About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 39. Chapters: Gecko, Beonex Communicator, XUL, Bugzilla, XPCOM, The Book of Mozilla, About URI scheme, SeaMonkey, Mozilla Foundation, Camino, Mozilla Corporation, Epiphany, Mozilla Sunbird, Tamarin, Minimo, SpiderMonkey, Rhino, Mozilla Public License, XBL, Mork, MicroB, Add-on, List of Mozilla products, Nvu, XULRunner, Mozilla application framework, MozillaZine, Moji extension, Mozilla Add-ons, Mozilla Europe, Mozilla Prism, Mozilla Developer Center, Tinderbox, KompoZer, Mozdev.org, XPInstall, BlueGriffon, Gnuzilla, Ghostzilla, Netscape Public License, Mozilla Raindrop, Mozilla Messaging, Bonsai, KaXUL, Mozilla Grendel, Mozilla Japan, Public Suffix List, Code Rush, Mycroft project, Litmus, Mozilla China, Mariner, CZilla, XPConnect, Rikaichan, XPIDL, Mozilla ActiveX Control, EXtensible Tag Framework, Application Object Model, KnowledgeTree Public License. Excerpt: The Book of Mozilla is a computer Easter egg found in the Netscape and Mozilla series of web browsers. It is viewed by directing the browser to about: mozilla. There is no real book entitled The Book of Mozilla. However, apparent quotations hidden in Netscape and Mozilla give this impression by revealing passages in the style of apocalyptic literature, such as the Book of Revelation in the Bible. When about: mozilla is typed into the location bar, various versions of these browsers display a cryptic message in white text on a maroon background in the browser window. There are five official verses of The Book of Mozilla which have been included in shipping releases, although various unofficial verses can be found on the World Wide Web. All five official verses have scriptural chapter and verse references, although these are actually references to important dates in the history of Netscape and Mozilla. The five verses all refer to the activities of a fearsome-sounding.