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Netscape Navigator 9 was the final version of the browser, and it only held 0.6% of the market for browsers upon release. Support for the browser was officially discontinued in 2008.
Soon after its introduction in 1994, Navigator, or just plain "Netscape," as it was commonly called, quickly became the leading browser on the Web. As of Version 6.0, the Navigator name was ...
Netscape 8.0 (above) and 9.0 (below) For the curious, Netscape Navigator 9 is still available on the web from various archives. However, keep in mind, this is not the Navigator of yore.
‘Netscape is the first Internet tool that lets the average user with a 14.4 kb modem work with the Internet interactively,’ said Todd Haedrich, principal of Point of Presence Company in Seattle.
Netscape Navigator, the first real commercial Web browser, launched on Oct. 13, 1994. And though I’ve written before about the danger of overselling techniversaries, this one stands out to me.
Netscape Navigator, the storied Web browser that launched an Internet boom but is now a mere shell of its former self, will soon be put out of its misery. Now under the umbrella of Time Warner’s ...
It birthed the web as we know it. But tomorrow, February 1, marks the demise of Netscape Navigator, the first commercial web browser. Navigator will continue to function should you happen to have ...
In testing Netscape Navigator 6.0, we installed it on four machines, one a Windows 2000 Advanced Server, the other three Windows 98SE machines. The installations were a bit rough, with two ...
Still, if you want to kick it old-school and use Navigator again, you can grab the beta from Netscape, pull out your 28.8k modem, put on a Goo Goo Dolls CD, and get back to the glory days of mid ...
According to a post on the Netscape Blog, support (and subsequent updates) for it will no longer be provided by AOL (disclosure: AOL is our parent company's parent) after February 1, 2008.
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