Firefox has become the default browser for nearly 400,000 IBM employees, a big coup for the open-source project during a time of increasing browser competition.
"All IBM employees will be asked to use it as their default browser," Bob Sutor, vice president of open source and Linux at IBM's Software Group, said in a blog post Thursday. "Firefox is enterprise-ready, and we're ready to adopt it for our enterprise."
Mozilla has said in recent weeks it believes nearly 400 million people use its software.
In particular, IBM will load Firefox on new computers, train employees in its use, encourage vendors working with IBM to adopt it, and rely on the browser for its increasing use of cloud computing in its own IT infrastructure, he said.
"Today we already have thousands of employees using it on Linux, Mac, and Windows laptops and desktops, but we're going to be adding thousands more users to the rolls," Sutor said.
Sutor lavished praise on the browser's role in recent history:
"While other browsers have come and gone, Firefox is now the gold standard for what an open, secure, and standards-compliant browser should be," he said. "I think it was Firefox and its growth that reinvigorated the browser market as well as the web. That is, Firefox forced competitors to respond. Their software has gotten better and we have all benefited."
Like Firefox, both Opera and Google's Chrome browser also span Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux, but Sutor said IBM is interested in Firefox's independence. "Firefox is open source, and its development schedule is managed by a development community not beholden to one commercial entity," he said.
The support from IBM might help nudge Firefox's recently wavering share of browser usage in a more optimistic direction.
Nice! I know some people don't care for Firefox but I don't know anybody who has switched back to IE after using Firefox or another browser. IE is garbage. Occasionally I have to use it for an MS download or something and I am reminded quickly why I don't use it anymore.
"All IBM employees will be asked to use it as their default browser," Bob Sutor, vice president of open source and Linux at IBM's Software Group, said in a blog post Thursday. "Firefox is enterprise-ready, and we're ready to adopt it for our enterprise."
Mozilla has said in recent weeks it believes nearly 400 million people use its software.
In particular, IBM will load Firefox on new computers, train employees in its use, encourage vendors working with IBM to adopt it, and rely on the browser for its increasing use of cloud computing in its own IT infrastructure, he said.
"Today we already have thousands of employees using it on Linux, Mac, and Windows laptops and desktops, but we're going to be adding thousands more users to the rolls," Sutor said.
Sutor lavished praise on the browser's role in recent history:
"While other browsers have come and gone, Firefox is now the gold standard for what an open, secure, and standards-compliant browser should be," he said. "I think it was Firefox and its growth that reinvigorated the browser market as well as the web. That is, Firefox forced competitors to respond. Their software has gotten better and we have all benefited."
Like Firefox, both Opera and Google's Chrome browser also span Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux, but Sutor said IBM is interested in Firefox's independence. "Firefox is open source, and its development schedule is managed by a development community not beholden to one commercial entity," he said.
The support from IBM might help nudge Firefox's recently wavering share of browser usage in a more optimistic direction.
Nice! I know some people don't care for Firefox but I don't know anybody who has switched back to IE after using Firefox or another browser. IE is garbage. Occasionally I have to use it for an MS download or something and I am reminded quickly why I don't use it anymore.
But wine was the great assassin of both tradition and propriety...
-Brandon Sanderson, The Way of Kings
-Brandon Sanderson, The Way of Kings
IBM names Firefox its default browser
02/07/2010 05:04:46 AM
- 714 Views
Yeah, seems like the real competition is between Chrome and Firefox, not IE.
02/07/2010 09:16:04 AM
- 495 Views
After using Firefox, I couldn't go back to IE. But after using Chrome... goodbye Firefox. *NM*
02/07/2010 05:06:55 PM
- 251 Views
I'm the only person I know who still can't make the switch to Chrome.
02/07/2010 06:57:53 PM
- 448 Views
I still have Firefox as #1, Opera as #2 and Chrome only #3.
03/07/2010 01:47:54 AM
- 458 Views
I thought Opera was pretty smooth but I just wasn't won over.
03/07/2010 05:57:01 PM
- 472 Views
I never bothered with even giving Opera a chance.
03/07/2010 06:55:46 PM
- 475 Views
Actually Opera has a better record of standards compliance than Firefox
03/07/2010 10:07:02 PM
- 465 Views
Well, certainly odd given I've heard numerous Opera complaints and virtually none about Firefox.
03/07/2010 10:59:39 PM
- 458 Views
That's those web pages fault then
03/07/2010 11:57:27 PM
- 464 Views
Seems to me it would be the standards' fault for being difficult to implement. *NM*
04/07/2010 07:23:32 AM
- 194 Views
This is bad news
02/07/2010 07:18:38 PM
- 445 Views
Untrue. Evidence: IE still lets you run .exes directly from the browser. *NM*
02/07/2010 11:55:18 PM
- 216 Views