Henry wrote:Sorry, David, I see I called you "John" again---darn! When WILL I learn?
Henry,
You can always go back and edit your previous post and pretend that it never happened...at least until people quote you (as above).
But when pressed you can always claim they made it up...
Anyway, I don’t mind. Perhaps if I were prone to sign public communication with my first name; normally I limit that to private messages and e-mail. Not that it matters at this point; I think that most likely everyone remembers vaguely who I am and where I live now. Despite this, though, only a certain board ‘admin’ has attempted to harass me via my contact information, and it has been entirely through
third-party spam.
Henry wrote:BTW, as I understand it (not much!), Netscape 7.0 is a Mozilla-based browser. The other ones you mentioned are not supported on Mac OS 9.1; I've checked. Anyhow, everything is A-OK as of now!
You have it exactly correct. In the beginning (of
Mozilla’s history, at any rate—
browser history goes back further) there was
Netscape, and they were pretty much the undisputed king of web browsers until Microsoft unseated them by releasing Internet Explorer for free, as an add-on to Windows 95. Originally
Netscape was something for which one paid to use (like a lot more software at the time).
Netscape 7 (based on Mozilla 1.0.1) was created after AOL purchased the Netscape Communications Corporation, then spun off into Mozilla, and for a time, AOL repackaged their work (as they were primarily Netscape employees working at Mozilla until it became autonomous). They finally moved to build Netscape from
Firefox, but ultimately ended up axing it in favor of re-branding
Netscape as a web portal.
I’m not familiar enough with Mac OS 9 to know if it is possible to use a newer browser on it (I didn’t get a Mac until after the launch of Mac OS X), but it may be—in the meantime, now I know to test in Netscape 7 for Henry (and I have a copy on my laptop).
Here at
The Talking Machine Forum™ we firmly believe in
“No member left behind.”
I imagine that a lot of this history is not of interest to most of our members, but just in case anyone cares, my personal browser use history was:
NCSA Mosaic → Netscape → Mozilla → Firefox
...with the use of some other browsers in parallel, mostly for testing web sites that I had created. These days you always have to test your pages in IE, also—you can write completely valid
HTML and
CSS and still have it break your page in any way imaginable, and often it requires kludges to work around its failings.
— MordEth