Netscape: Bowed, but not broken
Summary
Topics
America Online, which has see-sawed over its priceyNetscape acquisition for years, is once again readyingthe brand for a comeback try, CNET News.com haslearned.
What's new:
Netscape, the browser that brought the Web to the masses and then virtually disappeared, is 10 years old. Now it's getting ready for an AOL makeover.
Bottom line:
Microsoft's dominant IE browser hasn't enjoyed a significant feature update in years, opening up opportunities for small challengers. But AOL will have to fight to keep its faded brand inthe spotlight.
The move is a surprise, considering the company laid off hundreds of Netscape programmers less than a year ago and is reported to be developing a standalone browser based on Microsoft's rival Internet Explorer technology.
Even so, sources familiar with the plans said theTime Warner unit is putting the finishing touches onnew versions of the Netscape browser and Web portal.The company expects to unveil them with a rechargedmarketing strategy in December or January.
AOL declined to detail the new Netscape's features,but sources familiar with the company's plans saidthis browser was a distinct effort from the IE-basedrelease also in the works. AOL also kept mum ondetails of the portal or the marketing push beyondpromising a launch near the New Year.
"Netscape continues to be one of the most valuedbrands and one of the most valued products on theInternet," said AOL spokesman Andrew Weinstein. "Andthe Netscape team is working hard to take advantage ofthose strong attributes to re-energize the brand andits products."
March 1993 Mid-1994 October 1994 November 1994 August 1995 August 1995 August 1996 October 1997 January 1998 November 1998 April 2000 May 2003 July 2003 September 2004Key dates in browser history
Marc Andreessen announces the Mosaic browser, written in collaboration with colleagues at the University of Illinois and the National Center for Supercomputing Applications.
Jim Clark and Marc Andreessen found Mosaic Communications (later Netscape).
First public beta of the Netscape Browser is released.
Mosaic Communications
Netscape goes public at $28 a share. It closes that day at $58.25.
Microsoft releases Internet Explorer 1.0.
Netscape's lawyers complain to the U.S. Department of Justice about Microsoft.
Justice Department charges Microsoft with violating terms of a 1995 consent decree.
Netscape creates Mozilla.org and says a new browser will be free and open source.
America Online buys Netscape for $4.2 billion.
Federal judge says Microsoft abused its monopoly to capture the browser market.
AOL agrees to continue using the Internet Explorer browser and settles antitrust claims against Microsoft for $750 million.
The Mozilla Foundation is created and AOL spins off Mozilla as an independent foundation.
Preview of Mozilla's Firefox 1.0 is released.
Microsoft's dominant IE browser hasn't enjoyed a significant feature update in years, opening up opportunities for small challengers including Netscape progeny Firefox, Opera Software's Opera and Apple Computer's Safari browser.
Even as a glimmer of competition opens up in the browser market, a weakened Netscape could find itself sidelined after years of abuse at the hands of Microsoft and subsequent neglect after AOL agreed to purchase the company for about $5 billion in 1999.
"It certainly was one of the most powerful brandson the Internet at one point," said Jupiter analystMichael Gartenberg. "However, that brand has beenseverely tarnished over the last several years. It'shard to see how they're going to (revitalize thebrand) at a time when there's been such a decline interms of consumers' perception of what Netscape is all about."
Microsoft maintains its stranglehold on the browser market. But the company is beginning to feel momentum for change thanks to mounting dissatisfaction with features and severe security problems with IE. Major computer security groups such as the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's Computer Emergency Readiness Team recently recommended Web surfers switch from Microsoft's browser, although some of that criticism has since been blunted with last month's release of a major IE security update for users of Windows XP.
In an intriguing twist, the major catalyst for competition has come not from commercial browser efforts but rather collectives of open-source programmers. Open-source project licenses let others both use the software at no charge and contribute to its development.
A decade on the
Web with Netscape
Although Netscape gave birth to the most important open-source browser group, Mozilla, AOL has yet to capitalize on Mozilla's recent successes. While Mozilla and its Firefox preview releases win raves, AOL continues to use IE as the default browser for its proprietary online service and as the basis for its planned standalone browser. In recent months AOL has barely promoted Netscape 7, which was based on pre-Firefox versions of Mozilla and most recently updated in August.
Even before its full-version 1.0 release--now scheduled for the second week of November--Firefox has exceeded its goal of 1 million downloads in 10 days, surpassed 4.3 million downloads in one month, won plaudits from reviewers, and earned the interest of corporate developers, including Nokia. Scattered metrics suggest the browser might be cutting into Microsoft's still-overwhelming lead.
Even Netscape founder Marc Andreessen, who last year dismissed the state ofbrowser navigation as "an embarrassment," recently weighed in with praise for Firefox, which he said along with open-source based Safari could threaten IE.
One of Andreessen's cohorts from the early Netscapedays called that wishful thinking, noting thatMicrosoft has the resources to defend its browserdominance should a serious threat ever develop.
"I think it is basically a lost cause," said Jon Mittelhauser, one of Mosaic's five original authors and a founding Netscape engineer. "I keep hearing quotes from people like Marc about how these independent little browsers are going to challenge IE since it is stagnating. I wish them all the best, but I don't think they have learned from the past. Microsoft won that war because they can outspend anyone.
"The browser is not advancing because (Microsoft isn't) being challenged. I hope that someone does start to challenge them just to get Microsoft to invest in the browser again, but nobody could ever actually retake the crown. If Microsoft starts to feel some pressure, they will just crank up the spending again and crush whoever itis."
Still, given the stasis that has gripped IE for thepast three years, analysts credited Firefox withreawakening AOL's interest in its browser.
"What's interesting is the real center of gravityisn't around the Netscape brand anymore," Jupiter's Gartenberg said. "It's about Firefox. Without a doubt, the Firefox stuff has been one of the most interesting things to happen in the browser space since 1999. They may be very well trying to leverage some of that popularity to popularize the brand."
A long plummet
If Netscape's decline was precipitous, that'sbecause it had so far to fall.
Netscape had its seeds in the Mosaic Web browsercreated by University of Illinois graduate Andreessen and a small group of others. Unlike the browsers that preceded it, which were used primarily by academics and computerenthusiasts, Mosaic boasted ease of use for people accustomed to the common Windows and Mac graphical user interfaces.
(Andreessen is sometimes falsely credited withinventing the Web browser--that distinction belongs to Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee.)
When Silicon Graphics founder Jim Clark put hisfortune and entrepreneurial energy behind Mosaic, NetscapeCommunications was born.
The start-up's meteoric rise was fueled by rapidadoption of its browser and an apparent lock on amarket that could threaten Microsoft's operating system franchise. That rise reached a climax with Netscape's spectacular initial public offering, which began the inflation of the Internet financial bubble and made multimillionaires out of Netscape's investors, founders and employees.
To hear them tell it, those early employees earnedevery penny.
The first order of business for the start-up was torewrite the browser from scratch and rename it inorder to avoid intellectual property claims by theNational Center for Supercomputing Applications, which had sponsored Andreessen and friends' Mosaic efforts.
That rewrite involved the marathon coding sessionsand cubicle sleepovers that have become part ofSilicon Valley lore. Amid knuckle-crunching stress,chronic sleep deprivation and copious caffeine and sugar abuse, coders credited Andreessen with helping keep up morale as nerves began to fray.
"You need someone like Marc around to overcome thesoul-sucking blackness that sets in when you've agreedto impossible goals," programmer Jamie Zawinski wrotein his diary three weeks before the launch. "We've finallyannounced a public beta to the Net, and there are loads of bugs, and they're hard bugs, sucky, hardware-dependent ones...We're doomed."
When Oct. 13, 1994, rolled around, Netscapereleased a browser that had been rewritten from theground up. It would not be the last time.
In terms of its code, the browser that celebratesits 10th birthday on Wednesday bears little or norelation to the browser called Netscape today. That'sbecause once Microsoft caught up to Netscape withIE--based on technology it acquired fromSpyglass--Netscape found itself at a marketing andtechnological disadvantage. Before long, the browserwould have to be rewritten a second time.
While Microsoft's antitrust prosecution at thehands of the federal government found the companyguilty of abusing its monopoly operating systemposition to dominate the browser market at Netscape'sexpense, Netscape insiders credit the company's loss in thebrowser market to the company's own mistakes bothstrategic and technical.
"I think there were definitely instances thatpeople could hold up and say, here's where Microsoftwas playing unfair," said Netscape founding engineerChris Houck, now a programmer for Palo Alto, Calif., high-tech start-up LiveOps. "And in each instance you could alsomake a strong argument that here's where the Netscapeguys f***ed up. Given that, it's hard to take a moralstand on that one way or the other."
Talkback - Tell Us What You Think
The best of ZDNet, delivered
ZDNet Newsletters
Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox




