Marketing Workspace: Difference between revisions

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Axel Hecht
Axel Hecht


A member of Mozilla Europe’s board of directors, Axel Hecht started contributing to Mozilla in 1999, working on XSLT. He has been a module owner of RDF since 2004. (can you provide more detail about what XSLT and RDF are and their importance? Also, what does his role as a module owner entail?)
A member of Mozilla Europe’s board of directors, Axel Hecht started contributing to Mozilla in 1999, working on XSLT. He has been the module owner of RDF since 2004, steering the development of this backend component towards standards compliance, performance and applicability to web applications. His focus is in developing Mozilla as a platform for web applications as well as light weight cross platform and localizable applications on the client. Axel also started the european annual developer meetings in 2000 and is a central figure in the european developer community ever since. As of recently, he participated in bringing localisations of Firefox into CVS, integrating platform and application development communities with the localisation communities around the world.


Alex received a degree in physics from the University of Stuttgart and a doctorate in mathematics from the University of Kiel. He is now with the Department of Applied Mathematics at Humboldt University in Berlin.
Axel received a degree in physics from the University of Stuttgart and a doctorate in mathematics from the University of Kiel. He is now with the Department of Applied Mathematics at Humboldt University in Berlin.





Revision as of 20:31, 11 May 2005

Brendan Eich

Brendan Eich is chief architect of the Mozilla project and widely recognized for his enduring contributions to the Internet revolution. In 1995, Brendan invented JavaScript (ECMAScript), the Internet's most widely used programming language. He co-founded the mozilla.org project in 1998.

With Brendan's leadership, Mozilla launched the award winning Firefox web browser and Thunderbird e-mail client now used by more than 60 million people worldwide. Brendan still actively drives innovations in web technology, including E4X (ECMAScript for XML).

He works at the Mozilla Foundation and is a member of the foundation's board of directors.

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Mike Shaver

Mike Shaver is a founding member of mozilla.org and lead technologist who has earned free reign to meddle in almost anything he likes from licensing and organizational issues to platform architecture and software development. His greatest contribution to the Mozilla project to date is (??)

Mike contributes to the Mozilla project as an employee of Oracle. As a member of Oracle's Open Client group, he works on improvements to Mozilla technology and applications.


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Ben Goodger

Ben Goodger is a lead developer for Mozilla’s Firefox web browser. He does everything from scheduling milestones to tinkering directly with hands-on creativity in the technical evolution of specific products and capabilities. Ben leads the development for the Extension system, Software Update, Windows shell integration, the new Download system, the new Options UI (the new permission manager UI for XPInstall and blocking pop-ups). He was the original author of Mozilla Suite code for the buggy bookmarks manager UI, save-page-with-images and the original Classic theme that later gave rise to much of the icon set Qute and later Winstripe.

Ben tracks bugs, maintains home pages, and acts as a liaison between Mozilla and other groups. He led the initial marketing efforts that culminated in more than 52 million Firefox downloads from November 2004 to May 2005. Ben contributes to the Mozilla project as an employee of Google Inc.

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Brian Ryner

Brian Ryner is a key developer for Mozilla Firefox. One of his early successful forays into the Mozilla project was mousewheel scrolling support in 2000. He was also invaluable in the development of the Gecko layout engine, still a component of the Firefox web browser today.

Among Brian’s other ongoing contributions to Mozilla code: improved performance of page layout and rendering, development of the XForms extension for Firefox/Mozilla, application-level features such as the Linux installer, GNOME integration and password manager, and development of the fast-back feature. Brian is employed by Google Inc. but continues his work on the Mozilla project.

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Axel Hecht

A member of Mozilla Europe’s board of directors, Axel Hecht started contributing to Mozilla in 1999, working on XSLT. He has been the module owner of RDF since 2004, steering the development of this backend component towards standards compliance, performance and applicability to web applications. His focus is in developing Mozilla as a platform for web applications as well as light weight cross platform and localizable applications on the client. Axel also started the european annual developer meetings in 2000 and is a central figure in the european developer community ever since. As of recently, he participated in bringing localisations of Firefox into CVS, integrating platform and application development communities with the localisation communities around the world.

Axel received a degree in physics from the University of Stuttgart and a doctorate in mathematics from the University of Kiel. He is now with the Department of Applied Mathematics at Humboldt University in Berlin.


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Robert O'Callahan

Robert O'Callahan got involved in Mozilla in 1999 when he should have been working on his doctoral thesis. He worked as a volunteer for several years, fixing bugs and implementing features in the layout and rendering core of Gecko. Smooth scrolling, justified text, and multi-column layout are some of his contributions. Currently he spends most of his time on Mozilla's new graphics infrastructure. Robert works for Mozilla full-time as an employee of Novell in New Zealand.