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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, October 01, 2001 |
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Survival of the fastest
THE WORLD Wide Web is the best part of the Internet the
part that allows us look at (and hear to) a mix of text and
images, sound and video in a single layout called the Web page.
But we can't do this without a key software component the
Web Browser that understands the language used to create
these goodies (Hyper Text Mark-up Language and its extensions)
and then interprets it for us.
Which is why the browser guys the ones who control the
gateway to the Web are usually busy either going to banks
to stash away their earnings. And the irony of Internet, of
course, is that the ones who make the mega bucks are not the ones
who charge for their product, but those who give it away free.
Lot of users think the Norwegian ``Opera'' is a great little
browser the fastest and slimmest around. But does one want
to pay $30 for it when others give similar products free? No!
The two browsers, Netscape and Internet Explorer, have been
slugging it out in what came to be known as the "Browser Wars",
with each releasing a new version, hard on the hells of the other
guy. The battle has now gone into the next stage: Netscape
released its Version 6.0 about nine months ago and followed it up
with an upgrade called 6.1, on August 1, this year. Internet
Explorer launched its own IE 6.0 exactly 27 days later.
When Netscape 6.0 first became available many changed over from
the classic Netscape 4.7 version then realised it was a
mistake. The new Netscape was a highly unstable and painfully
slow product, which took ages to open. So, users went back to the
4.7. The August tweak operation, which produced the version 6.1,
is said to have remedied most of the problems and speeded up the
start-up with a `Quick Launch' feature. The package now includes
the Netscape Navigator, Instant Messenger, Composer and Address
Book, NullSoft's Winamp for audio playback, RealPlayer8 for
seeing video and Macromedia's Flash for seeing those jazzy web
animations. A HP print utility, ``Print Plus'' and the
"Net2Phone'' PC-to-phone utility is also thrown in (the last one
is illegal in India till April 2002). The software occupies 26 MB
on Windows/Intel PCs.
The August release of Microsoft's Internet Explorer 6.0 was
bundled with the new Office XP suite. But otherwise it is barely
distinguishable from the previous version 5.5. However, there are
a few security enhancements, including a ``sentry'' who can be
ordered to keep out intruders those annoying ``cookies''
who sneak in with incoming e-mail. Also useful, is an improved
``print preview'' feature that allows you to see how big a
particular Web document is, before you hit the print button...
then realise it's going to take a full ream of paper.
Meanwhile, two weeks ago, Microsoft unveiled another `freebie'
browser, MSN Explorer, which is in effect, large chunks of its
own IE 5.5 plus a little icing on the cake: It throws in Outlook
Express, MSN Messenger, the Windows Media player for audio and
video, into a single smooth application. Here you can surf the
web, send and receive email, exchange instant messages, play
multimedia all from one central interface. Did someone at
the back there, say "Big Deal! I have all these features in
Netscape?" True , but MSN Explorer, whips it all together into
one interlinked page and then allows up to five different users
in the family.
And since this version is localised for India, you can see
Bollywood rather than Hollywood gossip and Dalal Street rather
than Wall Street stocks. One advantage is that you can access
your own special MSN Explorer version any where in the world
not just on your personal desktop. The India version can
be downloaded from www.msn.co.in and the 5 MB file may take about
half an hour on a good day. But why bother? The October issues of
the Indian IT monthlies, Digit, Computers @ Home and PC Quest
contain the browser on their free CDs.
A week after installing the `desi' MSN Explorer, one still gets
a kick when a browser opens with the cheery greeting "Good
Morning", gives the latest dope on Sushmita Sen's new film and
Michael Jackson's new album, forecasts what the weather is going
to be in his hometown and the political weather in Delhi
all in a screen that one has created, the way one want it to
look.
And sorry, you can't see it. It's protected by a password.
A.VISHNU
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