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Netscape Bares All
- Are Netscape's plans to release its Navigator source code a game-winning play? Jeffrey Veen takes a look. [Wired News]
Netscape Drafts Free-Code License
- In Step One of its plan to free Communicator's source code, Netscape posts a draft of its public license and invites feedback. At least one early reader likes most of what he sees. [Wired News]
Netscape Drops Java VM Development
- Netscape will turn to others' Java Virtual Machines for its browser software. [Wired News]
Netscape Frees Communicator 5.0 Code
- In a move that's wowing some developers, the browser giant has said it will freely license its software source code, starting with the suite of browser and messaging apps. [Wired News]
Netscape Retools for Standards
- Netscape renewed the faith of Web developers Monday, telling them the next version of its browser would include an overhaul of its creaking page layout engine. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
Netscape Rolls the Dice
- Today's the day - developers get their first look at the source code that makes Netscape's browser software tick. What will happen next? Lots of things, say developers and the company. [Wired News]
Netscape Seeking Tech Support
- Wang says Netscape's browser infringes on a 1985 patent and has filed suit. Netscape denies it, and hopes developers will come to its aid. At least one learned observer doesn't like Wang's chances. [Wired News]
Netscape Shepherds Mozilla to the Masses
- Netcape launches Mozilla.org, a dedicated internal team and Web site that will guide the Communicator source code into the hands of waiting developers. [Wired News]
Netscape Weans Itself from Java VM
- Now that Java virtual machine builders have stepped up to the plate, Netscape is taking itself out of the game. [Wired News]
Netscape: Bring on the Frankenbrowsers
- As the date approaches for Netscape's browser source-code giveaway, developers are lining up to create their own, mutated versions of the world's most popular browser. Keeping the free-for-all under control may be the company's next great challenge. [Wired News]
Network Security Seal a Sticky Wicket
- Following a $40,000 audit, the TruSecure Certification will tell the world that your network is secure. But experts caution that story could change overnight. [Wired News]
New Center to Fight Crackers
- High-ranking officials from federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies are planning an anti-cracker defense organization modeled after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But they're doing it as private citizens. By James Glave. [Wired News]
New Economy: Batwear at the NYSE
- Forget videogames. To experience the consensual hallucination of cyberspace, visit the New York Stock Exchange. [Wired News]
New MS Memo Targets Linux
- A second Microsoft memo leaked this week spends 10,000 words on the subject of Linux and the threat it poses to the Windows OS. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
New Net Traffic Cop
- After two years of development, ballyhooed startup Juniper Networks is unveiling technology the company says will make the Net's main pipelines more reliable. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
New Push for Fiber to the Home
- BellSouth and Japan's NTT will collaborate on a standard for new, more affordable fiber-to-the-home equipment. What about ADSL over plain old copper? By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
New Y2K Threat: Embedded Systems
- It's not the bank's mainframe you should worry about when ringing in the new millennium, but the chips built into the nearby power plant - unless Project Damocles gets to it first. [Wired News]
Newton May Rise Again
- A small group of Apple Newton developers and companies have joined forces with the goal of buying or licensing the PDA for use in vertical business markets such as health care and transportation. [Wired News]
Next Space Race: Tourism
- Egged on by a $10 million prize, 16 companies are racing to put wealthy tourists into orbit. The two front runners have begun testing their hardware. [Wired News]
Next-Generation Browsers
- With all the browser hoo-hah surrounding the Microsoft antitrust case, it's interesting that a peek at the latest versions from Netscape and Microsoft doesn't give us much to be excited about. By Jeffrey Veen. [Wired News]
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