|
|
|
|
|
by dralley
1678 days ago
|
|
>They all do. IE is eee of HTML and the web. MS Java and VisualJ or whatever it was called was eee of Sun Java. ActiveX was eee of the web browser. All of those efforts failed miserably. They have nothing to do with the actual reasons why Netscape died, why Firefox is trending down, why Java never became dominant, why Open/LibreOffice never replaced MS Office, why open chat protocols were replaced by chat services from Google, Facebook, Discord and Slack, why Java applets never caught on, etc. |
|
The grandparent comment is right on the money with "You're assuming the goal of these things was to replace the product, when the goal was to destroy the competitor."
MS bought at least 10-15 years of dominance with EEE, vaporware, and other anticompetitive practices.
Just like Google killed RSS with Reader.
Just like Facebook bought WhatsApp and Instagram to avoid them potentially growing into replacements for Facebook.
The goal was to kill or delay an upstart that would distract users away from their core products, not to produce a successful competitor to the upstart.
Netscape
Netscape no doubt had its own problems, but MS deeply embedding IE into Windows 98 was a huge part of them.
Java
Actually Java was pretty dominant. Interactive web was either Flash or Java. If it was for entertainment, it was Flash, if it was for work or computation, it was Java.
Open/LibreOffice
Have you forgotten WordPerfect?