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Netscape Founder Says Web Browsing Innovation Dead

mattOzan writes "Marc Andreessen told Reuters today that browser innovation ended five years ago (which would put us at about Navigator 4.5 beta -- what was so innovative about that? The "What's Related" button? Beatnik integration?) "Navigation is an embarrassment. Using bookmarks and back and forth buttons -- we had about eighteen different things we had in mind for the browser." Well, pass me the NDA and tell me what they were!"

15 of 895 comments (clear)

  1. Internet by Luigi30 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Browser innovation died with the rise of spyware/adware/etc. That caused browser innovations to be used against the end-user, so the innovations are negated.

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    1. Re:Internet by sniggly · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Try mozilla firebird and all the great plugins available for it, tabbed browsing, mouse gestures, popup blocking...

      And no spyware/adware, and it runs on windows and more platforms.

      I guess Andreesen when talking about all the innovations he "had in mind" he meant tabbed browsing, mouse gestures, popup blocking... I guess he was lucky to be in netscape at the time, most of what he did afterwards kind of failed miserably.

      --
      Of those to whom much is given, much is required.
  2. some quick ones by ywwg · · Score: 5, Interesting

    popup blocking
    cookie management
    forms information management
    tabbed browsing
    css-compliance
    that little bar that appears in moz on some pages with the extra links like "up" and "email" or whatever
    mouse gestures

    obviously, the browser has not been just sitting still.

  3. How I'd improve bookmarks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'd let the browser keep track of sites I visit frequently, and generate it's own list of bookmarks for me. Sometimes I'm too lazy to bookmark things, or more accurately, to organize them well. IT'd be nice if the browser did that. Maybe Bayesian bookmark classification.

  4. I can think of a couple innovations... by Desperado · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How about tabbed browsing (I know it's not everyone's cuppa but...) and cascaiding style sheets or the super back button in Safari or popup ad blocking? These are all worthwhile IMO.

    Refinement is what I'm looking for, web browsers are a commodity now.

    From the tone of the interview, Marc sounds like he's a bitter man now.

    --
    If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much space.
  5. Re:Funny how innovation stopped right then by cnkeller · · Score: 4, Interesting
    It just happens to coincide with the time he left Netscape to go start his own failed company LoudCloud.

    You mean Opsware. Marc's a nice guy though. We're his next door neighbors and used to see him quite a bit across the street at Hobee's. He's probably still got his table there....

    --

    there are no stupid questions, but there are a lot of inquisitive idiots

  6. Re:Not true. by Cebu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't understand how his is innovation in terms of navigation at all. The web browsers navigation system is the same whether you're using the keyboard, mouse, or even mouse gestures... it's simply another input method. Throwing in voice commands or a touch screen to navigate doesn't change the fact that you're still using back, forward, and history.

    In my opinion, Anderson's opinion is quite accurate if perhaps somewhat blunt. Just consider how narrow the subset of graphs, representing a user browsing the web that our current browser history model encompasses. Even the simple case where someone browses a few links deep then decides to go back a few links and browse a different topic looses quiet a bit of information. That difference alone affects browser usage patterns.

    Personally, I haven't seen any significant change in the browser navigation system for even longer than Anderson is suggesting. Certainly there have been some nice incremental changes to UI and encoding schemas, but navigation itself has been untouched for... well, longer than I care to remember.

  7. Some features I would like to see by Mostly+a+lurker · · Score: 4, Interesting
    First, 'a read ahead and preview' kind of capability. The way this would operate is as follows: when otherwise idle, the browser would try to anticipate future user actions and read the data in advance. But most important, when you moved the mouse over a link that the browser had already read some data for, it would display a preview. Moving the mouse would revert the display. Clicking the mouse would confirm the page navigation. I grant that this might generate extra network activity (perhaps images might be initially suppressed) but the user experience would be much enhanced.

    Second, I think there is scope for a far better builtin download manager. I know Opera and Mozilla have rudimentary download managers, but these lack obvious useful features: drag and drop; downloading of all matching patterns; scheduled downloads and others.

  8. So what's your next big idea for Mozilla, then? by derinax · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I got one word: Hoverlinks. It's a natural step from tabbed browsing.

    Pause over a link and you get a small preview of the click-through content in a hovering dialog a la tooltips. Implement in links using a small frame, perhaps...

    So Mark's thrown the gauntlet down. What's your idea?

  9. can we ignore this guy already? by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm serious. It's ironic that the "end of innovation" coincides with his leaving Netscape as well as Netscape's doomed 4.x series piece of shit^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hbrowser. Before that, "innovation" was Netscape ignoring the W3C and making up new "standards" every other week.

    Andreessen should be a pariah in the open source world. He abandoned an open source project (Mosaic & NCSA httpd) in order to compete with it in the commercial world. "Competition" in the Microsoft sense of the word: Gain the upper hand in the market then "innovate" so much that nobody can keep up. And, of course, give away the browser free of charge in order to sell the server. When Microsoft finally woke up to the web, Netscape was playing on their ballfield and obviously lost.

    Anyway, I'm tired of hearing him and Jim Barksdale whine about the browser market. Get over it already.

  10. Re:Whats wrong with current browsers? by Revenge013 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It is stumping to try and reinvent the browsers as we know it, or even to innovate. I compare browsing to the mechanics of reading a book: Book -> TOC -> Chapters -> Pages... if ya wanna get fancy, then throw in an index or bib.

    With that mindset, viewing web pages are the equivalent to turning pages... not many different ways to absorb the content.

    There is more room to innovate on the web-design level than with the browsing software. Sounds like he was pissed off because he couldn't reinvent the wheel.

    --
    Trivial Omnipotence
  11. The comments are old by blazerw11 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...and probably taken out of context. These quotes were made about a week ago. The comments also seemed to be in response to Microsoft's recent actions (no more Mac IE, no more stand alone IE).

    Marc's probably pretty annoyed that his comments are getting misconstrued this way.

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    A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely rearranging their prejudices. -- William James
  12. browser innovation, yes... by zorander · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The innovation on the Web has moved to the server side. Even large sites five years ago were very dependent on static pages. ASP, PHP, mod_perl, and Servlets were not used nearly as much as they are today. The dynamicism of sites has dramatically increased. The browsers always supported this, it's just that the server software wasn't there. I think part of it must have had to do with the processing cost of dynamically generating all pages, but I am no expert.

    There are still issues--multimedia delivery is one, so is effective user interfaces for more-than-web pages (something more powerful than javascript/html forms but not as cumbersome or ugly as java or .net or as single-platform as activex). Also large concepts like the page based model--which worked great for gopher and the early web, but which seems to be losing its luster lately.

    For instance, when I'm viewing blog comments, I should be able to expand and contract the threads with + and - buttons (without a pageload), change the threshhold (at least higher, since the data wouldn't neccesarily be there to go lower from the initial state), even mark them read and unread without a form send. Yes some browsers have features that makes this more or less possible, but across the board this stuff should be easy and widespread.

    The answer could be more and better client side scripting, or it could be interactive server connections (more robust than http). I personally like the client side scripting idea better, but that's me.

    Brian

  13. Ways to make pr0n surfing better by slaker · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Let's face it: There's not much we need to work on, since Moz and Opera nicely handle pop-ups. But I do think my pr0n browsing experience could be better.

    Here's some recent innovations, and a few new ideas:

    1. Linky (mozdev.org) - Linky lets me select a bunch of links and open them in tabs. Or just open all the links on a page in tabs. Good lord, why wasn't this in Netscape 2!?! Think of all the time I could've saved myself by not having to middle-click on everything.

    2. Image Permissions. I'm on a slow link, and doubleclick does nothing but waste bandwidth. Thank you Mozilla.

    3. Plug-in Management: The thing that Opera does right. Turning on flash on a site-by-site basis is a good thing.

    4. Profitable web browser: The thing that operasoft manages to do that netscape couldn't, apparently.

    5. Pop-up control. I used IE for the first time in quite awhile today. Good gods, how do people stand it? Every other browser seems to be better in this department than IE.

    And some things that would make browsing better:

    1. A better bookmark system. I think the netscape method (a single file) works better most of the time, but I *really* wish I could have my bookmarks follow me everywhere (yeah, I know that there are sites that do exactly that. None of them seemed appealing last time I looked). I also wish filing could be made easier.

    2. Better control over saving files. This is essentially a pr0n thing: I'd love to be able to highlight a bunch of stuff, right-click and choose "save all selected...", but I can't do that. Don't know why.

    3. Navigational AI. No, I'm not kidding. I see my students hit a new-to-them web site and then have no clue what to do. A browser "idiot mode" and "idiot tags" would be helpful, as would a browser with enough smarts to say "This looks like the link to product support" or "Click here to view cart". There would be some interesting pattern recognition software needed, but hey, what else are we doing with our 3GHz desktop PCs?

    4. A text-reading mode. There are decent screen-reading programs in the world. Reading long pages of text (e.g. tinyurl.com/ypc) is a frickin' chore. My co-workers more or less print every page they have to scroll to see. A better experience for a reader might help somewhat.

    5. Better "connection awareness". I'd love it if my browser could look at my transfer rates and choose to throttle back on images or display the odd ALT tag instead of making me wait.

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    -- I wanna decide who lives and who dies - Crow T. Robot, MST3K
  14. UI changes != innovations! by Shadowlore · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Those are *UI* improvements, not *browser* *innovations*.

    I love tabs, quite abit actually. But that is not a *browser* innovation. My terminal window has it. Would you say the command line "innovated" because of tabbed windows? I bet you wouldn't.

    Popup blocking? That's just a response to popups. One "innovation" to stop another "innovation"? Please.
    CSS? not a browser innovation, a standard! My word processing has stylesheets, XML has them, etc.. An improvement is not an innovation, just as not all innovations are improvements. Especially when alleged "innovations" come from other apps.

    For crying out loud XChat has had tabbing for a long time. Graphical forms have had them for years as well. This goes for gestures as well. Games have had them for quite some time. Thus, not innovation but merely a UI feature offered elsewhere.

    It is true there is very little innovation going on in the browser these days, But mostly because everyone got worried about "backward compatibility" and the fact that browsing was overhyped anyway.

    After all, we are talking about wandering or searching a resource for information. How many innovations have there been in *walking* for example?

    IMO, much of the lack of innovation has to do with poor shortsighted choices not a part of "browsing".

    For example, the effectively flat namespace that is DNS according to Internic. A heirarchical namespace would bring us a vastly different world.

    HTML is limited, the flat namespace is limiting. With these two firmly entrenched now, the next true innovation will come from elsewhere.

    When the famed dream of bi-directional hyperlinks comes to fruition (if ever), we'll see innovation. When the web is more than just a uni-directional reference, and is more self-organizing, we'll see innovation. When the flat-namespace is busted out, and we move beyond HTML (or flash/shockwave -- after all those arent innovations in *browsing* they are different ways of showing you a pretty cartoon or movie clip), we'll see innovation.

    Until then, we are stuck with the sea of flotsam, jetsam, and Innovation Stagnation(tm) that is the current state of the web and browsing it.

    --
    My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.