Farewell, old friend Netscape
It appears that we are just about a week away from the changing of the guard on the old Browser Wars. If you look on the netscape.aol.com site, you'll see that the old Netscape Browser support will officially end on March 1, 2008. Even the Netscape Blog advises a switch.
Time Warner Inc. (NYSE: TWX) has been making many changes at AOL and its properties over the last two years. In fact, Netscape, AOL, Advertising.com, AIM, and just about everything else has changed. Unfortunately, some change also means the death of certain parts, and that part appears to be Netscape.
If you will remember back to the 1990's, this was its own public company with the "NSCP" ticker that had roughly a 90% market share. People even paid for AOL-acquired Netscape when its market share was steadily declining, and Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT) ended up paying out roughly $750 million in an antitrust settlement over search and bundling. Netscape is still loaded up on many PC's both on its own and via one of those old AOL access dial-up bundle offerings that used to be included with PC's. Now almost no one uses it. I used to use it exclusively, but those days are long gone. What a difference a decade makes.
Even Linux seller Red Hat (NYSE: RHT) paid money at one point for some of Netscape's security software.
Frankly, Mozilla's Firefox has taken the place of Netscape in today's world and it is now almost an equally-yoked rival to Microsoft's (NASDAQ: MSFT) Internet Explorer that has been downloaded onto millions of computers. The business of owning a Web Browser is really nothing more than a project. Sure, there are others like Opera, but most web sites only want to support Explorer and Firefox now. Such is life in a world where free is becoming more and more of an expectation.
Even if it is merely for old times sake, "Farewell, old forgotten friend."
Time Warner Inc. (NYSE: TWX) has been making many changes at AOL and its properties over the last two years. In fact, Netscape, AOL, Advertising.com, AIM, and just about everything else has changed. Unfortunately, some change also means the death of certain parts, and that part appears to be Netscape.
If you will remember back to the 1990's, this was its own public company with the "NSCP" ticker that had roughly a 90% market share. People even paid for AOL-acquired Netscape when its market share was steadily declining, and Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT) ended up paying out roughly $750 million in an antitrust settlement over search and bundling. Netscape is still loaded up on many PC's both on its own and via one of those old AOL access dial-up bundle offerings that used to be included with PC's. Now almost no one uses it. I used to use it exclusively, but those days are long gone. What a difference a decade makes.
Even Linux seller Red Hat (NYSE: RHT) paid money at one point for some of Netscape's security software.
Frankly, Mozilla's Firefox has taken the place of Netscape in today's world and it is now almost an equally-yoked rival to Microsoft's (NASDAQ: MSFT) Internet Explorer that has been downloaded onto millions of computers. The business of owning a Web Browser is really nothing more than a project. Sure, there are others like Opera, but most web sites only want to support Explorer and Firefox now. Such is life in a world where free is becoming more and more of an expectation.
Even if it is merely for old times sake, "Farewell, old forgotten friend."











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
2-22-2008 @ 4:14PM
Daniel Goldman said...
Sure, there are others like Opera, but most web sites only want to support Explorer and Firefox now.
I use the latest Opera 9.5 beta version, and I've found that most of the websites I visit fully support Opera. We've fixed most of the compatibility issues with Opera 9.5.
Such is life in a world where free is becoming more and more of an expectation.
I'm not sure if you were implying that Opera still cost money. It has been free for the past couple years.
Daniel
Opera Software