¶ … Internet Explorer and Netscape Browsers
Most people in 2005 have accessed the World Wide Web, and chances are, they used Microsoft Internet Explorer to do it. In 1995, the situation was quite different; far fewer people had accessed the Web, and most of those who had used Netscape Navigator. Microsoft saw Netscape and the Web as a competitive threat to its operating system business, and launched its own browser to compete. The release of version 2 of each browser represented the real beginning of the "browser wars" of the 1990s. Netscape Navigator 2.0 is a more mature product than Microsoft Internet Explorer 2.0, however, Internet Explorer 2.0 has several user-interface features that are better designed. Internet Explorer is less focused on directing users to specific websites than Netscape is, and appears cleaner as a result. Netscape's menus offer more options that those in Internet Explorer, but many of those are just permanent bookmarks of Netscape websites. The help systems differ significantly; Internet Explorer has a small number of included HTML help files, while Netscape has a comprehensive online manual. Netscape has a significantly more sophisticated bookmarking system which includes support for folders, and generally resembles what would be found in a modern web browser. Netscape has broader support for web technologies, including frames, Java and Javascript, though both browsers support the basics of HTML, as well as more advanced features such as images and tables. Both browsers are fairly unstable, and remain so for a number of release cycles after version 2.0 due to the intense competition between the two.
When Microsoft licensed Spyglass Mosaic, Netscape had a head start. Not only was the browser more mature, but many users equated Netscape's browser software with the Internet in much the same way that users do with Internet Explorer in 2005. Users were familiar with Netscape's feature set, menu layout and absurdly large, blocky buttons. Internet Explorer 2.0 is essentially a re-badged version of Spyglass Mosaic. (Sink, 2003) The user interface is cleaner, more compact and resembles the original graphical browser that both are based on: NCSA Mosaic. Internet Explorer's buttons are small, but well organized and easy...
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