this post was submitted on 27 Aug 2023
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You might be thinking of Mozilla Application Suite (or just Mozilla, as it was known at the time), which was born out if Netscape. It included an HTML editor as well (and email and IRC as well), and it was seen as bloated, so they made the browser standalone and called it Phoenix, which was then renamed to Firebird due to a trademark conflict with Phoenix BIOS, and again changed to Firefox (due to a conflict with Firebird database).
I don't recall what the market share was at the time, but I do recall it being fairly popular - at least in the tech circles anyways, prior to 1.0. I even printed out a T-Shirt with the Firefox logo to celebrate the release, with the text "Dump IE, Get Firefox", and used to wear it all the time proudly. Might need to make a new T-Shirt now with the text "Dump Chrome, Get Firefox"...
I don't think I ever used Mozilla Application Suite. It seems that IE had over 90% market share, so probably I was just using IE and not even thinking about anything else until discovering Firefox and assuming it had always existed.
This site (video at top) has Firefox at about 3% market share in 2004. They cracked 10% in 2006, and by 2009 they had over 30%. By that point Chrome was coming onto the scene, which mostly eroded IE, and it wasn't until 2011 that FF was back under 30%. Then by 2012 Chrome was the top browser.
For some reason, in my mind Firefox has always had about 30% market share until recently. But it seems they only spent about 2 years over 30%, so their popularity was a lot more fleeting than I remember.
That's great! I can't say I've ever had enough passion for anything to get a T-shirt printed. And I don't much fancy explaining it to people:
It's really a lot more of a mouthful than it was in 2004.
Haha, that's indeed a mouthful, but I think that works well in my favour. I'm very quiet IRL and not good at making small talk, so wearing a T-shirt like that makes for a great conversation starter. I can go on and on about topics that I'm passionate about, so if someone asks "why", I'll be more than happy to unload on them. :)
I used to be quiet. Then I went through a phase of being a chatty person to colleagues. Now I've worked 95% from home for the past couple of years and now I'm back to being the quiet one 😆