Netscape 1994 Time Capsule 144
jenkin sear writes "Netscape Time capsule site- original splash screens, and much of the original netscape site, including the release notes for version 0.9. Definitely a trip down memory lane....
I saw this link on scripting news" Warm fuzzies. Sure was simpler then. An interesting similiar and unrelated article also popped out recently, a
history of microsoft.com.
First MS site ran on FreeBSD? (Score:1)
Rich -- Play xracer! [annexia.org]
Some things never change (Score:4)
http://www.microsoft
It describes their "Collage" design from August of 1995. Take a look at one of the most prominent links on the graphic. Yes, your eyes don't deceive you; it does say "Microsoft Reacts to the DOJ". Like I said, some things never change.
BTW: www.icab.de (nt) (Score:1)
Re:Netscape 0.94 (Score:1)
Re:Netscape 0.94 (also available from netscape) (Score:1)
MSFT was having DOJ trouble in 1995! (Score:1)
Check it out:
http://www.microsoft
Re:Ah... Good 'ole Micro$oft quality... (Score:1)
I suppose Microsoft coding policies specify a maximum of 50 pages of errors
Re:All browsers suffer from HTML extension-o-rama. (Score:2)
"I'm stunned Microsoft, et. al., aren't trying to add their own proprietary extensions to the English language and wrestly the whole thing under their proprietary control."
Ummm, Microsoft Encarta Dictionary. You can buy it at any bookstore in paper or computer form....
"At least Mosaid waits for the dust to settle before adopting new features. Is mosaic still developping its browser? "
Mosaic became Netscape. Same people, new code. Mosaic died shortly after Netscape.
Joseph Elwell.
Code Link on Slashdot is outdated. (Score:4)
Anyways, both code bases are based on flawed licenses. (Assuming the writers wanted the code to be free)
Cheers.
Joseph Elwell.
Re:Microsoft Time Capsule (Score:1)
www.microsofttimecapsule.com
ROTFL!!! I don't believe I actually fell for it! It should have been moderated UP not down. I hope this one shows up for meta moderation!
that is NOT the original MSFT website (Score:2)
I distinctly remember the original Microsoft website used a single image logo from the early 1980's (Circa 1981, IIRC). It was far cheesier than the "original" they posted in the story.
Re:Boy does that revive some horrific memories (Score:1)
I know of people getting less training than that at Stream. Kind of sad because that model of support could work very well.
The big question is: Do they still support Netscape or did that change in the AOL takeover?
Boy does that revive some horrific memories (Score:5)
There were six of us back then, supporting the PC, Mac and about 9 flavors of Unix. I lasted the longest, until the 2.0 betas. (In fact, I still have my Mosaic Communications t-shirt (with the angry Mozilla) and a brochure from the first few months.)
There were some good times and alot of bad. Since we were in Oregon and they were in California, they were willing to ignore us at times. It took a bit to get them to deal with the bugs we and our customers uncovered. (Leading to some very strange calls.)
And then there were the staffing issues. Because many of the original team left for other jobs, we were whittled down to TWO people at one point. (Doing 70 calls a day for a while.) When 1.2 was released to Egghead stores, we had FOUR people on the phones. (And the typos and bugs were bad enough that we got lots and lots of calls.) The staffing problems were not all Netscape's fault though. Corporate Software did not staff for the load that they expected out of a weird power play trying to keep Netscape current on their bills. (Which they were holding back on because Corporate Software was playing these games.)
There are a whole lot more stories I could tell. It was an interesting time in my life. Not certain if I would want to do it again...
And, yes, as far as I know, Stream is still doing support for Netscape. (At least since I talked to any Stream employees, but it has been a while.)
Some mcom.com url's (Score:1)
To my surprise, I found that the beta version information pages [mcom.com] are still availble on home.mcom.com.
Much more fun than playing EA hockey, IMHO.
And then it appeared on Slashdot. Wierd...
Re:Slashdot (Score:2)
Unless the Slashdot Kommisarriat has managed to erase all my memories of someone going by a subtly differently spelled name:
http://slashdot.org/search.pl?query=sengan [slashdot.org] yields plenty of his stories. You just had an extra 'e' in there.
Sengan kicked off one of the bloodiest wars of the time on Slashdot with his classic US and UK unilaterally attack Iraq [slashdot.org]. It garnered 748 comments and earned Sengan a special fan club of his very own.
------------
Michael Hall
mphall@cstone.nospam.net
Netscape 0.94 (Score:4)
http://scribers.midwest.net/dsmith42 /ns094.zip [midwest.net] is where it is now -- mirrors are welcome. :)
Re:Slashdot is legible in Netscape 0.94 (Score:1)
Re:Reply to that first email :-) (Score:2)
No ... MAIL at Microsoft ran on UNIX for ages (Score:1)
Re:Slashdot (Score:2)
Re:Slashdot (Score:4)
Dragging myself manfully back on-topic, I loved the phrase in the announcement of Netscape 0.9 about it being "optimised for 14.4 modems". Those were the days.
Re:Netscape decided to try the Open Source way (Score:2)
Re:Netscape decided to try the Open Source way (Score:2)
Re:Ah... Good 'ole Micro$oft quality... (Score:2)
Re:Netscape decided to try the Open Source way (Score:1)
Re:Slashdot (Score:1)
Much old stuff is still accessible
eg "Linus on KDE vs. GNOME flame wars" at
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/980711108243
which is from mid '98.
At one point in time slash dot articles didn't have the date embedded in them at all, the articles were just numbered according to an incremented counter. For fun I went back as far as I could articles 000000000003 and 000000000005 were quite a laugh, with Rob fooling around saying stuff that he never expected people to see. I can't find those really old articles anymore.
Re:From the beginning (Score:1)
I meant March 23 1997 of course.
From the beginning (Score:3)
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00000001.sht
And it was actually articles
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00000005.sht
and
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00000004.sht
that were funny.
First non Malda comment:
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00000017.sht
First post by Hemos, Chips and Dips lives!:
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00000018.sht
Mandrake says Xfree 4.0 out soon (this in Oct-1997!)
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00000028.sht
Who new KDE and Gnome were so old (Oct-97 again)
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00000048.sht
First flame war, things were pretty civilized then
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00000054.sht
First fan?
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00000072.sht
Not just XFree can fall behind schedule, NT5 Ship Date Delayed, probably won't ship until 1999.
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00000114.sht
Wow it's a good thing these things tags aren't allowed in comments anymore
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00000137.sht
Slashdot has been renamed to Slashdot, "5000 hits per day, and that isn't slowing down yet" it's unstoppable:
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00000150.sht
Last of the old posts, then the format changes to yy/mm/dd/millsec and becomes untrackable
http://slashdot.org/articles/older/00001079.sht
just had to post.. (Score:1)
although nothing looks right
Re:Yet another victem of the SlashDot Effect. (Score:1)
ms rewriting history? (Score:4)
Netscape 0.97beta + LINUX = M$ competitor (Score:3)
Truly those were the founding days that solidified the potential in my and many of my fellow students' minds of OSS software, and of Linux in particular as a competitor to Window.
Since netscape is really the only true big browser available for Linux, it history is very closely tied to Linux's. Netscape helped linux along back then and we should pay hommage to them!
I hope everyone's tried the new Mozilla milestones!
Math
Re:Microsoft's history article (Score:1)
D
----
Re:PHPSlash (Score:1)
--hunter
Mirrors for the Netscape Capsule (Score:1)
http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/mozilla/ [ucla.edu]
http://www.dotnetat.net/mozilla/ [dotnetat.net]
Re:First MS site ran on FreeBSD? (Score:1)
--
Re:Slashdot (Score:1)
Re:Slashdot (Score:1)
I for one would love to see the original "chips and dips" which preceded
--------------------------------
Re:Moderator him up - Don't! (Score:2)
Yes, his whole argument was silly. He had "facts", but those facts didn't have anything to do with his conclusion. It's like me saying that the sun will go down Dec 31, it'll be dark, and people will drive with their headlights on. Because of that, there will be no Y2K problems. All of those were facts, and all will be true, but they have nothing to do with Y2K.
So, if anything, this should be marked up as "Funny", but having a few facts in a post that has nothing to do with the facts presented, is *not* "Informative".
-BrentRe:Ah... Good 'ole Micro$oft quality... (Score:2)
Yeah, they're *still* rebooting. You just can't tell it anymore because they've added enough servers so they aren't all rebooting at the same time :)
-BrentMS History: Funny as hell (Score:3)
"The predecessor to MSNBC, known then as MSN News, was first published prematurely when a member of the production team, sitting up on a desk to study a schematic, clicked a mouse button with his derriere. The team watched in horror as the content went live to a public server before it was ready."
"Mark Ingalls recalls how he mistakenly deleted the live default.htm file that served as the microsoft.com home page, in the days before staging servers. While home page visitors were receiving File Not Found errors, Ingalls rooted around in his browser cache - where the cache filenames did NOT map to their real names - to find and restore the page to active duty."
Moderator him up (Score:1)
I like what Netscape tried to do but this guy should be moderated up.
Netscape decided to try the Open Source way (Score:1)
Netscape decided to trust the free software movement and open source their browser. When will Slashdot show the same faith and release its own code?
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
suck.com (Score:2)
one thing i'd REALLY like to know about is the changing layout of suck.com. they seem purposefully quiet about this, and the only reference they have to the fact their logo originally looked totally different is hidden deep in the contributor profiles.. even teh back issues hae the new header image plastered on. yes, i realize the layout was never more than marginally tooled; i'm still really curious for some unknown reason.
oh, and real quick, cuz i haven't seen any other posters mention this: that "netscape time capsule" site is BEAUTIFUL from a layout standpoint. Whoever is responsible for the web design there is amazing.
but good LORD.. look at that clean, usable, uncluttered NSCA mosaic layout. i had no IDEA. i am amazed by what a gigantic step backward netscapes 0.97-4.7 are.. i mean a "stop" button is nice but not worth 12 other buttons that are never used.. esp. if the one ("security") next to "stop", the one you constantly hit by accident, opens up a slow-to-open dialog with a nonfunctional close box an.. sorry, i'm ranting again
-mcc-baka
listen to your heartbeat delete beep beep BEEP.
My god... How depressing... (Score:1)
I remember the days when I was using version 1 under windows 3.1 with trumpet winsock....
I still use it every day under linux, in fact I still swear by it. After all, it is realistically the only viable browser under linux.
I have been playing with mozilla, and I like it, but it is still a bit too grungy for everyday use.
Re:Sorry have to do this. (Score:1)
Anyway, maybe every first post should be the DeCSS source code.....ooops off topic again..... now what were we talking about? Oh yea netscape, the story of how someone took someone elses code, made some money, and sold out to AOL of all things. My god....AOL....the "you've got mail" idiots. Now what was the AOL keyword for slashdot....oh yea..."first post".
Re:Already /.'d (Score:2)
The URL you requested:
http://www.eng.buffalo.edu/~clau/mozilla
is restricted, and cannot be accessed. Please do not repeat the request.
The Slashdot effect is truly a sight to behold. I hope the Slashdot effect is always used "for niceness instead of evil" (as Maxwell Smart would have put it). There's not much difference between it and a distributed denial-of-service attack - and let's hope the lawyers of affected sites don't notice the similarity.
For some reason, "please do not repeat the request" reminds me a lot of the "French person" in Monty Python and the Holy Grail where he says "now go away, or I shall taunt you a second time."
Here's a fast mirror site (Score:1)
http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/mozilla [ucla.edu]
Re:PHP not free? (Score:1)
PHP4 is only under the PHP License, which is essentially the apache license. GPL was dropped to make it easier to use/distribute PHP for commercial purposes. Some people just like to spread FUD. PHP4 is "free". The confusion comes from the fact that the Zend engine, which is integrates into PHP4, is licensed under the QPL. However, this only applies to Zend as a standalone product, withing PHP4 all you have is the PHP License and no worries.
Already /.'d (Score:1)
microsoft.com future.. (Score:1)
Six years may not sound like a lot of time, but in "Internet time" that's almost half a lifetime. Internet time is sometimes likened to dog years - the first year is like 14, and every subsequent year is roughly equivalent to seven virtual years. By that reckoning, microsoft.com is pushing 50.
Apparently we can all look forward to microsoft.com being a corpse in about 5-6 years..
now i see... (Score:1)
i'm telling you, if they publicly snafus me again, i'm gonna give billyg a pop in the nose!
*remove tounge from cheek*
-confidential
paradox (Score:1)
Windows 2000 was released? i thought they said "maybe febuary"?
-confidential
Re:Microsoft did good (Score:1)
Microsoft did good (Score:3)
"[Engineers] were literally in front of the FTP and download servers for an entire day rebooting them to keep them up because there were too many users for what the boxes could handle."
come from a Microsoft spokesperson.
No, this isn't a new story to laugh at Microsoft with. Having them admit to being mortal is an important step in becoming less of the conceived monster that they appear to be.
In case you're missing the big deal: Microsoft admitted that something they made didn't work. Perhaps this is just a fluke, or this article didn't get cleared by their PR people, but maybe this is a sign that they're going to start being more forthright when it comes to bugs?
Or am I reading too much into this?
You're reading too much into it (Score:1)
As to the article, I'm guessing the PR people rightly guessed that there's not a lot of risk admitting something didn't work due to unexpected popularity. "Why, there were many more users than even *we* could predict!"
Re:Netscape 0.94 (Score:1)
Ah... Good 'ole Micro$oft quality... (Score:4)
I quote:
"Steve Heaney and Mark Ingalls were literally in front of the FTP and download servers for an entire day
rebooting them to keep them up because there were too many users for what the boxes could handle," said
Todd Weeks, now microsoft.com's systems operations manager. "Two weeks later, they hired a capacity
planner for the download program so we wouldn't have the same fiasco for Internet Explorer 4.0."
Further back in the past (Score:4)
Another time capsule I very much like: go to ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/DEC/sim/ [digital.com] and download the PDP emulator from the sources/ subdirectory. Then download the files from the software/ directory: uv5swre.tar.Z is an image of a PDP-11 disk running Unix version 5. That's really something worth trying out. You can also download Unix versions 6 and 7, and some old version of RSTS/E, and a few other dusty programs of the kind. Including a copy of the Lisp interpreter (with source), by L. Peter Deutsch, for the PDP-1.
One thing I would also very much like is to be able to run ITS, the fabled hackers' operating system that ran on the PDP-10. I found the sources, but I don't have a PDP-10 emulator capable of running that thing.
Re:Microsoft did good (Score:1)
I think you're reading too much ... they admitted that the boxes couldn't handle the load. That sounds more like hardware to me.
Re:All browsers suffer from HTML extension-o-rama. (Score:1)
Yea but who added HTML extensions first? Netscape :) Who passed on making their scripting ECMA compatible? Netscape. Grrrr such a royal pain to try to get a site to render in Netscape after their "bent" the standards.
Re:Microsoft did good (Score:1)
PHP not free? (Score:1)
PHP License
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of:
A) the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
B) the PHP License as published by the PHP development Team and included in the distribution in the file: LICENSE
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of both licenses referred to here. If you did not, or have any questions about PHP licensing, please contact core@php.net.
Is PHP4B3 different?
Re:Moderator him up - Don't! (Score:2)
I correctly predicted Mozilla source would lack SSL and lack JAVA when shipped.
Wow! He predicted something that has been known by anyone interested in Mozilla since the openning of the source code... (And if you don't know the reasons for the lack of SSL and how Java is supported in Mozilla, then find out [mozilla.org].)
No way to turn off graphics? (Score:1)
I have a time capsule... (Score:2)
Not necessarily all discussions are archived (Score:2)
I am impressed! (Score:1)
Those were the days when the Web wasn't yet commercialized...
Netscape 0.93 works!! (Score:1)
Re:Netscape 0.94 (Score:1)
Many, many moons ago I remember the day when Yahoo! switched to using that newest of web inventions, tables. There had actually been a fair amount of discussion about it: they sent a lot of early users emails asking if they should include tables or not, since very few web browsers supported them. (I voted yes, although table support in the version of Mosaic I was using was poor.)
What really irritates me: I was a grad student at the same school at the same time as Filo and Yang. All of my friends and I collected web site addresses and indexed our favorites: there were no search engines at that time. Then we found the precursor to Yahoo and more or less stopped: we sent our lists to them and just let them do the indexing. Now I teach chemistry and they're gazillionaires. Sigh....
Eric
Re:Boy does that revive some horrific memories (Score:1)
Ah, yes, Stream... I remember those days. I was there for a few months in late 95 - early 96, just about the time 2.0 came out. I remember the joys of figuring out how to set up Win95's DUN; supporting the Netcom logins; all sorts of stuff.
It was insane; it was crazy; it was amazing. I remember when the agency told me I had the position, but they couldn't tell me what I was supporting. Then we got there and we weren't supposed to tell anyone what we were supporting. Netscape didn't want anyone to know what was going on. (One Sunday there was a hellish ice storm, I showed up along with about 4 others, and we just took messages 'cause we didn't have the people for it, and had some interesting questions about WHY we weren't fully staffed...)
Would I do it again? No. Would I change having done it? No. A few months later I got a job for an ISP based on my experience at Netscape. And it's been pretty much uphill since then.
Someone did steal a book from me while I was there, which annoys me... but it was years ago and the book's way outdated now. So.
Re:Already /.'d (Score:1)
Error 403: Access Forbidden
The URL you requested:
http://www.eng.buffalo.edu/~clau/mozilla
is restricted, and cannot be accessed. Please do not repeat the request.
See? /. doesn't do H1 tags, but the extra emphasis on the "do not" makes such a difference... :)
Re:Sorry have to do this. (Score:1)
I predict a very large spike in posts surrounding midnight that day, assuming of course that all the necessary computers continue running over the date change. Naturally, the more people that respond to this post, the more people will attempt to get first post of the new millenium (first post of the first year in which the first digit in a four digit year is '2').
Happy posting!
microsoft's site history (Score:1)
403ed out (Score:1)
"The URL you requested:
http://www.eng.buffalo.edu/~clau/mozilla
is restricted, and cannot be accessed. Please do not repeat the request."
------------
Re:Microsoft's history article (Score:1)
The article is filled with quotes like:
"Steve Heaney and Mark Ingalls were literally in front of the FTP and download servers for an entire day rebooting them to keep them up because there were too many users for what the boxes could handle,"
Time capsule from before the slashdot effect (Score:1)
First, the web admin 403-forbids the site 10 minutes after slashdot links to it.
An hour later the server, http://www.eng.buffalo.edu/, is completely crashed.
Pinging confucius.eng.buffalo.edu [128.205.25.7] with 32 bytes of data:
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Microsoft remote administration history (Score:3)
Did you notice that Microsoft's picture of the first Microsoft web server ever also shows the first pioneering implementation of Microsoft's proven PTKAMRFA remote administration tool, still the only remote administration option to ship with Windows NT to this day?
(PTKAMRFA: Put The Keyboard And Monitor Really Far Away (tm) (c) )
Some linux people seem to think that telnet or ssh is superior but they're just stupid longhairs.
PHPSlash (Score:1)
You can find PHPSlash here: http://phplib.netuse.de/download/index.php3 [netuse.de]
Be aware that it is pre-alpha software (v 0.5.2). A website will exist at phpslash.org, but it is not there yet.
Mirror (Score:2)
MSFT vs DOJ: The Early Years (Score:2)
Hehe... This has been going on for quite some time, it would seem.
1995: Msft responds to the DOJ
1999-2000: The DOJ has lain dormant for too long...
Re:Netscape 0.94 (also available from netscape) (Score:1)
I don't even see v0.94.
Listen to the history (Score:3)
Slashdot (Score:3)
Re:Microsoft remote administration history (Score:1)
a quick check shows that neither gopher://microsoft.com, nor gopher://gopher.microsoft.com work anymore
You'd think Microsoft would still have one of those original servers sitting in a forgotten corner somewhere with the legacy gopher content still in place.
Re:ms rewriting history? (Score:2)
The domain name 'microsoft.com' has been around for a LONG time, and was probably headed by a Xenix machine living in Building 11 on campus in Redmond.
If you wanted to email someone at Microsoft, you added @microsoft.com to their internal email name. The internal culture was that your internal email name WAS your name, and you'd pronounce them as best you could; many people knew each other by email and not by face, even on the 52 acre campus. "Oh, YOU'RE edh! I'm toddla!" But that was pretty much the extent of Microsoft's "presence" on the Internet. It wasn't until Win31 shipped that they made their BBS of Windows Driver Library available by FTP, if I recall.
Once they started making products that were Internet related, they shifted to using the WinNT servers that were replacing each departments' Xenix that year. It's a part of the corporate culture of "eat your own dogfood."
Re:Netscape decided to try the Open Source way (Score:1)
Maybe Andover wants to keep that code a secret -- security by obscurity works, ya know ;)...
--
Working Mirror (Score:1)
Re:Working Mirror (Score:1)
Re:Working Mirror (Score:2)
open source... (Score:1)
bye,
-jimbo
concerning the slashdot effect (Score:1)
Microsoft's history article (Score:2)
Reply to that first email :-) (Score:2)
Cc :
Attchmnt:
Subject : Re: Here it is, world!
----- Message Text -----
Hi Marc,
Sorry for the late reply, please send me an
updated list of the mirrors, thanks!
>An up-to-date listing of mirror sites can be
>obtained at any time by
>sending email to release@mcom.com.
Yet another victem of the SlashDot Effect. (Score:1)
Re:Already /.'d (Score:3)
Wait...don't answer that.
Site Taken Down (Score:1)
"If you received this message from attempting to access the web site "http://www.eng.buffalo.edu/~clau/mozilla", please do not bother sending e-mail to the administrators; the site has been taken down due to overload problems."
Re:Site Taken Down (Score:1)
Microsoft Time Capsule (Score:3)
Re:Site Taken Down (It's Up Again) (Score:3)
To anyone I may have freaked out on: I apologize. I was beside myself trying to get things working again, as this server is sometimes used for Real Work, and was totally useless during the initial onslaught. I'm better now ... :-)