Labs/F1

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Revision as of 05:56, 1 April 2011 by Clarkbw (talk | contribs)
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Feature Status ETA Owner
Feature Page Structure Firefox Client share bits are coming along but tests and security review may inhibit landing. 2011-04-12 Bryan Clark

Summary

Mozilla F1 is a browser extension that allows you to share links in a fast and fun way. Share links from within the browser without leaving the page using the same services you already know and love.

Team

  • Lead Developers: James Burke, Shane Caraveo, Philipp von Weitershausen, Tarek Ziadé
  • Product Manager: Bryan Clark
  • QA: Jonathan Griffin
  • UX: Andy Chung, Stephen Horlander, Alex Faaborg, Alexander Limi
  • Security: Curtis Koenig, Yvan Boily, Daniel Veditz, Sid Stamm, David Chan, Lucas Adamski, Pete Fritchman
  • Product Marketing: Mayumi Matsuno
  • Legal: Alex Fowler


Release Requirements

See Firefox:F1 Product Roadmap

Complete checklist of items that need to be satisfied before we can call this feature "done".

Next Steps

See Firefox:F1 Product Roadmap


Related Bugs & Dependencies

F1 has 3 bugzilla components related to the technical pieces required to run it.


Designs

Any and all mockups, design specs, tech specs, etc. Either inline or linked to.

TODO

Screen-shot-2011-03-10-at-1.25.50-PM.png


Goals/Use Cases

The high level goals for the feature (which the release requirements checklist should fulfill). These are the guiding light and overall vision for the feature. Refer to this if there is confusion or are disputes about direction, designs, planning, etc.

Non-Goals

Things we are specifically not doing or building as part of this feature.

Other Documentation

Sharing Services

Like Digg, Facebook, Twitter, etc.

The F1 team has been in contact with a number of different sharing services. If you would like to participate in the discussion please open an issue or send me a message.


Developer Information

F1 uses both a some client and server code to provide the sharing service. You'll find all the pieces you need to get started hacking in the source repositories

Don't ask for permission, get stared and make changes. Just fork the source code, make a branch, commit, test, and create a pull request.