I would argue JetBrains doesn't make most of their money from individual developers (consumers) but rather from businesses (who in some cases may be freelancers or solo founders).
Firefox offering a browser to companies, that's a better product for them from a security perspective or something, sounds possibly interesting.
But that being said, the competition from Chrome (which is free, integrated with GSuite, and already offers corporate security features) would be stiff.
And of course, Firefox's mission has always put humans at the center, not businesses. Moving from "Google Search $$" to "Business $$" might be a frying pan to fire move in terms of distracting from their core mission...
But still, interesting, and I appreciate your thoughts..
I would argue JetBrains doesn't make most of their money from individual developers (consumers) but rather from businesses (who in some cases may be freelancers or solo founders).
Firefox offering a browser to companies, that's a better product for them from a security perspective or something, sounds possibly interesting.
But that being said, the competition from Chrome (which is free, integrated with GSuite, and already offers corporate security features) would be stiff.
And of course, Firefox's mission has always put humans at the center, not businesses. Moving from "Google Search $$" to "Business $$" might be a frying pan to fire move in terms of distracting from their core mission...
But still, interesting, and I appreciate your thoughts..