- Part 1: How 12 people made Firefox 1.0
- Part 2: Where Firefox’s $US55million a year comes from
- Part 3: Putting Firefox on mobile phones
- Part 4: business cool on IE7, recontemplating Firefox?
- Part 5: Why no built-in ad-blocker in Firefox yet?
- Part 6: Firefox 3.0 “lock-in branding”—what gives!
- Part 7: Firefox to go head-to-head with Flash and Silverlight
- Part 8: The touchy relationship between Microsoft and Mozilla
- Part 9: Getting Firefox onto more desktops
- Part 10: Mozilla Japan’s cute Firefox cartoon character
- Part 11: The stoush over Linux distros and the Firefox trademark
- Part 12: Mozilla working on “Web 3.0”—web apps that will run in your browser without an internet connection




