Mosaic Netscape 0.9 was released 30 years ago today

According to my notes, it went live shortly after midnight on Oct 13, 1994. We sat in the conference room in the dark and listened to different sound effects fired for each different platform that was downloaded. At some point late that night I wandered off and wrote the first version of the page that loaded when you pressed the "What's Cool" button in the toolbar. (A couple days later, Jim Clark would go ballistic in a company-wide email because I had included a link to Bianca's Smut Shack.)

For those of you who are unaware of these finer details, 0.9 was the first release of the Netscape browser (which begat Firefox) available to the general public. This beta release was an unannounced surprise. Prior to this, everyone assumed that what we were doing was going to be a standard for-sale product where you sent off your $35 and then some time later got a disc in the mail with a license key. That we just said, "Here's our FTP site, come get it, go crazy" was, at the time, shocking to people.

These anniversaries keep piling up, so I don't really have a lot to add, but check my NSCP tag or the Previouslies for more, particularly the links in this one.


I'd still like to find a way to run a mid-90s vintage Unix version of the browser under emulation on an M1 Mac. I asked about that a while back but was never able to Make It Go.


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41 Responses:

  1. J$ says:
    1
    Via Mastodon

    I remember immediately installing it on our Sun servers and Macs.

    I think I missed Bianca’s Smut Shack. Drat.

    • AJ Sadauskas says:
      11
      Via Mastodon

      Yeah, I remember back when Marc Andreesen and Netscape used to be "the good guys" in the battle against Microsoft.

      If only we knew...

      • bitzero says:
        7
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        A16z has become one of the most negative forces of the world. Batshit crazy and with a lot of money.

        • AJ Sadauskas says:
          13
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          Meanwhile, the non-management part of Netscape, which AOL eventually spat out as the Mozilla Foundation, has a fine track record of jumping on tech fads, only to abandon them soon after.

          Now excuse me, I need to look up some Pocket articles on how to get my Firefox OS smartphone working with my Firefox streaming stick. Hopefully Mozilla AI can help 😂

      • 2
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        OMG this, so much this. I was a Netscape Solutions Expert certified consultant in the late 1990s, when everyone was hot to be a Microsoft Certified Solutions Engineer.

  2. 1
    Via Mastodon

    Happy 30th birthday Mosaic Netscape 0.9! 🥳🎉

  3. 3
    Via Mastodon

    > I'd still like to find a way to run a mid-90s vintage Unix version of the browser under emulation on an M1 Mac. I asked about that a while back but was never able to Make It Go.

    Don't know about a Mac version… but I've got some copies of Australian Personal Computer magazine CDs that would have Linux copies of Netscape from around that time…

    I can dig one out and see if modern Linux will run it. It was Motif-based and I think largely statically linked, so we might be lucky.

  4. 2
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    I wang netscape back! not mozilla, netscape. i want choice in the browser market. Not firefox and reskinned chromiums.

  5. Adolf Osborne says:
    1
    United States

    They grow up so fast.

  6. 1
    Via Mastodon

    it was a great day when my university installed Netscape 0.9 - a huge improvement over Mosaic! That was back in the days when you had to use the Internet before lunchtime because it would all ground to a halt when America logged on.

  7. Kevin Lyda says:
    Ireland

    I can't try this right now because annoyingly some idiots took archive.org down.  However it seems like there's an older emulator for 32 bit intel chips. This guy has a pretty good guide on getting RedHat 5.2 running.

    Not Irix, sorry. But if you have some RedHat 5.2 CDs around and a CDROM drive (I'm annoyingly missing the latter at the moment), this might work.

    https://www.chrisrcook.com/2024/03/03/getting-red-hat-linux-5-2-up-and-running-on-86box/

  8. Will Deakin says:
    Via Mastodon

    I am grateful for your good works. But disappointed that the fishcam 404s

  9. Jim Flanagan says:
    Via Mastodon

    I spent an inordinate amount of time trying to figure out how that animated compass logo on your home page worked

  10. stb says:
    Germany

    If I remember correctly, you were still being asked to buy a license, which my employer back then did (I think 3 or 5 licenses). I don't remember how we managed to get the payment done from Germany (I think a US friend mailed a check). Unfortunately, I believe the licenses were lost in the shuffle (and the company does not exist anymore).

    • jwz says:
      1
      United States

      "Customers who download the software do so for personal use only. Commercial users can purchase supported, licensed copies of Mosaic Netscape directly from Mosaic Communications.  Pricing starts at $99 per user, which includes a 90-day warranty and customer support.  Volume discounts are available for multiple user licenses.  For information on volume licensing of Mosaic Netscape, send electronic mail to sales@mcom.com."

  11. Bob Clark says:
    1
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    I remember how long it took to download it with my 14.4 modem, worth every minute.

  12. Doctor Memory says:
    2
    United States

    RETVRN to the days of proper animated page-loading throbber animations. I feel like we lost something ineffable there.

  13. 1
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    Was there and used it. I also feel mildly responsible for a small part of the internet I built.

  14. 2
    Via Mastodon

    still my favourite of the spinner loader logos.

  15. Commandhat says:
    2
    United States

    It sounds like you might want the project 86Box (latest) which aims to emulate 86x hardware (not software).

    Note that if you want SATA support to put multiple drives, you'll presently need to compile from source; the latest build at time of writing has a bug in their PIIX3 code which flips a bit and causes pretty much anything to fail.

    To spoonfeed, if this is a new project to you:

    1) Grab latest binary or compile from source
    2) Clone their roms project (https://github.com/86Box/roms) into a roms/ subdirectory next to the binary
    3) Open 86box, go to Tools -> Settings and set up a valid 8086 machine.

    I've reproduced my machine below, dropdown choices in bold:

    Machine Type: Socket 8,
    Motherboard: ASUS P/I-P65UP5,
    CPU: Intel Pentium II Overdrive (@ 100 mhz -- if your actual cpu is faster then 2.5 GHz you might try going higher)
    Memory: 256 MB (Linux at-the-time can handle 512 but there are some rom issues with handling this much memory that you'd probably wanna skip)
    Display: Pick any PCI card you fancy -- My favorite is the S3 ViRGE Diamond 2000
    Sound: Pick any plug 'n' play card. Popular choice is Sound Blaster 16 PnP, I think.
    Network: SLiRP, change the adapter dropdown to AMD Pc-net PCI.
    Hard disks: Add a single drive here for simplicity. Aim for 504MB as a max, the Socket 8 roms have trouble with higher dimensions. Make sure your hard drive is present at 0:0.
    Floppy & CD-ROM drives: Add One ATAPI CD-ROM and make sure the channel is 0:1.

    4) Click OK to save settings, 86box will automatically reboot and load the correct BiOS ROM
    5) While your machine POSTs, right click your CD-ROM and load the iso or whatever you need in. If you're still at the boot-up screen then you finish, mash DEL to get into settings.
    6) Change your boot sequence as needed in BIOS FEATURES SETUP.
    7) Save and reboot, should try to load your CD-ROM once the POST passes.

    • Commandhat says:
      1
      United States

      Note that SLiRP emulates a modem and will piggyback on your *actual internet connection* so mind that if you connect an old linux machine to the internet you may have to handle linux virii. If that worries you, change SLiRP to Pcap and you can use standard pcap tools to moderate the machine's connection.

    • Commandhat says:
      1
      United States

      I'll also note that 86box is a fork of Qemu that's more user-friendly (but at the same time hides more stuff), so if you know how to follow these instructions in Qemu that's likely more preferable)

  16. Jim Jones says:
    Via Mastodon

    I still have a VHS copy of Code Rush.

  17. 3
    Via Mastodon

    I remember. It was amazing.

  18. David Konerding says:
    1
    United States

    The choice and effort to keep browsers running on all three platforms back in the 90s played a huge role in Microsoft and Apple not completely replacing UNIX/Linux.  To the extent that you were pivotal in ensuring the UNIX releases, I truly thank you.

    • jwz says:
      1
      United States

      Thanks, and I agree with your assessment. Killing off cross-platform was the first thing the Collabra reverse-acquisition pinheads tried to do.

  19. United Kingdom

    "Remember, it's spelt N-E-T-S-C-A-P-E, but it's pronounced Mozilla."

  20. United States

    Since I can still run Netscape on Red Hat 5.2 and Mosaic on Dell SVR4 on real hardware, and Dell SVR4 on 86Box, it seems it should be possible to get both browsers running on 86Box on Apple processors, but it will be a while before I pursue, if I do.

  21. Crofton says:
    Via Mastodon

    wild times. I was at a company that had a firewall, so we had to create our own websites internally to use Netscape.

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