America Online Inc. (AOL) on Tuesday released a preview version of a new Netscape Web browser that is based on the open-source Firefox Web browser, but also supports Microsoft Corp.’s Internet ...
Hosted on MSN
7 Defunct Web Browsers That Aren't Internet Explorer
Today, Internet Explorer might be the most well-known discontinued web browser, but the path to modern web giants like Chrome, Firefox, and Safari is filled with a rich history of innovation driven by ...
America Online is testing a version of the Netscape browser in a possible prelude to booting Microsoft's Internet Explorer from its flagship Internet service. The test on Compuserve, one of America ...
NEW YORK - AOL Time Warner Inc. said Tuesday the latest version of its discount Internet service, CompuServe, is using browser technology by its Netscape unit, instead of Microsoft Corp.'s Internet ...
After February 1, 2008, AOL will no longer provide updates and support for Netscape, which is often considered the first true mass-market browser An historic name in software will effectively pass ...
NEW YORK - AOL Time Warner Inc is remaking its pioneering Netscape software business into an Internet media hub brimming with Time Warner artists and publications, aimed at office workers and Web ...
How, you ask? Simple. By combining the best elements of its two leading rivals. Netscape is out with a test release of version 8.0, and the new browser is nothing like its recent predecessors, which ...
Netscape Thursday released a new version of its browser that incorporates both Internet Explorer and the open source Firefox browser engines to allow users to choose between the security of Firefox ...
New data on worldwide usage of Web browser software shows Netscape is once again being clobbered by rival browser Internet Explorer and now has an estimated market share of 3.4%, according to a ...
Identity theft is a serious problem on the Web these days. Just ask Netscape. Not long after America Online bought Netscape Communications Corp. in 1998, AOL began neglecting the browser at the heart ...
As AOL, in the equivalent of selling sperm to pay the cable bill, offloaded a billion dollar’s worth of patents to Microsoft, something strange happened: the latter became the owner of Netscape.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results