~terry
Sun, Sep 22, 1996 (08:16)
seed
Netscape may become not only the way we naviage the web, it may become an
operating system unto itself and may replace Windows as the os of
choice. Of course this is a big "if" and there's an outfit in Redmond,
WA that may have some other ideas about who owns/controls how we
interface with the net.
Anyway, let's talk Netscape only here. We'll have another item on the
browser wars.
~terry
Sun, Dec 15, 1996 (00:27)
#1
NS mailer hack from a newsgroup on
secnews.netscape.com
Automatic filing/filtering of mail messages is a feature that was
officially dropped before Netscape 2.0 was released. It's not
supported. But it turns out that the code was never actually removed,
there is just no user interface to it.
Don't rely on this. It is untested. It is hard to use. It's not
supported. It's not even a claimed "feature." It doesn't work in news.
It has many limitations. Treat it as "as is" if at all. (I wasn't
here; this conversation did not occur.)
There *will* be an interface for this some day, and it will work a lot
better. But for now...
To filter your mail, you create a text file. On Windows, this file is
called "sort.dat" and goes in the "nsmail" directory along with your
mail folders. On Mac, it's called Mail Filters" and goes in your
"nsmail" directory. On Unix, it's called "mailsort" and goes in your
"~/.netscape/" directory.
When you do "get mail", this file is consulted for each new message to
decide where to put it. In the file, each line describes a pattern and
an action to take. The first line which is matched by a message is
executed, and subsequent matches are ignored. If no line matches, the
message is left in your Inbox, as normal.
The lines have three fields, seperated by tabs: the file name of the
destination folder; the name of a header field to consult; and a
substring to look for in that header field. For example:
c:\netscape\nsmail\bounces From mailer-daemon
c:\netscape\nsmail\fan-mail Subject your home page
This says that if the message contains the string "mailer-daemon" in the
"From" field, it should be put in the "bounces" folder instead of the
"Inbox" folder.
Lines beginning with "#" are comments. Blank lines are ignored.
Mail files will be created as necessary, but directories will not.
The full pathname of the mail folder may not contain spaces: so if you
have installed Netscape in a directory which has some component whose
name contains a space (as is the default on some platforms) this won't
work until you rename those directories to not contain spaces.
One note the unix version appends the path to nsmail
so you just have to put something like
Cron From cron-daemon
in ~/.netscape/mailsort
~terry
Sun, Dec 15, 1996 (21:44)
#2
Go to http://www.peak-media.com and download a copy of their NetJet browser
cache. "IMHO, this is the greatest new utility since sliced bread --
speeds up browser response time on large sites (CNN, Microsoft, etc)
by about 15 to 20 percent.
I think it works with Internet Explorer, too. Running it with
Netscape at places like CNN, STIM, etc. is like suddenly discovering
the Windows for Workgroups 32-bit file access option. Much better."
- Lenny Bailes
~tedchong
Tue, Dec 17, 1996 (02:09)
#3
Can NetJet speeds up web access on very slow link?
~terry
Mon, Nov 23, 1998 (07:41)
#4
AOL's working a merger with Netscape...looks serious.
http://www.wired.com/news/news/business/story/16418.html
~ratthing
Mon, Nov 23, 1998 (09:52)
#5
the wall street journal reports that this merger is more or less
official!
~terry
Tue, Nov 24, 1998 (18:08)
#6
America Online, Inc. to Acquire Netscape Communications in Stock
Transaction Valued at $4.2 Billion
Acquisition To Significantly Advance AOL's Multiple Brand Strategy,
Broaden Audience, and Take E-Commerce to New Level
AOL To Operate Most Popular and Diverse Family of Brands in Cyberspace
AOL and Sun Microsystems, Inc. to Develop Next Generation of E-Commerce
Solutions and Internet Devices
DULLES, VA, November 24, 1998 -- America Online, Inc. (NYSE: AOL) today
announced that it will acquire Netscape Communications Corporation
(NASDAQ: NSCP) in a transaction that will extend America Online's
leadership in interactive services.
The stock-for-stock, pooling-of-interests transaction, in which
stockholders of Netscape will receive 0.45 shares of AOL common stock for
each share of Netscape common stock, is valued at $4.2 billion. It is
expected to close in the spring of 1999, subject to various conditions
including customary regulatory approvals and approval by Netscape's
shareholders. The Company said it expects the transaction will be
slightly accretive to operating results. Netscape's operations will
remain based in Mountain View, CA.
Key benefits of the acquisition will be to:
Advance America Online's multiple-brand strategy with one of the
Internet's best known brands; Substantially broaden America Online's
global audience at home and at work, by adding the fast-growing Netscape
Netcenter portal that is integrated with the Netscape browser used by
millions of people; Accelerate the growth of e-commerce across the
America Online and Netscape brands and provide added value to their
business partners; Provide significant new opportunities to make America
Online's brands available anywhere to interactive consumers, as well as
to maximize the value of these brands, by taking advantage of AOL's
existing shared infrastructure; and Expand the range of America Online
products and services by adding world-class technology and an experienced
development team that has demonstrated its ability to innovate rapidly.
Separately, America Online announced that it has entered into a strategic
development and marketing alliance with Sun Microsystems, Inc. to enhance
its delivery of e-commerce solutions that will help build revenues across
America Online and Netscape brands, and offer added value to both America
Online and Netscape business partners, as well as the growing number of
major corporations planning to put their business on the Internet. The
companies will develop easy-to-deploy, end-to-end solutions for
e-commerce based on the best available technologies and expand their
sales channels to include each other's products and services.
The three-year America Online-Sun agreements also will increase
distribution and development of Netscape's enterprise software for
corporate customers. The companies also will use Sun's Java technology to
offer AOL services on selected Internet devices, consistent with AOL's
"AOL Anywhere" strategy to extend its brand to all emerging mass market
platforms. (See separate America Online-Sun Microsystems release.)
Most Popular and Diverse Family of Brands in Cyberspace With Netscape
joining its AOL, CompuServe, AOL.COM, AOL Instant Messenger, ICQ, and
Digital City brands, America Online will operate the most popular and
diverse family of brands in cyberspace.
Steve Case, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of America Online, said:
"The acquisition of Netscape is a big step forward for America Online
that will greatly accelerate our business momentum. Netscape has played a
key role in helping consumers benefit from the enormous power of the
Internet, and we share the same mission. With Netscape, we will broaden
our global audience at home and at work, and add world-class technology
to support an expanded range of America Online interactive products and
services."
Mr. Case added: "The development of e-commerce is entering an exciting
new stage. Increasingly, companies are seeing the power of the Internet
as central to their business strategies and consumers are seeing the
convenience of online shopping as central to their lives. Netscape's
highly regarded suite of e-commerce software, coupled with our strategic
alliance with Sun, will help us drive e-commerce to a whole new level
that will benefit both business partners and Internet consumers."
Mr. Case continued: "We have been very impressed with how quickly
Netscape has transformed its business -- shifting its focus away from
browsers and platforms and toward high-growth portal and e-commerce
opportunities. We look forward to welcoming the Netscape team to our
America Online family. Having known each other for many years, we know
that together we can take the Internet to the next stage of its
development. And as interactive services become more central to the daily
lives of tens of millions of people, the promise of e-commerce becomes
even more of a reality for consumers and businesses."
Mr. Case concluded: "One key to this acquisition is the flexibility that
it gives us. ICQ, our instant communications and chat portal, will
promote the downloading and registration of the Netscape client software
to its large and rapidly growing international community. We also expect
to maintain our working relationship with Microsoft, continuing to
include Internet Explorer in the AOL service so consumers will continue
to have AOL software included on the Windows desktop."
Bob Pittman, President and Chief Operating Officer of America Online,
said: "Netscape has always been one of the best-known and most highly
renowned Internet brands. Over the past year, Netscape has extended that
brand into the portal space with Netscape Netcenter, and developed a
truly differentiated portal by building useful links between the service
and the Netscape client software and Netscape's enterprise business.
Although Netscape Netcenter is already one of the fastest-growing
portals, we believe our existing shared infrastructure will enable us to
efficiently expand its audience and build its revenue streams. With AOL,
CompuServe, ICQ, Digital City and now Netscape Netcenter, we will offer
an unparalleled array of interactive services to the full spectrum of
Internet consumers as well as to our commerce and content partners."
Mr. Pittman added: "America Online has made great progress over the past
few years in taking e-commerce from promise to reality, but we've only
scratched the surface in reaching its full potential. Our acquisition of
Netscape and the alliance with Sun will allow us to accelerate our
e-commerce efforts. We will add complementary, best of breed tools and
platforms to speed the time to market for companies now wanting to enter
e-commerce, as well as for those ready to scale their businesses further.
This will be of enormous value to both America Online and Netscape
commerce partners P both business-to-business and business-to-consumers P
and provide even more convenience for Internet shoppers."
The Company said Jim Barksdale, President and Chief Executive Officer of
Netscape, will be joining America Online's Board of Directors after the
transaction closes.
Mr. Barksdale said: "America Online and Netscape share a common vision -
to offer solutions that make it simple for businesses and consumers to
participate fully in the Net Economy. The companies' complementary
strengths promise to accelerate the adoption of e-commerce and Internet
applications worldwide. This exciting partnership enables us to deliver
even better and more complete products and services to both existing and
new customers."
Netscape Brand Synonymous With Internet The Netscape brand is virtually
synonymous with the Internet, including such widely used products as
Netscape's browser, Netscape Netcenter, and Netscape's suite of
enterprise and e-commerce applications and software. America Online will
be able to efficiently speed the development of Netscape's products and
services with its shared infrastructure, current advertising and commerce
relationships, and ability to drive traffic from its other brands. In
addition, the Netscape portal will offer connections to other America
Online brands to maximize utility for customers and its value to the
Company.
Launched in June, Netscape Netcenter is one of the Internet's fastest
growing portals worldwide in registrations, traffic and software
downloads. Netscape Netcenter now has more than 9 million registered
members. Since June, daily traffic has increased by 50%. In the most
recent quarter, worldwide downloads exceeded 24 million, fueled in part
by the release of both new beta and final versions of its browser
software.
In addition, Netscape has announced plans to enhance Netscape Netcenter
with the recent acquisitions of AtWeb Inc., to link more than 600,000
small-business Web sites to the portal, and NewHoo! Community Directory
Project to provide comprehensive Internet directory service. Netscape
also has introduced the "Netscape TuneUp for IE," a free software add-on
to Microsoft Internet Explorer that integrates Netscape's popular Smart
Browsing services while providing access to Netscape Netcenter services.
Netscape has transformed itself over the past year into a successful
portal and enterprise/e-commerce software business. The Company currently
offers a full suite of packaged applications for business-to-business and
business-to-consumer Internet commerce, and award-winning Internet server
software for building and hosting a variety of Internet applications.
Netscape's corporate customers using the Company's e-commerce and
infrastructure software suite include Ford, Lucent Technologies, Bell
Canada, France Telecom, John Hancock and the US Department of Defense.
In July, Netscape introduced its newest browser, Communicator 4.5,
designed to link Netscape Netcenter's content and services with the
browser's ease-of-use advances P making it simpler for people to find
what they want on the Internet and creating a persistent relationship
with users that helps generate higher usage levels. This month, Netscape
is introducing the Custom Portal to bring the power of consumer portals
to business and government audiences, including Internet service
providers and computer manufacturers. As part of its effort to drive more
traffic to Netscape Netcenter, America Online said it plans to continue
to develop the Communicator and pursue new distribution channels.
Unique Technology Solutions for E-Commerce Partners The Company said its
strategic alliance with Sun Microsystems will bring together America
Online's industry-leading consumer reach, Sun's e-commerce hardware and
operating system platforms, and Netscape's complementary suite of
e-commerce software. Together, the companies will be able to offer
complete turnkey solutions along with modular software and consulting
services to enable e-commerce partners to put their businesses online
fast and scale quickly to meet consumer demand.
"The interactive marketplace is changing quickly, and it is clear that
America Online is a leader in driving e-commerce forward," said Scott
McNealy, President, CEO and Chairman of Sun Microsystems. "We are
incredibly excited about the opportunity to work closely with the world's
leading provider of branded interactive services and to integrate our
full-range of products and services into the most comprehensive turnkey
e-commerce solutions."
Under the America Online-Sun alliance, both companies will sell products
and services through each other's sales channels and customer
relationships to market their existing products and services, as well as
their new e-commerce solutions. Sun's large sales and service
organizations will provide technical support for these products and
services. The alliance also will bring new development and distribution
opportunities for Netscape's software and applications.
About America Online America Online, Inc., based in Dulles, Virginia, is
the world's leader in branded interactive services and content. America
Online, Inc. operates two worldwide Internet online services: America
Online, with more than 14 million members; and CompuServe, with
approximately 2 million members. America Online, Inc. also operates AOL
Studios, a leading builder of Internet brands for new market segments.
Other branded Internet services operated by America Online, Inc. include
AOL.COM, the world's most accessed Web site from home; Digital City,
Inc., the No. 1 branded local content network and community guide on AOL
and the Internet; AOL NetFind, AOL's comprehensive guide to the Internet;
AOL Instant Messenger, an instant messaging tool available on both AOL
and the Internet; and ICQ, an instant communication and chat technology
on the Internet.
This release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of
the "safe harbor" provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform
Act of 1995. The forward-looking statements are based on management's
current expectations or beliefs as well as on a number of assumptions
about future events, and are subject to factors and uncertainties that
could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in
the forward-looking statements. The reader is cautioned not to put undue
reliance on forward-looking statements, which are not a guarantee of
future performance and are subject to a number of uncertainties and other
factors, many outside America Online's control. The forward-looking
statements in this release address subjects including the expected date
of closing the acquisition, future financial and operating results,
growth of the Company's audience, growth of the online commerce industry,
and the development and success of new online commerce technology and
platforms.
The following factors, among others, could cause actual results to differ
materially from those described in the forward-looking statements: the
risk that the Netscape business will not be integrated successfully into
the Company's business; costs related to the merger; inability to obtain
approval of Netscape stockholders; inability to obtain, or meet
conditions imposed for, governmental approvals for the merger; increased
competition and its effects on pricing, spending, third-party
relationships, the subscriber base and revenues; reliance on network
service providers; inability to identify, develop and achieve commercial
success for new products and services and access and distribution
technologies pursuant to the development and marketing agreements with
Sun; risks of new and changing regulation in the U.S. and
internationally.
For a detailed discussion of these and other cautionary statements,
please refer to the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange
Commission, especially in the Forward-Looking Statements section of the
Management's Discussion and Analysis section of the Company's Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1998 and in the 10-Q for the quarter
ended September 30, 1998, and in the Risk Factors section of the
Company's most recently filed registration statement on Form S-3 filed in
June 1998.
Netscape and the Netscape N Logo are registered trademarks of Netscape
Communications Corporation in the United States and other countries.
Other Netscape logos, product names, and service names, including
Netcenter, Smart Browsing, Netscape Contact, Mozilla, and Netscape Open
Directory are also trademarks of Netscape Communications Corporation.
Other product and brand names are trademarks of their respective owners.
~terry
Tue, Nov 24, 1998 (18:08)
#7
Scripting.com has an interesting quote from a press release:
"The two companies will work together to ensure that all future
releases of the AOL platform will be based entirely on Java
technology."
~KitchenManager
Wed, Dec 2, 1998 (16:06)
#8
JOY!!!
(Did the sarcasm come through?)
~CotC
Wed, Dec 2, 1998 (16:19)
#9
Sarcasm? Sorry, I'm not familiar with the concept...
~terry
Tue, Dec 8, 1998 (11:42)
#10
Date: Mon, 7 Dec 1998 10:44:47 -0600
To: chapman@mcfeeley.cc.utexas.edu
From: Gary Chapman
Subject: LA Times column, 12/7/98
Reply-To: gary.chapman@mail.utexas.edu
Sender: owner-chapman@mcfeeley.cc.utexas.edu
X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.2.07 -- ListProc(tm) by CREN
X-UIDL: 601f79050a8891ebae837b6ee1c69ab8
Friends,
Below is my Los Angeles Times column for today, December 7, 1998. As
always, please feel free to pass this on, but please retain the copyright
notice.
-- Gary
Gary Chapman
Director
The 21st Century Project
LBJ School of Public Affairs
Drawer Y, University Station
University of Texas
Austin, TX 78713
(512) 263-1218
(512) 471-1835 (fax)
gary.chapman@mail.utexas.edu
http://www.utexas.edu/lbj/21cp
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Monday, December 7, 1998
DIGITAL NATION
Duel Heats Up Over Culture of the Internet
By Gary Chapman
Copyright 1998, The Los Angeles Times, All Rights Reserved
The proposed merger of America Online Inc. and Netscape Communications
Corp. seems to have pleased Wall Street, and boosted almost all Internet
stocks, but it created a sour and anxious feeling among longtime Internet
activists and programmers.
They see this new goliath as yet another encroachment by "the suits," the
corporate culture that has recently discovered the Internet, and as
perhaps the cyberspace equivalent of suburban sprawl, the "malling of
America." AOL's flirtation with the metaphors of commercial TV, with its
"channels" and ubiquitous advertising, raises the specter of the Internet
turning into a commercial wasteland like TV, subverting the promise of
cyberspace as a different kind of medium.
New-media pundit Jon Katz wrote that the AOL-Netscape merger is a
"catastrophe" for Net culture.
The hacker and activist community on the Internet is deeply suspicious of
any company that seems to harbor ambitions of being emperor of
cyberspace, whether it's AOL-Netscape or Microsoft. These programmers,
activists and idealists think the Internet is working just fine already,
the way they created it.
What seems to be shaping up is a fascinating duel between two models of
Net culture, both of them gaining strength in the last year: the
commercial culture of big corporations and the "gift economy" developing
among thousands of computer programmers who are contributing to "open
source" software such as the operating system Linux. These two models
will coexist for a while, but how they interact with each other is likely
to be the most interesting story in the technology field for some years
to come.
Linux has been the rage in all the technology press lately, in part
because of its radically different development from the corporate model
represented by Microsoft and its Windows operating system. A familiar
story by now, Linux was first developed by Linus Torvalds in 1991, when
the Finnish computer science student wanted a version of the Unix
operating system to run on his 386 PC.
Torvalds used software tools produced by the Free Software Foundation, an
organization founded by Richard Stallman in Cambridge, Mass. Stallman's
personal philosophy -- which earned him a MacArthur Foundation "genius
grant" -- is that software should be free and widely shared in a
community committed to improving its capabilities, not unlike the way we
regard scientific knowledge. This does not mean that software should cost
nothing. It means that software source code, the text of a program that
is interpreted by computers as instructions, should be freely available
for modification and improvement by others, for the benefit of all.
Torvalds put Linux into this model of software development and relied on
the distributed intelligence of thousands of volunteers around the world
to improve the operating system. He also made it free in the conventional
sense of that word: It's available for download, without cost, through
many sites on the Internet.
The result is that Linux is now widely used -- estimates of its user
population vary from 6 million up to 20 million people, depending on whom
you ask -- and widely admired for its stability, scalability (its ability
to handle large tasks) and speed. It's highly customizable because its
source code is accessible to programmers, unlike that of Windows. Linux
doesn't crash, or only rarely, also unlike Windows. And Linux is so fast
and efficient that it can resurrect otherwise obsolete -- and therefore
cheap -- computers and turn them into effective Internet servers or
desktop machines. And because it's free, it greatly reduces the expense
of implementing cutting-edge computing.
The Mexican government, for example, last month announced that it will
install Linux in 140,000 computer labs in Mexican elementary and
secondary schools. Government officials estimated that Windows licenses
for all these labs would cost them close to $125 million. Linux is not
only free, it doesn't require replacing older computers, and it's
possibly the operating system of the future -- Mexico could lead the
world in producing Linux system administrators. This may be the smartest
thing the Mexican government has ever done.
Aside from its technical benefits, however, the most interesting thing
about Linux and other open source software -- which includes the
scripting language Perl and many applications -- may be the corresponding
phenomenon of the open source model of development as a true social
movement. And the resurrection of the idea of a "gift economy," a term
with a long history in anthropology, to apply to a high-tech subculture
is intriguing and portentous.
The phrase was coined by French anthropologist Marcel Mauss in his 1924
book "The Gift" (translated into English in 1935), a study of the
potlatch ceremonies of Northwest American Indians. It has been, since
then, a paradigm of anthropological study but almost exclusively of
"primitive" societies such as South Sea islanders, North American Indians
and African tribes. It refers to the practice among these groups of
circulating gifts -- such as blankets, shells or herd animals -- as a
mode of prestige and exchange.
Anthropologist Bronislaw Malinowski, in his 1922 book, "Argonauts of the
Western Pacific," wrote about the gift circulation of shell armbands
among the Kula on islands near New Guinea. He wrote that one of these
armbands enabled a Kula man "to draw a great deal of renown, to exhibit
the article, to tell how he obtained it, and to plan to whom he is going
to give it. And all this forms one of the favorite subjects of tribal
conversation and gossip."
This description is pretty much identical to what happens among the
thousands of programmer volunteers working on open source software code,
who clearly view themselves as part of a community. Their conversation
and gossip can be found on Usenet sites, where people get free technical
support advice, and on Web sites like Slashdot (http://www.slashdot.org),
which ills itself as "News for Nerds. Stuff That Matters." The volume of
traffic on Slashdot is astounding, with hundreds of new messages every
day. And the overall gestalt of Slashdot and other open source sites is
evangelical, pushing the concept of open source software as the superior
method of software development.
Eric Raymond, who wrote the influential open source manifesto "The
Cathedral and the Bazaar,"
(http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/) and who is the
president of a new organization called the Open Source Initiative
(http://www.opensource.org/), says, "In a real gift culture, the wealth
is inside the person's head, not in economic value.
"One of the things that ticks me off," says Raymond, "is when the
corporate types approach the Internet as a tabula rasa, as unexplored
wilderness that can be transformed by corporate beneficence. They don't
understand that the Internet already has its own folklore, its own
heroes, its own values. If you come to the Internet like some British
imperialist thinking that your mission is to civilize the natives,
they're not likely to take it very well." Indeed, antipathy to Microsoft
and the other "suits" of the "new economy" is part of the glue that holds
the open source community together.
"This is my politics, as well as my technology," Raymond adds. "When
someone says 'social movement,' I typically reach for my gun -- it
usually means coercion. But the open source movement is about
voluntarism, cooperation, gift-giving, building community. It's about
working for the benefit of everyone without anyone holding a gun to your
head."
It will be strange and fascinating if the real long-term threat to
Microsoft is less another corporate competitor or the Justice Department
and more a high-tech version of an ancient human ritual of exchange, the
gift economy. Bill Gates must be watching this in utter stupefaction.
Gary Chapman is director of The 21st Century Project at the University of
Texas at Austin. His e-mail address Is gary.chapman@mail.utexas.edu.
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~MarciaH
Fri, Aug 18, 2000 (21:08)
#11
Browser Alert: Netscape Communicator 4.75 Final
Not to be outdone by all the features added in last month's upgrade,
our friends in Mountain View decided to release another one yesterday
(just too late for the news to make our usual dispatch). Before this
release, the only way to protect yourself from Netscape's "Brown Orifice"
security hole was to disable Java in the advanced preferences menu. Now
you can enjoy worry-free Java-licious surfing with the latest download,
found here:
http://2.digital.cnet.com/cgi-bin2/flo?y=e1Q0BBFIE0P0BcBd
Check out our new Netscape Communicator Beginners Center:
http://2.digital.cnet.com/cgi-bin2/flo?y=e1Q0BBFIE0P0C1lW