I think that they do to some extent. People ask their tech-savvy friends what to buy/use, or they use what work computers provide, which are configured by tech-savvy users.
> Mozilla getting involved in meetups
Not only meetups -- I'm talking about the feeling of the community in general. I've been using the browser since Mozilla Application Suite and was a very active early evangelist. The community was much different back then.
> not deprecating an API allowing vim navigation in the browser
I think that you are underestimating the enthusiasm people have for some of those Firefox tools. :)
> would take Mozilla even farther from relevance
Re-creating the grassroots-driven community would not make Mozilla less relevant. It's exactly what they need to do to survive.
I think that they do to some extent. People ask their tech-savvy friends what to buy/use, or they use what work computers provide, which are configured by tech-savvy users.
> Mozilla getting involved in meetups
Not only meetups -- I'm talking about the feeling of the community in general. I've been using the browser since Mozilla Application Suite and was a very active early evangelist. The community was much different back then.
> not deprecating an API allowing vim navigation in the browser
I think that you are underestimating the enthusiasm people have for some of those Firefox tools. :)
> would take Mozilla even farther from relevance
Re-creating the grassroots-driven community would not make Mozilla less relevant. It's exactly what they need to do to survive.