Mozilla 24 Overview
Mozilla 24 was a worldwide, 24-hour open discussion that connected community members, academics and Web visionaries from Asia, America and Europe, in person and over the broadband video WIDE network. Mozilla 24 took place on September 15, 2007 and featured industry leaders who presented on the Web trends and technologies that will help shape the future of the Web.
Web n.0
Dr. Lawrence Lessig, professor of law at Stanford Law School and founder of its Center for Internet and Society
Getting started in Open Source projects, or "Learning to be at the festival"
David Humphrey, professor in the School of Computer Studies at Seneca College
Mozilla Developer Center Japan Project
Atsushi Shimono, MDC Japan Project Leader
Camellia: International Standard Encryption Algorithm from Japan
Masayuki Kanda, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (NTT)
Global Scale Computing
Mitchell Baker, Chair, Mozilla Foundation, Dr. Vint Cerf, Vice President and Chief Internet Evangelist at Google Inc., and Dr. Jun Murai, professor of Faculty of Environment and Information Studies and Vice President at Keio University
Other Programs
Mozilla 24 Opening (Japan)
IT pioneers vs. students - Is open source cool?! (Japan)
Panel discussion on open source: IT pioneers vs. students.
SOI A+zilla Add-ons Competition: Develop open source, develop people (Japan, Thailand, Hawaii)
Mozilla add-ons development competition for Asia-Pacific region developers.
Open Source and Localization - Europe and Asia joint workshop (France, Japan and Thailand)
European and Asian perspectives on open source, Mozilla product and website localization.
Accessibility of Web browsers: Practical case studies from India and the U.S. (India, Japan and the U.S)
Mozilla community members from Mumbai, India and Boston, U.S.A., who are visually impaired, discuss and demonstrate Web browser accessibility options.

