Archive for February 14th, 2007

Mozilla Manifesto

Mitchell BakerMitchell Baker, CEO of Mozilla Corporation and Mozilla Foundation, has released a draft version of the Mozilla Manifesto, a declaration of principles and ways the Mozilla project as a whole follows and the goals it pursues.

Part of the Mozilla Manifesto are 10 Principles that Mozilla “…believes are critical for the Internet to continue to benefit the public good as well as commercial aspects of life.” I am not going to list or discuss all 10 of the principles. However, #5 really stood out:

“Individuals must have the ability to shape their own experiences on the Internet.”

I strongly believe this is what Mozilla Firefox being an open-source browser is all about. Firefox through its add-ons (extensions, themes, plug-ins, etc) allows individuals the ability to shape their Internet experience by making it their browser. They are not stuck with a “one-size fits all” browser, which restricts their Internet experience with the limitations of being a closed-source browser.


View the complete Manifesto at Mitchell’s Blog

News Source:
Mozilla Links

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Places in Fx 3.0a3?

For some odd reason there was a Gecko 1.9/Grand Paradiso meeting on Tuesday (2007/02/13). In the meeting notes there is a brief mention that the Fx 3 developers are targeting (still have some bugs to work out) to have Places in place for the Alpha 3 release due out sometime next month.

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Fx Add-ons Overhaul Pt 3

[Part 1][Part 2][Part 3][Part 3.5][Part 4][Part 4.5]

This is part 3 of my multi-part series on the Firefox Add-ons Overhaul. At the bottom of the Part 2 entry I had added this update:

Update: The “preview” site is a work in progress and has actually been up (and down) for several weeks. The current extension list is NOT all inclusive, more may be added prior to the final release.

Since this post, the preview site has been updated and nearly all the extensions I had mentioned prior as being removed/missing are now included in the preview site. They have also added many new dictionaries which are to be used with the Fx 2 Spellchecker.

In addition, some of the new features added with this overhaul include the option to discuss and review (more on this later) the extensions. Plus the categories have been trimmed from 22 down to 12. However the biggest change is going to be the new review process and the introduction of the Sandbox. The process is described in more details in the article: Reviewing the Review Process. The flow-chart diagram below provides a good overview on how this new process will work:

With this new process in place, updates to established (trusted) add-ons should be made available to the public a lot sooner. When Fx 2 was released back in October, there was a massive crunch as developers who had waited until after the release started putting through their updates. The delays were horrible, typically the add-ons were not reviewed and posted until anywhere from 5 to 10 days after they were submitted. The process should be much quicker when Fx 3 is released later this year. Not only will trusted extensions get put through quicker, but since these don’t need to be reviewed this will free up the editors to review the new add-ons.

The only thing that still has not been “overhauled” is the search feature. Again, no Advanced Search option and the search results will be displayed in order of recently updated. Also until you do a search, your results are limited to 10 add-ons per page (when the results are displayed this can be changed to 5, 20, or 50 for that search). I do however, have one good thing to say about the new search and that is it can be done from anywhere on the site.

There are still some delays in getting the new site AMO v3 (Remora) live. For info about the delay here. So, I’ll likely do Part 4 once this goes live which hopefully will be by the end of the week.

Review: CoLT


Back in October I touched briefly on my favorite and by far most used extension, CoLT (Copy Link Text). Since then I have found myself using it even more and have even taken advantage of the custom styles option.

In the beginning I used CoLT mainly for copying entire (Text AND Links) HTML links. All I had to do was right-click (no need to highlight) the link I wanted to copy and selected from the context menu, ‘Copy Link Text & Locations As’ followed by ‘HTML Link’ from the sub menu. The extension automatically generated the HTML code for the link which I then pasted right into the HTML editor. So much simpler then copying the link, typing the link name and then going through and manually adding the link.

In late November, the CybertNet Forum went live and I discovered using CoLT made posting links on their board so much easier. The forum uses BBCode which at that time was totally foreign to me. The formating is a bit different than HTML and the coding for links is way different than that for HTML. I had been using CoLT for a blog entry when I noticed in the Custom Format section there was an option for BBCode! So all I had to do was right-click on the link, select from the context menu, ‘Copy Link Text & Locations As’ followed by ‘Custom Format 1 (BBCode)‘ from the sub menu. CoLT generated the BBCode for the link which I was able to paste right into the message/reply box.

In late December, the author at New Media did a pingback to my original article with a simple request “However… it would be nice, if the extension had a “copy as HTML link with target=”_blank”" feature”. I commented back that this could be accomplished by setting this up as one of the Custom Formats. I would recommend doing this in the #2 or #3 slot since those are not as widely used as BBCode. For my own I used the Custom Format #2 slot:

  1. From Tools Menu select Add-Ons (Fx 1.0/1.5 Extensions)
  2. Locate CoLT
  3. Click Options
  4. Click the Custom Format Tab
  5. In the Menu Label field type in the description in my case I used _blank
  6. In the Format field paste the following code:
    <a href="%U" target="_blank">%T</a>
  7. Click OK
  8. Close out of the Add-Ons/Extensions Manager

So now if I want to post a link that will open in a new tab, I just right-click the link ‘Copy Link Text & Locations As’ then select ‘Custom Format 2 (_blank)‘ from the sub menu. CoLT has generated the HTML for the link including the _blank parameter.

CoLT is only 21KB and works with Firefox 1.0-2.0.0.* and can be obtained via the Firefox Add-Ons site.

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