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Waxy.org is the sandbox of Andy Baio, an independent journalist and programmer living in Portland, Oregon. I created Upcoming.org and some other stuff too.

Contact Me: log@waxy.org or waxpancake on AIM

Code Rush, the Mozilla Documentary from 2000

Posted Jun 17, 2008 (Updated Sep 19, 2008)

In honor of the release of Firefox 3.0, I'm offering up a video that documented its very beginning in 1998 — the first open-source release of Netscape's browser and the foundation of the Mozilla project.

Independent filmmakers followed the Mozilla team from March 1998 to April 1999, as they worked to open Netscape Communicator's source code to the world, in a last-ditch effort to save the company. The result is an amazing snapshot of computer history, capturing the people that worked on it, the first internal beta test, the moment Jamie Zawinski uploaded the first builds publicly, the launch party, the all-hands meeting announcing the AOL acquisition, and so much more. It aired on PBS nationally in March 2000, the same month as the beginning of the dot-com collapse.

Out-of-print and never released on DVD, the used VHS copies start at $50 on Amazon. Like all the videos I release on Waxy.org, this material is commercially unavailable. If they ever come back into print, or the copyright holders contact me, I'll take them down immediately.

Important Update (September 16): At the request of the the director, I've removed the video from Waxy.org and Viddler. I've interviewed the director about his plans for releasing the film and the unreleased footage.

I've done my best to annotate the video, but many people in the film aren't identified. I've left Viddler annotations open to everyone, so if you want to identify the people, places, or notable objects/events/trivia in the film, then please add your inline comments the video! (Or IM/email me and I'll take care of it.)

The video's now offline, but I've saved all the annotations. Thanks to Tman for creating the subtitle file, which can be used in video players like Media Player Classic or VLC, or simply viewed as plain text.

Now go download Firefox 3.0 and help make history!

Interviews and Appearances

  • Jamie Zawinski: Left Netscape on April 1, 1999, now the owner of DNA Lounge in San Francisco
  • Jim Barksdale, CEO
  • Michael Toy
  • Jim Roskind
  • Tara Hernandez: Now an infrastructure engineer at Pixar
  • Scott Collins: Now works on the Slashdot engineering team
  • Jeff Weinstein
  • Marc Andreessen
  • Stuart Parmenter (and his parents)
  • Brendan Eich: CTO at Mozilla
  • David Readerman, Tech Analyst
  • Po Bronson, Wired Magazine
  • Kara Swisher, Wall Street Journal
  • Gregg Zachary, Wall Street Journal
  • Ellen Ullman, Author of Close to the Machine

30 Comments (Add Yours)

Jun 17, 2008
2:13 PM  
l.m.orchard wrote:

I've got this on VHS at home and watched it in total fanboy glee back when it came out. Now I'm sitting in Mountain View as a MoCo employee watching the download counter on the big screen for Firefox 3. I'm finding it hard to express the feeling without resorting to profanity.

I sure hope no one makes you un-share this.


Jun 17, 2008
2:38 PM  
Philipp Lenssen wrote:

A very cool share.


Jun 17, 2008
4:08 PM  
Leonard Lin wrote:

Man, I remember watching this when it aired on PBS... Good times.

I love that most of the people in there have a live web presence. I suspect that'll be the norm for most people moving forward rather than the exception.


Jun 17, 2008
11:45 PM  
Neil Kandalgaonkar wrote:

Did I mention you are awesome? Today? This doco holds a special place in my heart. Thank you.


Jun 18, 2008
8:18 AM  
Colin Devroe wrote:

This is both excellent and timely. Thanks for taking the time to encode and annotate, yet again.

This makes me want to build something. Wait, I am helping to build something. This makes me want to get back to work.


Jun 18, 2008
8:20 AM  
Colin Devroe wrote:

Oh, and I also want a frickin donut!


Jun 18, 2008
11:43 AM  
alan taylor wrote:

Awesome Andy, thanks for this - watched it on the train this morning, felt like I was in a time-warp. It's hard to believe how much has changed, and that it's been ten years since then already.


Jun 18, 2008
11:57 AM  
Mac Steve wrote:

Andy I thank you so much for this.
Obviously a very timely release date.

Ever since I watched Mike Pinkerton's (of Camino fame) Google Talk about his time at Mozilla, I wanted to get hold of Code Rush but couldn't. For everybody else who enjoyed Code Rush, that Google Video might be an interesting sequel.


Jun 18, 2008
12:14 PM  
Colin Devroe wrote:

Mac Steve: Thanks for the link to the Google Talk.


Jun 18, 2008
1:35 PM  
parkbench wrote:

Is there any way to get a text dump of the viddler comments? I'm torrenting the file but I want to get all the 'behind the scenes' info as well. A dump with time signatures and such would be all I would need to follow along manually.


Jun 18, 2008
1:52 PM  
Andy Baio wrote:

Yes! The full list is on Viddler's site.


Jun 19, 2008
7:17 AM  
parkbench wrote:

Just curious: some of the video comments were helpful, but a lot of them were redundant. Literally, the information would be on the screen, being told to us, and then a viddler comment would pop up of the exact same thing (ie someone's name and affiliation). What exactly was your reason for doing this?


Jun 19, 2008
7:32 AM  
Andy Baio wrote:

I add annotations for all speakers and sections, even if they're identified on-screen, so that people can seek directly to those parts of the video. It's just metadata.


Jun 20, 2008
5:37 AM  
Eschnou wrote:

I had kept this on my to-do list for the last few days and finally had time to watch it. This is just an amazing piece of documentary. Thanks for sharing !


Jun 20, 2008
10:39 AM  
Eli Simpson wrote:

Incredible find, thanks for sharing!


Jun 21, 2008
2:47 AM  
Viper007Bond wrote:

I'm much too young to have been around for this (23 now), but that sure explains a lot. Thanks for posting!

And heh, kinda funny to think that I watched that video and posted this comment via FF3. Space time should fold into itself or something.


Jun 21, 2008
12:50 PM  
Cuélebre wrote:

Cool, downloading torrent and writing an entry in my blog with the embed video.
Thanks.


Jun 22, 2008
10:51 AM  
Alistair McMillan wrote:

I've been wanting to see this for ages, but could never find it.

Many thanks.


Jun 24, 2008
4:16 PM  
springboard wrote:

Yeah, been looking for it everywhere, great of you to put it up.


Jun 24, 2008
7:17 PM  
Guido wrote:

That was enjoyable. Thanks for sharing ... again.


Jun 28, 2008
12:39 AM  
SomeGuy wrote:

"we had to do one small adjustment, and it worked!" (right before the 20-minute mark)

That's Don Melton, aka gramps, who later worked at Eazel (on Nautilus), and now Apple (on Safari/Webkit). He appears elsewhere in the video with crazy hair and a hockey stick.


Jun 29, 2008
4:16 PM  
Robert Kaiser wrote:

The guy speaking about Tara being the best manager at Netscape at her leaving party (45:00) is Chris Hofmann (still at Mozilla today).


Jul 3, 2008
9:25 PM  
TMan wrote:

I translated the viddler comments into srt subtitle format. This means you can use a media player like Media Player Classic to display them while watching the mp4 download. You can get that file at http://w15.easy-share.com/1700811239.html


Jul 10, 2008
10:49 AM  
Bernardo Carvalho wrote:

Thanks for sharing. Great stuff.


Jul 17, 2008
11:01 AM  
Petrea Stefan wrote:

A very nice insight to mozilla history and to netscape.
I enjoyed it :)
Thanks


Jul 20, 2008
9:02 AM  
Karsten wrote:

A realy nice insight to mozilla history and to netscape... Thanks a lot :)


Aug 15, 2008
11:27 PM  
Carla Nico wrote:

Thank you so much for it!


Sep 26, 2008
9:26 PM  
Anonymous wrote:

Where I can find the torrent of this documentary?


Sep 26, 2008
10:15 PM  
Andy Baio wrote:

Maybe you missed the update above, but I was contacted by the director and asked to pull down the video. More information here.


Oct 14, 2008
6:44 PM  
Really Sad wrote:

Andy, and you are even worser than this director guy, not to publish a critical comment. So eat bubu u both girlies. The movie was not even worth the whole blabla.


 

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