

Since then, Microsoft and Mozilla have been sending each other cakes on every major browser release, but Google decided to join the fun only in 2015. “Congratulations on IE10, love Mozilla,” the cake which had a gigantic Firefox logo right in the center read. Mozilla eventually decided to return the favor in 2012 when they sent Microsoft their own cake after the release of Internet Explorer 10.

After all, eating cake every six weeks can’t be a good thing for anyone, right? They continued sending more cakes when Mozilla shipped Firefox 3 and Firefox 4, but decided to switch to a less-expensive cupcake when Mozilla eventually embraced a six-week release cycle for the browser. Shortly after Firefox 2 became available for download, the Internet Explorer team sent Mozilla a cake with a special message: “Congratulations on shipping! Love, the IE team.”Īnd Microsoft’s engineers just didn’t want to stop there. At that time, Firefox was still in its early days, but the release of version 2 was seen by the Redmond-based software giant as the right occasion to congratulate its emerging rival on the release of a new browser. The whole tradition was actually started by Microsoft back in 2006. It happened this month when Microsoft released the new Chromium-based Microsoft Edge, and both Mozilla and Google sent cakes to the Microsoft Edge team to congratulate them on this new milestone. However, the Microsoft-Google-Mozilla trio is part of a cake-giving tradition that makes the headlines every once in a while, as the three companies send each other delicious treats whenever one of them ships a new browser. In fact, the migration of Microsoft Edge to Chromium brought Microsoft and Google closer together, as the two are now collaborating on improvements for the engine that’s powering their browsers.
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Microsoft, Google, and Mozilla might be fierce competitors in the browser market, but this doesn’t necessarily mean they don’t respect each other.
