Internet Outlook with Richard Wiggins | 79
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EXTRA!!! | January 28, 1998 | |
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East Lansing, Michigan
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ast week was a tough one for the editors who lay out the front pages of major newspapers. What with Lewinski visits Clinton, John Paul visits Fidel, and Kaczynski avoids a visit with the executioner, there wasn't much room on the front page for Internet news. We saw brief coverage of Microsoft's announcement that they had finally figured out how to remove the Internet Explorer icon from Windows '95 in compliance with a federal court order. As an aside, reporters noted that Netscape had decided to make its Navigator available to the world for free.
A tiny footnote to the aside was lost in the shuffle: not only did Netscape announce that the Navigator would become freeware, they also announced that the source code to the browser would be made freely available as well:
Netscape believes that harnessing the creative abilities of all Internet developers will be an unprecedented way to advance the features and quality of Communicator for all customers. Detailed license terms, additional information, and a developer version of Communicator Standard Edition 5.0 source code is scheduled to be available by March 31, 1998, on the Netscape Web site.
Was this an inspired strategic maneuver, or a foolish pawning of the family jewels? No one reacted more positively to Netscape's move than Tim O'Reilly, founder of the publishing company that bears his surname. In a press release, O'Reilly stated:
It's no accident that despite all the ink spilled over the war between Netscape and Microsoft, the dominant web server software is still the freeware Apache server, and that for all the hype about Java, it is still the freeware Perl language that activates the majority of web sitesÂ
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After spending three years trying to act like Microsoft, Netscape is returning to its roots and starting to act like a real Internet company again.
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Created: January 28, 1998
Revised: January 28, 1998
URL: https://webreference.com/outlook/extra/index.html