Heh, that's funny. Thanks for pointing it out, I would never have imagined
that.
Un saludo,
Alex.
-Mensaje original-
De: Les Hughes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Enviado el: martes 18 de junio de 2002 15:37
Para: 'Jakarta General List'
Asunto: RE: Interesting quote
Erm, IE
Fernandez Martinez, Alejandro wrote:
Heh, that's funny. Thanks for pointing it out, I would never have imagined
that.
It has been there since the very beginning. I remember seeing it back in
Netscape 2/3 times, when Explorer was barely used at all (95/96, I can't
remember).
(...)
Erm,
On 6/24/02 11:29 AM, Santiago Gala [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Fernandez Martinez, Alejandro wrote:
Heh, that's funny. Thanks for pointing it out, I would never have imagined
that.
It has been there since the very beginning. I remember seeing it back in
Netscape 2/3 times, when Explorer
I guess they dropped the parts from Spyglass - wasn't the first IE just a
rebranded spyglass browser?
Yes. IIRC, The IE that came with windows originally (That didn't do
jack) was just Mosaic, which at the time
had been recently acquired from NCSA, where Anderssen used to work. So
Struth! It gets better!
What next? IIS - Help - About (c) 1998 ASF That'd be the day
Yes. IIRC, The IE that came with windows originally (That didn't do
jack) was just Mosaic, which at the time
had been recently acquired from NCSA, where Anderssen used to
work. So
essentially,
just like the BSD tcp/ip code in windows. MS is very good at taking the
best bits of free software and running away with it. They should do it
more often.
Struth! It gets better!
What next? IIS - Help - About (c) 1998 ASF That'd be the day
yeah. It'd solve a lot of security problems
- Leo, who's thinking how nice it'd be to be able to plug in mod_webapp
into that IIS
HA!
-Andy, who will laugh when Leo gets Code Red III or IV or whatever.
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just like the BSD tcp/ip code in windows. MS is very good at taking the
best bits of free software and running away with it. They should do it
more often.
One of my CS professors (who's now a full professor at Carnegie Mellon)
used to always say One good thief is worth 10 good engineers.
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