Back in 2004, the Mozilla Foundation placed a two-page Firefox advocacy ad in The New York Times, featuring the names of 10,000 donators.
What I wasn’t expecting though, was this prominently featured quote:
“I installed Firefox on my laptop
today. It’s so fast — I never knew
there could be that much of a
difference.”
— Stephen Cropp, New Zealand
What a legend. I wonder if Mr. Cropp is still using Firefox, and what he’s up to these days.
Source: Hacker News
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 😆