We got the Winners!

Demoparty

The Demoparty Online Competition 2011 is part of the Mozilla Labs Demoparty Project, an initiative to foster artful exploration of open web technologies.

Voting Process for 100 Demos

Last week you helped us find the winners of our online competition out of 100 demos up in our gallery. The community ratings and the opinion of our judges were both weighted 50% to determine the final results.

The Results

We are going to release more detailed information on the winning demos in upcoming blog posts. But for now – Enjoy the hard facts – Our Top 20 demos from +100 submisions. (The “Single Effect” category ruled with about 60 submissions, that’s why you see the Top 10 there)

NOW – *drumroll* – The Results are:

MAIN DEMO TOP 3 Community Judges Final Place
Akemi Winner! 3,67 3,58 3,62 1
Azathioprine 2,83 3,58 3,21 2
The Self-Explanatory Demo 3,17 3 3,08 3
SINGLE EFFECT TOP 10
WebGL Water Winner! 3,83 4,75 4,29 1
demojs-fff 3,5 3,67 3,59 2
Breaking wave 3,33 3,5 3,42 3
Lights & Shadows 3,33 3,5 3,42 4
WebGL Path Tracing 3,5 3,33 3,42 5
Canvas Trip by Adinpsz 3 3,75 3,38 6
Traveling Wavefronts Shader Demo 3,17 3,5 3,33 7
Beanstalk 2,83 3,83 3,33 8
Plasma effect 3 3,66 3,33 9
Undulating Monkey 3,33 3,16 3,25 10
AUDIO DEMO TOP 3
Flares Winner! 3 3,66 3,33 1
Duper Mario Synth 2,83 3,25 3,04 2
Beatdetektor 3 2,67 2,83 2,75 3
ANIMATED GIF TOP 3
Untitled (Illusion 1) Winner! 2,5 3,33 2,92 1
The Awesomest Native-made Gifs 2,5 3,25 2,88 2
Cubes Infinite 2,67 3 2,83 3
CSS3 DEMO WINNER
CSS Nyan Cat Winner! 2,67 3,5 3,08 1

Now Please Enjoy

…the “Main Demo” Winner Akemi (Congrats you just won a trip to Helsinki!). Follow @mozlabs to see the detailed winner presentations!!!

… and the “Single Effect” Winner “WebGL Water Simulation”. Demo Link or screen capture:

100 Demos – Gallery and Voting Open Now!

Earlier this week we silently opened-up the voting process for the 100 demo (and animated GIF) submissions. We’re super happy about the broad spectrum of entries, and now it’s up to you to decide on the winners!

Link: The gallery with all the submissions is here

If you create yourself an account you will be able to vote for 5 randomly selected demos or GIFs. The community votes will weight 50% of the decissions, another 50% will come from our judges.

Deadline is Sunday, the 28th of August. VOTE NOW!

WebFWD Welcomes the First Fellows

This is a cross-post from the WebFWD blog:

Only two short months ago we launched WebFWD – Mozilla’s accelerator and incubator program for Open Innovation and the open Web. Today we are proud and very happy to announce our first two Fellows – and as a bonus three projects which came through our partnership with Teens in Tech into our “Friends of WebFWD” program.

Fellows:

# OpenPhoto

The Idea: OpenPhoto is an Open Source photo sharing platform which gives users complete ownership and portability of their photos. Users’ photos, tags and comments are seamlessly stored into personally owned cloud services owned by themselves. Whatever they want to do or wherever they want to go their photos are free to go with them.

The Team: Jaisen Mathai, Patrick Santana, Patrick Boos, Florian Menevis, Preet Jassi, Klaus Komenda, Kitt Hodsden, Peter Sankauskas, John Fabrizio and Gareth Greenaway

Learn more at TheOpenPhotoProject.com

# CASH Music

The Idea: CASH Music is a nonprofit organization focussed on artist sustainability through education and open technology. We’ve worked directly with artists and independent labels to build a free and open platform that can be downloaded and used to promote, distribute, and sell music.

The Team: Jesse von Doom,
Maggie Vail and Jonathan “Duke” Leto

Learn more at CASHMusic.org

As part of our Teens in Tech program:

# Bubbls

The Idea: Bubbls is a social platform that helps young adults plan events and hangouts. We’re a website and mobile app.

The Team: James Maa, Matthew Miller and Matt Plant

Learn more at Bubbls.com

# Codulous

The Idea: Codulous is an online code editor that makes it really easy to code on the go.

The Team: Raphie Palefsky-Smith, Andrew Amis, Kai Tamkun and Marc Laugharn

Learn more at Codulo.us

# MySchoolHelp

The Idea: MySchoolHelp is a place where high school students can find and share notes from their school.

The Team: Ben Lang, Jake Essman, Amanda Aizuss and Nick Donelly

Learn more at MySchoolHelp.com

What’s Next?

The teams are currently getting set up in our system (we use Yammer for inter-team communication), get matched with their mentors and soon we’ll start our first workshops. And as this is the first iteration of our program, we expect to learn at least as much from our teams than they (hopefully) will learn from us.

Stay tuned for updates from the teams and our progress. This is the beginning of a very interesting journey!

P.S.: We are also continuously evaluating new projects – so, don’t be shy and apply here. And join our forum if you have questions or would like to discuss the program, enterpreneurship in the vein of Open Source and Open Innovation.

Send us to SxSW

Mozilla has submitted three panels for the South by Southwest (SxSW) conference in March 2012 in Austin, Texas. And now you have the chance to select the panels which interest you most – we would be delighted if you could vote for one (or more) of the following panels from Mozilla:

Lean Startup Methodology Meets Open Source

A conversation about how the lean startup methodology propagated by Eric Ries et al. can and should be used in the context of Open Source projects. Many promising Open Source projects get stalled due to lack of focus, lack of customer-centric thinking and too much “scratching my own itch”-ism. Applying the battle-proven techniques of lean startups can help bring better Open Source projects to the world – and make the world a better place. Pascal and Ash respectively bring deep experience in Open Source/ Open Innovation and lean startup practices and will argue their hearts out – for better Open Source projects.

Vote for this panel here

Fast CSS: how browsers lay out Web pages

This session explains the basic concepts in browser implementations of core Web document technologies (HTML, XHTML, CSS, and SVG), explains their general performance characteristics and how they interact with Javascript, and explains common optimizations (such as coalescing changes) that browsers make. Rather than presenting specific techniques authors can use, the goal is to build understanding of the performance characteristics of the Web platform so authors can have ideas of what things are likely to be fast or slow, and what types of changes they can experiment with to improve the performance of their Web pages.

Vote for this panel here

Open-Web, Open-News: Reporters & Developers Remix

We’re experiencing the birth of a new era: Legacy news organizations are beginning the process of moving beyond their print and broadcast past, while new, all-web reporting outfits begin to chart a path into a new future. In the process, exciting new discussions of how the culture of the open web intersects with the culture of the newsroom are growing ever more frequent. All of this has kicked off a wave of innovation throughout the journalism space that has seen leaps forward in real-time reporting, data visualization, back-end technology, and much more. But it’s nothing compared to the innovations to come. Recognizing the many opportunities to facilitate community and empower webmakers to build real tools, the Knight-Mozilla News Technology Partnership was formed in 2011. It has kicked off a year of design challenges that culminated in placing technology fellows in some of the world’s best newsrooms, charged with creating code for new kinds of news. As the partnership enters its second year, this conversation will address the broad implications of this new kind of collaboration: How do we work together to innovate in the news space? How do we bring the best practices of both disciplines to bear on the other? How do we broaden the scope, spread the code, and create real impact?

Vote for this panel here

To see all Mozilla submissions in the SxSW PanelPicker click here.

Thank you & see you at SxSW!

Mozilla Labs introduces new beta site

Today, Mozilla’s innovation team is unveiling the beta of a brand new website. As a member of the Mozilla Labs community, we wanted to invite you to kick the tires and let us know what you think: http://beta.mozillalabs.com (it’s also linked from beta.drumbeat.org)

Codenamed “BetaFarm” for now (the name will change soon), the new site is an effort to put supported projects from Mozilla Labs and the Mozilla Foundation under a single roof. The site is powered by the same engine that drives Drumbeat.org, with lots of improvements under the hood.

The goal: make it easy for anyone to find, follow and contribute to Mozilla projects. It’s a work in progress, and we want to give you an early opportunity to try it and give us some feedback.

A bit of background: You told us you want a site that helps you participate and stay informed. And that the current Mozilla Labs site doesn’t make that easy enough. We also heard that it can be hard to find all of the innovation projects across different parts of Mozilla, and that it takes too many clicks and searches to find a way to get involved. We all share the same mission — what’s most important is that people can easily find our projects and pitch in.

That’s where we’re hoping BetaFarm can help address some of what we heard from you. But we want to know what you think. Visit the site at beta.mozillalabs.com and sign up — you can use Mozilla Browser ID to create an account. There you can follow projects, sign up for events, and find links and information to participate in projects. And please tell us what you think using the feedback tab.

Thank you for your commitment, your time, and your interest in Mozilla.

Pascal Finette on behalf of the Mozilla Labs crew

PS – A huge thank you to the talented Paul Osman, Ross Bruniges, Andy Chung, Havi Hoffman, Ryan Merkley, and the rest of the team who have done spectacular work to get us here.

Mozilla Labs Initiatives For Identity and Open Web Apps

As the Web evolves and Web experiences move beyond the browser, Mozilla is expanding to reflect these changes. Mitchell Baker recently blogged about this. Jay Sullivan also recently published a product vision that articulates how Mozilla will build products that help people “discover, experience and connect on their own terms.”

Integrated platforms (iOS, Android and others) do a good job of establishing a users identity and then allowing them to transact and communicate easily (at least, within the integrated environment).  They also make it straightforward to find content (app stores) and to interact with users inside the same vertical. We believe the Web should have the same (or even better) capabilities, so we are focused on:

  1. Identity: How to identify yourself across the Web, and maintain user sovereignty.
  2. Web Platform: Add capabilities to the Web to make it easy for users to find, transact with, and manage their content.
  3. Open Web Apps Ecosystem: Ensure there is a vibrant and open environment for developers to build content with Web technologies, and for users to experience that content anywhere on the Web.

Identity: Today your identity is most likely fragmented across many websites, applications and social networks. There are trade offs between how much of your identity you want to share and the universe of applications and services that you can utilize, and it may not always be clear how you should manage these trade offs. As we work to help you identify yourself across the Web, we are focused on:

  • Identification and authorization: How you make yourself known to the Web by logging into different websites and apps, and what elements of your data those sites can access.  Mozilla plans to “embrace and extend” existing identity and login providers with our BrowserID project.
  • Control and transparency: You should have better control over the flow of your information online and you should have lightweight, easy to understand ways to set and manage your preferences.  BrowserID makes this a more realistic goal.
  • User at the center: Your online content should be portable across devices and platforms. Web applications should work wherever the Web works and not be limited to any single integrated system. For example, Firefox Sync keeps your browsing history, passwords, open tabs and other data synchronized across multiple computers and Android devices.

Web Platform: Modern browsers based on open standards (like Firefox) enable developers to create amazing Web applications and websites. With Firefox shipping on faster release cycles, Mozilla is rapidly increasing the capabilities of the browser platform, meaning developers can build more and more of their applications using Web technologies.

That said, there is more the Web Platform needs:

  • Device Capabilities: Mobile devices, tablets, TVs, automobiles and many other devices are connecting to the Web. The capabilities of these devices continue to expand and proliferate. We are working, both through innovation and through standards, to export more of these capabilities to the Web. WebGL, WebSockets, support for HTML audio and video, Rainbow and the early Boot-to-Gecko project are great examples of this.
  • Discovery: Users find it easy to discover apps in apps stores. The Web has the potential to create much better discovery mechanisms because it is linkable and brows-able. We are working to enhance search and discovery while browsing (Prospector), using social indicators to aid discovery, and matching users’ intents to allow multiple Web apps to ‘speak’ to each other seamlessly (Web Activities).
  • Transactions: Combining identity with proof-of-purchase (a digital receipt) can make transactions easy and link them to a user (not a device). We are also working to make different types of transactions (free, freemium, paid, subscription, in-app) easy on the Web.
  • Social: Leveraging a strong identity that works across the Web enables users to interact seamlessly and easily with content, apps and other people. This is particularly powerful when that identity can be used across platforms and devices while maintaining a great user experience (F1 sharing add-on).

Open Web Apps Ecosystem: Finally, utilizing all of the above, we want to make it even easier to create and consume awesome Web experiences. To enable this, we are focused on:

  • Open Web Apps Platform: Developers need tools that make it easier to create and monetize consistent and compelling Web experiences across platforms and devices. Mozilla, and many others,  are building the tools and infrastructure that will enable developers and users to harness the full power of the Web.
  • App Store: We are building an app store to create choice and opportunity online. The experience gained with Firefox Add-ons in areas like install flows, ratings, bundles and curation provides the foundation to build an Open Web Apps store.

Many of these initiatives are in their early stages, but are fundamental to an open Web that extends beyond the browser.  You can participate with us, or follow our progress, at the above links and by watching the Mozilla Labs blog for updates.

Demoparty Submission Closed, 100+ Entries

Submissions Closed

This weekend we closed submissions for our Demoparty Online Competition*. We recieved a little over 100 submissions and are excited now to look into them.

Here’s what’s happening next

– 20th – 27th of August: Pre-Selection goes live and you can vote for them!
– All online votes count 50%, the 10 Judges count for 50%, too
– 26th of August: Voting process is over. Expect the winner’s announcement any day.

Now STAY TUNED!!

* Mozilla Labs Demoparty is an initiative to foster artful exploration of open web technologies.

Final CALL for Demos

Demoparty 2011 coming to an End

After 7 events and 6 weeks of open submissions – This sunday our online demo competition will close. After the winners are determined (50% you / 50% jury) the Demoparty 2011 initiative is coming to an end. It’s been a fantastic ride, we’ve brought new communites together and helped to launch events that’ll defnetly stick around. The web is an exciting place for creatives in 2011.

On Monday we announced a deadline extension of +1 week to give some of you more time to wrap-up your demo. August 14th, 2011 it will be!

Made a Demo? Submit and win!

If you’re reading this, and you have recently created something cool with web technologies – Submit your work now to win a trip to the Alternative Party in Helsinki, Finland; you can win a Makerbot 3D printing kit; books, Angry Birds, and a lot more.

Final Event last weekend – Assembly


Our collaboration with the Assembly Demoparty in Helsinki marked the final and 7th event for our 2011 Demoparty season. Photo taken by swehrmann

Video Message


This video gives a basic explanation of the Demoparty project by @tbx

Freestyle Winning Demo of Paris Event


Image: The winner of the Paris DemoJS 2011 freestyle compo – Flares by tmp

Mozilla at Assembly – A talk on Art & WebGL (Pt2)

Mozilla Labs Demoparty is an initiative to foster artful exploration of open web technologies. The online competition is ending this sunday. (Submit your demo now!)

Last weekend Mozilla Labs arranged severall talks on HTML5 technology at the gigantic Assembly demoparty (Basically an arena full of hackers and geeks). This is our second post on it, find the first Assembly post here.
Photo by swehrmann on flickr

Visy’s HTML5 talk

Title: “In the country of the blind, the one-eyed man is king” – Or how fumbling my way through pixel-based effects made learning WebGL a lot easier by Visa-Valtteri “visy” Pimiä

Visy takes us into his world of pixel effects, shaders, WebGL and much more for creating art work. Enjoy:

View Visy’s slides here: In the country of the blind, the one-eyed man is king – Slides by Visy

Assembly photo by swehrmann on flickr

Extended Deadline for Demoparty Competition

You asked for it – you get it. We’ve decided to extend the online competition’s submission deadline for +1 week to give you a bit more time for wrapping-up your demos.

Extended Deadline: August, 14th (11:00 GMT)

SUBMIT NOW + Good Luck!!

Mozilla Labs Demoparty is an initiative to foster artful exploration of open web technologies.

Still reading? OK – here’s a link to a WebGL HTML5 Audio visualisation demo by Rob Hawkes: