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Has AOL Ruined Netscape?

Anonymous Coward sent it: a scathing, three-page ZDNet article that claims the AOL purchase has turned Netscape into a shadow of its former self, that morale there is low and employee turnover is high, and that the company is now mired in bureaucracy, caught between Sun and AOL managements. The article was so sad, I almost wanted to cry by the time I got to the end.

245 comments

  1. Boohoo! by Binary+Tree · · Score: 1

    Indeed, let's all have a moment of silence for the former Netscape....
    =~(~~~~~~

  2. Has Netscape ruined Netscape? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seems to me that Netscape was going down the toilet way before AOL bought them.

    1. Re:Has Netscape ruined Netscape? by drewda · · Score: 2

      I had inside experience with Netscape before AOL gobbled them up. It wasn't a very pretty sight. Netscape couldn't finish any products--they would often cancel them right after a big we're-making-the-best-thing-since-sliced-bread gala. The Netscape that most people think of had already died out long before AOL came along.

  3. Oh my goodness... by NettRom · · Score: 2
    it's a very sad article to read. one could read into it that AOL bought Netscape only to dismantle it and keep the few things that they needed (the browser, Netcenter and a couple of other things).

    combining this article with nomo zilla and nscp/aol by jwz the view of AOL one gets is all but pretty.

    Sad to see that what was in many ways such a great company pushing the boundaries, staying on the forefront of the web & Internet revolution, has broken into pieces.

    RIP?

    1. Re:Oh my goodness... by Menthos · · Score: 2
      I don't understand why AOL bought Netscape in the first hand. Okay, Netscape indeed had a great brand before AOL took over, but AOL and Netscape always have been different types of companies. AOL is service-oriented and Netscape was technical-oriented. The deal didn't, and still doesn't make any sense, because a service company can never run a technical company that always needs to be at the bleeding edge (browser development). A brand isn't everything, by buying for the brand only and don't understanding the other company, you can easily just end up ruining the brand. I think this is what has already happened.

      --

      GNU/Linux. The Freshmaker.

    2. Re:Oh my goodness... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      one could read into it that AOL bought Netscape only to dismantle it


      I've often wondered that myself. They bought a browser company, and immediately said they would still integrate IE into the aol software. Why??? If it were my desicion, i would invest money into nestscape then when it was ready dump IE and integrate netscape. But for some reason aol never had any intent to do that...*sigh* At any rate i continue and will continue to use netscape; a web browser is not a suitable OS!

    3. Re:Oh my goodness... by JordanH · · Score: 2
      I think owning Netscape is a big feather in the cap to AOL and Steve Case. Before AOL bought Netscape, AOL didn't have nearly the cachet as a serious player. As you say, Netscape is a great brand.

      Sun really needed the Netscape Servers to be able to sell a complete Internet solution based on commercial products. I think Sun is still convinced that most customers want turnkey systems based on commercial products. This is perhaps getting less true all the time, but it still represents the largest market segment. AOL could sure make good use of Sun systems too. So, the three way deal was a match made in heaven.

      Note that Netscape is the loser here. Nobody knows or cares what Netscape wants. It's irrelevant. Microsoft "removed their air supply" and AOL/Sun picks at the pieces.

    4. Re:Oh my goodness... by JPMH · · Score: 1
      Note that Netscape is the loser here. Nobody knows or cares what Netscape wants. It's irrelevant. Microsoft "removed their air supply" and AOL/Sun picks at the pieces.

      Netscape's shareholders wanted money. They got it.

      Netscape wanted survival. The browser team survives.

    5. Re:Oh my goodness... by znu · · Score: 1

      AOL can't do that. They'd lose their space on the Windows desktop. That kind of thing doesn't seem like a big deal to us, but it's a major source for new users.

      Maybe once the DoJ is done nailing MS to the floor AOL will start using Netscape.

      --

      --
      This space unintentionally left unblank.
    6. Re:Oh my goodness... by bmetzler · · Score: 2
      All this crap from ZDET really means is that the division between Windows Users and Non-Windows users is growing faster and deeper which is something that is seeming more and more to scare the hell out of the IE/Windows-boosting crowd, because it really means that any "standards" from Microsoft most likely won't be supported outside of MS.

      The fevor of both the Windows users, and the Linux users is getting to the fanatical level of religous bigotry. Pretty soon it'll be taboo to talk about religion, politics, and what OS you use. The pro-Microsoft arguments have especially been getting worse and worse lately, with the debate not being over concrete things, but just abstract ideas. IE is better then Netscape because the moon is full tonight. Nay-yay-yah!!!

      Chrome Effects was an example of this

      Oh, did I miss something important? What is Chrome Effects?

      -Brent
      --
    7. Re:Oh my goodness... by holloway · · Score: 1
      I'm not sure if this was exactly what you were responding to but Chrome effects refers to Mozilla's UI that can be fully customised using XPToolkit.... imagine freeamp skins (read:winamp skins) but with functionality so you may place buttons anywhere using existing technologies like XML, CSS, HTML, Javascript (ecmascript?) DOM.

      Meaning future downloads of a dumbed down interface for your Aunt Gladis or a NIN mozilla chrome with inbuilt mp3 player.

      If you can't hack Mozilla assembling a Chrome helps to do your bit to make Mozilla a better browser (...than IE :). If you want to learn more about chromes try Mozillazine's chromeZone.

    8. Re:Oh my goodness... by C.Lee · · Score: 0

      >> Chrome Effects was an example of this

      >Oh, did I miss something important? What is Chrome Effects?

      Basically it was an attempt by Microsoft to bog down the WWW even more with even more useless graphical crud that basically died because nearly everbody outside of MS supporters thought it was a fucking stupid idea.

  4. COLWOF by AndyElf · · Score: 0

    ... which stands for Crying-Out-Loud-Wheeping-On-the-Floor

    --

    --AP
  5. Netscape - AOL by BradyB · · Score: 1
    Well IMO, Netscape was already headed down because of the hurting that Microsofts IE put on them. For a company that shipped other things besides browsers they sure didn't like someone taking market share from their browser. So how did they respond to this, they put out a browser that was and well is not stable, bug ridden, crashy (if that's a word) I have used Netscape from the 1st day I got on the Internet, I will probably continue to use them, but I have looked elsewhere and found better products from other companies.

    I know AOL probably just wanted to brand name of Netscape because they are probably as tired of Microsoft as anyone else. So, with that in mind they merged with another Microsoft hater, Sun. And all the employees that were used to putting out good quality stuff were just being shuffled around like paper in a trashcan. I don't blame them for leaving.

    I hope that AOL can pull this act together, and start shipping AOL disks with Netscape 5.0 as the browser as soon as it comes out. If they don't then we will know that they secretly bought out Netscape to crush its product and name and was paid to do it by Microsoft? Hmmm..

    --

    Good is never enough, when you dream of being great!
    1. Re:Netscape - AOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I'm sure AOL is tired of Microsoft, that's why they're about to release that Linux AOL client - NOT!

    2. Re:Netscape - AOL by Benley · · Score: 1

      As much as I am tired of Microsoft, I am even MORE sick of AOL. I am forced to use AOL every once in a while, like when I am stuck in a hotel room and I must get online, and each time I use their service, I find it to be terrible.

      AOL has been a BIG annoyance to the internet community ever since they first released thousands of moron chatroom "A/S/L?" checkers into the population of the net. Would we not be better off if they just WENT AWAY?

      And for God's sake, USE SOME STANDARD FRICKIN SOFTWARE! What exactly is the point of making it nearly impossible to use an external web browser or ICQ with AOL without being disconnected after 5 or 10 minutes simply because you aren't interacting with the nearly-useless AOL software?

      Forgive me if I sound bitter. There are people living here, connected to our LAN with direct - already paid for - internet service, and they STILL use AOL because they don't know that there is any other way to connect to the internet. I feel like AOL is like an army of Care Bears that make you feel all warm and fuzzy about using their service and the net, but they somehow leave you totally uneducated about anything particularly normal. What gives?

  6. This may be a reason why... by Arctic+Fox · · Score: 1

    ...IE has over taken Netscape for browswer supremacy.
    Before you rail me for not trashing Microsoft...
    If you dont care about your employer, why would you care about the product? The guys working on IE are probably happier than pigs in shit because a) they're winning, b) it pays well.

  7. Small IE rant by Sneakums · · Score: 1

    In Microsoft, respect is gained by getting stuff out the door, not by taking the time to do it properly.

    Internet Explorer is not done properly. Standard support is poor, and undoubtedly the code implementing it is shoddy.

    Security in IE has repeatedly been shown to be badly broken, and almost certainly not an integral part of the design.

    The idea that digital signatures can protect a user from malicious code is ludicrous.

    1. Re:Small IE rant by TummyX · · Score: 1


      Internet Explorer is not done properly. Standard support is poor, and undoubtedly the code implementing it is shoddy.

      Excuse me? Not done properly how huh?
      Hrm, it's componentised, it's fast, it's lean and mean. Standard support is the BEST of any browser currently out there - so what if it has more non standard features - that doesn't make the standard features dissapear.


      Security in IE has repeatedly been shown to be badly broken, and almost certainly not an integral part of the design.
      The idea that digital signatures can protect a user from malicious code is ludicrous.

      Security in some windows components are broken, which cause IE uses, makes IE broken (it's hard to draw the line where IE ends and other things start - ala COM).
      Anyway, digital signatures don't protect stupid users. And their very concept is not sand box code, but to allow code to run, but only if the user agrees. Signatures basically allow people to sue the ones responsible if the code is bad.
      Java is limited cause it's sand boxed, and already there are efforts to extend it with signatures.

      And BTW, have you ever looked at the security options in IE? It looks like just a long list box, but there are advanced features, there are at least 5 different dialogs each with their own dialogs and settings especially for Java. IE allows a flexible range of customization and settings - MUCH more so that Netscape.
      BTW, netscape plugins aren't secure either.

    2. Re:Small IE rant by jilles · · Score: 2

      "Standard support is the BEST of any browser currently out there"

      Big deal they first wiped out the competition and only then could they claim to offer the best support for standards. Just wait two months or so, then mozilla comes out.

      "Java is limited cause it's sand boxed, and already there are efforts to extend it with signatures."

      As far as I know signatures/certificates are in JDK 1.1 and newer version. Java operates in a sandbox by default. With the use of certificates you can allow applets outside the sandbox. I think Java's certificate model is a bit more sophisticated then ie's security model.

      "It looks like just a long list box, but there are advanced features, there are at least 5 different dialogs each with their own dialogs and settings especially for Java. IE allows a flexible range of customization and settings - MUCH more so that Netscape."

      With the default settings, ie is very insecure since vbscript and activex stuff are enabled then.
      Netscape doesn't support these things and doesn't need the complex dialogs to turn them of.

      "Security in some windows components are broken, which cause IE uses, makes IE broken (it's hard to draw the line where IE ends and other things start - ala COM)."

      That's what we call a messy program. Netscape proves that you don't have to do things that way to make a browser so IE's insecurity is inexcusable.

      --

      Jilles
    3. Re:Small IE rant by TummyX · · Score: 1


      Big deal they first wiped out the competition and only then could they claim to offer the best support for standards. Just wait two months or so, then mozilla comes out

      Big deal? The original post said IE was bad at standards.
      Pst. Netscape never had the same level of standards IE4/5 had nor did they even attempt it until IE4 came out and killed them on technical levels.



      That's what we call a messy program. Netscape proves that you don't have to do things that way to make a browser so IE's insecurity is inexcusable.

      Uh. Yeah, you can not COMPONENTISE things, not reuse code and not add advanced features if you want to.
      "messy" is what I'd call netscape.

      Why do you think they threw away the old source and started a new new componentised model...funnily enough, they based it on COM.

    4. Re:Small IE rant by jilles · · Score: 2

      "The original post said IE was bad at standards."

      And they are right, it is. IE 5 is not HTML 4.0 compliant, does not conform to the XML 1.0 standard, makes a mess out of CSS 1.0, not to mention CSS 2.0, has a proprietary version of XSL.

      The fact that netscape does not implement those standards is not relevant because it does not claim to do so.

      I never said netscape was a good program, worse, I'm using ie 5 right now for the simple reason its better than ns 4.

      "Uh. Yeah, you can not COMPONENTISE things, not reuse code and not add advanced features if you want to. "messy" is what I'd call netscape."

      Agreed, they're both messy programs. But just wrapping your code in activeX doesn't make it any better. MS stuff has way to many dependencies on the lower level OS hence its poor security.

      BTW. strange senctence: you cannot ... unless you want to.

      As far as I know mozilla is crossplatform which means it is definately not based on COM. Probably they use some sort of ORB that resembles COM. At this point I would like to point out that MS did not invent COM, it's just a classical example of their embrace and extend policy. COM in it self is not evil but the stuff they put on top of it at MS is.

      --

      Jilles
    5. Re:Small IE rant by IntlHarvester · · Score: 2

      Hmmm... Here's an equally true statement:

      Netscape Navigator is not done properly. Standard support is poor, and undoubtedly the code implementing it is shoddy.

      Security in Navigator has repeatedly been shown to be badly broken, and almost certainly not an integral part of the design.

      The idea that digital signatures can protect a user from malicious code is ludicrous. (Netscape has this feature too.)

      Yawn.
      --

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    6. Re:Small IE rant by Sneakums · · Score: 1

      I did say "rant", you know.

    7. Re:Small IE rant by Sneakums · · Score: 1

      > mozilla is crossplatform which means it is definately not based on COM

      Mozilla uses its own implementation of COM, called XPCOM. They are very similar.

      > MS did not invent COM

      I'm afraid they did. COM specifies a standard layout for vtables, GUIDs, etc to allow components to interoperate.

      > COM is not evil.

      True. What is evil is wrapping crap code in a COM interface and calling it good.

    8. Re:Small IE rant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, DEC invented COM. Microsoft extended it...

    9. Re:Small IE rant by bmetzler · · Score: 2
      Hmmm... Here's an equally true statement:

      Yep, but that Netscape code is going away anyways, so it doesn't matter. And most of those issues didn't exist when the browser was first developed meaning that there basically had to be kludges to get them in.

      However, that's no big deal, because we have Mozilla now. Mozilla was written from scratch with all these issues in mind, so it implements them in a documentably superiour manner.

      -Brent
      --
    10. Re:Small IE rant by Sneakums · · Score: 1

      Microsoft invented COM. DEC (co?)invented DCE RPC, which Distributed COM (DCOM) uses as its wire protocol (with a couple of changes).

    11. Re:Small IE rant by Drayke · · Score: 1

      In Microsoft, respect is gained by getting stuff out the door, not by taking the time to do it properly.

      "Rant" or no, herein lies the crux of the problem, I think. Netscape knows very well that to keep any viability they must continue to be visible. Hence the reason we see new revs of Communicator with nothing much different every time we turn around. (I use 4.5/4.6 at work and 4.04/4.08/4.6/4.7 on my various boxen at home, and the only real difference I've seen is the multiple IMAP server capability in 4.5+ - nice to have for people like me who actually use IMAP, but better would be something like Outlook Express's multiple POP capability, which would actually appeal to the mass market. "Smart Browsing" is BS, and another Netcenter button does not a minor rev number make.) They're trying to stay visible, to look busy (as defined by Joe Consumer) while the Mozilla coders finish v5. And from a technical standpoint, if v5 in whatever form is half what it claims to be, I'm willing to wait.

      -Drayke

      --

      -Drayke

      If all the world's a stage, it must have been an easy audition.
    12. Re:Small IE rant by TummyX · · Score: 1


      . But just wrapping your code in activeX doesn't make it any better


      It would make it better, and the fact that IE is faster, leaner etc than Netscape makes it even better. Components are better than no components IMHO.


      As far as I know mozilla is crossplatform which means it is definately not based on COM

      It's called xpCOM and is based very much on COM (right down to many of the interface names).
      COM is also cross platform and language nuetral - it's just not very popular on other platforms. A few companies like Bristal and Software (oh and Microsoft) have COM engines for Unix.
      COM was designed to be language and platform neutral.
      It's better than having Java (controlled by sun) with all these things like RMI and JINI which rely on Java :|.
      With COM, from the ground up it was designed to just allow you to quickly turn anything into a COM object.
      In fact, you can turn a standard DLL into a COM server just by writing a type libary for it (IDL), same with java classes.
      And with windows monikers, you can create any type of object from any language and especially scripting languages.
      eg.

      // from javascript
      javaobject=GetObject("java:myjavaclass");

      'from vb/vbscript
      javaobject=CreateObject("java:myjavaclass");


      Microsoft are big and considered evil, but they really do have some pretty neat technologies, and they manage to integrate them well into the windows api (giving them away free).
      WinInet for example makes it easy to FTP etc etc...

    13. Re:Small IE rant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Netscape 4.5 is a stable version for windows and you can still get the latest pluggins. The only bug I have found with 4.5 is that you have to close and reopen the browser to clear your disk cache. I don't know what I will do for interactive ftp if the Netscape pluggin support starts to dwindle, I guess the solution will be to use a quick load elder version of netscape that doesn't play king of the hill with explorer.

    14. Re:Small IE rant by jilles · · Score: 2

      OK, your making pretty much the same point I did:
      Mozilla uses a ms com like orb but ms did not invent it.

      About the technical advantages of COM, sure it is convenient that you make a COM component of anything. This includes Java classes (through a bridge).

      But why would people want to use RMI when they have COM? Apart from its platform independence, RMI can do some stuff COM cannot: download classes from a remote spot, serialize objects over a network connection and some other stuff. All this at the cost of language independence.

      Likewise, JINI can use the same mechanisms to do cool stuff you simply cannot do with COM.

      So a language dependency has the great advantage that you can do language specific stuff.

      "Microsoft are big and considered evil, but they really do have some pretty neat technologies, and they manage to integrate them well into the windows api (giving them away free)."

      I don't really think discussing companies in terms of good and evil makes much sense and of course MS did some neat stuff. I don't think COM is neat, though. A lot of win32 programmers seem to be really impressed with it but from where I'm standing its just a very simple ORB with lots of stuff strapped on top of it. I've seen much more impressive stuff like CORBA and voyager and considering this, MS could have pulled out something more advanced if they had taken the time to do the research & development instead of hacking a simple RPC mechanism on top of OLE.

      Of course even a simple ORB allows you to do some neat distributed programming but that's not the point.

      That's exactly the reason why the mozilla team used a COM like orb. It's relatively simple to implement, small, fast and provides what they need. I'm sure if rpc would have been in the requirements they would have chosen something more heavier: CORBA.

      --

      Jilles
    15. Re:Small IE rant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      JRMP (the old RMI wire protocol) could be implemented by any platform, though having a JVM certainly makes it easier. But RMI can use IIOP now, so that doesn't matter anyway.

      COM uses reference counting (the most unimaginably inefficient form of garbage collection ever devised), mandates vtbls (when we've known better ways to dispatch methods on pipelined architectures for years), gets inheritance wrong, makes dynamic invocation fragile if not impossible, and makes both introspection and exceptions optional and too painful to use much. Don't even mention Automation- all that does is (optionally) support functionality a better-designed ORB could provide for every interface.

    16. Re:Small IE rant by TummyX · · Score: 1


      JRMP (the old RMI wire protocol) could be implemented by any platform, though having a JVM certainly makes it easier. But RMI can use IIOP now, so that doesn't matter anyway.


      Same as COM but it doesn't stop people complaining.


      COM uses reference counting (the most unimaginably inefficient form of garbage collection ever devised), mandates vtbls (when we've known better ways to dispatch methods on pipelined architectures for years), gets inheritance wrong, makes dynamic invocation fragile if not impossible, and makes both introspection and exceptions optional and too painful to use much. Don't even mention Automation - all that does is (optionally) support functionality a better-designed ORB could provide for every interface.

      You mean DCOM.
      Reference counting isn't the best, but it is one of the easiest to implement and can be rather fast. Mandating vtables also is a speed issue.
      If you don't like it, how about SOAP.
      Inheritance wrong? How so? COM specifies interfaces not implementation, and interface inheritance works fine thats.
      Exceptions are bad compared to java yes.

    17. Re:Small IE rant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You mean DCOM.

      My only beef with DCOM is, unlike IIOP, there's hardly anything out there to interoperate with. (I've heard of two ludicrously expensive ports, but nothing for AIX or Linux.)

      Reference counting isn't the best, but it is one of the easiest to implement and can be rather fast.

      Reference counting (along with explicit freeing, which is just RC the hard way) is the only GC schemes that take O(n) time in the number of objects killed by one lost reference.

      Mandating vtables also is a speed issue.

      Branch-on-type is usually faster than vtbls on real hardware- serious OO guys (Self? Mercury?) figured that out a long time ago. A JVM can take advantage of that, where COM has cemented the old simplistic way that stalls pipelines.

      COM specifies interfaces not implementation, and interface inheritance works fine thats.

      Single inheritance is crippled, its only saving grace is that it's just about impossible to screw up. Every place a client queries for and requires using several related interfaces, there should have been one subinterface that provides all that functionality, for the same reason you can't (well, shouldn't) only implement part of an interface. Which interface provides a method I know the object supports is an implementation detail.

      Exceptions are bad compared to java yes.

      ISupportErrorInfo helps, but ISTR Brockschmidt found some threading problems right away, and as usual doing the Right Thing is totally optional.

    18. Re:Small IE rant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PS: Thanks for the reminder about SOAP. I remember hearing the name, but never got around to looking into it until now.

    19. Re:Small IE rant by TummyX · · Score: 1

      Reference counting (along with explicit freeing, which is just RC the hard way) is the only GC schemes that take O(n) time in the number of objects killed by one lost reference.

      Yes, O(n) time for the numberof objects killed by one lost reference, however if the number of objects destroyed isn't that high, it's possible it'll be faster than having garbage collector scan for what's not garbage.

  8. Browser Suicide by Assistant+Madman · · Score: 1

    Interestingly, my browser (Netscape 4.61) crashed on the third page of the report - not once or twice, but four times. Guess it just didn't want to read about the slow demise of its parent company :)

    Cheers,
    GC

    1. Re:Browser Suicide by fwr · · Score: 1

      Hmm. My browser (4.7) did just fine, and I reloaded it a couple of times just to make sure. I'd suggest upgrading.

    2. Re:Browser Suicide by Assistant+Madman · · Score: 1

      >Hmm. My browser (4.7) did just fine, and I reloaded it a couple of times just to make sure. I'd suggest upgrading.

      I had upgraded to 4.7, but sadly it seemed to be even more buggy (and choke harder on java-enabled pages) than did earlier versions. Thus I downgraded to 4.61. Sad, really, as I have been using Netscape exclusively on my personal box (sadled with IE occasionally at work) since version 1.1

      Cheers,
      GC

    3. Re:Browser Suicide by paleo · · Score: 1

      IE 4.0 crashed on third page too. There was some problem with the scrolling. The problem spilled over to my other IE windows and stopped when I shut this particular window. Funny. Wierd.

    4. Re:Browser Suicide by Crixus · · Score: 1
      Interestingly, my browser (Netscape 4.61) crashed on the third page of the report - not once or twice, but four times. Guess it just didn't want to read about the slow demise of its parent company :)

      Opera 3.60 seemed to handle it fine. I can't wait for the linux release.

      --
      Ignore Alien Orders
    5. Re:Browser Suicide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well IE5 worked prefectly, as usual.

    6. Re:Browser Suicide by Drayke · · Score: 1

      Opera 3.60 seemed to handle it fine. I can't wait for the linux release.

      Off-topic, I know, but I've heard that for months, and I've yet to see a Linux release. And I'd love to see just how many big ugly bugs Opera has (there have got to be a few - I'm sick of hearing people praise Opera as though it were immune to all the headaches people see with IE/NS).</spleen>

      -Drayke

      --

      -Drayke

      If all the world's a stage, it must have been an easy audition.
    7. Re:Browser Suicide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think maybe you ran out of system resources, which is what happens to me any time I fart near my Win98 system.

  9. It's not just IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Have any of you considered the damage inflicted on Netscape by Apache? Maybe they were making a few bucks on Navigator, but they charge thousands of $$$ for their servers, and their market share there is 7.73 to Apache's 53.59. Three years ago they were pretty close.

    1. Re:It's not just IE by hexx · · Score: 1

      Apache hasn't cut into Netcenter's profits as much as the numbers would make one believe. Most of the Apache users (aka us) would probably not go buy Netcenter if Apache did not exist... we use Apache cause it kicks ass and is FREE. If Apache were taken away from me, I would not go out and buy Netcenter...I would cry and then get a XOOM page or something. I think MS's WebServer/IIS has cut into Netcenter's tangible market more than Apache. any thoughts?

    2. Re:It's not just IE by biohazard99 · · Score: 1

      It amazing. Instead of hiring people who were with the www at its inception, perl and lisp scripting merrilly, the market has started hiring more and more people who know VBScript so that Microsoft's precious IIS can deliver those "customized" *.asp pages. We have been able to do the same damn trick since the HTTP standard was released, sure maybe we couldn't use OLE to link up to a nother MS SQL database but who gives a rats ass

    3. Re:It's not just IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's amazing about it? VBscript is easier than Perl so there are more people able to create advanced web sites using it. When are you going to get it through your skull that when people have a choice between 'works and is easy' and 'works as well or better but is hard' they choose easy? If you've been able to do the same things since the HTTP standard was released why didn't you? Could it be because you're full of shit?

    4. Re:It's not just IE by biohazard99 · · Score: 1

      I was merely commenting that the idiots of the world don't know what they are paying for. They are willing to pay ungoodly ammounts for a server just because it say microsoft on it, which in my book is insane

    5. Re:It's not just IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how is vbscript 'easier' than perl? They both are quite similiar to 'basic' languages heh. No defining variables before use, no memory management, prebuilt objects for mostly everything.

    6. Re:It's not just IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tripe. As they say back home. Utter cow stomach lining.

      Netscape's product line at the low end did evaporate, but the high end looks fine. They stopped trading on itty bitty stuff and went to the high end. They do commerce procducts, company data interchange stuff, scalable servers. Go look at their product line.

      They realisedthe direction the market was headed long ago, and followed it before most people understood.

      Apache is a core web server product. A damned fine one (I'll get booted by the world if I say less -- but the source sez it all), but it is only part of an infrastructure. HTTP engines are tricky but only an enabler. A means to an end....

  10. Along the same lines.. by Egorn · · Score: 1

    Netscape Communications, Inc. announced 1999-11-09 that its much anticipated Netscape Navigator 5.0 will be available for trial later this month, the final version coming in February of 2000. With a beta version of Internet Explorer 5.5 coming soon, what will happen to Netscape? Is it too late? Is it the end of Netscape and esentially the browser wars? While we all may appreciate the concept of not having to deal with making a site compatible with both browsers, is it truly worth it? Without competition will IE become worse? Or will
    someone create a new and much more powerful browser (Opera?) Story taken from here!
    -------------------------------------------

    --

    Movie News - "Entertainment news, bitch!"
    1. Re:Along the same lines.. by finkployd · · Score: 1

      I don't think that because Microsoft's browser has a higher number it is going to be better. Now will the ignorant masses percieve it as better because of this? Probably. Kind of makes one wonder why MS didn't start IE on version 7.0 to really kick Netscape's ass.

      I personally am unhappy with both browsers. They are slow, non standards complient, loaded with crap I do not need in a web browser, and crash all the time. I like the concept of Opera but I HATE MDA windows.

      Oh well, time to shut up or start my own GPL'd browser project...

      Finkployd

    2. Re:Along the same lines.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I personally am unhappy with both browsers. They are slow, non standards complient, loaded with crap I do not need in a web browser, and crash all the time. I like the concept of Opera but I HATE MDA windows.

      Oh well, time to shut up or start my own GPL'd browser project...

      No need for your own GPL project. Yeah both IE5 and N4.X suck big time when it comes to standards compliance - but Mozilla is dedicated to bringing standards to its new browser. Just spend a few minutes downloading the nightly build at mozilla.org and give it a run. Standards....no nice.

      The one thing that N5 has going for it that nobody mentions - its damn small. (5 MB for everything).

    3. Re:Along the same lines.. by thetbone · · Score: 1

      you find IE5 slow? I assume you're running it on a 486. Get off your wallet man!

    4. Re:Along the same lines.. by mihalis · · Score: 1
      I personally am unhappy with both browsers. They are slow, non standards complient, loaded with crap I do not need in a web browser, and crash all the time.

      You can still get the standalone Navigator from their ftp servers. I quite like Navigator but I don't really like the extras that are added in to form Communicator (I mean, I have Emacs!) so I just stick with the original. I will be getting up to speed with Mozilla on Solaris and Linux soon and I'm hoping to switch over when it supports my fairly limited web needs.

      Chris Morgan
    5. Re:Along the same lines.. by finkployd · · Score: 1

      P200 Actually

      It could be faster, it doesn't need all the crap that it has, just simple program that can render pages from HTML would be nice, but no. Both browsers have to layer garbage that no one actually uses into the progam.

      I agree, IE is faster, but since it will be a cold day in hell before we see Linux IE, that doesn't do me much good. I'm not going to switch to a slow, unstable OS to get a fast, semi-stable browser :)

      Finkployd

  11. AOL on Crack by jajuka · · Score: 1

    Steve Case must have been smoking something to think Netcenter was worth aquiring. "Portals" of that type are a joke. I'd be shocked if even 5 percent of the "hits" Netcenter get are on purpose. The only reason to go there at all is to DL a new version of their browser. The rest are all just people who probably havent figured out you can just type in the address of the search engine you want, much less how to change their homepage. You dont believe me try taking a few help desk calls one day. I've listened to one tech trying to explain scroll bars to a user. :)
    Not to mention Netcenter is just about the ugliest Portal site I've seen and their web mail the slowest I've had the misfortune of using.

  12. AOL the vulture, Netscape the prey by robs · · Score: 1

    Mergers are never pretty, especially for the employees of the company being bought out. AOL really bought Netscape only for their prized possessions, and their fuzzy alliance with Sun was to reap as much as they could between the two companies.

    Unfortunately, AOL was too fast to try an assimilate Netscape into its own corporate family. From experience, that is a trying time for any employee. Priorities change, the work environment changes and there is always the threat that you might become a statistic in the merger ("here is your pink slip").

    It remains to been seen if AOL's approach in acquiring Netscape will hurt AOL in the long run.

    1. Re:AOL the vulture, Netscape the prey by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mergers go more smoothly with proper delegation to the supervisors who were already running things. It sounds like AOL treats employees like dirt, and Netscape employees realize they don't have to put up with it.

  13. It's all good by Money__ · · Score: 2
    Okay so AOL owns Netscape. I don't care if Netscape 5.0 has all kinds of dorky buttons hanging off of it. AOL bought the company, and they have the right to use the browser however they want.

    What matters to me in most Internet users is how they implement standards. they can add tons of URLs back to it AOL's domain, all kinds of 'paper clip inspired' interface kludge, that all ok

    Fast, Faster, Fastest, Stable and Standards compliant. These other things that will return Netscape back to prominence on the desktop.

    1. Re:It's all good by finkployd · · Score: 1

      Fast, Faster, Fastest, Stable and Standards compliant. These other things that will return Netscape back to prominence on the desktop.

      I agree, however, I do not see this in the milestone releases. I see slower, more buttons, crashing, etc.

      Now I understand that Netscape has been picked on way too much lately, and that I should really complain until the actual release of 5.0, but my problem is I've used EVERY milestone, and each time I'm disappointed. The trend has been bigger, more features, and ignore current bugs until we get all our "bells and whistles" in.
      Even when they get all the bugs fixed, that is one huge program that has a lot of crap that a web browser does not need. I have seperate web authoring, e-mail, and newsgroup clients, thank you.

      Finkployd

    2. Re:It's all good by Abigail-II · · Score: 1
      Fast, Faster, Fastest, Stable and Standards compliant. These other things that will return Netscape back to prominence on the desktop.

      That's very very funny! You do realize that Netscape gained its marketshare by shitting all over the the standards, don't you? I think the day Netscape dies should become an official day of celebration. Too bad the company didn't die 5 years ago.

      Personally, I don't think anything useful could come out of a company that after 5 years still isn't able to produce a browser than can parse comments correctly.

      -- Abigail

    3. Re:It's all good by Thr34d · · Score: 1

      That would make a really good argument on some other planet but around here there needs to be a competitor to Microsoft.

      I'll grant you that the current browser offering leaves alot to be desired, but the Mozilla project shows alot of promise.

      There needs to be a viable alternative to IE and Mozilla is going to be it. Netscape is trying hard, don't forget they get ZERO revenue from the browser and don't have Microsoft's resources to make up for that shortcoming. I'll add that Netscape was FORCED into this strategy by the guys from Redmond who began to give IE away for free.

      Also, don't even suggest that IE didn't shit all over standards either.

      --
      -- This space intentionally left blank.
    4. Re:It's all good by eddy+the+lip · · Score: 1

      As you point out, early NS didn't pay too much attention to standards. They didn't have to, they were the only game in town. And that's the best reason to have more than one browser around - if we ever have just one browser to work with, that company will gain default control of the standards, whether it be the Netscape of a few years ago, MS with IE in some murky future, or UltraBrowwer 15.1 of WorldDOM (lame pun, sorry).

      As long as we have alternatives, there will be pressure to stick with real W3C standards so they'll all work with the minimum of dumbass workarounds.

      --

      This is the voice of World Control. I bring you Peace.

    5. Re:It's all good by bitflip · · Score: 1

      Whaddya mean, they don't have Microsoft's resources to make up for zero revenue? AOL has buckets of money, and considering that they need some kind of UI for thier service, you'd think they'd be happy to spend it on their own product, rather than license IE technology from MS.

    6. Re:It's all good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Since I haven't written anything for the Mozilla project, I'm ashamed to say it (which is why I'm posting anon), but: my first contribution to the Mozilla project once it is stable will be to rip out all the E-mail/shop/flashing widget/composer/etc. crap and compile a version that is just a browser. Probably release it under the name UNetscape. The code is good, and once all the extraneous nonsense is wiped out, it should actually be fast and usable.

    7. Re:It's all good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If all you want is the browser, you got it. The current builds, and all those in the past come with both the suite (apprunner) and the browser (viewer) all by it's lonesome with no composer, e-mail, or newsgroup clients. Just 100% browser. Pretty cool beans if you ask me

    8. Re:It's all good by finkployd · · Score: 1

      I'm with you. That actually sounds like a great idea. Contribute to the improvment of a program without adding any code :)

      Seriously, that is probably going to happen, I'll be the first to download it. Heck, I might even try my hand at doing that myself.

      I still would like to see a browser from the ground up be designed to do one thing: Browse the web....and do it very fast.

      Finkployd

    9. Re:It's all good by finkployd · · Score: 1

      It's ok.
      It goes to the other extream though. I want a small fast broswer, but I still would like navigation buttons, bookmarks, etc :)

      A nice idea would be to create Mozilla in a modular style, with features being loaded and unloaded as needed.....now where have I seen a program like that before? :)

      Finkployd

  14. Some of us still use NC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I personally think NC 4.7 is better than even IE 5 as a website development platform. I also try a few of the builds of each mozilla milestone. Frankly I must say I am impressed by how far along mozilla is! Let's see microsoft recreate IE 5, dcom, activex and the mfc 100% from scratch in less than 1 or 2 years. BTW this is being posted with Maczilla M12 (M12 is now in production and you can get the nightly builds of it from their ftp now)

    1. Re:Some of us still use NC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, you're on crack.

      I've been developing everything from standard HTML sites to enormous (6,000+ lines of code) interactive sites, and Netscape has absolutely SUCKED at everything I've tried to make it to. IE 5, on the other hand, has been perfect.

    2. Re:Some of us still use NC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ditto. I produce interactive pages in a 90% Netscape environment and my life is a constant struggle with NS's limitations. IE, which it just kills me to admit, handles most things infinitely better.

  15. Big deal! This is a story? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Big nasty company treats formerly cool company like a piece of property instead of a valuable asset." Who cares? This kind of thing ALWAYS happens in the business world, it's rather like the eel retreating into its den to privately tear apart the fish it caught in front of the underwater camera. If you're in a company that gets bought out, quit...don't expect things to go along all rosy like before. It's just a fact of life.

  16. AOL sucks by johnnnyboy · · Score: 1

    You'll never see a more "dumb" company. They bought netscape just to take what they want from it. AOL is not a software company. And what about SUN? Well I counted them out when JAVA didn't deliver all the promises. Netscape was the only one that drove JAVA along. For their own company's sake, I hope they realize just how important the netscape browser really is before it's too late.

    --
    "If a show of teeth is not enough, bite ... but bite hard!"
    1. Re:AOL sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i beg to differ - everyone knows that netscape was worse to java than microsoft ever was. they pushed away developer by shipping non-compliant crippled, and incomplete java runtimes. had it not been for netscape, java would have still kept its promise. thank God, Sun now owns NS code - NS5 will deliver the promised land with OJI.

  17. That's Why It's Called Big Business by Coldraven · · Score: 1

    AOL's handling of Netscape is typical of any quick merger; by exploiting the track record of a smaller company's "cutting-edge" product, a larger interest will generally view their latest "partner" as a commodity. Apart from its browser, Netscape was most likely purchased in order to serve as part of AOL's research department. The extra cache of their trademark and logo, with Marc Andreesen's press coverage were lucky accidents which helped to sweeten the deal.

  18. Netscape Ruined Netscape by woogie · · Score: 2

    Personally, I am tired of hearing sob stories about Netscape. Why exactly should I feel badly for the employees that churned out crappy code, wouldn't return my calls when I was actively trying to purchase their product, and gave me hideous tech support afterwards?

    People talk of Netscape as if it were some sort of fallen hero, but the fact is that Netscape is the reason we have never had a standards compliant browser available, ever. Navigator 1.0 added a bunch of crap without being compliant and it went downhill from there. And don't get me started on the bugs in their code.

    In many ways, AOL got suckered by this deal. They should remember next time they are considering buying a software company to look at the code first.

    The Mozilla project is the only thing that they have done right. I just hope it isn't too late for it to matter.

    Woogie

    1. Re:Netscape Ruined Netscape by fwr · · Score: 1

      I honestly believe that one of the reasons why navigator is as buggy as it is is due to Microsoft's monopoly on the OS and their illegal leveraging and tying of their browser with their monopoly product. That they added a few additional features that were not hammered out in an official standards group is a non issue as long as they FULLY publish the new functionality, which I'm under the impression that they did.

      So you're blaming Netscape for the fact that Microsoft doesn't have a standards compliant browser? Please, go troll elsewhere.

      AOL didn't get suckered. There's a thing called due dilligence. If they didn't do it, then it's their own fault.

    2. Re:Netscape Ruined Netscape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Amen brother!
      The Mozilla project is the only thing that they have done right. I just hope it isn't too late for it to matter.
      (Except for that.)
    3. Re:Netscape Ruined Netscape by Slothrup · · Score: 2
      So you're blaming Netscape for the fact that Microsoft doesn't have a standards compliant browser? Please, go troll elsewhere.

      Call a spade a spade. Microsoft's bypass of the standards process does not justify the same by Netscape and vice versa. The Open Source community should supports open standards and the companies that adhere to them, and should avoid products that aren't standards-compliant *especially* when the lack of compliance is because of a desire to achieve market dominance.

      --
      The difference between theory and practice is that, in theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
    4. Re:Netscape Ruined Netscape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bull. Netscape was buggy on WFW, and is even worse on Linux. How can you say that Netscape is buggy because of OS monopoly when they have access to the Linux source? Face it Netscape browser coders can't write a decent browser and haven't since they ripped off Mosaic. Opera is far less buggy than Netscape and they don't have anywhere near the resources that Netscape/AOL has.

    5. Re:Netscape Ruined Netscape by fwr · · Score: 1

      And Netscape doesn't have anywhere near the resources that Microsoft has. When Microsoft bought "Internet Explorer" and through tons of resources at making it "better" than Navigator (which they could only afford because of their OS monopoly) Netscape was forced to "cut corners." If some other company, such as whoever makes Opera, started to compete with Netscape, instead of the Microsoft behemoth, I don't believe Navigator would be in such a mess it is.

      Don't cha see? This is exactly what the whole anti-trust case is about. Microsoft's actions in destroying competition in other non-OS areas by using it's influence in their OS monopoly. Whether that comes in the form of product tieing, which they did (in forcing OEMs to exclusively tie IE with their monopoly OS), or using their monopoly profits to buy out their competition or buy into another market (which they did with their $40 over-fair-value for Windows 98 upgrade per customer), it's illegal for a company holding a monopoly to do.

      Besides, I don't know what your talking about with regard to Netscape being buggy in Linux. I'm running it right now and don't have any problems. In fact, I can't remember when the last time that it crashed was. And, even if it does, it's not going to take the whole computer down with it. I have much more occurances of IE crashing on my laptop than Communicator on my Linux box. Perhaps you are going to too many Microsoft oriented web sites that use that proprietary Microsoft HTML that Communicator can't handle that well???

  19. Version number folly by Sneakums · · Score: 1

    Is there any hard evidence to show that IE 5.5 or 6.0 will be more featureful than Mozilla 5?

    It's worth noting that IE is no longer in a frantic development mode, since it has performed its function, which was to grab the "market".

    1. Re:Version number folly by Egorn · · Score: 1

      In writing this article I was mostly asking questions to my readers and hoping they would post comments in response.

      One thing to always remember is that making a HTML renderer can not be easy so we can almost be sure that no matter what we will have unhealthy browsers which crash frequently.

      I personaly will not use IE mostly because I refuse to sell out to Microsoft all the way and with effecient testing and comparing of both 4.0 browsers Netscape ran faster and more reliable..

      during these tests I also learned that running netscape and IE 4.0 on the Win 95 OSR2.5 Netscape will have a very unexplainable crash.. So naturally with my persecution complex I decide that MS was viciously and intentialy crashing my Netscape browser.
      But now with the release of the IE 5.0 I cannot rely any longer on the benchmarks which once were my standing ground.

      And as I always end my comments.. Don't take my word for it. Test it your self.
      -------------------------------------------

      --

      Movie News - "Entertainment news, bitch!"
    2. Re:Version number folly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First you have to ask yourself - What does Mozilla 5 have working right now, what does IE 5.0 have right now? Let's see:

      Mozilla 5 beta
      HTML 4.0, CSS1, partial CSS2, XML (disp w/CSS), plugin support, Javascript, full DOM. No shortcut key for 'back' though.
      There will be no support for XSL, XQL, SVG, WebDAV VML, or P3P support

      Internet Explorer 5
      HTML 4.0, partial CSS1, CSS2, XML, XSL, XQL, VML, HTCs - HTML behaviors, WebDAV, SMIL, plugin support, Javascript, full DOM

      My opinion on what IE 5.5 release will add, based on what I have heard elsewhere:
      Full CSS1/HTML 4 compatibility (always been a sore point with IE browsers, they're finally listening to the Mac people about standards)
      SVG support
      xHTML 1.0 support
      HTML 4.01 support
      P3P support
      Dynamic shrinking of webpages (ala Opera)

      Will they slow down? What are all those paid programmers supposed to do then? There's a lot of money and time invested into the browser, which is becoming the user interface of the next century. There's no way they're slowing down, unless they go broke first.

      To those who go 'so what' about all these technologies, so be it. I refuse to be stuck in 1997 w/NS 4.x, or 1993 using Lynx. You can though - be my guest

  20. Netscape destroyed itself long before AOL came .. by TummyX · · Score: 1

    along.

    That's why AOL bought them out in the first place, cause they were struggling.
    Netscape prolly had low moral in the first place. How else can you explain Netscape 4.x?

  21. AOL bought Netscape, so why... by xrayu · · Score: 1

    did they ship an AOL 5.0 CD with IE on it?

    1. Re:AOL bought Netscape, so why... by xrayu · · Score: 1

      Sorry, not just shipped it. Printed it on the front instead of Netscape...

    2. Re:AOL bought Netscape, so why... by Fizgig · · Score: 1

      Because their contract w/ MS (which lets them be on the desktop of Windows when you install it) hasn't expired yet.

    3. Re:AOL bought Netscape, so why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now that you mention it there is a kind of a cozy deal between Microsoft and AOL. Is it possible that AOL and Microsoft worked out a deal where AOL would buy Netscape and then intentionally go in and heavy-handedly ruin morale and creativity at Netscape, and thus finally eliminate them as a competitor for Microsoft? Or am I just being paranoid?

  22. Netscape is dead ? But Mozilla lives ! by JPMH · · Score: 3
    Massive staff turnover... job losses... plunging morale... and comments like

    But while the Netscape brand may live on for some time, it is quite clear to many current and former Netscape pros that the culture they helped create behind the name is long gone. But while the Netscape brand may live on for some time, it is quite clear to many current and former Netscape pros that the culture they helped create behind the name is long gone.

    "We defined the Internet culture. We were really the first 'dotcom' startup," says one former Netscape facilities exec. "I loved my time at Netscape ... but it's a completely different company now."

    The most interesting thing about this article, I thought, was how little of it applies to Mozilla.

    Post jwz, it seems that morale at Mozilla has just been getting better and better. Developer turnover appears to be very low -- the same names are still appearing week after week in the status reports as 12 months ago. There's now a real confidence and enthusiasm that they are on a realistic timetable to deliver a world beating product -- and soon. Mozilla's culture is alive and well.

    Yeah, it sounds from this article as if the rest of Netscape has taken a beating. Sic transit gloria mundi.

    But as a consumer brand Netscape is defined by the browser. With Communicator 2000 in the next couple of months also including some of the goodies AOL has been keeping on its secret list, the Netscape brand is going to be back with a bang.

    1. Re:Netscape is dead ? But Mozilla lives ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mozilla just had to be brought up didnt it? Maybe someday Mozilla will be something, but not too likely.

    2. Re:Netscape is dead ? But Mozilla lives ! by sspiff · · Score: 1

      "But as a consumer brand Netscape is defined by the browser. With Communicator 2000 in the next
      couple of months also including some of the goodies AOL has been keeping on its secret list, the
      Netscape brand is going to be back with a bang."

      Err, could you elaborate on this? We need facts please, otherwise it is just vaporware promises.

      I can't see Netscape winning back the browser wars. They have just pissed their market share away and haven't made much of an effort to remain competitive. Maybe Mozilla can change this, but I wouldn't bet on it.

    3. Re:Netscape is dead ? But Mozilla lives ! by bmetzler · · Score: 2
      I can't see Netscape winning back the browser wars. They have just pissed their market share away and haven't made much of an effort to remain competitive. Maybe Mozilla can change this, but I wouldn't bet on it.

      Maybe you could elaborate on this. I see Mozilla as a *huge* effort to stay competitive.

      This is a market where the main competitor doesn't play by the rules. How do you think Netscape should have competed?

      I think that be redefining the market, and then making as much effort to create that market, is the best thing that Netscape should have done. By taking the time to have a solid Mozilla project, that is the best way to compete that there is.

      -Brent
      --
  23. My Netscape? by DrSpoo · · Score: 1

    Are you talking about My Netscape? I happen to think that it is quite excellent, and I have all my fav channels (slashdot, freshmeat, mozilla.org, segfault, linuxgames, etc etc) registered. The free email netscape.net is also pretty nice.

    I'm not complaining at all.

    --
    Sig (appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars)
    1. Re:My Netscape? by jajuka · · Score: 1

      Are you talking about My Netscape? I happen to think that it is quite excellent, and I have all my fav channels (slashdot, freshmeat, mozilla.org, segfault, linuxgames, etc etc) registered. The free email netscape.net is also pretty nice.

      No, I was refering to the main site. I'm glad netscape's webmail works for you, it was always slow as hell for me. Not to mention the conter-intuitive interface ie: clicking next to see the previous (cronologically) message. Personally I prefer to read my mail in order recieved. Threads you know. :)

      my.netscape looks very similar to h3o.net which has email forwarding, and is linux oriented. I prefer that.

  24. Culture clashes in m & a inevitable by BahamaDave · · Score: 1

    It's usually top management and the visionaries who get shaken out first, which of course makes the culture clash even worse.

    I've been through this as an employee and it is a miserable event, maybe taking 18-24 months to settle down for those who ride it out. Not a fun time.

    Usually what ends up happening is that the smaller aquired company ends up being totally assimilated into the culture of the larger aquiring company.

  25. Netscape = AOL.COM by macado · · Score: 1

    Everytime I go to the home.netscape.com web site I get pounded by annoying popup ads for stupid products that I don't want or don't tend to buy. Do you really think i'm going to "get AOL 5.0!" for linux? This is the same way with aol.com (yes i've been to the web site) more annoying popup ads in the same format as the Netscape ones. There were no popup ads on Netscape before the AOL merger. So it brings me to the question why did AOL buy Netscape, certainly not for its browser capabilities.. America Online software uses Internet Explorer. The only way AOL has helped/not helped netscape was to put ads on there web site, include there lame software into netscape, and not use there browser.

    1. Re:Netscape = AOL.COM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, if i remember correctly, Netscape had pop up ads before the buy out. I use Netcenter mainly because i had Netscape shares. I've been very disappoint with AOL and how they haven't even use any of Netscape strengths to help their revenues. It's so funny that AOL bought Netscape almost a year ago, and really Netscape hasn't helped AOL's revenues. AOL is stupid. Although, because of the buy out i have MORE aol shares which has made me more money. I would have liked to see Netscape make a come back, tho. I really felt that Netscape could have tie the Netscape5.0 browser with an improved portal and take back some market share. Oh, well... My only hope is that Mozilla becomes such a success, AOL will see it's a great product and hopefully some thing will come out of this buy out.

    2. Re:Netscape = AOL.COM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah and you can't just get an up-to-date standalone navigator anymore. You need to download communicator with crap attached.

  26. How much is a name worth? by Dacta · · Score: 2

    Netscape (the company) is dying - not just because of the corporate clash with AOL, but because they just don't have the technology.

    The shipping Navigator is second rate compared to IE5, and who uses a Netscape server these days? For webservers, it's IIS vs Apache, and for application servers, the Netscape one has such a bad reputation that people are dumping it for anything else.

    There is still the Netscape name, though, and that is worth a huge amount. Everybody has heard of Netscape, if only they could find a way to use that!

    AOL should spin an E-Technology company off and give it the Netscape name - they would make billions! The value of AOL stock has nothing to do with Netscape, but if there was a relaunch of Netscape, with some valid technology it would rock - hell, they could sell support for Apache or something.

    Forget this stuipid I-Planet thing. When did you ever hear anyone from Sun talking about that?

    The game isn't over for Netscape, not by a long way, but I think it's future lies in technology, not services & portals.

    --Donate food by clicking: www.thehungersite.com

  27. Amazing!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its amazing how many slashdotter kiddies KNOW WHAT THE SOURCE CODE TO INTERNET EXPLORER AND WINDOWS IS LIKE.

    I didnt realize you all worked for Microsoft!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    1. Re:Amazing!!! by Sneakums · · Score: 1

      I've looked at the MFC code. That has plenty of hacks. Many MSJ articles say the same. I don't think it unreasonable of me to extrapolate.

      At least with Mozilla, Linux and pretty much every other program in Linux, the source is out there for the great unwashed to look at and evaluate.

    2. Re:Amazing!!! by MassacrE · · Score: 1

      You can infer a lot by the output of a program to how badly it is written. Same goes for operating systems.

  28. Oh yeah? Well sit on this and spin.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The way I see the situation is that AOL really has no competition anymore in thier market. Remember Prodigy? What about Compuserve? oops, AOL owned now too. When you get right down to it, there isn't much out there other that AOL for some people. I remember when a 2400BPs AOL connection was the ONLY way for 100 miles to get online. Luckaly all that has changed and I have a computer now with a LAN connection to the internet through my college. But looking back at that time you could say that AOL was really bringing the internet to the people. Now, they didn't do it very well, and they CERTINLY paid for all of it through the constant advertizing. Now here comes this Netscape thing. Why? It seemed to me like AOL had everything going for it. Internet for the masses, OK, maybe some competition with webTV. It just didn't make any sense, and it still dosen't. I think that is why it didn't work. If AOL had some heavy competition from someone like Compuserve, then this would be a super stratigic move to strike against them. Probably company policies would be much more liberal, and everyone would have that "all fuzzy" feeling again. But, I would go as far to say that Netscape only had that feeling so long becuase it was "rage against the microsoft machine" time again. This is my point. Heavy competition = good working enviroment. Now, just for a second, I wanted to say something about microsoft. I think that these guys know they better get thier act together before the budding OS Linux comes a callin. I am running Win 2000 Beta, and you know what? It's nothing special. THAT in it's SELF is something to be supprised about. When was the last time you installed windows and Boom! Look at these channels! and boom! let's get your butt on the net! Win2000 didn't do any of that. Now, I have to assume that this is for Win2000, and NOT for Win Millenium (god I hate that name). But, I think that you can easily compare the two companies again. Microsoft = Machine, Linux = "Playful bunch of hackers that rage against it." Our heros in other words. It was the same battle in the browser wars, and as most people agree, Netscape LOST when IE4 came out. IE5 is really good stuff, no one can argue there, and Netscape 4.7 is crap, my opinion. Now we can look at the state that AOL is in, and ask ourselves, how much WORSE could microsoft get if they actually WIN against Linux, Macs, and other OSs? Now there's something to keep you techies up at night! (halloween music starts to play) The Frozen Viper

  29. Not a Surprise by Aphelion · · Score: 1

    Is it any coincidence that ZDNet first comes up with an article announcing the death of Netscape's Navigator product line a few days ago, when Mozilla is well up and running, being possibily one of the best and most popular open-source projects ever, and now, just as conveniently, do another announcement reinforcing the notion that Netscape is dead?

    Even if they substantiate their ideas, it should hardly be taken as reality with the track record that they have.

  30. browser brick wall by harenet · · Score: 0

    I must be missing some things. FUDbillygates is willing to become so tactical as to risk the possibility of ending up sharing a cell with john gotti, to widose the browser "market". but no 1 in the o-s community can whip together a gui browser to meet/debunk the onslaught of FUDulistic invasionofprivacy virusfriendly blight that IEaaaggghhh is?

    seems important enough to me. does look like noescape is dropping the ball, through little fault of theirs, i'd say. maybe it's kNoT important, even though it seams that the gui based www is expecting to run most, if not all their apps, in a browser. is it that difficult?

    seems like, with the recently acquired billyuns of several o-s? companies? that might be a priority?

    letting billygates coupdeville this, seems like surrendering after you've won.

    flaime on.

  31. What about Mozilla? by pwb · · Score: 4

    I have been watching the browser wars with much interest in the last several months. This is because I manage a project developing Java applet based database clients. I find both browsers very buggy and don't particularly like either. At the moment there just isn't anything better. Unfortunately because of the slow movement at Netscape for the last year, I see Microsoft gaining quickly in performance and features, and will probably blow by Netscape in the next year.

    I see IE as the biggest threat to Linux . The reason for that is I see the browser becoming the desktop of the future. If IE is the only real browser left, then Micrsoft will have an even bigger and stronger monopoly on "desktops" than they have now. Microsoft isn't about to make a Linux version of IE. And with out a good browser, Linux will never make the transition to the desktop from the server. (Taking over the server market I see as just a matter of time.) Part of my assumption here is that the next killer App will be built on top of a browser. And if IE is the only serious browser in town, then Microsoft still holds all the cards, (and a couple of spare Ace's).

    So from my point of view Mozilla is more important to linux than gnome/kde. Having said all of this, I have a question. A freind of mine and myself have talked about putting together a Mozilla distribution CD that contains "up to the week" source code, and the latest Milestone binaries currently found on mozilla.org. If you could buy one of these CDs, would you buy it? Would you report bugs or help with the Mozilla development? The only problem is that because of the rapid change in code and binaries, glass mastered CD's are out, it takes too long to have that done. And quick turn around for CD-R's is a bit higher per disk ($5-6). If you would buy and use a Mozilla distribution CD , mail me at Noble. Also we need people who can help set up the distribution for others OS's (Windows and Mac). I think we have Linux (and most unix) covered. E-mail me if you have time and knowledge to help with that.

    But most importantly, help Mozilla anyway you can.

    1. Re:What about Mozilla? by biohazard99 · · Score: 1
      well after this weeks virus scare MS is going to have to shape up its security on its *.hta (app over http). After spending the last five years telling AOheLl users that email text was not a threat, we've got to start watching for it

      sidebar, wonder if MS is going to get in the Utilities/Virus Scanner Market, just think, virus DAT updates @windowsupdate

    2. Re:What about Mozilla? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      There is one compelling reason why (despite being an experienced beta tester who can break software in ways its authors never imagined) I have NOT downloaded and tried out Mozilla: the timebombed builds. If I find one I like and want to keep, I can't, because it's gonna die on me regardless.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  32. Because... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's in the Best Intrests of AOL For Microsoft to be called a monopoly and see Tons of Legislation Thrown At Internet Explorer so it Ultimetly Fails. If you think that Internet Explorer would have the Browser share It has today without being on Every AOL Account out there then you must be dreaming.

    I believe that The only reason that AOL Chose IE over Netscape in the beginning is because they knew that it would eventually devalue Netscape to the point where it could be a cheap buy, then once they bought it, join the Anti-Microsoft Brigade, Get Microsoft classified as a monopoly which makes the government force Microsoft to Remove Internet Explorer from it's operating systems, then Release Mozilla and use Mozilla's small size to make it more appealing to download, Gain insane amounts of Market share, Put AOL Icons all over it to advertise the Service, Sell AOL Accounts, Make Billons.

    AOL at one time was classified as an Company almost equal to evil as Microsoft, What the hell happened to that?

    1. Re:Because... by MassacrE · · Score: 1

      It is probably much more around the idea that netscape 4.x is not modular, and they could not integrate the browser into the 'AOL' application. Mozilla is modular (and someone even made a compatibility ActiveX control with the WebBrowser interface, so you can swap it out with IE in your application code), but it isn't finished yet.

      AOL also gets the benefit of being on the Windows 98 CD as long as they use IE, as part of M$'s wheeling and dealing to kill netscape.

  33. dead netscape == healthy mozilla? by jajuka · · Score: 1

    There's been quite a bit of speculating about netscape / mozilla here lately, much of which seems not to distinguish between the two.

    Here's a thot tho... perhaps the death of the "commercial" netcape browser would benefit Mozilla?

    Mozilla's not about to go away, it seems to be linux's best hope for a stable browser. I for one dont think linux stablility is nearly as important to the corporate netscape as it's windows performance is.

    While overall I think the death of the official netscape browser would be a bad thing, would it's absense spur faster development of mozilla?

  34. Is it time for someone else to take over Mozilla? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If this is true then Netscape (the company) is unravelling fast. Would it be prudent at this
    point for someone/some group to take over the
    Mozilla project, or at least act as an angel
    for it.

    Considering the importance of the project to Linux perhaps RedHat could begin hosting/directing it.

    Just an idea.

    Jim Burnes
    jburnes@earthlink.net

  35. It ain't AOL's fault. by hatless · · Score: 5
    For one thing, the buyout made millionaires out of most longtime Netscape employees. Bolting the minute one vests is a perennial problem at tech companies, and it's getting worse.

    Second, Netscape's Unix-oriented tech culture started to hurt them when focus shifted towards usability features and cute UI flourishes in 1996. This was clear both on the browser side
    • the tedium of installing plugins, the horrors of SmartUpdate
    • their miserable signed-applet security dialogs

    and on the server side
    • the stubborn insistence on browser-based interfaces for server administration; client Java wasn't good enough but a native GUI would have made many admin tasks easier. Between their awful web admin UI and their poorly-documented config file format, Apache was easier to administer
    • for all their open APIs, and with all due respect for their LDAP servers, would it have killed them to bundle modules for native-OS authentication (at least NTDOM and NIS) with their admin server? This sort of thing came across as arrogance and contempt for the customer.

    I don't, however, fault them for their lousy tech support. I always found their server support group competent and responsive. It wasn't their fault that the product engineers would leave nasty bugs unfixed for release after release. That's why Apache's so compelling. And unless you had a special relationship with Microsoft, mediocre support like Netscape's was far above average.

    AOL and Sun bought themselves a troubled company with a faltering product vision, and they knew it. That doesn't mean Mozilla's not great technology; it is. And it doesn't mean Netscape's server line isn't good. It is. That's why their mail, web, directory, cert and app servers are the basis for the iPlanet line. But both the client and server groups at Netscape were sorely lacking product architects with customer and market focus.

    In this regard, the buyout offered Netscape a chance for redemption. If AOL can be made to care about Mozilla, their understanding of customer-focused (as opposed to geek-focused) usability can help it in ways XUL and XPFE as rallying slogans couldn't. And though Sun is still coming up to speed as a software vendor, they at least know how to listen to their customers in designing products in a way Netscape never did.
    1. Re:It ain't AOL's fault. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      iplanet is a Sun thing, let's not fool ourselves. Sun has more money, more engineers.

      iplanet = a lot of talk and no results. Whether or not they can pull it off in time is the question.

      Also, Netscape and Sun's customers are pissed given the past history with both companies and the fact that they'll have to migrate anew to the new iplanet.

  36. MS quashes Netscape on Linux? by RayChuang · · Score: 2

    Folks,

    If you think Microsoft smashing Netscape on the Windows platform is bad news, consider this possibility: Microsoft could easily direct its resources to create a Linux version (written under GPL guidelines) that will effectively finish off Netscape once and for all.

    People conveniently forget that Microsoft has written a version of Internet Explorer that runs on the Sun Solaris operating system. It wouldn't take much work to convert that code into something that will run under Linux.

    I mean, look at the Macintosh version of Internet Explorer. This version was literally written from scratch specifically for MacOS, and it's a very good and very FAST browser (it's certainly faster than Netscape Communicator 4.5 and later).

    Because Internet Explorer for Linux will be open source, that bunch of 1,000 Linux programmers will be able to suggest changes that will improve it rapidly. Microsoft could make like quarterly releases of IE for Linux on CD-ROM (with all the suggestions and changes from Linux programmers).

    Another thing people forget about is the MS-funded TransVirtual open-source Java project. Microsoft will likely incorporate TransVirtual Java code into Internet Explorer for Linux, and given TransVirtual's goal of full Sun Java 2.0 compliance, it'll be VERY interesting to see what Scott McNealy has to say if TransVirtual's open source Java VM and compiler is submitted to Sun for Sun compliance testing (especially given the fact that Sun is still reluctant to "open source" Java).

    In short, don't just count out Microsoft just yet. They could literally turn the open source community upside down (and you wonder why Microsoft has opened a major development center in Mountain View, CA--the heart of Linux development).

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
    1. Re:MS quashes Netscape on Linux? by Skaffen · · Score: 1

      Surely it can't be made truely open source, even if M$ tried to, for practical reasons. The "viral" nature of the GPL and other similar licenses would mean that code changes in the linux version couldn't be fed back into the (main) win32 IE as that would force win32 IE to adopt an open source license (unless I'm misinterpreting the GPL). Microsoft would, understandably, be unwilling to do this, and hence the two version's of IE would become separate entities- No bad thing IMHO, but unlikely to be welcomed by a company such as Microsoft, for both profit-making and support reasons.

      just my 2hundreths of your local currency unit...

    2. Re:MS quashes Netscape on Linux? by Etyenne · · Score: 1

      Because Internet Explorer for Linux will be open source, that bunch of 1,000 Linux programmers will be able to suggest changes that will improve it rapidly. Microsoft could make like quarterly releases of IE for Linux on CD-ROM (with all the suggestions and changes from Linux programmers).

      Availability of source code does'nt mean a theorical IE on Linux would gather much developper. Look at Sun with their pseudo-OS Solaris : are they're thousand of developper contributing to Solaris code ?

      Beside that, I doubt that MS could release anything remotely open-source ...

      --
      :wq
    3. Re:MS quashes Netscape on Linux? by DragonHawk · · Score: 2

      Microsoft could easily direct its resources to create a Linux version (written under GPL guidelines) that will effectively finish off Netscape once and for all.

      I would love for Microsoft to do this. But they won't. The reason so many people hate Microsoft is that they don't "play nice". Doing what you suggest would be "playing nice". It won't happen.

      If, through some miracle, it does happen, then great! MSIE does have some nice features, and the standard benefits of Open Source Software would still apply. By going OSS, MS would relinquish control to the users. That would be a Good Thing. So I hope they do so.

      I find it entirely more likely that Microsoft would release a closed, binary-only port of MSIE for Linux, in the hopes of driving Mozilla out of the picture. Once Mozilla has fallen behind, Microsoft could then drop MSIE on Linux, leaving Linux users out in the cold.

      --

      dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
      I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
    4. Re:MS quashes Netscape on Linux? by hadron · · Score: 1
      Yep. You are misinterpreting the situation totally. There are several fatal flaws in your ramblings.
      • Not all open source licences are copylefts
      • You can quite easily dual-licence software under two different licenses

      The real reason M$ won't licence any of their software under an open source licence, is quite mystifying. I guess it must be due to them all being evil borg, or something.

    5. Re:MS quashes Netscape on Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Competition. Microsoft is scared to death of having to compete with anyone on merit (I don't see why - they sometimes produced decent code when they need to), so they rely on hobbling competitors through incompatability and FUD.

    6. Re:MS quashes Netscape on Linux? by biohazard99 · · Score: 1
      Since MS isn't making any money on IE anyways, it would just be a team of SofEng taking a week sabatical, perhaps they are planning on doing this in conjunction with IE 5.5???

    7. Re:MS quashes Netscape on Linux? by C.Lee · · Score: 0

      >In short, don't just count out Microsoft just yet. They could literally turn the open
      >source community upside down (and you wonder why Microsoft has opened a >major development center >in Mountain View, CA--the heart of Linux >development).

      Um. The heart of Linux development takes place in NC, Europe and Japan. Mountain View, CA is not even in the picture.....

    8. Re:MS quashes Netscape on Linux? by SumoRoach · · Score: 1

      another argument for this:
      MS using a linux version of IE to finish of Netscape? They've already effectively finished off netscape. Why build up linux to help finish off the pitiful remnant of a company. (I'm exaggerating a bit, but I hope you get my point.)

  37. They got what they asked for by cshotton · · Score: 2

    Netscape was a classic example of a naive, technology-driven start-up unable to cope with a leadership position and an excess of capital. AOL has simply saved the remaining Netscape employees from becoming unemployed and picked up a marginally well-trafficked Web site in the process. All the other problems are of Netscape's own making.

    Specifically, they were never able to articulate a compelling technical vision. (c'mon, did *anyone* really think a Web browser was an operating system?) They never shipped a single product that was complete and of sufficient quality to warrant the market share they claimed or the price they charged. They never executed a successful acquisition strategy to do something constructive with the mass of cash they raised in their IPO.

    So in the end, they ended up with a bunch of 3 year old technology, nothing new in the pipeline, no partners or acquisitions to take them in a new direction, and competitors that followed a logical path towards the commoditization of Netscape's entire product line.

    Anyone with an ounce of business sense predicted in 1995 that Web browsers and Web servers would become integral parts of every operating system and ship on all new computers. Where did Netscape think they were going to make money? They can poor-mouth Microsoft all they want, but they simply put themselves out of business if for no other reason than a lack of vision.

    --

    Shut up and eat your vegetables!!!
    1. Re:They got what they asked for by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2

      How long have you been involved in the desktop Internet scene? I was installing Internet for thousands of clients in 1993 for $20 (CAN) a month (200 hours access). We distributed Netscape 1.0 and then 1.1N ... if it hadn't been for Netscape, we wouldn't have had a service to sell. Internet explorer 1.0 (and even 2.0) weren't worth the 'free'ness they were bundled for. Sure, MS caught up and I'm not here for the browser wars, but Netscape made the Internet what it is today, not Microsoft. Sure, they've fallen behind the times, but many of us remember the Netscape that got us really moving. Yes, there were browsers before; there was even Lynx. However, those didn't push the limits like Netscape did ... if you can't think of reasons Netscape should be honoured, you just weren't watching what happened.

      - Michael T. Babcock <homepage>

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  38. Re:Open Source ruined Netscape by znu · · Score: 1

    No, Netscape lost its will to live when Microsoft decided that the web browser market would be a nice thing to own.

    --

    --
    This space unintentionally left unblank.
  39. IE for Solaris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If you take a look, you'll see that IE for Solaris is essentially IE for Windows with Windows API libraries for Solaris. Not native code.

    1. Re:IE for Solaris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That maybe so, but it is a better CDE client than Netscape is. At least it pays attention to CDE resources and changes its colour scheme like all my other CDE apps when I use style manager.

      So its not hugely important win feature over Netscape but it is a good solid browser that renders quicker than Netscape AND it doesn't include a mail client, address book, news reader etc etc in the same binary! Okay so we have demand paging but the more code you lump into one binary the grater the risk is that bigs you don't normally use cause the bits you do problems.

      It isn't just IE they have released for Solaris, there is also Outlook mail and the Outlook contact/address manager - each one of them is a SEPARATE binary. MS has made a better job of the old UNIX axiom of binaries that the Netscape browser has - "do one thing and do it well".

  40. Media gripe: anonymous sources by J.+FoxGlov · · Score: 2

    There are at least 10 sources to this article, but /none/ of them are identified in this story! It's a great story, but how can anyone believe it conclusively? ZDNet could have just as easily made the whole thing up!

    Sure, it's believable, since AOL is evil incarnate [/dripping sarcasm] but I just have to say WTF Man, couldn't they have found one person in the rogues' gallery to own up to their statements? If they don't work for Netscape anymore, what the hell do they have to lose?

    J.

    --
    damned vulpine http://sb.drtwister.com/
    1. Re:Media gripe: anonymous sources by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe, just maybe this is a lie. It could be either.. 1.) Microsoft got Zdnet to lie about Netscape to hurt it's reputation OR 2.) AOL paid ZDnet to make Netscape look bad and when Netscape5.0 is ready, POW! Well, see Netscape back at full stream? I remember reading a article on businessweek.com saying AOL was getting ready to make a major push with Netscape portal and browser. AOL wanted netscape.com to be some thing different. AOL didn't want Netcenter to look like every other portal.

    2. Re:Media gripe: anonymous sources by caferace · · Score: 1
      As an ex-Netscape employee, a lot of (well, nearly all of..) the article rang true. Especially the part about Netcenter, with which I'm most familiar.

      I recognized very specifically who said some of the anonymous quotes. It was a tad eerie.

  41. Other AOL Acquisitions by KnobDicker · · Score: 1

    There's been alot of talk about "inevitable clash of cultures," regarding the AOL-Netscape story, but it didn't have to be that way--it wasn't inevitable. Steve Case and his cronies bear responsibility for driving off some of the best and brightest software developers in the country.

    The reason I say this was avoidable is the way that AOL has managed acquiring Mirabilis and Nullsoft--essentially it has taken a "hands off" approach to both ICQ and Winamp/SHOUTcast. Someone there finally did the right thing and recognized that the users of those products were skeptical of AOL's influence and were worried that AOL ownership would alienate the user bases of each product.

    Maybe the same micromanagement goes own behind the scenes at Mirabilis and Nullsoft but we don't hear about it, but I doubt that's the case. Each of these product lines retains a huge user following that's growing and both are pretty much devoid of AOL branding.

    I wonder how different things would have turned out had AOL seen the catfight with M$ over instant messaging on the horizon. With everyone else out of the way, Billgatus of Borg's newest target for destruction is AOL in the IM arena, and ICQ and AIM are winning the day for AOL so far. If AOL had had the foresight to see a hurculean battle against Microsoft, maybe they would have given the resources and stability to leave Netscape alone and let it do what it did best--make browsers.

    The big question that remains unsanswered is how does AOL's management feel about these departing people? I've always believed that you can replace machines or technology but you can't replace people. Talent, especially in today's hot economy, is a valuable asset that you can't squander or drive off. Okay so it's America and the victor gets the spoils and all that good BS...but I bet there's some relocated Netscape employees that are really making a difference with some other companies out there and are very satisfied with their new endeavors. Ex-Mozilla,org is a good place to find out where they are now.

    1. Re:Other AOL Acquisitions by KnobDicker · · Score: 1

      sorry for the comma in Ex-Mozilla.org

    2. Re:Other AOL Acquisitions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please, AOL was doing Netscape a favor. The products they were producing were crap. AOL, technology wise, blows Netscape out of the water. A browser is a joke compared to a system supporting 1 million *simultaneous* users. The AOL client runs on virtually anything and is relatively lightweight.

  42. Other AOL Acquisitions by KnobDicker · · Score: 1

    There's been alot of talk about "inevitable clash of cultures," regarding the AOL-Netscape story, but it didn't have to be that way--it wasn't inevitable. Steve Case and his cronies bear responsibility for driving off some of the best and brightest software developers in the country.

    The reason I say this was avoidable is the way that AOL has managed acquiring Mirabilis and Nullsoft--essentially it has taken a "hands off" approach to both ICQ and Winamp/SHOUTcast. Someone there finally did the right thing and recognized that the users of those products were skeptical of AOL's influence and were worried that AOL ownership would alienate the user bases of each product.

    Maybe the same micromanagement goes own behind the scenes at Mirabilis and Nullsoft but we don't hear about it, but I doubt that's the case. Each of these product lines retains a huge user following that's growing and both are pretty much devoid of AOL branding.

    I wonder how different things would have turned out had AOL seen the catfight with M$ over instant messaging on the horizon. With everyone else out of the way, Billgatus of Borg's newest target for destruction is AOL in the IM arena, and ICQ and AIM are winning the day for AOL so far. If AOL had had the foresight to see a hurculean battle against Microsoft, maybe they would have given the resources and stability to leave Netscape alone and let it do what it did best--make browsers.

    The big question that remains unsanswered is how does AOL's management feel about these departing people? I've always believed that you can replace machines or technology but you can't replace people. Talent, especially in today's hot economy, is a valuable asset that you can't squander or drive off. Okay so it's America and the victor gets the spoils and all that good BS...but I bet there's some relocated Netscape employees that are really making a difference with some other companies out there and are very satisfied with their new endeavors. Ex-Mozilla.org is a good place to find out where they are now.

  43. That one is easy by RatBastard · · Score: 1
    While we all may appreciate the concept of not having to deal with making a site compatible with both browsers, is it truly worth it?

    That one is easy. Stick to STANDARIZED HTML. I don't use ANY IE or Netscape extensions, it's just not worth it.

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
  44. ZDNet ain't exactly impartial by bafful · · Score: 1

    They have a long record of being in bed with Microsoft. And they happen to run a very similar story about Sun's acquisition of Star Division, citing even more vague sources ("according to sources who claim they obtained their information from researchers with The Gartner Group" - isn't that nice?). So all of this seems just to be the campaign of the week, let's see what's to follow...

  45. Sad but true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's no doubt about this. Netscape started struggling ever since Microsoft decided to enter the browser arena. Now, I'm sorry to say, I feel I like IE a lot more than Netscape. It does more and seems like it was put together a lot more cleanly. (I'm sorry, but having Navigator crash 3-4+ times a day for me and memory leak so much it pours into swap space just is not acceptable if it lacks features such as full CSS and DHTML.) I wish there was a Linux port. But this is another issue. I'm sure I'll get flamed for this.

    The point is, Netscape was already facing tough times and the developers simply could not turn out there best. Being merged with AOL much have been absolutely mortifying. Netscape was once a great company with a wonderful vision and an unparalleled product. Now, they face an army of coders at Microsoft and the ball and chain of the fools at AOL. I feel sorry for them.

    the.Silicon.Dragon
    =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- "We are going to detonate a 23kilo likeness of the President sculpted out of cocain by middle eastern assassins." -snifferbait

    1. Re:Sad but true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean that Netscape started struggling as soon as they had any meaningful competition. Until MS entered the picture Spry Mosaic was about your only other choice and didn't support all the Netscape only (embrace and extend) features. As soon as Netscape had competition they folded like a house of cards.

  46. The Netscape we know is dead by Mr.roboto · · Score: 1

    The Netscape we used to know and love is dead. It's just that simple. Steve Case is evil. A campaign is needed to stop this insanity. Steve makes nearly anything he touches wither and die. AOL is an evil cooperation. I presume Netscape, when restored to sort of normalness, will produce the same crap that AOL software does. I use it. (Not by choice, parents) It shuts down all of the time. I warn you all before upgrading when 5.X or 6.X comes out:It will be different, in an evil sort of way. In conclusion, the underdog known as netscape is dead, just another victim of cooperate greed.

    --
    Don't call my crazy, that's what they called me back in the home!
  47. Slashdot, The FUD HUB (an MS conglomerate) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hah, I guess someone should have taken into consideration the fact that mozilla outdoes IE in every conceivable benchmark, more standards support, 95% platform independent code, an XML generated interface...
    I guess most of you wont be happy until you see a shiny box, and a magazine article that claims that the browser war has yet again a victor.
    Ohwell, I think im going to start avoiding Slashdot: News For Dolts, Written By Fools.

    1. Re:Slashdot, The FUD HUB (an MS conglomerate) by mcc · · Score: 1

      > I guess most of you wont be happy until you see a shiny box, and a magazine article that claims that the browser war has yet again a victor.

      [coming from a mac user's perspective..]

      No.. more like i won't be happy until Netscape releases a browser that isn't slow, unstable, ram-hogging and bloated, standards-noncompliant, and having an interface which is actually painful to use.

      Mozilla sounds nice but it's not here now. MSIE4 is here now and works now and takes up half as much RAM as NS4. Icab is here now (if you can give up javascript) and takes up half as much RAM as IE4. For my purposes, until they release a version of mozilla that takes under 10 minutes to open isn't as unstable as a house of cards, netscape lost. They lost to IE in terms of a product that anyone would want to use, and lost to _everyone_ in terms of quality.. If they want to actually ship a usable product at some point in the future that's great. But until then i'm going to stick with shuttling between IE and Icab.

      -mcc-baka
      why web browsers suck: http://home.earthlink.net/~mcclure111/cyberleary.h tml#discontent

  48. Your scenario. by antizeus · · Score: 2
    Let's take a look at your scenario. Micros~1 releases a browser for Linux. It is:
    1. Decent
    2. Open Source
    3. GPL'ed
    How would this be anything other than good? Sure, it might contribute greatly to the death of Netscape, but who would care at that point? We'd have a decent open-source GPL'ed browser! Any problems (e.g. standards non-compliance, useless bloat) could be fixed, and the fixes could be distibuted thanks to the hypothetical licensing.

    The only real problem with your scenario is that it will never happen.

    --
    -- $SIGNATURE
    1. Re:Your scenario. by jkorty · · Score: 2

      You're forgetting that MS doesn't have to release IE under the GPL. It is perfectly free to continue to use its standard proprietary license. And there is no requirement that IE be any more `decent' than it is today: enough people like IE just the way it is, and it is just those people would make it a serious contender for the Linux browser market.

  49. Netscape was ruined before AOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    As someone who's had dealings with Netscape on several different levels, from long before the AOL take over, I can attest that Netscape was screwed up well before AOL bit it off. The turn over rate is very high - on one project alone we dealt with 5 different project managers in the course of a year.

    If anything, AOL and Sun can only improve the situation. These people desparately need direction.

  50. FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by Clark+Kent · · Score: 1

    The article is FUD.

    Don't you find it curious that a whole series of stories like this have appeared just prior to the release of Netscape 5.0? Don't you find it strange that, according to the comments, 90% of Windows supporters want to see Netscape dead? Does it make sense? Why would the average Windows user care?

    The story is part of Microsoft's ongoing campaign to kill Netscape and leave Microsoft with a near-monopoly in the web browser market. If Microsoft succeeds, then technological progress on the Net will slow to a crawl, because any innovation will have to come from Microsoft.

    The Mozilla project is progressing nicely. Those who claim that Mozilla's progress has been slow are either showing a high degree of ignorance, or have an ulterior motive. Anyone who has been paying attention knows that, after giving up on trying to improve the original Netscape code, the Mozilla team has basically rewritten the browser from scratch in less than a year. It's an amazing accomplishment!

    1. Re:FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why would the average Windows user care if Netscape dies? Maybe because at one time Netscape had 90% of the marketshare, so most Windows users have had at least some experience with Netscape and so want to see it die a horrible death.

      This story is not part of any conspiracy by Microsoft. Netscape blew it, AOL has always been hated by the Internet community, nothing has changed in this respect so why do you think this has anything to do with Microsoft? It's Microsofts fault that AOL is unable to manage an Internet company? Grow up and pull your head out of your ass, no matter how badly you want to belive it Microsoft does not impact everything that goes on in the computer industry.

    2. Re:FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by sspiff · · Score: 1

      Woohoo! All hail the Microsoft conspiracy!!

      Yes, folks the reason Netscape's browsers suck is all Microsoft's fault. No offence to anyone, but everytime I read a comment like this it makes me think of those militia wackos and their "new world order" conspiracy.

    3. Re:FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by Zagato-sama · · Score: 1

      Even better are the ones that claim "Microsoft inserted code into their Windows operating system to make Netscape suck" Of course Microsoft must've also hacked the macos, solaris, irix, linux, and whatnot kernels to include the "make Netscape suck" option. Is there no end to the evil that Microsoft brings into being?

    4. Re:FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by bmetzler · · Score: 2
      Of course Microsoft must've also hacked the macos, solaris, irix, linux, and whatnot kernels to include the "make Netscape suck" option.

      The quality of Netscape on non-microsoft platforms certainly may be something to debate about, but it's certainly not anything more then your opinion that Netscape sucks on other platforms. Certainly there are many people who believe that IE on Solaris and HP sucks worse.

      But it is fact, as documented in the FoF that Judge Jackson released, that Microsoft intentionally made it a "jolting" experience when users tried to use Netscape as the default browser under Windows. So maybe MS didn't make it suck, but the certainly did make it hard for you to make it the default browser on Windows. I know for one that it isn't a problem to make Netscape the default browser on Linux.

      -Brent
      --
    5. Re:FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I just had a merry-go-round with this. I've installed various stuff that dragged along IE3, IE4, and NS4.04. Each successive addition clobbered the settings for the previous one (IE4 totally killed off IE3!) .. and caused NS to open behind all other windows even when it was set as default browser. Finally got that fixed (not exactly sure how!) then since I'm gonna nuke this setup anyway when I'm done playing with it, I installed IE5. NS immediately got shoved to the back of the bus again and always opens at the back of the whole pile of open windows (and I usually have quite a pile). Then I installed NS4.5 -- and it evidently is smart enough to check for and negate whatever registry setting was forcing NS to always open UNDER any other open windows, since finally I have one that opens on top in the normal fashion.

      BTW, thru all this I discovered that *NS3* is the most configurable of the lot wrt to how *I* want my browser to behave.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    6. Re:FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by hectic · · Score: 1

      yea, but the question is, if you're using windows why would you use ns? ns has shit for css support, slow as hell, and crashes more than real jukebox. ie5, on the other hand, no matter what you say, is fast and it barely ever crashes. yes, you heard me right, it barely EVER crashes. i've had ie5 installed on my system since the beta and it has only crashed about twice (both of those happened when it was still in beta)

    7. Re:FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by bmetzler · · Score: 2
      ie5, on the other hand, no matter what you say, is fast and it barely ever crashes. yes, you heard me right, it barely EVER crashes.

      I use IE 5 on Windows because I've found that using Netscape 4.7 was a "jolting" experience. However, IE 5 crashes or otherwise chokes up at least once a week on me. But that's okay, because I'm only using it until Mozilla is released.

      -Brent
      --
    8. Re:FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by v6stang · · Score: 1

      I would call you lucky if IE5 only crashes once a week on your box. I can barely keep it running long enough to do Windows update. NS4.7, on the other hand, has only crashed on me while (stupid me) I tried to open NS and a MS office product at the same time. Time to swich to StarOffice.

      --
      "I always wanted to be a procrastinator, ...but I never got around to it."
    9. Re:FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by Mudi · · Score: 1

      Netscape 4.7 in Windows has evil GDI resource leaks, you wikl notice íf you run the WIndows resource meter in the system tray. I wouldn't recommend using it, rather use and older version.
      and IMO IE is really faster than netscape and i don't think this is microsoft's fault.
      on linux, netscape also crashes often.
      i really, really hope that mozilla will rock.
      because IMO all current browsers suck somehow.

      t.m.

      --
      --- thomas m., inter one networking group
    10. Re:FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by Zagato-sama · · Score: 1

      Actually I used Netscape as the default web browser for Windows till..well last night actually. I had no problems setting it as the "default web browser" whenever a link was launched, it would be launched in Netscape, not IE. The "Jolting experience" Is the diffrence users would feel when switching from IE file browsing to Netscape as opposed to Ie file browsing to IE web browsing. One feels like you're launching another application, another feels seemless. Now if Netscape ran horribly on Windows and without a glitch of Linux/Unix then yes, this would point to something wrong with the windows operating system interfacing with Netscape, but I think it's pretty apparent that netscape exhibits the same instability and bug set on all platforms. In short..Netscape is the one to blame for it's shortcomings, not IE. Personally I haven't tried the Solaris port of IE, is it similar to the Windows version?

    11. Re:FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by RallyDriver · · Score: 1

      > The quality of Netscape on non-microsoft platforms certainly may be something to debate about, but it's certainly not anything more then your opinion that Netscape sucks on other platforms. Certainly there are many people who believe that IE on Solaris and HP sucks worse.

      So, could it be argued that POSIX sucks as a platform for building browsers on?

    12. Re:FUD - The Netscape Browser is Alive and Well by Last+Warrior · · Score: 1

      Maybe it hasnt crashed yet because you havent hit one of those wonderful activex pages. Notice.. we are now scanning your harddisk. Any illegal porn or pirated copies of Microsoft products will be reported to your local authorities and the SPA. LW

  51. Damn right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Adding anoying crap like AOL Instant messenger and the stupid popups were the #1 reason to change my home page. The worst part of AIM is that there is no uninstall option, fuck AOL!

  52. just remember.... by smash · · Score: 1

    .... that Netscape is not Mozilla :)

    Netscape is kindof irrelevant these days, they may be dead (and as far as I am concerned, they have been dead for a good 12 months), but mozilla is alive and well.

    I tried out one of the nightly builds a couple of days ago, and it really has come a long way... even since milestone 9 :)

    at this rate, we should have a decent usable browser in early 2000 :)

    smash

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  53. Well, duh.. When did you join us? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, it's pretty sad.. Did you need a news story to tell you that?

  54. Netscape market share by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To tell you the truth, I am amazed that the netscape market share is still that high. I work helpdesk for an ISP (yes,yes, helpdesk, intelligence of a potted plant) taking an average of 40 calls a day of all of these maybe every third day I will find a user using netscape. maybe it's just the people that need to ring up a helpdesk, but for these people, there would not be any reason to use another browser, especially if they don't know what one is, or that you have to connect to the internet to send email, or that when your old ISP's webpage is set as your homepage it doesn't mean you are still connecting through your old ISP. uhhm, but I digress. anyway, here are some bitches about IE. 1) main one, cant be removed, well duh, however this means that you can't use the grand old "royal flush" method of "fixing" microsoft products, namely removing and reinstalling, if one piece of IE5 decides to screw another part over, well tough titties mistah. 2) Is it just me, or the image rendering features, or what? Whenever I view a page in IE5, it always looks like IE has ripped the page from the net, sucked out all the blood, vibrancy, individualism of the page and presented ypu with it's dessicated carcass? oh well, I've just pulled an all nighter and I'm rambling.

  55. Forget Netscape, what about Nullsoft?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Yeah, Winamp3 is posed to be slick, but there's no escaping the fact that Justin & the gang are workin for AOL. Once their millions wear off & they settle into their mountain resort homes & new cars I wonder if they'll still be cookin with gas the way they used to..

    1. Re:Forget Netscape, what about Nullsoft?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Winamp has already gone from freeware to nag free shareware, how much longer do you think it will be, under AOLs management, until its crippleware?

  56. AOL's Purchase of Netscape Made Perfect Sense by Clark+Kent · · Score: 1

    Besides wanting the Netcenter hits, AOL had a reason that made it imperative to buy Netscape:

    AOL needed to ensure the survival of the Netscape browser.

    AOL knows that Microsoft wants their business. They also know their history, for example, they know that Microsoft has used Windows in ways that tended to sabotage Microsoft's competitors (e.g. DR-DOS and WordPerfect).

    Consider this quote from Bill Gates:

    "You never sent me a response on the question of what things an app would do that would make it run with MSDOS and not run DR-DOS. Is there any version check or api they fail to have? Is ther feature they have that might get in our way? I am not looking for something they cant get around. I am looking for something their current binary fails on."

    Or, consider this quote from Microsoft's Brad Chase:

    "We will bind the shell to the Internet Explorer, so that running any other browser is a jolting experience."

    If Netscape disappeared, and AOL was left dependent on IE, how long would it be before AOL's customers found it a "jolting experience" to surf the Net, while MSN's customers found it smooth as silk?

  57. Apache killed off Netscape servers for good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It would take a tremendous stroke of brilliance for "iPlanet" to reclaim Netscape's former market share in servers. Since Apache is free, and has all of the "brainshare" for server extensions, that ain't gonna happen.

  58. It would be nice of the security options *worked* by DragonHawk · · Score: 2

    have you ever looked at the security options in IE? ... IE allows a flexible range of customization and settings - MUCH more so that Netscape.

    While I agree with Microsoft's design here in theory, in practice, there have been countless holes discovered in these settings, which make them useless.

    --

    dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
    I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
  59. FUD? Drop the trite acronyms - article was correct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Firstly, the article was more about the erosion in staffing at Netscape. Call it "FUD" if you want, but it isn't - its a fact.

    Added to which, Netcenter has basically fallen off of the map in term of portals (not that it was ever a real threat to the established players), Netscape servers occupy only a sliver of the server market, and the browser is plagued by bugs and lateness.

    Added to which, the reflexive use of the term "FUD" on /. is getting quite tiresome. Even valid criticism is now being met with "FUD!! Fudmeister!!!", with almost no effort to actually refute the arguments made.

    Its amazing that /. has generated its own grammar and terminology as it becomes more close-minded.

  60. Flash, attention-grabbing story...but inaccurate! by elig · · Score: 5

    Having lived through all of what the author describes, this article simply distorts Netscape's past year of history in order to create a flashy, attention-grabbing story --- even if it's of questionable accuracy.

    1. Attrition: Yes, people have burned out and left Netscape. But, you know what? New, enthusiastic employees of equal or greater caliber --- excited about the work that's being done at Netscape, and already trained from hacking on the Mozilla source code --- have come back to replace them in full force. The net effect is zero.

    2. Netscape culture: Guess what? For most employees, the culture *hasn't* appreciably changed. Employees' dogs and children still have company badges, and we drink all the beer we want. ;) Yeah, it takes a few months to order a new computer, and we see an AOL logo at company meetings. So what? Personally, I think AOL is a great company to work for, whether perceived as "cool" or not.

    3. 5.0 Release Date: The author provides no evidence that the turnover has resulted in the one year delay in the Communicator 5 beta. Which is convenient --- because no cause and effect relationship exists between these two events. As many Mozillans have pointed out already in far more detail, the delay came about from a ground-up rearchitecting of the entire product. (And anyone who is bothered by this can go to http://www.mozilla.org and help ship a browser; whining here won't do jacksquat.)

    4. Barry Schuler's comments: I attended that meeting. Barry **never** made these comments. He was, however, busily serving up a barbeque after the meeting, as Mr. Barksdale himself would have done. (Another AOL executive, in fact, did make these comments, but the journalist is, in my opinion grossly stripping the comments out of their intended context, which would have been obvious had he attended the meeting.)

    Based exclusively on my personal experiences, it looks to me as if this journalist sought to write an article about a topic, and then wedged the facts to fit his original preconceptions. We ain't dead yet. ;)

    --- elig@prometheus-music.com's personal $.02.

  61. Stats of "time spent on site" bolster your point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MediaMetrix stats for "average time spent on site" bolster your point. While the netscape home page gets lots of hits, no one sticks around to find out anymore about it- Netcenter has low stats in this regard.. Most of these users just haven't reset their home page.

  62. The greatest disappointment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After reading this article I realized I hadn't even looked at www.netscape.com in months and decided to have a look. To my horror they have started having a pop up window advertising aol 5.0. I think this pretty much summarises how they've changed from a respectable company, to... aol

  63. unlike /., zdnet sees BOTH sides of a story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    You've been lulled by /. into thinking that news stories cannot and should not ever write anything critical about any company even tacitly associated with open source, or any company even remotely aligned against microsoft.

    Do you honestly think ZDNet was off base?

    1. Re:unlike /., zdnet sees BOTH sides of a story by Drayke · · Score: 1

      Do you honestly think ZDNet was off base?

      Yes. In all honesty I think Netscape is struggling at this point, but still has a lot of life left in it if they can put out a strong product (5.0) quickly, and perhaps if something develops soon in the DOJ vs. MS case that would allow Netscape to start setting up agreements to bundle browsers with new systems (that's still where most impressions are formed). It's a tough case, but it's not hopeless.

      -Drayke

      --

      -Drayke

      If all the world's a stage, it must have been an easy audition.
  64. Pressing weekly Mozilla CDs is a bad idea, imho by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't see anyone buying the CD's when its quite easy to nab the source from the site. Yes, I know its twenty megs, but by now anyone who is a serios mozilla developer has developed an "overnight download" strategy.

  65. It tries to be helpfull but gets in your way. by Egorn · · Score: 1


    (Use the Preview Button! Check those URLs! Don't forget the http://!)
    --------------------------------------- ----

    --

    Movie News - "Entertainment news, bitch!"
  66. MOZILLA/NS:QUIT BLAMING THE VICTIM!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Is this going to be the ongoing retort of Netscape staffers who can't ship a browser:

    We didn't ship because you didn't help us. If you would have helped us, we would have shipped

    GIVE ME A BREAK.

    This is just blaming the victim. The Mozilla supporters in here have to realize that open sourcing a product does not oblige anyone to look at the code or pitch in. We have jobs too, and we don't ask for your help in getting them done.

    The Mozilla supporters have to really quit using this as a crutch - its really getting old and annoying, and at this late stage of development, Mythical Man Month states quite clearly that adding more developers will just slow it down (and no, Cathedral and Bazaar does not advocate piling on coders at the last minute either)

    1. Re:MOZILLA/NS:QUIT BLAMING THE VICTIM!! by Drayke · · Score: 1

      We didn't ship because you didn't help us. If you would have helped us, we would have shipped

      That was never stated nor implied. The more important statement here is that they were rebuilding the product from the ground up. Yes, it delays releases, but if the net result is a better product, so be it. Microsoft should learn from this approach, maybe start building Windows v6 now - might regain them some credibility.

      On the article in general, I'm going to have to agree that it seems to suffer from a disturbing lack of unforced facts. I don't think I saw a single direct quote from a current employee, and as far as the attrition, etc., it looks like that was all from vague guesses by former employees. You want turnover figures, ask the HR department, and don't be surprised when they tell you where to go.

      -Drayke

      --

      -Drayke

      If all the world's a stage, it must have been an easy audition.
    2. Re:MOZILLA/NS:QUIT BLAMING THE VICTIM!! by MattyT · · Score: 1

      The statement was not necessarily asking for more development. Bug finders and testers are not subject to Moore's law, and Mozilla probably needs them more now than developers.

    3. Re:MOZILLA/NS:QUIT BLAMING THE VICTIM!! by MattyT · · Score: 1

      D'oh! Not Moore's law, of course, but you know what I mean!

  67. HaH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Netscape was any good, it would have stood the test of time, despite it's mighty opponent(s). It's up to Mozilla team to put some life back in that browser. Netscape killed itself!

    1. Re:HaH! by notsosilentbob · · Score: 1
      If Netscape was any good, it would have stood the test of time, despite it's mighty opponent(s).

      Are you insane? What planet do you live on? I hope Microsoft never points it's big guns at you. Gee... lets see.. I'm going to put out some software, try and make some money one so I can eat. Microsoft comes along, throws 100 million at their own version, and gives it away for free. Gee... big suprise when my company goes down the toilet.

      So tell me, genius, how would *you* have stayed afloat in your new startup, no capital, next to no income, and not charged for your software? How do you compete with a behemouth with billions that wants to squash you?

    2. Re:HaH! by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

      Are you insane? What planet do you live on? I hope Microsoft never points it's big guns at you. Gee... lets see.. I'm going to put out some software, try and make some money one so I can eat. Microsoft comes along, throws 100 million at their own version, and gives it away for free. Gee... big suprise when my company goes down the toilet.

      My guess is that people like you have a short memory. Netscape built their market share by giving the browser away on their website. Oh, sure, you had to pay after 90 days [nudge nudge wink wink]. I downloaded it a few times myself. Never reminded me to pay, never quit working (besides the hideous bugs).

      At the time, Netscape had around 95% of the browser market (and Microsoft is a monopoly because of their current 60% share) and used that monopoly to wield control over the web. They created new tags, javascript (sorry, it's not a "standard"), and cookies. They owned it.

      Now, you tell us, genius, how in the hell was Microsoft supposed to compete against a monopoly that gave its software away? The only choice they had was to do the same.

      I hate to defend Microsoft, but at least they're honest about wanting to rule the world.

    3. Re:HaH! by notsosilentbob · · Score: 1
      Microsoft is a monopoly because of their current 60% share)

      No, Microsoft is a monopoly because they can tank anyone that gets in their way.

      Netscape wasn't a monopoly by definition, as evidenced by the fact that they couldn't hold the browser market, even WITH a 95% share.

      If ever there was a case of winning against M$, they should have been it. But they lost, again proving that it you have more money you can kill anything you want. Now, you tell us, genius, how in the hell was Microsoft supposed to compete against a monopoly that gave its software away? The only choice they had was to do the same.

      Your argument assumes that Netscape would have thrived if it had continually given away it's software never making money. 20/20 hindsight shows us that they couldn't. M$ forced them to give up permanently the idea of charging for their browser. And where did it get them? Tanked. Clearly, they just weren't making enough MONEY to stay afloat, keep good engineers, keep their market share -- heck, even a reasonable share of the market. They LOST.

      It's a pretty simple equation: little income against big bad M$ == death. Your only hope is to try avoid their radar altogether, or to have them fuck up somehow and sign a contract with you such that they can't screw you over (read: Java -- even still they tried to subvert it at every chance they got).

      And yes, I once worked at a company that had M$ aim it's guns at us. It was a medium sized company, we tried to buy a smaller startup that had some technology we wanted to compete with a M$ product (something already on the market but theirs sucked the big weenie). M$ got wind of what we were up to, counterbid against us several times until we couldn't bid higher, up to the point of a ridicuous amount (way more than the startup was worth) and then --- get this --- M$ killed the technology that they just bought. Never saw the light of day.

      *That*, my friend, is why M$ is a monopoly. They can do damn near anything they wanted. Bob

  68. Browser Companies by Woil · · Score: 1

    Now if only Corel would jump into the browser competition like it has the OS, Office, and Drafting worlds, then I would be happy... Do you realize that Corel is aligning themselves to compete / replace microsoft on nearly every front but this one?

    -Woil.

  69. Note to Rob, et al. by freakho · · Score: 1

    I think the article itself has been fairly thoroughly dissected, as has the author's journalistic methods. This same discussion always happens, and goes in the same direction, every time a ZD article (from any ZD holding) is posted here. The obvious lesson would be that the next time somebody subits a ZD article, Just Say No!

    This concludes this broadcast of the Emergency Clue Network.

  70. IE for Linux! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah! I can't wait till Microsoft does the right thing and make IE available on Linux. The Linux world will be a much better place.

    1. Re:IE for Linux! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Point 1: As far as market share of desktop machines, Linux is a drop in the ocean at the moment - the introduction of IE might persuade more users to switch from Windows to Linux - would Bill Gates ever permit that ? Point 2: If IE for Linux was made available, it would no doubt use the same awful UNIX Win95 API kludge that was inflicted on IE for Solaris and HP-UX, which would make it as dreadfully slow as those current two IE on UNIX implement- ations are. Before you "wish" for IE on Linux - check out IE on Solaris or IE on HP-UX and be prepared to change your mind very quickly indeed. What we need is a *good* browser on UNIXes in general. Netscape 3.04 was the last decent cross-platform UNIX browser release and that was over 2 years ago ! Mozilla looks like the first browser that will be worth using since NS 3.04.

  71. It's time for more Open Source browsers! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's clear to me that it's about time more open source developers devote their time in the browser development arena. The w3c browser called "Amaya" is absolute crap! So, if you don't like IE, and you know Netscape/Mozilla are cow dung, let's see some other open source browsers available.

  72. Poor phrasing. by Sneakums · · Score: 1

    I should have said, "pretty much every program that runs on Linux".

  73. Who killed netscape? by Zagato-sama · · Score: 2

    Well quite honestly.. I'd have to say Netscape killed Netscape. Lack of vision, lack of conforming to standards, lack of interest in forming OEM relationships. Netscape literally snatched defeat from the jaws of victory, they _were_ the monopoly in the browser market..and they let Microsoft chew them up and spit them back out. Netscape was dead before AOL bought them. Now of course some people are angry at microsoft for making IE free...well let me ask you something, Gimp is free, Gimp is similar to Photoshop, a commercial product that costs quite a bundle. Gimp is packaged with most Linux distributions (if not all?) Is Gimp evil? Netscape should've created other sources of revenue. Also notice that we now have two competing browsers that are _free_ as opposed to having one browser that was not. The consumer benefitted from competition. If you believe netscape should've remained the monopoly..well don't point fingers at Microsoft then. Now the issue here is "What comes next?" AOL does have gigantic resources to use in competition with MS, not only are they a wealthy company, but they also command the largest Internet user base. After their contract expires in 2001 (?) They should be able to dump their new AOL-Netscape browser onto every one of their customers which could shift the playing field overnight.

  74. oooh the W3C by biohazard99 · · Score: 1

    The W3C just sits on its hands while waiting for MS and the other Browser Manufacturers to duke it out, remember , wasn't even incorporated until HTML4.0, and XML SMIL and all the other *ML out there are slowly but surely being decided in Redmond and on the desktop, not at the w3c

  75. Informed Opinion by LeviLevi · · Score: 2

    Hold on to your hats, because I'm about to offer what appears to be a real commodity here on Slashdot: an informed opinion. I worked for Netscape from 95-99. I was there. Were you? That being said, keep in mind that this is my opinion. (#include ) The most prophetic thing I ever heard about Netscape was that it was eventually going to be a Harvard Business Study. From what I understand about those studies, that isn't very complimentary. Casting aside the inflamatory excesses of the ZDnet article, there are only two reasons why Netscape is in the position that they are in now: mismanagement and poor product quality. In that order. That should tell you something (i.e. mismanagement engenders poor product quality). I've read some comments in this thread that stated it was "wrong" for Netscape to consider the browser a "platform". Well, if we didn't convince you, we certainly convinced Microsoft. The Dept. of Justice was also able to convince Judge Jackson for us. (For those who haven't, those findings of fact are _great_ reading.) Let me let you all in on a little secret: the "Browser Wars" were/are a creation of the media and user communities. Boiled down to the purest fundamentals, our strategy was to create a networked computing "platform". Market share, especially after MS started doing their nasty, was only of marginal interest. We were trying to do something completely different. (And they are trying again with 5.0/Mozilla.) What? The "Browser Wars" didn't happen? Nonsense! I must be an idiot! How can I say that? Well, it's pretty easy, though many in the Slashdot/Linux community don't realize it. The fact is that there is a significant difference between "geek" computing and "consumer" computing. Consumers don't care about standards compliance. Consumers don't care about plugins and extenstions. Consumers care about one thing: they want what they're using to work and they don't care how. They were the target for the new platform. Our efforts were directed primarliy at them. For a whole host of reasons (mismanagement and poor quality), we were unable to achieve this. MS was, irrespective of the underhanded and illegal crap they did to make sure they were able to. Yes, as an engineer I agree that standards compliance would be a wonderful thing. There are several problems, though. The main one being I don't think developers (not just in the OSS community) don't know what they mean by the term "standards compliance". Do you know how many ambiguities are in the average standards document? (More than there should be.) What happens when the biggest fish in the pond (i.e. MS) zigs, and the rest of the community zags? This is what I think of when I hear people whining for "standards compliance": developers want their code to work and they don't care how. Does that sound like the above definition of a consumer? Bingo! It should. Achieving true standards compliance will take a lot more activism than the community is putting out. About that activism for a moment. For all the adulation Netscape/AOL got for starting the Mozilla project, the amount of useful work that has come from outside the company doesn't measure up. Sorry to burst your bubble, guys, but according to my still-connected comrades there are at most a dozen or two useful outside contributors. Most of the people who blindly assert that Open Source == Good do like to look at the code and _maybe_ tweak it for their own purposes, but the truth is that there is a high barrier to entry into the community because the source tree is an undocumented rats nest. So where are the people to document it? (More than the current 'Find the Design Patterns' thingy that's happenning.) Where are the thousands of people to QA? There's a lot more to QA than just swiping the bits and complaining about bugs. Open Source is not automatically good. It only matters if there is an active community that sincerely cares and goes out of it's way to allow newcomers to contribute without alpha-male "I'm elite and you're not," posturing. I'm firmly convinced that the success of any open source project is directly proportional to the extent that it fosters a "good" community. The Mozilla Project would not exist if AOL didn't pay the salaries of the majority of engineers who work on it. I'm sorry but that's not my definition of a "good" community. Two things have to happen if open source is to be more than a flash in the pan. The first is that the community has to realize that consumers don't care how things work. This is hard because it is fundamental to geek nature to care about how things work. The second thing is that enough socialization has to take place to end posturing, encourage newcomers, and understand that not all work can be sexy. The Mozilla project has a lot of thankless work that needs to be done. For those that truly care about their computing environment and open development communities, try to contribute whatever you can whenever you can. You may not get the reward and recognition you want, but when people talk about how great the new open source browser is, you'll have the satisfaction of knowing that you contributed. Having volunteered in areas outside the open source community, that feeling is more valuable than our whacked capitalist^100 culture makes it out to be.

    1. Re:Informed Opinion by LeviLevi · · Score: 1
      Crap! I screwed the pooch! Hit submit instead of preview. I do know how to format stuff.

      Sorry.

    2. Re:Informed Opinion by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Re the comment:
      Open Source is not automatically good. It only matters if there is an active community that sincerely cares and goes out of it's way to allow newcomers to contribute without alpha-male "I'm elite and you're not," posturing.

      Just as I've said elsewhere.

      However, a correction to the notion of what's an "alpha" (speaking as a professional dog breeder/trainer with 30 years experience): The true alpha NEVER postures or bullies or tries to prove how much better he is, because he KNOWS, and doesn't have to prove it -- and everyone else tacitly acknowledges his status. Posturing and strutting and picking fights over who's better are done by betas (wanna-be alphas) who will NEVER make it as an alpha even if the job position is open. Only another true alpha will move into the position -- and the betas will once again be left to fight it out among themselves.




      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  76. Opinions are individual by RoLlEr_CoAsTeR · · Score: 1

    It was the same battle in the browser wars, and as most people agree, Netscape LOST when IE4 came out. IE5 is really good stuff, no one can argue there, and Netscape 4.7 is crap, my opinion.

    You're right in saying "my opinion" because there are still lots of people out there who think that Netscape is still good, isn't crap, etc, etc (like me) and who wouldn't use IE 'less they had to (I do, sometimes, out of necessity).

    When was the last time you installed windows and Boom!

    I whole-heartedly agree with you on this one. The computer we had at my house ran/still runs Win95, but when I got my laptop, I wanted Win98, because I was stupid and believed that it would somehow be better. It wasn't, as we all know; in fact, it was worse. More of a memory hog, more of a pain, that stupid channel bar, Active Desktop, etc, etc, etc.. the list goes on for miles. Plus, my computer crashes more than the old computer running Win95! But, that's a bit off topic.. this isn't a Windows discussion, but.. just doing my <rant> for the day.

    --

    Insert mind here.
  77. Deja Vu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This completely reminds me of this webpage hack. It's a good read once you get past the initial script kiddie lettering.

  78. Zona research and FUD by VValdo · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry but quotes such as:

    Zona Research showing Netscape trailing Microsoft Internet Explorer by some 20 percent.

    is a total misinterpretation of Zona's findings. Zona was only testing corporate users who use their browsers at work. Zona used a total of 160 or so respondants. Zona provides no margin of error that I could find.

    This study has been touted in at least three ZDnet articles now as "proof" of IE's lead over Netscape. ZDNet articles have also claimed that the Zona study declares IE a winner, which it doesn't. *AND* Zona lists Microsoft as one of its "key clients" on its web page!

    this is either deliberate or incompetant. Either way it's result is to generate unsubstantiated FUD.
    The actual study is here: http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,1018 042,00.html The results are much different from what I've seen in articles such as the ZDnet for today's news and Jesse Berst's article here: http://www.zdnet.com/anchordesk/story/story_4076.h tml

    W
    -------------------

    --
    -------------------
    This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  79. Find the oft-quoted Zona study here: by VValdo · · Score: 1

    Sorry, this is the right address for the Zona study:

    http://www.zonaresearch.com/browserstudy

    You'll see how the results have been totally warped to sound like an IE marketshare victory.

    W
    -------------------

    --
    -------------------
    This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  80. Re:FUD? Drop the trite acronyms - article was corr by bmetzler · · Score: 2
    Added to which, Netcenter has basically fallen off of the map in term of portals (not that it was ever a real threat to the established players),

    Netcenter is still one of the top 5 sites on the internet in terms of hits. How can you say that it's fallen off the map. It gets more hits the /. ever will.

    -Brent
    --
  81. Reality check by robinjo · · Score: 2

    I can't believe the amount of negative posts about Netscape in this topic. The story itself was already crap but it looks like all the backstabbers are busy this weekend. I can't but wonder if some ACs are here to try to boost opinions that Netscape lost because of an inferior product.

    Now let's have a reality check. Netscape is not about Communicator anymore. It's been about Mozilla already for more than a year. Sure they have released new versions of Communicator, but all the hard development and hopes are on Mozilla. And believe me, Mozilla is looking better and better every day. Just grab a nightly build from ftp.mozilla.org and see with your own eyes.

    Mozilla has been built from ground up. It's well designed and has some really ground breaking code. It's already faster than IE and there's still a lot to optimize. The nightly build for win32 is just 5,2 MB. Compare that to the 18,1 MB bloat of Communicator and tens of megs of MSIE. Those who have programmed know that the bigger the executable, the more it contains ugly spaghetti code. Mozilla is also perfect for cell phones and hand held devices as it's small, componentized and runs on a free OS. That gives Mozilla a difinite edge compared to MSIE.

    We've been patiently waiting for Mozilla for a year already. Now that Mozilla is getting close to ready, we get to read all these horror stories about Netscape being dead. It's just FUD and if you read the Findings of Fact-document, you don't have to be a genious to figure out who's feeding these news. But it doesn't matter what ZDNet, Gartner or Microsoft say. Mozilla will ship within 2-3 months and it will be a great product.

    1. Re:Reality check by LunarOne · · Score: 1
      Excellent suggestion! I downloaded Mozilla as you said and this is my first (but surely will not be my last) post using it.

      The interface is clean and the rendering is gorgeous. Of course, the build of the hour is a little less than beta quality (be gentle if you download tonight's build). However, this project is clearly on track to become a serious browser - there's hope, and I wish I was a contributor.

      --

      Read my sig if you like, but I'll never see yours, thanks to Discussions, Viewing, Disable sigs...
  82. AOL didn't buy Netscape for the portal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...they didn't buy Netscape for Communicator/Mozilla. What they *did* buy Netscape for was a ready-made multi-billion-dollar lawsuit against Microsoft that they could take advantage of.

  83. Re:Flash, attention-grabbing story...but inaccurat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NO FAIR! You're not supposed to post here if you actually have some semblance of a clue as to what's really going on! I guess it doesn't matter, though - no one will pay any attention - they've already got it all figured out.

  84. Yes, but not RedHat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...the core Mozilla/Gecko/Raptor code should be turned over to the W3C and turned into a reference implementation, freely-licensable to all parties for building standards-compliant browsers.

  85. ZDNet against Mozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ZDnet has published quite a few articles about Mozilla and Netscape by now and all of them are filled with mis-information. Jesse Berst in his recent article wrote that Communicator 5 will be shipped without XML. Well the browser I am using right now (Mozilla nightly build) has its GUI built with XML. ZDnet then posted an article saying that Netscape is losing browser share, but can't they see the trend of pc without windows and what will all those pc run, surely Mozilla and nothing else. Nokia and Intel are developing their net appliances using Mozilla a clear example that Mozilla is the favourite choice for net appliances, why 'cuz its "free" and people can tweak it, and why will they use 20 megs of bloatware. Some people like the speed of IE 5.0 and don't like the slow Mozilla, can't they just read the front page of mozilla.org its in alpha stage. Yeah Yeah we have waited alot, but didn't we wait for Linux 2.2 for 2 years. Mozilla has taught us alot and has provided us with many usefull tools which are only the byproduct of development of Mozilla, just wait for actual product whose alpha versions are rock stable on my machine (Red Hat 6.0). However there is one and only one problem with current Milstones and Nightly builds of Mozilla they don't render ZDnet pages correctly, hmm now I wonder why ZDNet is spitting out all the FUD against Mozilla and Netscape. Go and try the latest nightly build for mozilla you will be able to use it for hours without a single crash (atleast that is my experience).

  86. Indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think there is any recovery... they are so screwed up its beyond belief. You ever try and even order a product through the supposed Sun Netscape Alliance? Birthdays come quicker for me than waiting for shipment from these bozos. Netscape has been dead for a long time, just no one wanted to admit it.

  87. YES! by ColourCure · · Score: 1

    aol and it's user-friendly connect-a-moron-to-the-rest-of-the-world tatics have just about ruined the entire internet. how many terabytes upon terabytes upon terabytes of resources have been wasted on useless, idiotic "who i am/pics of user's dog/carry out a better social life" crap! aol has long been the gateway for people who have no business using a computer in the first place to get in. i'm all for imposing computer-literacy (hate that term!) tests on anyone who request internet access. and by the way, i'm not bitter or anything :)

    1. Re:YES! by Graymalkin · · Score: 2

      Just because some people find they need to upload/download pictures of themselves and others and their dogs doesn't mean they have no right to the bandwidth. If they pay for it then they can do what they want with it. Many people don't need computers but they have them, I would rather have them use AOL and call tech support than have them call me so I can explain TCP/IP to them.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  88. LIVE: My Observations... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am in the middle of installing a new NT Server and am waiting for SP6 to download. So I sit here in Netscape Navigator 4.7 after trying to get Mozilla M10 to download a file correctly. Anyway, all of this aside, I find it funny that I can't download SP6 via the included Internet Explorer 2 with NT4. I have to download Netscape because I can't install IE5 without SP3 or greater. And I can't install SP6 directly, because it needs IE3 to install. So I have to download two service packs etc... blah blah. Nonetheless, the point I am getting at is that this one of the rare times that I ever use Navigator. This is a dual CPU system. Dual 550s. I looked at the CPU use graph and Netscape appears to *not* take advantage of dual CPUs. How do I arrive at this conclusion? I see that netscape.exe is consuming 50% of available CPU time. In other words: It's eating an entire CPU for itself. And what is Netscape doing? Downloading a file at 120KB/sec. That's *weak*

  89. Re:FUD? Drop the trite acronyms - article was corr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Netcenter is still one of the top 5 sites on the internet in terms of hits.

    Only because it is now counted as part of AOL. Netventer itself never had meaningful hit counts. Check Mediametrix for more data.

  90. Zdnet is shit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I emailed Ted Leonsis, who is president of Interactive Properties at America Online, I and asked him if that Zdnet article had any true to it...

    His comments were:

    "Just more bad inside scoop;mostly wrong. Ted"

    I'd image that the only true part was that Netscape is losing some people.




    http://www.businessweek.com/1999/99_32/b3641061. htm

    Also, from the looks of this businessweek article i don't know how things could be going so wrong. It seems AOL is focus on taking Netscape to the next step.


    Also, check out Netcenter's new looks.
    http://netscape.com/index_a.html
    http://netscape.com/index_b.html
    http://netscape.com/index_c.html

  91. Microsoft Quotes for Those Living Under a Rock by Clark+Kent · · Score: 2

    So you don't believe Microsoft engages in FUD campaigns, and other unethical behaviour?

    Here are some Microsoft quotes for you . . .

    Microsoft's Brad Silverberg re DR-DOS:

    "We are engaged in a FUD campaign to let the press know about some of the bugs. We'll provide info a few bugs at a time to stretch it out."

    Microsoft analysis paper re DR-DOS:

    "On the PR side, we have begun an 'aggressive leak campaign' for MS-DOS 5.0. The goal is to build anticipation for MS-DOS 5.0, and diffuse potential excitement/momentum from the DR DOS 5.0 announcement."

    Microsoft PR plan re DR-DOS:

    "Objectives: FUD DR DOS with every editorial contact made."

    Microsoft's Brad Silverberg re DR-DOS:

    "What the guy is supposed to do is feel uncomfortable, and when he has bugs, suspect that the problem is dr-dos and then go out to buy ms-dos. or decide not to take the risk for all the other machines he has to buy for in the office."

    Microsoft J++ Pricing Proposal re Java:

    The "strategic objective" is to "kill cross-platform Java by grow[ing] the polluted Java market."

    Memo re Java:

    "at this point its [sic] not good to create MORE noise around our win32 java classes. Instead we should just quietly grow j++ share and assume that people will take advantage of our classes without ever realizing they are building win32-only java apps."

    Microsoft's Vinod Valloppillil re Linux:

    "OSS projects have been able to gain a foothold in many server applications because of the wide utility of highly commoditized, simple protocols. By extending these protocols and developing new protocols, we can deny OSS projects entry into the market."

    Microsoft's James Allchin re Netscape:

    "I don't understand how IE is going to win. The current path is simply to copy everything that Netscape does packaging and product wise. Let's [suppose] IE is as good as Navigator/Communicator. Who wins? The one with 80% market share. Maybe being free helps us, but once people are used to a product it is hard to change them. Consider Office. We are more expensive today and we're still winning. My conclusion is that we must leverage Windows more. Treating IE as just an add-on to Windows which is cross-platform [means] losing our biggest advantage -- Windows marketshare. We should dedicate a cross group team to come up with ways to leverage Windows technically more. . . . We should think about an integrated solution -- that is our strength."

    Microsoft's James Allchin re Netscape:

    "Pitting browser against browser is hard since Netscape has 80% marketshare and we have [less than] 20%. . . . I am convinced we have to use Windows -- this is the one thing they don't have. . . . We have to be competitive with features, but we need something more -- Windows integration."

    "If you agree that Windows is a huge asset, then it follows quickly that we are not investing sufficiently in finding ways to tie IE and Windows together."

    Microsoft's Paul Maritz on Netscape:

    The major reason for this is . . . to combat Nscp, we have to [] position the browser as "going away" and do deeper integration on Windows.

    Microsoft's Christian Wildfeuer on Netscape:

    "The stunning insight is this: To make [users] switch away from Netscape, we need to make them upgrade to Memphis. . . . It seems clear to me that it will be very hard to increase browser market share on the merits of IE 4 alone. It will be more important to leverage the OS asset to make people use IE instead of Navigator."

    Microsoft executive re Netscape:

    Content drives browser adoption, and we need to go to the top five sites and ask them, "What can we do to get you to adopt IE?" We should be prepared to write a check, buy sites, or add features -- basically do whatever it takes to drive adoption.

    Microsoft's Brad Chase re Netscape:

    "We will bind the shell to the Internet Explorer, so that running any other browser is a jolting experience."


    Yep. Just honest-to-goodness competition on the merits of their products -- in a pig's eye.

    Sources:

    DR-DOS Case - Consolidated Statement of Facts:

    http://www.drdos.com/fullstory/factstat.html

    Java Case - Motion for Preliminary Injunction:

    http://java.sun.com/lawsuit/051498.unfair.html

    Linux - Halloween Document:

    http://www.opensource.org/halloween/halloween1.h tml

    DOJ Case - Findings of Fact:

    http://usvms.gpo.gov/findfact.html

  92. Re:Flash, attention-grabbing story...but inaccurat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are deeply imbedded in the Netscape/AOL reality distortion field. As someone who worked there for several years, I have a somewhat different view.

    Mozilla is so far behind schedule because of horribly bad management. There were several attempts to rearchitect the browser and make it cleaner and more modular. All of them failed due to reasons ranging from bad design to management cowardice.

    There has been huge pressure from management to ship something as soon as possible, but at the same time, there's a laundry list of features that MUST be done. As a result, you end up with something that take far longer than it would have, had it been managed well.

  93. Screwed the Pooch by Lefthand · · Score: 1

    Where did this saying "ever" come from. I first heard it in the movie "Stand By Me" , and now here it is again. Was this ever a Real saying?

  94. The Bottom Line by Flippo · · Score: 1

    Forget Netscape. Forget AOL. Forget SUN.
    I could care less about these companies or ANY other company for that matter.

    I'm currently using Netscape 4.06(!).
    ('Coz I got so accustomed to its crashes, I kinda consider it a feature now - I NEED 'em :)

    And let me tell you somethin.
    I don't like monopolies.
    SO I CAN'T migrate to IEx.x, just 'coz it's a WHOLE LOT BETTER than my Netscape.
    (x.x >= 5.5)

    BUT THE MASSES CAN,
    UNLESS you offer them A BETTER ALTERNATIVE. F A S T.

    -which is:
    a FINISHED (NO BETA), COMPACT & FREE BROWSER
    that EQUALS or surpasses IEx.x on STABILITY, SECURITY & USER-FRIENDLINESS
    and OFFERS EVERY OFTEN-USED FEATURE that IEx.x does
    and that runs on Windoze and Linux

    those are the MINIMUM requirements

    don't care where it comes from (ANYTHIN BUT MSFT ofcrs)
    don't care about its name

    does it have to be open-source?
    NO, but it would be GREAT if it were. And I believe it would also NEED to be for long-term 'survival'.

    does it have to follow standards? (that is, not seek to extend them)
    NO, but I would very much appreciate if it did. Don't try to fight MSFT on its own terrain.
    Go for their weak spots. Security, stability, closed source. Cfr. Linux.

    This is what I want.
    This is probably what a LOT of /. readers want.
    This is what's NEEDed to keep MSFT from monopolizing the browser market.
    This is what's NEEDed to make Linux a viable platform for the masses to browse the web.
    Oh you don't care about that right? You're not really into fightin MSFT over desktops eh?
    You just need your own little Tux in your own little desktop.
    Well you better START to care!
    The masses, you see, are so BRAINWASHed by years of MSFT marketing,
    they FORGOT they WANT and NEED C H O I C E.
    I WANT CHOICE. NOW and FOREVER.
    &
    THOSE WHO HAVE THE POWER TO CREATE CHOICE
    HAVE THE OBLIGATION TO DO SO.

    I don't have that power. DO YOU?

    Does Netscape 5.0 qualify? From what I hear, it doesn't.
    Does Opera qualify? NOPE, 'coz for one thing, it ain't free.
    Does Mozilla qualify? YOU TELL ME!

    (And the next hurdle will be... a me$$enger-compatible instant messager...)

  95. Facts and the Courts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But it is fact, as documented in the FoF that Judge Jackson released Just because Jackson stated something in his Findings of Fact, doesn't make it true. It only makes it a fact in the legal sense. Consider that according to the courts it's a fact that O.J. didn't kill his wife. Anyone who can think for themselves can easily come to a different set of "facts" based on the evidence given at the trial. If you followed the trial and agree with Jackson's FoF, good for you. If you just read Jackson's FoF and took it as the truth, then you need to start thinking for yourself.

    1. Re:Facts and the Courts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone needs to read up on his law..The criminal trial never found that OJ didn't kill his ex-wife and her husband (didn't find that he did either)... but it found that there wasn't enough solid evidence presented well enough to convict him of the crime against the state of murder. OTOH, the civil trial for him committing the tort of killing his ex-wife and her husband found him liable and punished him severely. A crime against the state is NOT a tort against an individual, and a finding of fact is just that. A finding of FACT. Legality comes later. Besides, this is anti-trust, not criminal law. The rules are different.

  96. Most Linux uses use Netscape but no free access by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux users are a Netscape captive audience. Corel has come to this conclusion that MS is in a short to midterm bind on this . I could put my brother on mkLinux but the free internet services do not seem to support it. Another client weakness of Linux. I hope people on this site E-mail these free services for Linux support. We need Netscape to hold off IE but Netscape will lose the captive audience of the free access crowd because they cannot do so in Linux. At this point to get on line Windows is cheaper and Netscape cannot benefit. Netscape cannot win on Windows only.

  97. Re:FiRST PoST by ToneMaster · · Score: 1

    I agree. Bloatware. =:-)

  98. It is happening by extrasolar · · Score: 2

    Its happening. One of the greatest things I have seen is the separation of rendering engine from the application. The KDE html rendering component is being ported to bonobo and wrappers for mozilla is already underway IIRC. With HTML rendering everywhere will give GNU a truly web desktop... the right way I because of the nature of open development.

    Also there is mnemonic. If you are extreme web surfer dude you won't care about mnemonic. But the mnemonic project is looking to do a very extensable browser interface. They want to do HTML, XML, TeX, MathML, etc. And I don't think it is tied to GUI.

    GZilla is coming along nicely I think. Then there is Lynx which is a viable alternative right now. I use it consistantly and the only reason I use netscape occasionally is because too many web developers don't care about text-only users...

    Then there is emacs/w3. I haven't been able to get this one to work but I hear it has impressive CSS support.

    Just remember this when considering Bazaar development. Programmers program because it is interesting and not for production value. Just because we have two great desktops doesn't mean we won't have another superfluous desktop or ten more. Same thing goes for every other free software project. If it is interesting it will be done, how much it benefits our revolution is often beside the point.

    Nothing is more important than the hack.

    ***Beginning*of*Signiture***
    Linux? That's GNU/Linux to you mister!

    1. Re:It is happening by ecampbel · · Score: 1

      You know, IE has been doing this since version 3. The rendering engine is nothing more than an ActiveX control that any Window's application can use.

      --

      Sig goes here
    2. Re:It is happening by extrasolar · · Score: 2

      Yeah. That was smart of them. Now they got Active desktop, web folders, HTML help, etc. in Windows 98. Even an application my mom uses uses the IE component.

      But I see more potential with Free Software. Bonobo technology, for instance will let you embed graphics into the filemanager, icon lists into a spreadsheet, spreadsheets onto the desktop, etc. I think KDE is a ways ahead in this technology (I saw a screenshot of Konqueror with an embeded terrminal).

      I think with Free Software, this technology will probably be used more. I think the idea of embedding things on the desktop is a very intriguing idea. Who needs wallpaper when you can embed a graphic. We can even mimic ActiveDesktop with a Mozilla or KHTML componetent.

      Ah, the possibilities.

      ***Beginning*of*Signiture***
      Linux? That's GNU/Linux to you mister!

  99. Newer is not necessarilly better by lfd · · Score: 1

    Navigator 3.04 (X11/Linux) went through all 3 pages without any problem. I stick to this "old" version because it works most of the time. I've tried Communicator 4.7 but the mailer was so slow,
    not to mention the different UI, that I gave up on it after about 2 hours of utilization.

    3.04 is not so bad indeed. Like most other people, I'm waiting for the 1st non beta-release of Mozilla - which will require me to upgrade to Slackware 7 for the glibc 2.1 - and if it doesn't do it, I'll go for the Opera browser.

    There's one recent trend I would like to complain about here: browser sniffers. Those f...g JS applets are probably written by good people whose managers are convinced that netsurfers use the most recent release of either NS or IE. This is definitely a wrong assumption. Sites like www.bmwusa.com, www.linuxworldexpo.com or the secured version of www.summitbank.com (I bank in NJ and I am on temporary assignment in CA) will deny access to browsers older than NS 4. That's a shame. HTML used to be an open standard, but then came Sun with all their fancy Java stuff and the world suddently came to an end - at least for NS 3 users...

    --
    Going on means going far, going far means returning. Tao te Ching
    1. Re:Newer is not necessarilly better by Carnage4Life · · Score: 1

      but then came Sun with all their fancy Java stuff and the world suddently came to an end - at least for NS 3 users...
      Browser sniffing is usually done with javascript which was developed by Netscape not Sun.

      Bad Command Or File Name

  100. Companies using Netscape web servers by lfd · · Score: 1

    A quick lookup on http:/www.netcraft.com./ reveals that some of the users of Netcape web servers are State Farm (the name I used for the lookup), Dilbert, Playboy, Sybase, Ferrari and Walt Disney. Are these names big enough for your taste?

    --
    Going on means going far, going far means returning. Tao te Ching
  101. poor commenting and documentation = bad code by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The first problem I have with your comment is that open source is a flash in the pan. Open source is as old as UNIX. TCP/IP, Perl, Apache:NCSA, SMTP, are #1 in their catagories with two having no real competition. BSDs and Linux, Python, Kde/Gnome, BASH, PHP, gcc are also very respectable OSS contributions. Some are rather young but BSDs are about 25 years old. What is new is commercial software going OSS. The reason most trainers stress documentation is because the code may end up anywhere. Any and all developement tools are as good as its documentation. Any program that grows without documentation may be doomed into oblivion. Basic design flexabilty is also a key. I do not know the politics behind all of it but a program without comments is bad code and that is done by the programmer, not management. Flexabilty and documentation often go hand in hand. Keeping things as vague as possible until you must commit yourself to the specific is the art of flexable programming but also leads to complexity which can be solved by a quick explaination. If there is little excitement about Netscape I wonder how much this has to do with it. I am taking at your word about the mess that Netscape is so the best thing as I see it is for someone who know the code to bring it to OSS developers into a palatable form.

  102. List of Netscapees by Wanker · · Score: 1

    The Ex-Mozilla site has a self-maintaining list of people who have fled Netscape. Ironically, there is also a My Netscape Network channel which lists the most recently changed entries on Ex-Mozilla.

  103. AOL knows MS because AOL knows themselves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I totally agree. AOL cannot be in a comfort zone with IE being the only way on the net. MS will end up with two browsers one for you and one for me. Take a page from Intuit as well they seemed to survive many deadly encounters with MS. AOL also knows MS because AOL knows themselves.

  104. Lynx hasn't crashed yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Some really-weird URLs will make Lynx stop, and it usually resumes when given an 'fg' command (FreeBSD), but it hasn't actually crashed more than once (if even once) since late 1995.

    Nicholas Bodley // nbodley@shell.tiac.net

  105. Before you make another post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What exactly do you base your hopes on. If the GPL holds up there will be no MS Linux. If IE makes it to Linux you will have to pay about $50 for it at best. Microsoft hates Linux you hear me HATE HATE HATE the little penguin. What is Bill having for thanksgetting? Penguin. So stop asking about MS ports to Linux.

  106. The irony is killing me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's really ironic about this whole affair is that when it's all over --- when Microsoft has lost the OS battle with Linux, and when one of the several competing office suites finally kills MS Office -- all Microsoft will have left is Internet Explorer. Until they have to start charging for it to pay the bills... I can't flipping wait.

  107. Re:Flash, attention-grabbing story...but inaccurat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The story is fairly accurate.. I work at netscape daily (not as an employee) and I have never seen an organization with worse morale. I'm not sure how much of it is due to AOL though.. biggest problem is that netscape first level managers are quite incompetent while at the same time arrogance runs rampant. The results are predictable.. no skilled engineers tolerate this type of working conditions very long, and they bail out.. only the very entry-level and the very incompetent stick around. The result is the product quality we all know and love! It is a pretty sad place to be.

  108. Why Was This Offtopic Post Moderated Up? by Carnage4Life · · Score: 1

    So you don't believe Microsoft engages in FUD campaigns, and other unethical behaviour?

    Where does he say he doesn't believe in Microsoft's FUD? He made a valid statement when he pointed out that the article is accurate when it says that AOL has managed Netscape badly and driven away most off the original employees. Please don't take my word for it here's a quote or two from actual Netscape employees.

    We all now all the evil things Microsoft has done...crushing Netscape & polluting Java are the ones that really get me riled up but it doesn't mean that we should ignore rational discussion of blind our eyes to the facts in an effort to stoke the flames of hatred.


    AOL is just as bad as Microsoft it's simply easier to avoid them.

    Bad Command Or File Name

    1. Re:Why Was This Offtopic Post Moderated Up? by Clark+Kent · · Score: 1

      Good response, and good links. I would have no problem if someone wants to moderate your post up.

      Why is it relevant that Microsoft engages in such "business" tactics? Two reasons:

      1. It lends credence to the idea that the recent spate of anti-Netscape stories is actually part a FUD campaign by Microsoft.

      2. It tells us that if Microsoft succeeds in killing Netscape, then they won't hesitate to manipulate (i.e. corrupt) Web standards to harm their competitors (those competitors being whatever business Microsoft wants to enter next).

      Is AOL as bad as Microsoft? I can't say for sure, but I'm not aware of anything AOL has done to me, that is, other than annoying me by waging an aggressive marketing campaign, and by bringing a bunch of non-techies onto the Net. Also, it may be true, as the article states, that AOL is a bureaucratic company, and not a nice place to work. However, none of that matters in this case.

      What matters is that if you want to avoid both Microsoft and AOL, then the way to do it will be to use Mozilla. But wait, you say, isn't Mozilla controlled by AOL? Not really. Mozilla is Open Source, and the number of non-AOL developers is growing every day. As long as AOL is doing the right thing with Mozilla, their contribution is appreciated. But, if AOL ever tried to use Mozilla to betray the Internet community, then control of Mozilla's development would be snatched from them in an eyeblink.

      In other words, Open Source Mozilla helps protect Web standards. The fact that AOL is supporting it suggests that they intend to compete fairly, rather than by trying to bend the rules the way Microsoft does.

    2. Re:Why Was This Offtopic Post Moderated Up? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft doesn't have to actually corrupt W3C standards (though they're in the Consortium, so presumably they could exert such pressure), merely go on implementing them so poorly nobody else can rely on them. Witness OBJECT, PNG transparency, and Content-Type.

  109. Set the programmers free!!! by Last+Warrior · · Score: 1

    wouldnt it be swell if the best programmers from the netscape dayz went to go work for the browser company formerly known as Microsloth. Once M$ internet division is split into a different company, we could take it by force and skill and reprogram that piece of shiat Iexploder! Just my $.01 Company stock went down today.

  110. Migrate to what? by hatless · · Score: 2
    Um, last time I checked, most iPlanet products were picking up where the Netscape ones left off. Most of the "migrations" such as they are, are going to be from the discontinued Sun products. Let's look at that:
    • Directory server. It's an LDAPv3 server with LDIF support. Migrating to the Netscape/iPlanet product won't take long at all.

    • Mail server. Sun's mail server is a POP3/SMTP/IMAP server with no particularly special features. It authenticates against an LDAP server. THe Netscape/iPlanet mail server is a POP3/SMTP/IMAP server with a few special features. It authenticates against an LDAP server. Migration of mailboxes should consist of a few Net::IMAP perl scripts.

    • Web server. Sun's non-Java webserver is nothing special, and nobody of note uses it anyway. Moving CGIs written for it (which is about all it can do) won't take much. And Sun's Java Webserver is a Servlet 2.0 webserver with sub-1.0 JSP support. The Netscape/iPlanet Enterprise Server supports 2.0 servlets and sub-1.0 JSP. No code will likely have to change to move to this. The big deal, such as it is, is learning a new admin tool and config file format.

    • Application server. This is as much of a trouble spot as there will be. In essence, the iPlanet Application Server is going to be the Kiva/Netscape engine combined with the NetDynamics tools. So NetDynamics customers might have a bit of a hump to get over, but nothing much worse than what most EJB appserver customers go through in order to take advantage of new revs of the APIs.


    As a customer of both companies, this doesn't seem bad at all. I've seen worse upgrade headaches from a single vendor. What are Sun's customers pissed about with regard to their server software? They've got the most popular commercial Unix out there, and some of the best hardware and hardware support around. Their own server software line was never that popular in the first place, and moving customers from one standards-compliant server software line to another isn't bad at all.

    Yeah, iPlanet == Sun, but it's not like changing the brand name means the underlying products came out of nowhere.

    Are you a paying customer of either? Personally, I'd rather use OpenLDAP, Cyrus, and an EJB appserver that plays nice with Apache. But as a customer of both Sun and Netscape over the years, I think the Sun adoption of the Netscape server product line is good news.
  111. new employees != old employees by ./ · · Score: 1

    While I agree with most of the points above, I respectfully disagree with the first point, that new employees completely replace their previous counterparts.

    The previous employees have the day-to-day functional knowledge for that particular work environment. Need to get a computer / peripheral quickly? They know which admin assistant is the most responsive. They know which boss will "invite" you to meetings, and which will shield you from as many as possible. They even know where you can get a lunch without waiting the whole hour in a line.

    My point-de-resistance is... almost all documentation for almost all software lives in the author's mind. Losing the sole source of an obsure or crucial piece of code sucks really hard. It makes life hard.

    I believe that while eager new employees certainly _can_ equal the productivity of their predecessors, they certainly do not do so right away. And when deadlines are tight (haha! always!) that can do Bad Things to the project.

    (It can, however, lead to very profitable "consultancy" tasks for the former author. Unless they for some reason don't like the company any longer =)

  112. will not happen... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    AOL has a contract with MSFT for using IE until 2001, or so.

  113. Not forgetful by antizeus · · Score: 1
    You're forgetting that MS doesn't have to release IE under the GPL.

    Of course they don't. I was responding to a hypothetical scenario suggested by the original poster in this thread. This hypothetical scenario included MSIE-Linux being GPL'ed. So nyah, nyah!

    Also, I do consider MSIE 4.0 to be decent. Unlike their OS. I use it on my laptop (which I keep W95 on for Quicken), and I'm more or less satisfied with it. On my primary box (Linux kernel 2.0.36) I prefer to use Lynx.

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  114. (Side note on standards :-) by CRConrad · · Score: 1

    LeviLevi writes:

    "The main one being I don't think developers (not just in the OSS community) don't know what they mean by the term "standards compliance". Do you know how many ambiguities are in the average standards document? (More than there should be.) What happens when the biggest fish in the pond (i.e. MS) zigs, and the rest of the community zags?"

    I have a hard time believing that the HTML standards at the time were *SO* ambiguous that anybody could reasonably interpret them as permitting that excretion, the BLINK tag! And that's one eyesore Microsoft was (for once) not responsible for...


    Christian R. Conrad
    MY opinions, not my employer's - Hedengren, Finland.

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    Christian R. Conrad
    mail me at iki.fi ; same user ID as here