29-Mar-2024 09:55 GMT.
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
[News] AmiZilla Welcomes Others To Browse For CashANN.lu
Posted on 30-Oct-2003 10:17 GMT by Bill Panagouleas54 comments
View flat
View list
Over the last several months since I started the AmiZilla Project I have heard a growing whisper to allow the funds to also be available to the programmers of IBrowse, Voyager & AWeb. Most, like myself wish for a Mozilla or Firebird port to Amiga OS/MorphOS but a growing few do continue to express their love of the Amiga Browsers, which is understandable. AmiZilla Welcomes Others To Browse For Cash

Over the last several months since I started the AmiZilla Project I have heard a growing whisper to allow the funds to also be available to the programmers of IBrowse, Voyager & AWeb. Most, like myself wish for a Mozilla or Firebird port to Amiga OS/MorphOS but a growing few do continue to express their love of the Amiga Browsers, which is understandable. So today unless the current donators to the AmiZilla Project mind I am extending the AmiZilla Initiative to also include IBrowse, Voyager & AWeb. What this means is if the coders of these browsers update their programs to a functional comparable feature set of Mozilla 1.5 or FireBird they will win the AmiZilla contest and get the money. The programming teams will have to study the rich and extensive feature set of Mozilla or Firebird and update their browsers to something similar. Keep in mind that this is a contest so only the winner that crosses the finish line first wins. I respect and commend the Amiga browser developers for all of their hard work over the years and hope this puts them on equal footing for a chance to win the over $4100 that has already been collected for AmiZilla. The requirements will stay the same as far as making it available for Amiga, MorphOS, AROS, Amiga Forever, WinUAE Etc. Keep in mind teams have already been working hard part time to port Mozilla so keep the funds coming in to motivate these teams to bring this project to completion so that other new projects can be started like updating the Video Toaster Flyer source code. The new players in this contest (IBrowse, Voyager & AWeb) will also want incentive to update and extend their applications. The money already collected is a good start but may not be enough to get the teams to spend as much time on the AmiZilla Project as they normally would with a much large pot of funds to win.

Current Booty: $4159.40

Mailinglist now has over 220 members and over 330 messages, most are about programming and porting Mozilla.

AmiZilla website has gotten over 2 million hits since appearing on the famous unix geek website slashdot.

AmiZilla continues to gather positive press for the Amiga and MorphOS by being covered on mainstream websites like CNET's news.com, mozillazine.org and many others.

http://news.com.com/2009-1088-984352.html

http://www.mozillazine.org/talkback.html?article=3262

http://www.toolinux.com/lininfo/news/news/news20030608003711.htm

Keep in mind that the AmiZilla Project needs you to be successful. The booty is now over $4150, which is a impressive amount of money for an Amiga project. If only one programmer was working on the port this would be a nice reward. However several programmers are working together. Once the money is split among coders the booty is not big enough. Please contribute if you can, every dollar helps motivate programmers to make the AmiZilla Project a success. After the release of AmiZilla more projects are being developed like Hot CoCo (JVM) and F Gordon (Flash). The development and launch of these add-ons to AmiZilla depend on the success of that project. Paypal donations can be sent in via this weblink.
www.amizilla.org


Best regards

Bill Panagouleas


About AmiZilla
The goal of the AmiZilla effort is to raise such an obscene/huge amount of money to give away to the first programmer/team that can port Mozilla to Amiga/Compatible systems that programmers will be falling over themselves getting this application coded in record time. Project now welcomes the programming teams of IBrowse, Voyager and AWeb to join the contest.

About DiscreetFX
DiscreetFX has been creating software products for the Amiga, video editing & computer generated graphics (CGI) industry since 1995. The Amiga computer defined and created the video editing, computer graphics market with its birth in 1985. DiscreetFX creates Real-time transitions and effects seen on over 100 television programs including Blind Date, 5th Wheel, Shipmates and more! You can also see DiscreetFX software used on the following networks HBO, Showtime, Discovery Channel, PBS, Fox and more!
List of all comments to this article
Sorted by date, most recent at bottom
Comment 1krize30-Oct-2003 10:02 GMT
Comment 2Anonymous30-Oct-2003 10:32 GMT
Comment 3Bill Panagouleas30-Oct-2003 10:39 GMT
Comment 4Bill Panagouleas30-Oct-2003 10:56 GMT
Comment 5Robert30-Oct-2003 11:29 GMT
Comment 6Anonymous30-Oct-2003 11:37 GMT
Comment 7Anonymous30-Oct-2003 11:41 GMT
Comment 8hooligan/dcsRegistered user30-Oct-2003 12:00 GMT
Comment 9Anonymous30-Oct-2003 12:31 GMT
Comment 10Anonymous30-Oct-2003 12:33 GMT
Comment 11krize30-Oct-2003 12:48 GMT
Comment 12Hagge30-Oct-2003 14:14 GMT
Comment 13Hagge30-Oct-2003 14:15 GMT
Comment 14reflect30-Oct-2003 14:19 GMT
Comment 15hippie200030-Oct-2003 16:41 GMT
Comment 16greenboyRegistered user30-Oct-2003 17:04 GMT
Comment 17greenboyRegistered user30-Oct-2003 17:06 GMT
Comment 18pixie30-Oct-2003 17:35 GMT
Comment 19smithy30-Oct-2003 17:49 GMT
Comment 20smithy30-Oct-2003 17:51 GMT
Comment 21John30-Oct-2003 17:52 GMT
Comment 22greenboyRegistered user30-Oct-2003 17:57 GMT
Comment 23Stephane Desrosiers30-Oct-2003 18:04 GMT
Comment 24greenboyRegistered user30-Oct-2003 18:05 GMT
Comment 25pixie30-Oct-2003 18:08 GMT
Comment 26Vexar30-Oct-2003 18:09 GMT
Comment 27greenboyRegistered user30-Oct-2003 19:23 GMT
Comment 28Anonymous30-Oct-2003 20:25 GMT
Comment 29smithy30-Oct-2003 23:56 GMT
Comment 30reflect31-Oct-2003 03:13 GMT
Comment 31Anonymous31-Oct-2003 09:11 GMT
Comment 32pixie31-Oct-2003 10:12 GMT
Comment 33o1iRegistered user31-Oct-2003 10:37 GMT
Comment 34Vexar31-Oct-2003 13:50 GMT
Comment 35greenboyRegistered user31-Oct-2003 15:06 GMT
Comment 36greenboyRegistered user31-Oct-2003 15:14 GMT
Comment 37greenboyRegistered user31-Oct-2003 16:16 GMT
Comment 38Amigan Software01-Nov-2003 00:55 GMT
Comment 39greenboyRegistered user01-Nov-2003 01:32 GMT
Comment 40greenboyRegistered user01-Nov-2003 03:26 GMT
Comment 41Hagge01-Nov-2003 08:19 GMT
Comment 42vortexau01-Nov-2003 08:24 GMT
Comment 43- GALAXY -01-Nov-2003 11:43 GMT
Comment 44o1iRegistered user01-Nov-2003 12:53 GMT
Comment 45Anonymous01-Nov-2003 13:53 GMT
Comment 46- GALAXY -01-Nov-2003 14:04 GMT
Comment 47Henrik Mikael Kristensen01-Nov-2003 14:20 GMT
Comment 48- GALAXY -01-Nov-2003 14:43 GMT
Comment 49- GALAXY -01-Nov-2003 14:50 GMT
Comment 50o1iRegistered user01-Nov-2003 14:51 GMT
Comment 51greenboyRegistered user01-Nov-2003 15:15 GMT
Comment 52Henrik Mikael Kristensen01-Nov-2003 15:55 GMT
Comment 53o1iRegistered user01-Nov-2003 18:49 GMT
Comment 54AnonX07-Nov-2003 19:32 GMT
Back to Top