On GameSpot: The Sith return to The Old Republic
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Jim Hu
Posted on ZDNet News: Oct 6, 2004 10:40:00 PM

SAN FRANCISCO--The Web browser wars may have been reignited, according to browser pioneer Marc Andreessen.

This time, it's not Andreessen's former company, Netscape Communications, that's taking on Microsoft's Internet Explorer. It's the increasingly popular smaller products such as Apple Computer's Safari and the open-source Firefox, Andreessen said.

"It may turn out that there's a one-two punch with Firefox and Safari," Andreessen said Wednesday at the Web 2.0 conference here. "Microsoft is certainly going to respond competitively."

Firefox owes more than a debt of gratitude to Netscape. The company created and funded the open-source Mozilla project that created it, although Mozilla was later spun off as an independent group.

Claiming browser development has been at a standstill since 1998, Andreessen said the recent emergence of competitive software will force Microsoft to pay more attention to developing new features in IE.

However, competition could compel the company to use aggressive tactics to protect its Windows operating system monopoly, he warned. Microsoft's maneuvers against Netscape ensnared the software giant in a lengthy federal antitrust suit. Microsoft was found to have violated antitrust law, but was spared from a breakup of the company.

Andreessen said he doesn't expect Microsoft to change its way of doing things should it detect a threat from Safari and Firefox.

"If I were (Microsoft) I'd take another look, and I would see how I could screw with other people's businesses with this monopoly (I) have," he said.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 73 Talkback(s)
Not exactly.....row
The difference between the ultrahyped "browser wars" of the 1990s and the issues being raised today are completely different. Like many other things in the '90s, the "wars" were about marketing, cust... (Read the rest)
Posted by: jeffdickey Posted on: 10/15/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Can we move on..  Kamakazii | 10/06/04
Remind me again  Yagotta B. Kidding | 10/06/04
What do Rome, Carthage, and a battle for Sicily...  Anton Philidor | 10/07/04
Analogies  Roger Ramjet | 10/07/04
The analogy works, I suppose  Anton Philidor | 10/07/04
Thing is this isn't a war. It's business.  voska | 10/07/04
Cardinal sins  Anton Philidor | 10/07/04
Never fatal  Roger Ramjet | 10/08/04
Beating Standard Oil  Anton Philidor | 10/08/04
Man, where have you been. Virtually no inovation since 1998.  DonnieBoy | 10/06/04
Close, but wrong  alterego_z | 10/06/04
Can't move on with IE  jstead1 | 10/06/04
BWAHAHAHAHA!!!  Jeff Spicoli | 10/07/04
Re-read the article  IT_User | 10/07/04
Go back 10-15 years...  ITGuy04 | 10/07/04
huh?  eLurker | 10/07/04
E..buddy, glad to see you are stil amongst the living:)  Laff | 10/07/04
I HAVE moved along...  BitTwiddler | 10/07/04
I thought a war was NOT won until the other side  Laff | 10/07/04
Surrenders or disappears  Anton Philidor | 10/07/04
IF MS releases LongHorn and IF people buy it.  Laff | 10/07/04
We, not Netscape, lost  Update victim | 10/07/04
But OEM's want to sell computers with software...  Anton Philidor | 10/07/04
I'd say IE has been a dead issue for some time now. NT  catlord17 | 10/07/04
Not exactly.....row  jeffdickey | 10/15/04
Man, so true, what will Microsoft do next. They will not take this sitting  DonnieBoy | 10/06/04
evil?  Arm A. Geddon | 10/06/04
Maybe something with credit cards  DarthRidiculous | 10/06/04
They Tried that with Passport...  el1jones | 10/07/04
Well, for that reason, and this:  Yen_z | 10/07/04
Brilliant move  Yagotta B. Kidding | 10/07/04
Trustworthy Computing??  ZooberSoft | 10/07/04
Choice ?  mbraincell@... | 10/07/04
that's funny...  Arm A. Geddon | 10/07/04
I'm not so sure...  rbethell | 10/07/04
I noticed that too...  catlord17 | 10/08/04
The war's not over...  John L. Ries | 10/06/04
have I got a war going on...  Arm A. Geddon | 10/06/04
That's your choice.  John L. Ries | 10/06/04
After Longhorn, peace  Anton Philidor | 10/07/04
Not necessarily...  John L. Ries | 10/07/04
Browser? What's a browser?  Anton Philidor | 10/08/04
Sometimes I'm too serious  John L. Ries | 10/06/04
seriously...  Arm A. Geddon | 10/06/04
Safari from Konqueror  Roger Ramjet | 10/07/04
Konqueror does what?  catlord17 | 10/08/04
Safari  ITGuy04 | 10/07/04
Safari  Yagotta B. Kidding | 10/07/04
Safari  tic swayback | 10/07/04
IRONIC  wiskowst | 10/07/04
Competition is what feeds innovation  David Hamilton | 10/07/04
ms already addressed the problem  V Sanders | 10/07/04
Bolted on  rpmyers1 | 10/07/04
Good news! Microsoft only understands winning.  boomslang_z | 10/07/04
We'll see  NT Admin | 10/07/04
Am I the only one  rkadowns | 10/07/04
The speech through the PA...  Anton Philidor | 10/07/04
Alternative speech from the CEO after seeing savings  Laff | 10/07/04
Whispers from the audience  Anton Philidor | 10/07/04
Hey! YOU work here too? SNICKER:)  Laff | 10/07/04
Of course not.  AmusedAtItAll | 10/07/04
Good to be taken seriously...  Anton Philidor | 10/08/04
Who else is there?  amicus_curious | 10/07/04
Why would using Firefox doom Microsoft  voska | 10/07/04
You did follow MS vs DOJ, didn't you?  John L. Ries | 10/07/04
Not so sure about that  voska | 10/07/04
I could be wrong, but...  catlord17 | 10/08/04
.NET  sokushi jonez | 10/07/04
The Harder They Fall...  guitrwiz@... | 10/07/04
Oh yeah  sokushi jonez | 10/07/04
How much is it?  amicus_curious | 10/07/04
Bye Bye  richdave | 10/07/04
Google data centers, grid computing!  anthonycea | 10/09/04

What do you think?

advertisement
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

Meet Doc

advertisement
Click Here