Netscape 6

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Netscape 6

Netscape 6.1 under Windows
Developed by Netscape Communications Corporation, AOL
Latest release 6.2.3 / May 15, 2002
OS Cross-platform
Genre Internet suite
License Proprietary EULA
Website wp.netscape.com/browsers/6

Netscape 6 was the name of Netscape Communications Corporation's proprietary cross-platform internet suite from versions 6.0-6.2.3. It superseded Netscape Communicator 4.8 (as the release of Netscape Communicator 5 was scrapped) and was replaced by the simply-named Netscape. Netscape 6, and later Netscape 7, were based on the Mozilla Application Suite, an open-source software package which at that time was simply known as Mozilla.

It consisted of the following major components:

Contents

[edit] History and development

In March 1998, Netscape split off most of the Communicator code and put it under an open source license. The project was dubbed Mozilla. It was estimated that turning the gutted source code (all proprietary elements had to be removed) into a new browser release might take a year, and so it was decided that the next release of the corporate Netscape browser, version 5.0, would be based on it. Netscape assigned its browser development engineers to help with the project.

Later that year it was quite evident that development on Mozilla was not proceeding quickly, so Netscape reassigned some of its engineers to a new Communicator 4.5 release. This had the result of redirecting part of the browser effort into a dead-end branch while Internet Explorer 5.0 was still building momentum.

The version 5 of the browser was skipped, at the time when Internet Explorer 5.0 had been available for a year and a half. There were plans to release an almost-ready version 5.0 based on the 4.x codebase, but this idea was scrapped. The Mozilla engineers decided to scrap the Communicator code and start over from scratch. All resources were bound to work on the Mozilla-based Netscape 6.0 release, which some Netscape employees still deem one of the bigger mistakes in the company's history.

The first public builds of Mozilla two years later were rather disappointing, with many mid-level PCs too slow to run the bloated browser (which used its own custom set of graphical user interface widgets and had a customizable UI built in a custom XML dialect known as XUL). With much fanfare, Netscape's new owners AOL released version 6 on November 14, 2000, based on pre-release Mozilla code. The product was considered by many to be a colossal disappointment: it was criticized for being huge, slow, unstable, and to most, visually unappealing. None of this was surprising, as the Mozilla core itself was nowhere near release-ready and itself unstable.

Versions 6.1 and 6.2, released in 2001, addressed the stability problems and were more respected, but still had a relatively small number of users and was facing new competition from Internet Explorer 6.0, released in the summer of 2001.

[edit] Release history


[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Languages