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Death of a legend: Netscape is no more

On one of the final days of 2007 we are forced to say good­bye to an old leg­end. On Decem­ber 29 2007, Amer­ica Online decided to pull the plug on the Netscape project. For many peo­ple, includ­ing myself, Netscape was a big part of dis­cov­er­ing the Inter­net in its early days. Netscape started in 1994 as a fork off the Mosaic Grand­fa­ther of all browsers (yes, I used that one too), and started the bat­tle for the web by tak­ing on Microsoft’s Inter­net Explorer. AOL bought the brand name and the tech­nol­ogy a while back, but the browser that had won the war had fought its last bat­tle.
I’ve been active on the inter­net since 1993, when the first few con­sumer ori­ented providers started here in the Nether­lands. With our first set of install disks (yes, back in those days you had to install the inter­net on your own com­puter ;-) ) came the Mosaic browser, a gopher client, and some other clients. This because the Inter­net is so much more then just the World Wide Web and e-mail (don’t for­get IRC, gopher, whois, tel­net and tons of other net­works and pro­to­cols that are used to serve you with your daily batch of infor­ma­tion and inter­ac­tion). Soon we started build­ing web­pages and using the Webcrawler search to find other people’s work online. But Mosaic was lim­ited, and the world was mov­ing fast. And then Netscape came to the res­cue.
In my hum­ble opin­ion, the Netscape browser made the web sexy for every­day users. And there­fore it was instru­men­tal in mak­ing the inter­net what it is today, a part of our every­day lives. And for that, I am very grate­ful to Marc Andreesen and all the oth­ers who started the Netscape project because they for­saw that this Inter­web thingy had a great future ahead.
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