This is semantic silliness. The outfits that make Netscape, Mozilla et al are ultra-quick to tell you that they are marketing not just a browser, but "Communications Suites" or equivalent verbiage. Communications Suites turn out to mean a browser bundled with mail reader, news reader, and some other stuff. It is only our half-smart savvy-blinkers that conflates the two and calls the whole suite a "browser."
--On Monday, July 08, 2002 11:27 PM -0400 Nick Simicich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > At 12:06 PM 2002-07-08 -0800, Roger B.A. Klorese wrote: >> > What does this have to do with anything? I can't imagine using a >> browser >> > for mail, sorry. >> >> Who said anything about a browser? Netscape has a mail and news >> client as well, which is not the browser. > > But I am a dumb user. I installed a browser --- where did that mail > and news client come from? What is the difference? I think it is > all the web, you know? I mean, I want it to all be the web, why > should I have to learn the difference? And I'm right because I'm the > user.
