Firefox/Planning/2014-10-29

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Revision as of 17:09, 29 October 2014 by Kneedham (talk | contribs) (Insights update, some of the news that's worth reading this week.)
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Planning Meeting Details

  • Wednesdays - 11:00am PT, 18:00 UTC
  • Mountain View Offices: Warp Core Conference Room
  • Toronto Offices: Finch Conference Room
  • irc.mozilla.org #planning for backchannel
  • (the developer meeting takes place on Tuesdays)

Video/Teleconference Details - NEW

REMEMBER
These notes are read by people who weren't able to attend the meeting. Please make sure to include links and context so they can be understood.


Schedule & Progress on Upcoming Releases (Lukas/Sylvestre/Lawrence)

Firefox Desktop & Platform (Javaun/Chad/Martin)

Current Releases

Beta (146)

Aurora (54)

Nightly (147)

UX (Madhava)

Firefox Mobile (Mark/Brad/Jenn)

Current Releases

Beta (146)

Aurora (54)

Nightly (147)

UX (Ian)

Developer Tools (Jeff/Rob/Dave)

Feedback Summary (Cheng/Tyler/Matt)

Desktop

Mobile

User Experience Research (Bill)

Market Insights from the Market Strategy Team (Kev)

Something to Think About

  • Lifehacker posted an article this morning around all the things you can do with Chrome's address bar. Firefox can do a number of the same things, but it's interesting to see the continual improvements the Chrome team makes around search integration, and also the productivity hacks (like searching drive without going there) that people come up with to make a feature more useful than it's intended design.

Why we should care: Chrome's modifications to the address bar aren't ground-breaking, nor are they changes that came about all at once. They are a series of iterative changes that work well with Google's external services, and focus on increasing utility which, not coincidentally, increases the value and stickiness of the Google experience as a whole. Continued improvements to features is a good thing, and is something to consider as part of our general product upkeep, particularly around the opportunity to do more with services (both ours, and others) that promote the open web as a platform.

Worth a Read

  • Benedict Evans updated his popular "Mobile Is Eating the World" presentation, and posits that mobile effectively is technology today. He's also put together a post on Tablets, PCs and Office that goes a little bit into technology cycles, but the important bit he pushes in both places is the concept of screens being the window to your stuff, and the platform under the screen being a commodity (e.g. processing power is becoming less of a limiter) that is really simply the interface that better fits the task at hand.
  • Ars Technica has an overview of some of the more interesting changes in Lollipop which focus on unbundling apps and APIs to mitigate fragmentation risk, an enhanced setup process focusing on user experience, and the shift in the Nexus brand from a market-share builder to a premium offering.
  • Google's Sundar Pichai was promoted last week in a move that solidifies Google's movement towards a unified, backend-anchored, multi-screen experience. Pichai was originally fronting Android and Chrome OS (and a couple other related services), and now takes on Google's most important web properties, including Gmail, Search, AdSense, and the infrastructure that runs it. This gives business units inside Google better alignment around company goals, and shows the confidence Google has in Pichai. Expect further alignment in Google's unified experience movement through products like Inbox and moving more Google Account data in the cloud, where it doesn't rely on a client app.

Notes

Marketing, Press & Public Reaction (Arcadio)

Questions, Comments, FYI