12. • Mozilla project started in 1998 within Netscape
• Mozilla Foundation started in 2003
• approximately 350 paid staff in 20 countries
• ~40% of code contributed by volunteers
• Testing community of 60,000+
• More than 400 million users
• Global browser market share 25~30%
Facts
20. butterapp.org | popcorn.js
One cool example of that is Butter which is a visual interface on top of the Popcorn
JavaScript framework that allows you to build interactive presentations with HTML5
video.
23. aloha-editor.org
Aloha Editor is a browser-based what-you-see-is-what-you-get editor which can be
embedded into your own website and can allow a developer to edit a website instantaneously
in the browser.
39. mediaqueri.es
Media Queries showcases websites that use media queries to provide users variable-sized
websites based on whether they are on a desktop, tablet, or mobile device.
40. caniuse.com
caniuse.com is a very helpful tool for web developers who need to check browser support for
any given html, css, or svg, including both popular desktop browsers as well as leading
smartphone browsers.
41. modernizr.com
Modernizr is a powerful JavaScript library that allows web developers to check which browsers
support which features and provide advanced features to some users and falls back to
simpler features for those users who have older browsers.
42. vid.ly
vid.ly is a powerful web service which converts videos from various formats to all of the
formats that are used in the major browsers. This means vid.ly will serve the right video
format to the right user, be they on different desktop browsers, or tablets or smart phones.
46. diveintohtml5.org
Dive Into HTML5 is Mark Pilgrim’s free book on HTML5, available on web. Pilgrim works for
Google and is a long-time web standards advocate.
48. developer.mozilla.org
I should not forget to promote our own Mozilla Developer Network, which is one of the
leading sites for information about current web standards. MDN’s JavaScript documentation
is considered some of the best on the web today.
62. Instruct your device or application to
accompany all network requests with an
indication that you do not want to be tracked.
Service providers need to react to such
explicit requests.
•First, to all networked devices and
applications
•Second, to all types of tracking and
•Third, to all purposes of tracking.
Do Not Track
63. Neelie Kroes, the Vice President of the European Commission responsible for the Digital
Agenda for Europe. She told the Online Tracking Protection and Browsers Workshop in
Brussels that “we should collectively pay more attention to the emerging ‘do-not-track’
technologies,”