![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Information about your favorite browser: news, articles and more.
Revamping the Web Browser
Published June 15th, 2006 in All Categories, Other News
For years, the Web browser was a technology that seemed frozen in time. While the Web itself
exploded with new types of content and virtual communities, the way users accessed that material changed hardly at all from 1997 to 2004 (not coincidentally, the years when Microsoft’s Internet Explorer had a chokehold on the browser market).
But now with a maturing base of open-source code for building Web tools, browser technology is thawing quickly — and upstart software engineers are bringing into question some long-dominant assumptions about the way browsers can and should work.
Browster, for example, offers a free add-on for Internet Explorer and the Mozilla Foundation’s open-source Firefox browser that’s a simpler alternative to using the "Back" button. The San Francisco company lets people viewing a Web page, say, a list of Google search results, see what lies beyond the hyperlinks simply by placing the mouse over those links — without having to click on them or open a new window. Technology Review: Emerging Technologies and their Impact








