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First Mobile Firefox enters home stretch


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First Mobile Firefox enters home stretch

Firefox for mobile phones, an important step in bringing the second most popular PC browser to an area where a rival project holds more influence.

Mozilla is wrapping up work on its first version of

"Our goal is to have a release candidate next week," said Jay Sullivan, Mozilla's vice president of mobile. "If things go smoothly, we'll have a (final) version out in the next few weeks," with the debut planned for this year, he added.

fennec_logo.jpg Mozilla has been a leader in advancing the Web state of the art. But when it comes to the mobile phones, where the power of a new generation of hardware has transformed browsers from primitive afterthoughts to useful tools, Firefox has been missing in action.

Instead, an open-source project called WebKit powers the browser on the higher-end mobile phones du jour--Apple's iPhone, the Palm Pre, and Motorola's Droid and other models running Google's Android operating system, with BlackBerry headed that direction, too.

In contrast, the first mobile Firefox version will run on Nokia's powerful but relatively obscure new N900, a $569 hybrid computer and mobile phone that uses Nokia's Linux-based Maemo operating system. A Windows Mobile version of Firefox is set to arrive next year, and Mozilla has begun working on an Android version now that Google released a native developer kit.

Firefox has one big thing going for it, though: it's a close relative of the PC-based browser that today is used by about a quarter of people on the Web.

The link extends beyond brand familiarity. For one thing, mobile Firefox is based on the same code as the present Firefox 3.6--also a beta version due to finished by the end of 2009. For another, through a Mozilla service and browser plug-in called Weave, mobile Firefox synchronizes bookmarks, passwords, and even open tabs with the desktop version of the browser.

In addition, Firefox for the N900 can run many Firefox extensions--AdBlock Plus among the 30 or so now available. Sullivan recommends updating their interfaces for the small devices, though.

Nokia partnership

Mozilla has been working closely with Nokia to develop Firefox on its N900 handset. It already ships with a lighter-weight browser that uses the same Gecko code base as Firefox, but the full Firefox mobile version--a project code-named Fennec--is more powerful.

"You want to put the desktop experience into a pocket-sized device," said Ari Jaaksi, vice president of Maemo devices. "What do people use on the desktop? Firefox."

However, Firefox won't ship with the device, at least initially. The company is open to the idea of including it in the next version of the operating system, due in the second half of 2010, Jaaksi said. Mozilla, meanwhile, is comfortable with the idea of people having to actively download the browser, the most common way Firefox has been distributed on PCs.

The N900 is available as an unlocked device through various retail channels, but Nokia doesn't yet have any partnerships in the United States with wireless service carriers who might help bring the N900 to a broader market. It's a relatively powerful device with a 600MHz processor and 3D graphics hardware--enough oomph to run Adobe Flash on Web pages today. Its price may seem high, but bear in mind that unlocked devices don't get a subsidy by carriers that expect to see their up-front payment returned over months of subscription payments.

nokia_n900.jpg Nokia's N900 will be the first device that runs the mobile version of Firefox.

So does Firefox require this level or horsepower?

"We need pretty high-end stuff to make the Web great," Sullivan said, but not so high-end that the N900 is the only handset to fit the bill. "Everything now on the mid- to high-end is fine."

WebKit has intercepted the newer generation of smartphones. Through the wonders of Moore's Law, new devices get steadily more processing power and memory. So aiming for today's top-end phones can mean software will work on tomorrow's mainstream models.

The N900 is at the top end of the range, but Firefox runs elsewhere, too. The Windows Mobile version of Fennec is in alpha testing now, lagging the Maemo version by about three or four months, Sullivan said. Mozilla plans to release it in final form in the first half of 2010, he said.

Firefox: like an operating system?

Mozilla has a lot of plans for mobile Firefox that, to some extent, put it in opposition with Nokia. The N900 is aimed in part at programmers who want to low-level control over a device through its Linux operating system. But Firefox--like Google's Chrome--is assuming the role of a general-purpose foundation for running programs.

"We're almost an operating system," Sullivan said.

Several features support the direction. Built into Firefox now is geolocation, which lets a Web application tap into the phone's services to figure out where a user is and, for example, show a map of the nearest pizza shops. Also included is support for orientation detection, important for games, and offline data storage, important for a variety of programming needs.

There's more on the way in 2010, Sullivan said:

• Support for multitouch displays for a more sophisticated user interface.

• Support for haptic feedback, such as the phone vibrating when a virtual keyboard key is tapped.

• The ability to control a camera.

• Support for Electrolysis, Mozilla's project to split tasks such as the user interface, tabs, and plug-ins into separate processes. That improves stability and performance, he said.

• Support for JetPack, Mozilla's next-generation extensions system.

S• Integration of the Weave synchronization software so it's no longer a plug-in.

Support for WebGL, an interface to provide browsers with accelerated 3D graphics.

• Faster execution of JavaScript programs that are common and increasingly powerful on the Web.

Applications that run natively on a device--whether directly on the hardware as in the case of the iPhone or on the Java-derived layer called Dalvik on Android--are an important area of mobile development today. But the Palm Pre uses a browser-based application design.

"It's the right model. It's not there yet," Sullivan said of Web-based programs. Today programmers must create separate versions of applications for BlackBerry, Nokia's Symbian, Android, the iPhone, and other mobile phones.

But that profusion will be replaced by the universality of the Web, he predicted.

"In three years," Sullivan said, "80 percent of those applications are going to be Web-based."

Source - CNET

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it would be the slowest on cold start browser,in the history of browsers on cell phones :lmao:

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Firefox-Mobile-RC-to-Come-Next-Week-2.jpg

tb_zoom.gif The guys over at Mozilla seem pretty busy with the development of the mobile version of their Internet browser, called Fennec. And since they work so hard on it, they might be able to deliver a release candidate for the mobile Firefox as soon as next week, while the final version of the browser might arrive within a matter of weeks too.

"Our goal is to have a release candidate next week," said Jay Sullivan, Mozilla's vice president of mobile, in an interview with Cnet. "If things go smoothly, we'll have a (final) version out in the next few weeks." Moreover, it seems that the "following weeks" are expected to materialize before the end of the ongoing year.

As many of you might already know, Mozilla is currently working on delivering the mobile version of its browser to two of currently available operating systems on the market, namely Microsoft's Windows Mobile and Nokia's Maemo platform. The release candidate of Firefox mobile is to arrive to Maemo next week, with the final version soon after, while the Windows Mobile flavor of the browser is expected to land only in 2010.

When it comes to what Firefox mobile will bring during the next year, the list unveiled by Sullivan includes:

- Support for multitouch displays for a more sophisticated user interface.

- Support for haptic feedback, such as the phone vibrating when a virtual keyboard key is tapped.

- The ability to control a camera.

- Support for Electrolysis, Mozilla's project to split tasks such as the user interface, tabs, and plug-ins into separate processes. That improves stability and performance, he said.

- Support for JetPack, Mozilla's next-generation extensions system.

- Integration of the Weave synchronization software so it's no longer a plug-in.

- Support for WebGL, an interface to provide browsers with accelerated 3D graphics.

- Faster execution of Javascript programs that are common and increasingly powerful on the Web.

According to Cnet, Mozilla and Nokia have been working closely on the development of Firefox mobile for Maemo, and users of a Nokia N900 Internet Tablet, the latest device delivered to the market with the platform, should enjoy an enhanced experience with the browser, it seems. "You want to put the desktop experience into a pocket-sized device," said Ari Jaaksi, vice president of Maemo devices. "What do people use on the desktop? Firefox."

In the future, the Maemo-based handsets released on the market might come with Firefox mobile on them right from the start, it seems, but not for the time being. However, Maemo is not the only mobile platform Mozilla is working with. Beside the said Windows Mobile flavor of the browser, the company is also expected to deliver an Android version in the near future,

though no other OSes will see it, at least for a while.

source;;;softpedia

http://news.softpedi...ek-129416.shtml

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