Commencement of project On July 25, 2011,
Andreas Gal, Director of Research at
Mozilla Corporation, announced the "Boot to
Gecko" Project (B2G) on the mozilla.dev.platform mailing list. According to
Ars Technica, "Mozilla says that B2G is motivated by a desire to demonstrate that the standards-based
open Web has the potential to be a competitive alternative to the existing single-vendor application development stacks offered by the dominant mobile operating systems." In 2012, Andreas Gal expanded on Mozilla's aims. He characterized the current set of mobile operating systems as "
walled gardens" and presented Firefox OS as more accessible: "We use completely open standards and there’s no proprietary software or technology involved." These are intended
W3C standards that attempt to bridge the capability gap that currently exists between native frameworks and web applications. The goal of these efforts is to enable developers to build applications using WebAPI which would then run in any
standards compliant browser without the need to rewrite their application for each platform.
Development history In July 2012, Boot to Gecko was rebranded as 'Firefox OS', after Mozilla's well-known desktop browser,
Firefox, and screenshots began appearing in August 2012. In September 2012, analysts Strategy Analysts forecast that Firefox OS would account for 1% of the global smartphone market in 2013, its first year of commercial availability. In February 2013, Mozilla announced plans for its global commercial roll-out of Firefox OS. Mozilla announced at a press conference before the start of
Mobile World Congress in Barcelona that the first wave of Firefox OS devices would be available to consumers in Brazil, Colombia, Hungary, Mexico, Montenegro, Poland, Serbia, Spain and Venezuela. Mozilla also announced that
LG Electronics,
ZTE,
Huawei and
TCL Corporation had committed to making Firefox OS devices. In December 2013, new features were added with the 1.2 release, including
conference calling,
silent SMS authentication for mobile billing, improved
push notifications, and three state settings for
Do Not Track. Async Pan and Zoom (APZ), included in version 1.3, should improve user interface responsiveness. Work was done to optimize Firefox OS to run a 128 MB platform with version 1.3T. A 128 MB device is out that seems to use that version but it may be unfinished. In 2015, Mozilla ported Firefox OS (an "experimental version") to
MIPS32 to work in a sub-$100 tablet (that can also run Android 4.4 KitKat). Mozilla has worked on developing the OS for Smart Feature Phones. Firefox OS was discontinued in January 2017. Implementation of DRM in the Firefox browser began with version 38. In August 2015, attempts by
Matchstick TV (based on Firefox OS) to add DRM caused the demise of
Matchstick, a decision that
Boing Boing called "suicide-by-DRM".
Demonstrations At
Mobile World Congress 2012, Mozilla and
Telefónica announced that the Spanish telecommunications provider intended to deliver "open Web devices" in 2012, based on HTML5 and these APIs. Mozilla also announced support for the project from
Adobe and
Qualcomm, and that
Deutsche Telekom’s Innovation Labs would join the project. Mozilla demonstrated a "sneak preview" of the software and apps running on
Samsung Galaxy S II phones (replacing their usual Android operating system). In August 2012, a
Nokia employee demonstrated the OS running on a
Raspberry Pi. Firefox OS is compatible with a number of devices, including Otoro,
PandaBoard, Emulator (ARM and x86),
Desktop,
Nexus S, Nexus S 4G,
Samsung Galaxy S II,
Galaxy Nexus and
Nexus 4. A
MIPS port was created by
Imagination Technologies in March 2015. In December 2012, Mozilla rolled out another update and released Firefox OS Simulator 1.0, which can be downloaded as an add-on for Firefox. The latest version of Firefox OS Simulator, version 4.0, was released on July 3, 2013 and announced on July 11, 2013. Mozilla's planned US$25 Firefox smartphone displayed at MWC, is built by
Spreadtrum. Mozilla has collaborated with four handset makers and five wireless carriers to provide five Firefox-powered smartphones in Europe and Latin America so far with cellphone launches being led by UK marketer John D. Bernard. In India, Mozilla planned a launching at $25 in partnership with
Intex and
Spice, but the price ended up being $33 (converted from 1,999
Rupees). ==Core technologies==