AOL Plans to Drop Curtain on Netscape's Browser
<<   January/2008   >>
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31  

Arts
Movies
Humor
Television
Music

Business
Internet
Finance
Jobs
Investing
Economy

Computers
Software
Hardware
World
Mobile

Games
Video Games
RPGs

Health
Fitness
Medicine
Alternative

Home
Consumers
Cooking

Recreation
Travel
Food
Outdoors

Reference
Psychology
Science
Education

Regional
US
Canada
Europe

Science
NSF
Space
Technology

Society
People
Religion

Sports
Baseball
Soccer
Basketball
 
07/Jan/2008 9:00AM
AOL Plans to Drop Curtain on Netscape's Browser

January 07, 2008 (Computerworld) -- AOL LLC’s Netscape unit is discontinuing its Navigator Web browser and urging users of the pioneering and once-dominant software to switch to its Firefox cousin. Ironically, the announcement of Navigator’s demise came on the same day that Microsoft Corp. filed a memorandum in federal court related to its 2002 antitrust consent decree. In the filing, Microsoft cited the ongoing development of Netscape’s browser and other products as a reason why most of the decree’s key provisions should be allowed to expire on Jan. 31. Netscape’s loss of control of the browser market to Microsoft in the late 1990s was the focus of the U.S. government’s antitrust case against the software giant. The prosecutors charged that Microsoft’s bundling of Internet Explorer into Windows gave it an unfair advantage over Netscape and other browser rivals. Navigator also lost users to Firefox, the open-source browser developed by the Mozilla Foundation, which was set up by the former Netscape Communications before it was bought by AOL in 1998. In November, Net Applications, a firm that measures Web metrics, tracked Netscape’s share of browser usage at just 0.60%, compared with 77.4% for IE and 16% for Firefox. That was a far cry from Netscape’s heyday, when it controlled more than 80% of the market. In a Dec. 28 posting on AOL’s Navigator blog, Tom Drapeau, director of the company’s Netscape brand team, said the unit will stop issuing security updates for the browser as of Feb. 1. “Given AOL’s current business focus and the success the Mozilla Foundation has had in developing critically acclaimed products, we feel it’s the right time to end development of Netscape-branded browsers [and] hand the reins fully to Mozilla,” Drapeau wrote. Navigator will remain available for download from an AOL Web site that has yet to be set up, but all support by AOL will cease. “While internal groups within AOL have invested a great deal of time and energy in attempting to revive Navigator, these efforts have not been successful in gaining market share from Internet Explorer,” Drapeau wrote. He noted that recent work on the browser “has been limited to a handful of engineers tasked with creating a skinned version of Firefox with a few extensions.”


Recent news in category
Image Gallery: Bill Gates Now . . . and Then
Image Gallery: Bill Gates Now . . . and Then
Complete coverage: Bill Gates Moves On

Global recent news
Frankly Speaking: Game changer
Scottish Executive Launches More AntiSectarian Material for Schools
Small Satellite Takes on Large Thunderstorms

07/Jan/2008 9:00AM
Mark Hall hears about the benefits of automating support best practices.

07/Jan/2008 9:00AM
A corrupted computer file forced the operators of a New Year's Eve fireworks show in Seattle to launch most of the projectiles manually, throwing the show out of sync with its accompanying music.

07/Jan/2008 9:00AM
One of the factors that could put a damper on the server virtualization market is the lack of formal commitments by software vendors to support their applications on virtual systems.

07/Jan/2008 9:00AM
Frank Hayes argues that IT hasn't changed the PC users experience since the 1980s, so this is the year to start delivering better technology to end users.

07/Jan/2008 9:00AM
Deloitte's IT strategy guru talks about 'innovation blowback,' green IT, the real point of outsourcing, the invasion of the enterprise and the end of IT as we know it.

Copyright © 2006 Rootio Ltd. All rights reserved.