90% Open Source Lightning
Well, not exactly: Lightning, which comes from Mozilla, is a 100% open source calendar extension for Mozilla Thunderbird....
On Open Enterprise blog.
open source, open genomics, open creation
Well, not exactly: Lightning, which comes from Mozilla, is a 100% open source calendar extension for Mozilla Thunderbird....
On Open Enterprise blog.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:58 pm 0 comments
Labels: calendaring, lightning, mozilla, open enterprise, outlook, sunbird, thunderbird
Mozilla's revenues (including both Mozilla Foundation and Mozilla Corporation) for 2006 were $66,840,850, up approximately 26% from 2005 revenue of $52,906,602. As in 2005 the vast majority of this revenue is associated with the search functionality in Mozilla Firefox, and the majority of that is from Google.
It's also doing rather well on just about every other metric, as Mitchell's post "Beyond Sustainability" explains. Recommended reading.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:53 am 0 comments
Labels: Firefox, google, mitchell baker, mozilla, sunbird, thunderbird
Good - if belated - news on the OOo front:First, OpenOffice.org shall get Firefox-like extensions capabilities by the 2.0.4. This release should be ready somewhere between the coming week and the end of the month. What this means is that besides the fact that OpenOffice.org could include extensions before, now the way to develop, include, select and manage them will be made easy. Aside the traditionnal .zip and unopkg extensions packages, a new and definitive extension format, .oxt, shall be used across the extensions that can be developed using a breadth of languages ranging from StarBasic to Java. New wizards and configuration tools shall be added for the benefit of our endusers.
Second, and I think that although we have no clear roadmap for this yet (besides, our version naming scheme is going to change once again ), OpenOffice.org and StarOffice shall include the Mozilla Foundation's Thunderbird and Sunbird (calendaring application) in the future. Besides the inclusion of those two softs inside the office suite, connectors to Sun Calendar Server and Microsoft Exchange will also be developed accordingly.
Great, but why not Lightning instead, and then we'd be in complete harmony? (Via Slashdot.)
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:48 pm 0 comments
Labels: Firefox, lightning, openoffice.org, sunbird, thunderbird
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