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Auf Platz 1 findet sich jetzt aber ein anderes Land. So geht es jetzt weiter Yahoo DE. So geht es weiter Yahoo DE. Viele fordern Konsequenzen Yahoo DE. In den Zutatenlisten wird er oft unzureichend deklariert. Darauf sollte man achten Yahoo DE. Neue Klimastudie Yahoo DE. Diese Schwachstelle nutzte er AOL. Erdkunde-Quiz: Hier scheitern alle! The real money, after all, was with enterprise licenses and software. So Netscape kind of walked the line there, making profits from individual sales but accessible for free to more savvy users.
For better or worse, this would eventually come back to hurt Netscape. The browser team, most of whom had made their mark writing code at Mosaic, brought things up another notch with Navigator. Already in its first release, the browser sported broader image support, cookies, and snazzy design elements. If you were a web designer at the time, there was a lot to get excited about.
In the incremental releases that followed in the first half of , Netscape added custom fonts, background colors, and embedded media. By version 2. Coding a site for Netscape browsers was a dream come true for a lot of designers. With each subsequent release, the whole web medium drew into more complete focus. With each step, web designers could add new layers of interactivity and visual polish.
True, these websites often would appear broken in other browsers. It might seem short-sighted now, but at the time, coding for Netscape was the only way to go. And it showed. By the time Netscape Navigator version 2 was released, the company had actually managed to accrue some revenue. Jim Clark, however, was not one to rest on his laurels.
He began pushing his board to take the company public. It was a bit of an unprecedented move. Netscape had only been a company for a year, and they had only recently began to see real revenue come in. But Netscape did have a few things going for them.
For one, they had a kind of cult like following. The press lauded their efforts, and their users evangelized their software. And at the center of it all was Marc Andreessen, who had been propelled to virtual rock star status. So Netscape went public. It exceeded all expectations, and stocks soared throughout the first day.
Andreessen got to the cover of Time , and began calling for the dawn of a new age when the PC operating system would live entirely on the web, and specifically with Netscape. According to Microsoft, their intention was to get a lay of the land as they planned the future of Microsoft and the web.
You see, Microsoft had largely ignored the web and the Internet at large for some time. Bill Gates failed to recognize the importance of this new network early on, so the company fell back on their core competency: personal computing.
And some employees began experimenting with setting up web servers and a central information hub, which would later transform into the Microsoft Network.
Then, Marc Andreessen began talking up Netscape not just as a browser, but as a new, cross-platform operating system. Gates did a quick about face in May of His paranoia for competition was also clear.
Bolstered by support from the very top of their company, a few Microsoft engineers got together to start working on a new browser. Over the years, this meeting has become the stuff of legends, primarily because there are two completely different versions of how it went down.
In a long, but productive exchange, the two companies shared ideas and visions for the future. Join up or move out of the way. Microsoft offered Netscape a meager sum for their browsers code base. When the team refused, employees from Microsoft threatened to eliminate them from the market by any means necessary. Now, keep in mind that at the time, Netscape had a very rational fear of competition from Microsoft. Bill Gates had notoriously stomped out adversaries in the past without a second thought.
And already, Netscape had begun to consult an anti-trust lawyer to prepare against a possible assault. From that day forward, the two companies rarely spoke. What followed was an escalation of conflict that affected web users, web designers, and even the World Wide Web itself.
It was called Internet Explorer. The browser team at Microsoft was still very small, so the code itself was somewhat ironically licensed from Spyglass Mosaic, a fork of the code Andreessen himself had worked on. IE was, at first, far from impressive.
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