Inside Firefox 3.0, Alpha 3: Gran Paradiso
This past Monday, Mozilla unveiled the third alpha of Gran Paradiso, the code name for Firefox 3.0. If development goes according to plan, this will be the first version of Firefox—or of any browser, for that matter—to have the three key components needed to support offline Web applications: DOM Storage; an offline execution model; and synchronization. That critical foundation will let free or low-cost Web suites compete with Microsoft software and possibly break the company's decades-long domination in office productivity apps.
What might such a world look like? In the immediate future, you'd have people trying out Web alternatives to Microsoft Office, such as the Google Apps for Your Domain suite or its subset, Google Spreadsheets and Docs, as their central workaday productivity tool. Plenty of those early adopters will find these upstarts lacking and no doubt turn back to Microsoft in whole or in part. Slowly, though, as the breadth and depth of the competing applications expand, perhaps Microsoft's 90-percent stranglehold on the preinstalled and post-PC-purchase installation suite market will loosen, if only a bit. Then, too, if Windows Vista is any indication of what lies ahead, the company's software will continue to require ever more awe-inspiring hardware—a far cry from the light and nimble Web-based applications Mozilla engineers envision.
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