- Tue Jul 1 2003 Netscape updates as Andreessen yawns
The AOL Time Warner unit touts improvements in navigation and spam control. Meanwhile, Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen calls the state of navigation "an embarrassment."
Posted by Paul Festa
- Mon Apr 28 2008 Lessons from a Web 1.0 archeological dig
Think the tech set is getting carried away? Our writer found a BroadVision lint brush, a RedHerring smart card, a BackWeb first-aid kit and some dot-com boom perspective while cleaning the garage.
Posted by Jim Kerstetter
- Thu Mar 8 2001 Loudcloud prices IPO after delay
Marc Andreessen's Web infrastructure services company prices at $6 per share after delaying its initial public offering and cutting its planned price.
Posted by John Borland
- Fri Mar 16 2001 Was Loudcloud's IPO worth the pain?
A week after Marc Andreessen's company limped to the IPO finish line, analysts are dissecting the issue for signs of the market's health--and of the company's own chances.
Posted by John Borland
- Fri Oct 5 2001 Sun absorbing iPlanet staff, functions
The software group has been losing its independence, with Sun gradually moving iPlanet functions within the rest of Sun, and AOL Time Warner's influence waning.
Posted by Stephen Shankland
- Tue Feb 27 2001 Loudcloud to host AOL's e-commerce software
America Online says it has signed a deal with the e-commerce software services provider to host and manage some of its e-commerce technologies.
Posted by Erich Luening
- Fri Oct 8 2004 AOL prepares its own browser
America Online is planning to release a stand-alone browser based on IE technology, according to sources familiar with the company's plans.
Posted by Jim Hu
- Fri Mar 14 2003 Netscape--a wild success
Posted by null Letters to the Editor
- Wed Oct 13 2004 Netscape's original browser press release
Ten years on, the announcement has a wonderfully archaic ring. Navigator, it said, can "run smoothly over 14.4 kilobit/second modems."
Posted by CNET Staff
- Wed Oct 13 2004 Netscape: Bowed, but not broken
It brought the Web to the masses, then virtually disappeared. Now the 10-year-old browser is set for an AOL makeover, News.com has learned.
Posted by Paul Festa