Coming back to Cupertino from our visit to L.A., I was struck by how green and
residential it felt here by comparison—much like the feeling I get when I
visit Eugene, but very odd to feel in Cupertino. It really makes me wonder what
it would be like visiting Eugene after living in L.A. for several years.
Speaking of which, we are moving to L.A. in a few months (well, Santa Monica
hopefully, which sounds nicer but still seems to be covered in smog).
Category: Life
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I've been looking around at reactions to the release of Camino 1.6, and a lot of
it could be summarized as: “So?” The points are generally valid;
amid the hype around the upcoming release of Firefox 3 (and to some extent, all
the WebKit hype), releasing a new version using Gecko 1.8 (as seen in Camino 1.5
and Firefox 2) is hardly ground-breaking. But then, it wasn't meant to be, which
is why it's Camino 1.6, rather than Camino 2—that would have been more
clear if we'd released it last November as we had originally hoped, but such is
the nature of trying to do scheduling in a volunteer project.
Camino 1.6 is, as it was intended, just an incremental improvement; nice if you
were already using Camino, but not nearly as exciting to read about as Firefox
3. (Here's a hint for the people wondering why we didn't use Gecko 1.9 by the
way: Gecko 1.9 development is very, very closely tied to Firefox 3 development,
and Firefox 3 isn't out of beta yet.)
If it were just the unfortunate timing of releasing amid flurries of stories
about how Firefox 3 is just around the corner and will bring about world peace
and cut through tin cans without getting dull, having press coverage
like “Good news for those of you who are part of the ever-shrinking
community that still uses Camino” (thanks for the love, Ars) would
be easy to ignore, but I think the real issue is a more lasting one: the change
in Safari's place in the web.
In the past year or so, WebKit has made very significant
advances in compatibility, the iPhone has raised WebKit prominence, site authors
are finally starting to get the idea that locking out the browser that comes
installed on the machines of 5+% of their potential visitors (as well as the
only one available to iPhone users) is probably not a good idea, and Safari is
available for testing (and with Drosera, potentially development) on Windows.
All that adds up to far fewer people finding themselves in need of a browser
other than Safari to use all the sites they need to, which used to be a big
part of why people turned to Camino.
That leaves us competing almost entirely on browser features and UI. But
things have changed there too: with Safari 3, Apple changed their approach and
actually back-ported a new version of Safari to the
previous OS, rather than just back-porting WebKit as they had been doing.
Assuming that continues, historical OS X adoption rates tell us that new
versions of Safari will be available to almost all Mac users, rather than only
about half, and so we lose another large uncontested (by Safari) user base.
In a head to head match between Apple and a handful of very-part-time
volunteers, it wouldn't take much effort on Apple's part to move fast enough
that we wouldn't be able to keep ahead of them.
To be clear, I'm not complaining. Camino is about giving users a sleek Mac
browser that Just Works; if Safari is equally good at being the browser
that we have been working to build, then users win, because the browsing
experience we wanted to provide is pre-installed on their machines. And it's not
like we are in this for the money. I'm also not saying I'm ready to hang up my
hat just yet (nor am I in any way, shape, or form speaking for the Camino
project; this is all just my own musing and opinions); just that I spend a lot
of time recently thinking about what might be next for Camino. Certainly, in the
short term, we work to get Camino 2 out there soon, based on Gecko 1.9 and
with a few new features that we've ween working on tossed in for good measure.
Beyond that, the path is (to me, at least) unclear.
Category: Camino
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