I started writing this a week and a half ago, but just finished it today.
First day at interning at Mozilla. I finally found out what I get to do this summer. I got the OK to blog about it, because you know how secret them Mozilla folks are about their secret in-house project (ie. What is this guy up to? ;)).
The actual wiki page was apparently out in the open, but no-one heard about it. It’s called WildOnAddons. While a new name is, IMO, mandatory, it’s actually a pretty neat idea. There are many great extensions such as Ted’s Extension Developer’s Extension that aren’t hosted on AMO. Some other extensions are hosted on AMO, but frequently have updates much sooner on their website before it goes public.
Sometimes, extensions come in bundled with packages such as Norton and McAfeee. Google Notebook is one of many Google Labs extension hosted on their own server.
In short, they’re hosted everywhere. But that presents a problem, how many are out there and can find and index them?
This is actually a lot harder then going on google and typing filetype:xpi, because according to those results, AMO only has 78 extensions. In fact, there are several repositories of addons each catering to a different crowd (yes, we are counting all addons). While I don’t think that AMO can satisfy everyone all the time. It might help us figure out how many extensions are out there and how many are hosted on our servers. Actually figuring this out will take a lot of work, and not as straight-forward as it sounds (ie. All of AMO’s sandboxed addons require authentication, so a web crawler would have to know about it if we were crawling through the web), but it will be worth it in the end.
I’ll keep blogging about it under wildon tag RSS feed if your interested on how progress goes.
Segmentation Fault » Blog Archive » Taming the beast from within says:
[…] I have been pouring two weeks into WildOn, which is finding out how many addons exist out there in the wild. But before I start unleashing […]
22 May 2008, 10:09 am