
It has long been known that in addition to the N900 port of Firefox (released just 49 days ago) Mozilla have been targeting Windows Mobile, drawing ever nearer to a release. They have now decided to
put the port on hold, following the news of Windows Phone 7 Series at MIX (and what that holds for Windows Mobile 6.5).
"While we think Windows Phone 7 looks interesting and has the potential to do well in the market, Microsoft has unfortunately decided to close off development to native applications. Because of this, we won't be able to provide Firefox for Windows Phone 7 at this time. Given that Microsoft is staking their future in mobile on Windows Mobile 7 (not 6.5) and because we don't know if or when Microsoft will release a native development kit, we are putting our Windows Mobile development on hold."
Member since:
2005-07-06
Nobody would want to run Firefox in a tab inside Chrome OS when Chrome OS itself is already a browser, and if Firefox could be offered it would undermine the APIs Google have added to to integrate the web with the device / UI.
Assuming that is the case; from what Microsoft has said, they're going to have native API's but they're going to be a very small subset when compared to 6.5 - so it'll be enough for the likes of Flash to get their stuff working but if you're expecting the operating system to provide a lot of API's then you'll be disappointed. In the case of Firefox there is a good chance that many of the API's they rely on in 6.5 will be unavailable thus require them to implement the feature themselves instead of relying on the operating system.