It's the easiest way to stay connected and participate in the Mozilla QA community... Mozilla Quality Assurance (QA) is a network of countless volunteers from the Internet community, along with a group of Mozilla employees, who share the common mission of taming the Lizard through testing and constructively reporting bugs in Mozilla products. This extension allows you to find bugs in Mozilla products by running simple tests within the browser. Helping out doesn't take up much of your time, doesn't require any special skills, and helps to improve Mozilla products like Firefox and Thunderbird. When you find a bug, this extension helps you to report it to Litmus, the tool we use to track our testing efforts. You can even search for bugs and learn more about them through Bugzilla, our bug tracking tool. Your test results and bug reports are valuable, and we use them to ensure that all features work properly across a wide range of platforms, operating systems, and configurations. Why should I get involved? If you're a fan of Firefox and want to help us make it even better, the easiest way to get involved is to help us test! The Mozilla QA team and community play an important role in making sure millions of people have the best Web experience possible... so what are you waiting for? Join the Mozilla QA community now! For more information, please visit the home of Mozilla QA at quality.mozilla.org (QMO). "> How do I get started? Getting started with Mozilla QA is easy! This setup wizard will ask you a few simple questions. Once that's done, you'll be able to use the Litmus tab, where you can select what you want to test, run those tests, and submit your results to Litmus. You can also search for bugs or see all the bugs reported today in the Bugzilla tab. To meet others and interact with the Mozilla QA team and community you can connect to IRC using the Chat tab. You'll also have a chance to learn more about Mozilla QA through regular updates and news on the QMO tab. It's all integrated into the Mozilla QA Companion! A note on privacy When you use the Mozilla QA Companion, you're submitting test results to an open system. Other members of the community will access the information you submit in order to improve the quality of Mozilla products. You should not submit any private or confidential information using the Mozilla QA Companion. If you provide your real name or an IRC nickname to display instead, we'll hide your email address from public view to help prevent email harvesting bots from spamming you. For more information, please see our Privacy Policy. Welcome to the Mozilla QA community... Let's get started! "> Create Account button to create your new account. Once your account is created, press the 'Continue' button to complete setup."> Congratulations! Your Litmus account has been created. You'll be able to use your new account both here in the Mozilla QA Companion and on the Litmus website. That's it! You're ready to start testing. If you have any questions along the way, please post to the QMO Forums or join us on IRC. We are in #qa on irc.mozilla.org. You can click the 'Join IRC Now' button in the Chat tab or if you have an IRC client installed already, you can just click this link: join #qa. "> irc.mozilla.org, channel #qa, but the easist way to get on IRC right now is through your web browser. Just click the button below."> QMO, the home of Mozilla QA, for more information about what's happening with the community. Here are a few useful links: QA Companion Home Community Events Discussion Forums Litmus The Litmus tab is great for running a few quick tests, but visit Litmus for detailed information about test cases and community activity through the Web interface. Make sure to read the Litmus Tutorial. Bugzilla The Bugzilla tab allows you to run a few basic searches, but visit Bugzilla to learn more about how we handle bugs, run advanced searches or work with bugs directly. ">