Hi :)
It doesn't really work out that way.  Mostly every distro fits neatly into 1 of 
about 8 main families and even different families only have minor differences 
between the way they do things.  

With package management there are only about 4 main different ways.  If you 
look at one good example, Adobe Reader
http://get.adobe.com/reader/otherversions/
The top drop-down shows, for;
* Windows, 7 different downloads.  One for each of 7, Vista, Xp and so on
* Mac, 4 different downloads
* Linux, 1, well 4 when you look at the bottom drop-down but of those 1 is deb 
and another is a tarball so that is just 1 really
* Solaris, 2
* Android, 1

So it's really not the case that there needs to be hundreds for
Gnu&Linux even tho that is often used as the excuse for not even
offering 1.

If hardware manufacturers didn't mind producing 1 OpenSource driver then
it would cover all the different Gnu&Linux families, Solaris, Android,
Bsd and Macs.  Plus being OpenSource would mean that it could be updated
faster if malware exploits were found.

So the simple answer to "Do we really need a Firefox package for every
distribution?" is No.  And at the moment we don't have a separate
package for each one anyway.

Regards from
Tom :)

--- On Sun, 8/4/12, Faldegast <1...@bugs.launchpad.net> wrote:

I don't really think it is impossible to gather all that under one roof.
However I tend to think that perhaps we have to much in the
distributions. Do we really need a Firefox package for every
distribution?

A common packaging of common apps should simplify a lot.

<snip />

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