12/28/2007, 2:45pm, EST
Friday, December 28thNetscape browser support to end in February
All support for Netscape web browsers will stop as of February 1st, the AOL-owned company has announced. Security updates will continue to be developed until that date, but afterwards, users will only be able to download archived versions of browsers such as Navigator. The company is instead pushing users towards Mozilla's Firefox, as the group was a creation of Netscape reaching back to 1999, to which AOL soon decided to provide backing. Firefox and Navigator have often shared close connections, to the extent that Navigator 9 became little more than a re-skinned version of its cousin.
Netscape's web browser was at one point dominant in the public space, and for many people the first browser they ever used. Its death knell was sounded with the introduction of Microsoft's Internet Explorer, which came bundled with Windows 95, and eventually matched its rival's features. Navigator thus became redundant, although not before triggering an infamous anti-trust case that saw Windows opened more widely to third-party software.
Filed under: industry, software
Other story tags: Firefox, AOL, mozilla, browsers, Netscape
,
, 13
,
,
,
, 
subscribe to comments
for this article
Netscape personifies the consequences of monopolies running around without control. Better product lost, and consumers will for long time be suffering because of it.
The hilarious thing was, back when v4 was released as Communicator, every yelled bloat and wanted Navigator back. So they released Navigator as just a browser. And then the public yelled because they removed the email program.
So, apparently, bloat is in the eye of the beholder.
Yet I never really figured out why they wasted the time with Netscape, since it was always just reskinned versions of Mozilla and then Firefox.
As others have noticed, it was a barely dressed up Firefox. The fact that Firefox is on a different codebase than Mozilla was before it...doesn't make it any less the heir to the netscape line of browsers...
its just a name change that took several years. Now, if AOL had dropped support for firefox, that would have been news.
rip netscape.