Sentences with phrase «browser wars»

According to a recent report in The New York Times («Amazon's Foray into Browser Wars», October 3, 2011), Amazon's new tablet, the Kindle Fire, and the new browser Amazon developed for it, the Silk, «may give Amazon unique insight into the Web clicks, buying patterns and media habits of Fire users».
It adopts a standard then adds incompatible «enhancements», a strategy that carries through to the internet today with the so - called browser wars that mean websites look different in different web browsers.
Perhaps the most famous example is the original browser war of the 1990s: Microsoft's fast - following Internet Explorer drove incumbent Netscape out of the market altogether.
* GigaOM Interview with John Lilly, CEO, Mozilla Corp. * Browser wars again.
The new browser wars are upon us and Microsoft knows a thing or two about how to compete.
Reminds me of the old, wild days coding websites during the «Browser Wars» — remember Netscape?
We are at a time when all the basic standards in digital content are in transition (HTML5, CSS3, ePUB 3.0, JavaScript 1.8), giving rise to memories of the Browser Wars.
I've never seen anything like the mess we have with ePub reading systems, even during the worst days of the browser wars.
Remember the Internet Explorer vs Netscape «browser wars» back in 1995 or so?
We've seen this in the «browser wars» that for many years saw web browser vendors, especially Microsoft, introducing non-standard features to try to keep users in its camp and drive the standards in ways that suited their interests.
You have a browser (this is really important lest we're forgetting the browser wars — past and present)
I agree that this is like the browser wars all over again, but hopefully the industry leaders have learned, and we won't end up with the equivalent of IE6 dragging the industry down for the next decade.
By the time of the browser wars of the mid-1990s, the tech business and the economy were beginning their boom, so no one was thinking too hard about the answers.
The browser wars are back, and netizens everywhere are being asked to choose sides.
Microsoft's long - overdue great leap forward in the browser wars looks suprising familiar to users of the Firefox browser.
As you'll probably know, even if you're imprisoned within your firm's IT compound, the browser wars are back again, and the competition has been heating up.
In any event, dead web or living web, the browser war was over, having been replaced by a more colourful conflict on smartphones with plants and pigs defending respectively against zombies and flying birds.
Hot on the heels of Microsoft announcing its newest browser, Project Spartan, we've got another brand new contender in the browser wars: Vivaldi.
More improvements will be coming and more improvements are indeed needed now that Microsoft Edge seems to be preparing to enter the browser wars as well.
When it comes to the browser war itself, Google's Chrome leads, controlling more than twice the share of Microsoft's Internet Explorer, which takes second place.
As Microsoft had «won» the browser wars and were on top, they decided to pull their developers off Internet Explorer and
As Microsoft had «won» the browser wars and were on top, they decided to pull their developers off Internet Explorer and stop developing IE entirely.
The browser wars will continue, and competition is constantly making every browser better.
Chrome may have won the browser wars way back when, but as history has shown, it's possible to lose your crown.
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