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Firefox's dev team: Canada's best-kept IT secret

Firefox's dev team: Canada's best-kept IT secret

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 21 Nov 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Three of the key team members behind the upstart browser are named Mike, and all three work out of Mozilla's Toronto office. Now Seneca College students may play an important role in creating new features for version 3

Although Mozilla’s Monday release of Firefox 3 Beta project, a developer preview release of its popular open source Web browser, has been a global effort, a significant portion of its core development takes place in Toronto.

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Those familiar with Mozilla and Firefox project will probably recognize names such as lead developer Mike Connor, user experience leader Mike Beltzner, and chief technology evangelist and Mozilla founding member Mike Shaver. All three Mikes work out of Mozilla’s Toronto office.

“Mozilla’s an interesting community because it’s pretty global with employees all over the place, but here in the Toronto office, it’s actually pretty sizable,” Johnathan Nightingale, Firefox’s security design lead of Toronto’s Mozilla office, said. “It’s not unusual to have eight to 10 people in the office, and for a company of about 100 employees, that’s pretty significant.”

Nightingale said the Toronto-based Firefox team does a wide range of work on the browser, including localization, back-end coding and design work. He said the proximity of all the Canadian Firefox developers was the determining factor in opening the Toronto office.

“A lot of us have sort of worked together in other parts of the Canadian tech sector and so, unsurprisingly, we crossed paths with each other from time to time,” Nightingale said. “The Mozilla community as a whole is a pretty accessible place for people who want to do cool things with the Internet and so as a lot of us discovered we were in the Toronto area; it made sense to start looking to open an office.”

In addition to the notable developers in the area, the Toronto-Firefox connection continues to grow. At Toronto’s Seneca College, a partnership with Mozilla has led students to develop notable software features that can be found in the latest incarnation of the browser.

David Humphrey, a professor at Seneca’s school of computer studies who runs open source development courses for the college, said the school’s partnership with Mozilla gives students the ability to help build software on a scale unlike anything that could be typically offered by academic institutions.

“For our students, it gives them the ability to work on world-class software and open source software at the same time,” Humphrey said. “I was trying to think of another company that would let students get involved in a shipping product like that, and yet for Mozilla, that’s really its standard because it has so many people from outside of the corporation contributing to this project.”


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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Comments (1)

CIO
by Sheeva Lazar 11/22/2007 12:00:00 AMWay to go Canada! And kudos to Seneca's David Humphrey, Andrew Smith and all the other Seneca Tech mavericks. As previous Seneca students, we have pride in all your excellent work. I exclusively use FF from the early days and just won't even consider anything else. Again - bang on for Seneca College and Canada!
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