And the Winner is… Who cares?
By Mark Tennent in Reader
Posted in utilities, Internet, Apple on January 4, 2010 at 2:21 pm
We used to live near a dentist who ran his entire operation in an Hypercard stack he devised himself. All patient information, treatments, appointments and bills were handled by his stack, running on one of those original, all-in-one Macs which us old hands think of as definitive. No colour, no sound, tiny screen, clunky operating system, no multi-tasking and a mouse the size of a house brick. But a graphical operating system from the days when windows were holes in buildings.
Hypercard was a forerunner to the Internet as we know it today, the world wide web. It combined databases with Hypertalk, an easy-to-use programming language. All wrapped up in a graphical front end. Hypercard also inspired Pei-Yuan Wei, a Taiwanese student at UC Berkeley, to build an adventure game construction set. What he ended up with was one of the world’s first web browsers called violaWWW which came complete with a graphical interface plus the ability to run applets, 3 years before Java was brewed.
This was in the late 1980’s and early 1990’s when Gophers rubbed shoulders with Archie and Veronica. Turbo Gopher VR even used 3D browsing which from personal recollection could make you feel seasick as you tunnelled through Gopher space. In those days, Macintosh and Next (which became Mac OS X) were the systems used by many of the developers of the Internet.
It all came to an end when the University of Minnesota in a Scrooge-like moment, started to charge for Gopher servers. Unlucky for them, the University of Illinois had just released Mosaic, a free and graphical web browser which soon overtook Gophers because it was easier to use. There are still over 100 Gopher servers in the world, which are supported by Mozilla-based browsers plus Omniweb. The number of servers has actually increased recently.
Mosaic, became Netscape, accompanied by all the other nascent browsers such as Lynx, Opera, Internet Explorer, Cyberdog, Omniweb, Camino, Chrome… We’ve tried them all for the Mac and each, apart from Opera, has been our favoured browser for a while, currently it’s Safari. On Windows XP we’ve tried Firefox, Safari and Chrome but stick with Internet Explorer.
So when we received the news that Chrome has overtaken Safari to become the third most popular method of accessing the web, the overwhelming urge was to yawn. Some reports have it as zooming past, in reality it is a difference of a mere 0.17% but each has increased market share at Internet Explorer’s expense.
Who cares?
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