Mozilla is far from healthy but calling it dead is overstating things.
[1]: https://radar.cloudflare.com/adoption-and-usage And CF stats doesn't depend on JavaScript.
Microsoft wasn't trying to control the web; they were trying to hobble it so that everyone kept on developing for win32. In retrospect, not a great strategy, but many companies try to kick the can down the road, and it often works, so I can't fault them too much.
The phoenix can rise.
The frozen chicken can not.
Still breathing makes a huge difference.
If you don’t like what Google is doing, don’t pretend that Firefox does not exist. Do something instead. File bug reports, send patches, donate to those who are working on Firefox and countering Google.
Probably better for a different org with different leadership to start over. I wouldn't count on Mozilla to miraculously reinvent itself.
If there were a good browser run by a different nonprofit org, I would support that.
Explorer and Internet Explorer were deeply married, with the ability to set web pages as desktop background, the Explorer of Windows 98 having a "sidebar" that was an HTML page, the ubiquitous help format being compressed HTML pages with index and search, ActiveX giving webpages desktop-application-like powers, JScript being a powerful javascript-compatible automation language for Windows. Windows was full of web technologies in the dot-com era, many bringing web and desktop closer together. This stopped an reversed course in the early 2000s. You could now say that's classic embrace-extend-extinguish, but the collapse of the dot-com bubble explains explains the sudden lack of investment and increasing distance between desktop and web just as well.
At any rate, 100M downloads across the lifetime of the app isn’t much to write home about when considering the billions (plural) that use Google products. Furthermore, there’s an entire class of people that think Chrome IS the internet. It’s wildly more common than the average HN would think.
I am posting from maintained Mozilla Firefox.
That would be impossible if FF would be dead.
According to these folks[0], Firefox has a 3.29% market share globally. They also claim there are 4.66 billion browser users globally.
If those numbers are correct, Firefox has a bit more than 150,000,000 users worldwide.
If my software had 150,000,000 users, I'd consider that wildly successful.
Other folks have different ideas/takes on that, I suppose. But it's food for thought nonetheless.
[0] https://backlinko.com/browser-market-share#worldwide-browser...
Edit: Fixed prose.
0: https://gs.statcounter.com/os-market-share/desktop/worldwide