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Lindsay Pereira
Bill Gates would know this story well enough. Create something
innovative, market it, get rich, and you won’t have to wait too long before someone
comes up with a better alternative. The norm has always been that
innovative
technology eventually spawns rebels. Behind every Sabeer Bhatia are
probably
a million other programmers busy developing their own systems to take
the
world by storm.
Take browsers for example.
Thanks to the power of advertising, you
thought
that the only ones worth talking about were Netscape Navigator and
Microsoft
Internet Explorer, right? You thought they were Gods gifts to the
Internet,
never mind their bulky presence filling out valuable hard disk space. As
any
surfer who’s ever used Opera (http://www.opera.com/) will tell you, you
were wrong, and how!
So what’s Opera, you ask? Well, it’s a browser created in Norway, with
over
a million users worldwide. First, the downside: you pay for it -- $39 to
be
exact, and $20 at an ‘educational price’. Still worth the money though,
considering its many assets. Opera can simultaneously open all pages you
were viewing when you last logged off the Net, letting you ‘save’
yesterday’s work. You can also resize a number of pages and tile them
together for a better view. Opera can also run on PCs as old as a 486.
You can filter cookies, get a full screen presentation, redirect the
output
from one window to another, add all open documents with just two clicks,
and
even zoom in and out of pages.
Opera is a special gift for the
handicapped,
as it is navigable entirely with the keyboard! As for that all-important
security factor, it features 128bit SSL encryption, version 2 and 3, and
is
also the first browser to support TLS 1.0.
Opera takes up only 4MB of RAM, while its install program can fit on a
1.4MB
floppy disk with ease. It loads pages as fast as any current big
browser.
Another interesting feature is the ‘multipane interface’ that lets users
open a number of windows, and specify different settings for each. For
example, your email site could open without graphics, while a news site
could open with them, saving you time and loading speed.
Another good choice is iCab (http://www.icab.de/), straight out of
Germany.
Built specially for Mac users, it is fully customisable and runs on 4MB,
almost one-fifth the memory taken by Netscape or IE. Programmers working
on
an HTML presentation can use the ‘kiosk’ mode that locks up the rest of
one’s computer leaving just the browser visible. It can also generate
error
reports indicating syntax mistakes on an HTML source useful for those
designing their own web pages. The cost? $29 at present, with additional
features like cascading stylesheets level 2 (CSS2) and JavaScript being
planned for its final release.
Talking about saving space, imagine a browser that can fit on a single
floppy disc! That’s the 1X browser (http://www.scitrav.com/1X/) and,
while
it doesn’t run Java yet, its creators say that this is actually an
advantage
as Java slows down page loading. It is especially useful for students
and
researchers, thanks to a feature that enables one to drag text clips to
an
HTML file on a shared drive -- far better than photocopies or e-mailed
links. You’ll have to cough up $15 to get it, which is still an
attractive
price when compared to most other options. The 1X Web Snippets facility
lets
you get online information fast; while the Previewer Paper Save mode
lets
you print compact hardcopies of web sites in a two column format.
Arachne (http://arachne.browser.org/) is another browser that fits on a
single floppy disk. This is for those without a machine capable of
running
Windows; small (less than 1 mb), uncomplicated, almost completely DOS
based,
and very fast. Still, for the sceptics, it supports most HTML pages, and
even gives users a mail client. There are toolbar icons for those who
feel
lost without them, while Arachne renders text and images like most
browsers
much bigger than itself. It’s navigable even without a mouse, and comes
with
its own built-in dialer, POP3 email client, Telnet client, and a
drag-and-drop FTP client. The downside is that installing and
configuring it
may take a while. That, and the fact that you have to pay $30 to get it.
Those interested may note that past users haven’t been complaining.
Rdesk (http://www.rdesk.com/), a slim browser with built-in text
editor, is
ideal for researchers and students. Users can drag and drop selected
text on
to a page at the lower half of the screen, and then save it all as a
word
document. Lots of other academic-research tools are also thrown in, for
$26.95. Also called the ‘RDesk Mediator,’ the browser’s main aim is to
help
users perform academic research with ease, which pretty much puts its
unique
features into perspective.
HotJava (http://java.sun.com/products/hotjava/) from the Sun
Microsystems’
stable, has potential, but needs working on. Built for Java, the best
thing
about it is its platform-neutrality that enables it to run on simply
everything. Developers are also free to customise parts of it, though
the
sad news is it’s a lot slower than browsers like IE and Netscape
Communicator. Everything is supported well enough; tables to colours to
frames; while the HotJava renders HTML, accepts cookies and supports
SSL-encrypted secure transactions as well.
Neoplanet (http://www.neoplanet.com/) is for those who prefer the look
of a
browser over everything else. It’s a small (under 2.5MB) ‘integrated
browser’ with an e-mail client, instant messaging, chat, web directory,
and search engine, all rolled into one slick package. And slick it
definitely
is, thanks to a choice of customisable skins. Best of all, it’s
freeware,
which should come as relief to those gasping after the prices just
mentioned.
Though Amaya (http://www.w3.org/Amaya/) supports cascading style sheets
and
boasts an integrated HTML editor, it fails where most modern sites are
concerned, thanks to no scripting support. Plus points, and there are
few,
should appeal mainly to web developers, as Amaya was created by the
World
Wide Web Consortium (W3C) to be a consistent platform on which official
HTML
developments could be viewed; and also comes with an authoring tool.
What
this means is that while the latest in HTML technology is a breeze on
Amaya,
additions like frames, JavaScript, and other enhancements simply fail to
show up.
If you’re done your homework on the World Wide Web,
Mosaic
(http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/SDG/Software/Mosaic/NCSAMosaicHome.html)
should be
anything but news for you. It’s been around a lot longer than most
browsers
but, sadly, doesn’t come close to the ones around today. There is no
Java or
scripting support, neither does it support complex tables or even
coloured
text. Since it was made to view traditional HTML 3.2 based content,
older
pages load well enough to please; it’s newer sites that reveal the
failures.
So why talk about it? Because it still has some special extras to offer,
like simplicity of use. You can initiate a TCP/IP-based group
environment,
chat, pass links, and even drag-and-drop files with friends online. Its
AutoSurf crawler automatically retrieves pages for offline viewing,
while
those with slow modems are offered an option that lets them load sites
with
text only, with Mosaic pulling images from the cache. Pros and cons
considered, take your pick.
Then there’s Softerm Plus+ (http://www.softronics.com/lit_plus.html)
which,
though low-powered, still claims to be a total Internet tools suite that
can
be yours for around $35. It’s a web browser, Telnet and FTP client, and
email app all in one; with the Telnet client emerging as its best
component.
That mentioned, there’s nothing much left to discuss. Standard email
client,
minimal features, basic newsreader, underpowered browser... and you’re
not
left with much to go on. Still interested? It’s your money.
Pros and cons, features and additions, there’s a lot more to those
already
mentioned. As with all other things online, the options never stop. What
one
needs to do is sit back, evaluate the need, and then set about finding a
browser that fits the requirement. And anyway, if all else fails,
there’s
always good old Netscape and Explorer.
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