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Beonex Business Services offered the suite for free and provided documentation, easy install routines for third-party plug-ins, and tried to sell support and customer-specific changes on the browser. [7] [8] The main goal was to implement Kerberos, OpenPGP, and LDAP in Beonex, [9] but that was marked as failed in mid-2004. [10]
Netscape 7.0 was released in 2002. It was based on a more stable and notably faster Mozilla 1.0 core and bundled with extras like integrated AOL Instant Messenger, integrated ICQ, Radio@Netscape, and new features such as tabbed browsing Archived June 12, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
In March 1998, Netscape split off most of the Communicator code and put it under an open source license. [2] The project was dubbed Mozilla.It was estimated that turning the gutted source code (all proprietary elements had to be removed) into a new browser release might take a year, and so it was decided that the next release of the corporate Netscape browser, version 5.0, would be based on it.
In October 1998, a major update to the program was released as Netscape 4.5. [9] This included many improvements, mostly to the Messenger e-mail client, which now also took on the features of Collabra.
Waterfox is a free and open-source web browser and fork of Firefox.It claims to be ethical and user-centric, emphasizing performance and privacy. [2] There are official Waterfox releases for Windows, macOS, Linux and Android.
Basilisk uses the Australis theme used by Firefox from versions 29 to 56. [12] It uses the Goanna rendering engine. The browser supports modern web browsing, including support for ECMAScript 6 on release and modern web cryptography standards, NPAPI plugins, classic Firefox addons, ALSA on Linux, WebAssembly (WASM), and allows for unsigned extensions.
From time to time, the SFX team or SFX members launch marketing events organized at the Spread Firefox website. As a part of the Spread Firefox campaign, there was an attempt to break the world download record with the release of Firefox 3. [295] This resulted in an official certified Guinness world record, with over eight million downloads. [296]
iCab is a web browser for MacOS and Classic Mac OS by Alexander Clauss, derived from Crystal Atari Browser (CAB) for Atari TOS compatible computers. [2] It was one of the few browsers still updated for the classic Mac OS prior to that version being discontinued after version 3.0.5 in 2008; [3] Classilla was the last browser that was maintained for that OS [4] but it was discontinued in 2021.