J-List is a wonderful toybox of things from Japan - come see
Every time you don't click over to J-List, God kills a kitten

The personal log of Peter, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Friday, June 27, 2008

Firefox Party!

I took a day off yesterday to attend the official Firefox 3.0 launch party in Tokyo, which celebrated the historic third release of the great open source web browser. At the party, I wandered around a large room filled with various industry people -- developers, programmers, the occasional bigwig from Bandai or Yahoo Japan -- with everyone in attendance being Japanese, except for myself and two friends from Italy and Spain who were with me. I knew intuitively that the normal mingling you'd expect at a party like that would be a little more difficult due to the (perceived) language barrier that separated us from the Japanese around us, and we would have stood there not talking to anyone all night if it hadn't been for the natural exuberance that foreigners seem to have, enabling us to ignore whatever invisible social rules that may have been in effect and start up a discussion with strangers by, say, overhearing a conversation about Osaka and responding by doing an impression of the Glico Man, from the famous neon sign in that city. In no time, we had melted the ice and had a circle of interesting people around us, chatting about various topics. Back during my days as an ESL teacher, I quickly learned that my students responded more when I was energetic and outgoing, and in fact Japanese seem to take it for granted that foreigners will be a little more interesting in social situations than they are themselves. Incidentally, I really am happy to recommend Firefox as a great browser for everyone to use when viewing J-List or any other website, whether you're on a Mac, a PC or a Linux machine, and I'm not just saying that because they gave me free beer and sushi, although that was pretty cool. I mean, what has your web browser of choice done for you lately?

6 Comments:

Blogger JOhn said...

Firefox is the best! I hope you were able to join in on the Record setting Download day of Firefox. :)

10:56 PM

 
Blogger Vicky said...

lol I remember the servers kept going down in the hours running up to the release. Pretty crazy!

I love Firefox, I've been using it exclusively for about 3/4 years now. It does have a problem with playing some types of embedded media though. But then again, that's what IETab is for!!! I do find Firefox 3 doesn't keep me logged into sites as consistently as v2, which is a bit annoying.

Looks like you had a good time. Ice sculpture? Looks really neat. I'd've been tempted to hold a lighter to it when no one was looking.

8:21 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Heh, there were a bunch of chefs standing around serving people, who might have objected. It's cool that they were able to make Netscape / Mozilla a success after all. Remember the bad years when Netscape required you to fill out some lame registration just to launch the browser the first time?

11:02 PM

 
Blogger Sebastiaan said...

After the sour taste that FireFox 2 gave me (huge memory leaks taking close to 2.5 GB's of physical ram with no tabs open) I switched to Opera.

Currently I run both Opera 9.5 for my normal webbrowsing and FireFox 3.0 for the companies Google Apps services. (We host all our corporate email and calendars at Google under our own domain with our own logo).

I may, MAY, try FF 3 for normal browsing one of these days because it seems the memory leaks have stopped. Who knows.

Unrelated Peter, are there any sights a tourist should visit in the Gunma area (where J-list is located I think, right), I will be there 2 days before I head to Fuji Rock Festival at Naeba.

Any suggestions would be more than welcome.

4:57 AM

 
Blogger Kellyann Brown said...

I have been a huge Firefox fan for YEARS!

As a mac user, I have found it to be stable and strong.

4:41 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Sebestian, Gunma is not the best for tourism but there is some good stuff. I always recommend the Prefectural History Museum. Hot springs are also good, with some being found in Ikaho, although if you have a car and the desire to go farther, Kusatsu is just about the most famous hot springs to be found anywhere in the Tokyo area. Otherwise check a guide book for ideas, our prefecture is kind of famous for not having that much of interest tourist-wise. (Kind of like going sightseeing in Orange County, California.)

6:15 PM

 

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