Word: browsers
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...Gates on display just to make him look bad. The video set up Boies' third witness, Apple senior vice president Avadis Tevanian. Apple says Microsoft threatened to withhold a key piece of software--Microsoft Office for Macintosh--unless Apple joined Microsoft's war on Netscape's Internet browser. But Gates offered Boies no help on this point. Presented with what seemed to be a smoking gun--an e-mail to Gates from Microsoft executive Don Bradford saying that "Mac Office is the perfect club" to get Apple to take actions that "significantly/materially disadvantage Netscape"--Gates claimed he knew nothing about...
...site expected to be launched later this year would allow students on federal financial aid to replace envelopes and stamps with a browser by putting aid applications on the Web, eliminating mailing time and removing paperwork from the application process...
...that cheap bandwidth and visual communities the size of shopping malls might fulfill: try-it-on Gaps; virtual town halls; online nightclubs with live video and sound. "I'm not sure that even the guys at E.C. know what the Palace's future is," says Foley. Like the Web browser before it, the Palace has a chance to become that rarest of online creations: a machine that grows of itself...
Justice contends that it was Microsoft's aggressive use of its market power--not the quality of its browser--that accounts for Internet Explorer's rapid growth at Netscape's expense. To make the point, Justice unveiled a memo from Hewlett-Packard complaining that Microsoft had prohibited it from installing Netscape if it wanted to keep installing Windows on its computers. "We are very disappointed," an H-P manager wrote. "From a consumer perspective, it is hurting our industry. If we had another choice of another supplier, based on your actions here, we would take...
...headhunter called to see if he was interested in applying for a job as fourth man out at nearby Microsoft, he declined. And that's why, when Doerr called to see if he was interested in running a company that was building a piece of software called a browser that just might change the world--or at least the World Wide Web--he jumped...