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Missing Missoula man died of hypothermia MISSOULA - The daughter of a 77-year-old Missoula man who was reported missing Monday says her father died of hypothermia. Search Results - helenair.com

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Same circus, new clowns Relations between state House Democrats and Republicans collapse in spat over reform bills._So much for the new civility. mcall.com - Breaking News

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Maine treasurer warns of state debts Treasurer Bruce Poliquin says taxpayers' obligation to pay off the unfunded liability in the retirement system will balloon in the years ahead. Portland Press Herald News Stories

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San Mateo police arrest San Leandro man over $25,000... The man is accused of stealing purses and wallets in the East Bay and then using their owners' credit cards to make the fraudulent purchases, according to a San Mateo police statement. Inside Bay Area Most Viewed

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Dick Gregory joins bridge crossing lineup SELMA -- Comedian Dick Gregory, who has mixed humor with civil rights activities throughout his long career, will join other well-known celebrities at this year's Bridge Crossing Jubilee. montgomeryadvertiser.com - Alabama

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Firefox On The iPhone? No (Though It Is Being Worked On). Another Mozilla Browser? Maybe.

Category : Technology

Continuing today’s theme of scouring Quora for interesting nuggets of information, a Q&A about Mozilla’s Firefox Mobile browser is of some interest. In response to the question: Will Firefox Mobile ever be released for iOS devices?, Mobile Firefox developer Matt Brubeck this morning gave his answer.

First, he gave the obvious and fairly well-known official answer, “We have no plans to release the full Firefox browser for Apple iOS devices,” Brubeck wrote. Why? Because the current iOS SDK agreement forbids apps like Firefox from including their own compilers and interpreters, Brubeck explains.

But he continues on to note that there are a couple of ways to work within Apple’s system, notably what Skyfire is doing (using Apple’s own build-in WebKit libraries) or what Opera Mini is doing (using a proxy server to execute their JavaScript). “Mozilla could create a browser that did one of those things, but it wouldn’t be related to Firefox in any way,” Brubeck explains.

Mozilla does currently have a Firefox iPhone app, Home, but it does not include a browser for the reasons listed above. Instead, it lets you sync bookmarks and open tabs between your iPhone and the home computer. But Mozilla is also in charge of other browsers, notably Camino, which has long been a Safari and Firefox alternative on Mac machines. Might Mozilla consider releasing it as an iPhone app? If they did, it would have to be altered from its current state as it’s not WebKit-based (it, like Firefox, is Gecko-based).

Or could Mozilla come up with an entirely new WebKit-friendly browser for the iPhone? It’s certainly possible, though it would still have to use the specific WebKit framework that Apple has built-in to iOS.

Or, there’s always the jailbreak route. As Brubeck notes, some people have been doing work to port Firefox to iOS. Interestingly enough, his wording seems to imply that it actually might be Mozilla employees working on this. But as he continues, “unless Apple removes these restrictions, Mozilla will not spend time and money on this project.” So if they are working on it, they’re doing so off-reservation.

The development would likely violate the SDK agreement, and it would not be distributable to non-jailbreak iOS users,” Brubeck conclues.




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Firefox Creative Lead Aza Raskin Leaves Mozilla To Found Startup Massive Health

Category : Technology

Almost two years to the day that Mozilla acq-hired him, Firefox Creative Lead Aza Raskin will be leaving Mozilla on January 1 to found a new startup called Massive Health. Raskin started out as head of user experience at Mozilla Labs where he spearheaded projects such as Tab Candy, Ubiquity, Jetpack, new mobile interfaces, and geolocation specifications.

Now, at Massive Health, he wants to bring better interface design to help people take control of their health, specifically people with weight-related health problems such as obesity, heart disease, and diabetes. Massive Health will present people with better data and tighter feedback loops so they can assess how the actions they take today will impact their weight and overall health.

His co-founder is Sutha Kamal, and Atul Varma—another Mozilla colleague and his former CTO at Humanized (the startup he sold to Mozilla)—will be also be joining him. Better health through better information is a huge, mostly-untapped opportunity. We’ll be following Massive Health closely once it launches.

Photo credit: Flickr/Gen Kanai




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Take That, Apple! Mozilla Adopts Baby Firefoxes

Category : Ready Steady Lets Go Green

photo firefox cubs mozilla red pandaScreenshot from Mozilla FirefoxLive

Marketing loves wildlife. Consider products like Apple’s Safari browser, and the Snow Leopard operating system. There was a call last year for Apple to help save real-life snow leopards. Mozilla, makers of the Firefox browser, must have been listening, because they’ve adopted real-life firefoxes. There’s such a thing? Yeh, and there’s even…Read the full story on TreeHugger


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Hot Shot Vets From Google, Mozilla, Yahoo Cooking Up Stealth Treats At Tasty Labs

Category : Technology

Earlier today, we noted that Paul Rademacher, the man known for creating “the first true Web 2.0 application”, was leaving his engineering job at Google after five years with the company. Now we know where he’s going. And it’s very interesting.

No, it’s not Facebook like seemingly every other Xoogler these days. Instead, he’s joining up with Joshua Schachter (the founder of Delicious) and Nick Nguyen (the former director of add-ons for Mozilla) to found Tasty Labs.

Schachter, who helped jumpstart the consumer Internet space in 2004 with Delicious, sold his company to Yahoo in 2005. He then left in 2008 and joined Google in 2009 before leaving earlier this year. Nguyen worked for Schachter at Delicious in the past and just left his post at Mozilla about ten days ago. Those two, along with Rademacher form a pretty hot shot team for whatever it is they’re doing.

I’m either going to launch an open source operating system for unmanned aerial vehicles, or build a first person shooter to teach non-violent solutions based on buddhist principles. Or a pet food review site,” Schachter told us in August when asked what he was working on. When reached for comment today, he confirmed that “pet food reviews is where the money is.. or a marketplace for used satellites.

Funny guy. In all seriousness though, Schachter does say they’re “definitely probably almost certainly not in the bookmarking space.” Given Rademacher’s expertise in Maps and Schachter’s recent angel investments in several location startups, that might not be a bad guess. Or maybe Schacter and Rademacher left Google because they wanted to build a social graph for the company and knew they couldn’t do it from within. Maybe they’ll do it from the outside and sell it back to the search giant in six months. Or maybe Schachter and Nguyen are secretly forming a new investment bank to buy Yahoo in six months and rip Delicious back from their claws. Tasty, Delicious, get it? Who knows.

You can find out basically nothing about Tasty Labs here.




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Mozilla Names SAP Exec Gary Kovacs As New CEO

Category : Technology

Earlier this year Mozilla Corporation, the company behind the Firefox web browser, announced that CEO John Lilly would be stepping down to take a position at VC firm Greylock Partners. The search for a new CEO took six months, and today the company is naming Lilly’s successor: Gary Kovacs, a tech veteran who currently serves as a Senior Vice President at SAP and has previously held executive positions at Sybase (which SAP acquired earlier this year) and Macromedia/Adobe.

Lilly has written a welcome post announcing the news, in which he says that Kovacs is right for the job because “he’s got deep background in the battlefields that will define the future of the Open Web: mobile and rich media, and he’s been involved in building great organizations several times over.”

Mitchell Baker, Chair of the Mozilla Foundation, has also written a welcome post that points out Kovacs’s experience with mobile and rich media. Here’s a portion of Baker’s post:

When we entered into sensitive areas I found it possible to raise potentially contentious issues, find some common ground, get to the heart of the matter and push some hard topics around until we both felt we’d reached a good place. I found Gary to have a great understanding of the different perspectives of the situation, an ability to be clear where we already had agreement, and a give-and-take process when we had disagreements that I think is fundamental for someone to be effective at Mozilla. Actually, I found Gary to focus a bit more on areas of agreement before diving to the heart of potential differences than is common at Mozilla — a trait I hope to learn from :)




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Mozilla Introduces Fennec Alpha For Android (2.0 Or Higher), Nokia N900

Category : Technology

Mozilla this morning introduced the Alpha release of the next version of its mobile browser Fennec for Android and Nokia N900. Fennec, which serves as the codename for Firefox mobile, comes with add-ons and is also built on the same technology that powers Firefox for the desktop.

An earlier version had surfaced back in April this year.

Fennec Alpha for Android and Nokia N900 comes with Firefox Sync built right into the browser, which means your smartphone browsing experience should closely match the one on your desktop.




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Mozilla Submits Firefox Home iPhone App. Apple Should Approve It

Category : Technology

Earlier this afternoon, Mozilla submitted what would be its first iPhone application to the App Store. No, it’s not Firefox — well, not exactly.

Mozilla has submitted an app called Firefox Home for approval. While it’s not the native Firefox web browser, it is an app that lets you easily move your Firefox browsing history, bookmarks, and open tabs to the iPhone. You can then either open these within the app or with mobile Safari.

Now, I know what you’re thinking: no way Apple accepts a Firefox app. But actually, I’m pretty sure they will.

Again, this app is not a new web browser, it’s just a tool for moving your data from your desktop to the phone. The browser that is built-in to the app is a WebKit-based one built with the tools Apple includes in the SDK. On its FAQ page, Mozilla says the following about Firefox for the iPhone:

Does this mean Firefox will be available on the iPhone?
No. We do not have plans to ship the Firefox browser for the iPhone. Due to constraints with the OS environment and distribution, we cannot provide users Firefox for the iPhone.

Apple did allow Opera to put its browser on the iPhone to the surprise of some. But there’s some talk that the only reason Apple did that as a way to quiet critics — because they knew the app wasn’t that great. After an initial surge in downloads, you don’t hear too much about it anymore. Mozilla, which is the world second most popular browser (well ahead of Safari), might be a different story. And Mozilla apparently knows it.

This app also isn’t Firefox Sync. Sync is a two way syncing of information between Firefox browsers on different machines. Firefox Home is a one-way push to the iPhone. “We only sync changes since the last update for bookmarks and open tabs. And history is limited to about 2000 items. And there is no auto-sync. The median disk space used by Sync users is about 2-3 MB total for all of their Sync data and Home only has a subset of that.,” Mozilla says.

Mozilla’s Asa Dotzler seems worried that Apple may not approve the app. But as long as it’s not using any undocumented APIs, I can’t see a reason why Apple would reject it — at least not without a lot of outrage, once again. And the app looks good, it should be very useful to users of Firefox.




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Mozilla Firefox or Internet Explorer?

Category : Technology

laptop30347484.jpgFaster internet service and secured internet connections are usually the main factors that determine if you should use Mozilla Firefox or Internet Explorer. Several experts have explorer the question as to which service provider is better and safer, here are a few of the things they concluded:

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