New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

R.I.P Netscape

post #1 of 18
Thread Starter 

AOL pulls plug on Netscape Web browser

By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer
Fri Dec 28, 5:10 PM ET



NEW YORK - Netscape Navigator, the world's first commercial Web browser and the launch pad of the Internet boom, will be pulled off life support Feb. 1 after a 13-year run.

Its current caretakers, Time Warner Inc.'s AOL, decided to kill further development and technical support to focus on growing the company as an advertising business. Netscape's usage dwindled with Microsoft Corp.'s entry into the browser business, and Netscape all but faded away following the birth of its open-source cousin, Firefox.

"While internal groups within AOL have invested a great deal of time and energy in attempting to revive Netscape Navigator, these efforts have not been successful in gaining market share from Microsoft's Internet Explorer," Netscape Director Tom Drapeau wrote in a blog entry Friday.

In recent years, Netscape has been little more than a repackaged version of the more popular Firefox, which commands about 10 percent of the Web browser market, with almost all of the rest going to Internet Explorer.

People will still be able to download and use the Netscape browser indefinitely, but AOL will stop releasing security and other updates on Feb. 1. Drapeau recommended that the small pool of Netscape users download Firefox instead.

A separate Netscape Web portal, which has had several incarnations in recent years, will continue to operate.

The World Wide Web was but a few years old when in April 1993 a team at the University of Illinois' National Center for Supercomputing Applications released Mosaic, the first Web browser to integrate images and sound with words. Before Mosaic, access to the Internet and the Web was largely limited to text, with any graphics displayed in separate windows.

Marc Andreessen and many of his university colleagues soon left to form a company tasked with commercializing the browser. The first version of Netscape came out in late 1994.

Netscape fed the gold-rush atmosphere with a landmark initial public offering of stock in August 1995. Netscape's stock carried a then-steep IPO price of $28 per share, a price that doubled on opening day to give the startup a $2 billion market value even though it had only $20 million in sales.

But Netscape's success also drew the attention of Microsoft, which quickly won market share by giving away its Internet Explorer browser for free with its flagship Windows operating system. The bundling prompted a Justice Department antitrust lawsuit and later a settlement with Microsoft.

Netscape eventually dropped fees for the software, but it was too late. Undone by IE, Netscape sold itself to AOL in a $10 billion deal completed in early 1999.

Netscape spawned an open-source project called Mozilla, in which developers from around the world freely contribute to writing and testing the software. Mozilla released its standalone browser, Firefox, and Netscape was never able to regain its former footing


Amazing how much influence for good and ill Netscape (the technology and the company) have had
post #2 of 18
Okay, this is news. But why the blue font other than irritating the eyes?
post #3 of 18
My first-ever browser was Netscape 4.12.
post #4 of 18
Quote:
Originally Posted by EdHocken
Okay, this is news. But why the blue font other than irritating the eyes?

Because apparently using the quote feature is incredibly difficult. Just like citing your sources is!
post #5 of 18
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Brendan
Because apparently using the quote feature is incredibly difficult. Just like citing your sources is!
At the top of my first post we read:

AOL pulls plug on Netscape Web browser

By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer
Fri Dec 28, 5:10 PM ET
post #6 of 18
Quote:
Originally Posted by EdHocken
Okay, this is news. But why the blue font other than irritating the eyes?
Huh? I see it as green.
post #7 of 18
It was blue, but it's green now.
post #8 of 18
You mean the boards are haunted?
post #9 of 18
Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard Dickson
It was blue, but it's green now.
Either way, it's still a bitch on the eyes.
post #10 of 18
Hmm I guess it blue itself early.
post #11 of 18
Good riddance Netscape.
post #12 of 18
I'll always associate Netscape with the tell-tale squawk of the old-fashioned dial-up modem. It made going onto the Internet seem like this mysterious journey.
post #13 of 18
I never really got into Netscape, as I was frustrated by the way the browser loaded images.

With the competition of IE7 (worst designed browser ever), Firefox (love it!!) and Opera (tried using it, but couldn't escape the death-grip of Firefox), plus other open-source variants, Netscape didn't really stand a chance.

The latest release of Netscape was merely Mozilla Firefox with a different skin and a few special features that will surely be in future iterations of Firefox (since version 3 of that browser is not far from official release).
post #14 of 18
Thank God. My father will be crushed(I hope). He's refrained from using IE or Firefox because he says they are 'pretentious'.

AT LEAST THEY AREN'T RETARDED, DAD!
post #15 of 18
Goodbye Netscape. You sure sucked hard in the end.

Even though it wasn't the first browser to expose me to the www (that dubious honor goes to Mosaic) you can never truly forget how you found goatse attached to an unrelated subject for the first time.
post #16 of 18
Quote:
Originally Posted by Quarant
Wait... There are browsers other than Safari? I'm confused!
Shhh... Relax, there's no need to bother yourself. Just keep looking at the transparencies and the candy colored icons. Everything will be fine.
post #17 of 18
Anyone remember when it looked like you might have to actually purchase an internet browser?
post #18 of 18
Quote:
Originally Posted by ChunkyLover53
My first-ever browser was Netscape 4.12.
Was is awkward but yet rewarding at the same time?

I know it was for me.


Remember Netscape 6? What a bloated piece of shit that was.
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
  Back to Forum: Misc. Culture