Mozilla has
asked
internet users everywhere to get involved designing the next generation of
browsers.
So far it has three ideas on the table: a next generation browser dubbed
Aurora, better ways to visualise bookmarks and browsing history and a new mobile
version of Firefox. It has posted videos showing early versions of the Aurora
browser, designed by Adaptive Path.
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“Today we’re calling on industry, higher education and people from around the
world to get involved and share their ideas and expertise as we collectively
explore and design future directions for the web,” said the organisation.
“You don’t have to be a software engineer to get involved, and you don’t have
to program. Everyone is welcome to participate.”
The planned browser would hide the browser frame until needed and let users
grab and move data sets across the page. A new controller would be added and
pictorial representations of history, temporary internet files and objects on
the page.
Items similar to each other would be concentrated into clusters surrounded by
current lines and web page images would move further away the longer they were
unused.
“But with a problem like designing the browser of the future, we weren’t even
sure where to start,” said Adaptive Path president Jesse James Garrett.
“The evolution of the browser seemed to be intimately intertwined with the
evolution of the web — and to some extent, the underlying internet — itself.
Plus we had to account for trends in general computing technologies: smaller,
faster, powerful, more connected and ubiquitous devices, enabling new kinds of
interactions and applications.”
All participants are being asked to work under a Creative Commons licence and
no timeline for completion has been given.
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