[6166] in www-talk@info.cern.ch

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Re: Netscape v NCSA

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Chris Lilley, Computer Graphics Un)
Fri Oct 14 01:53:10 1994

Date: Fri, 14 Oct 1994 06:49:18 +0100
Errors-To: listmaster@www0.cern.ch
Errors-To: listmaster@www0.cern.ch
Reply-To: lilley@v5.cgu.mcc.ac.uk
From: lilley@v5.cgu.mcc.ac.uk (Chris Lilley, Computer Graphics Unit)
To: Multiple recipients of list <www-talk@www0.cern.ch>

I have it running fine on an HP 735 workstation (HP-SUX 9.03).

The multi-threaded nature of the beast appeals - getting more than one inline 
image at once, for example. 

Promting for the name of a save-to-disk file while it is being fetched, rather 
than afterwards, is also a clever way to give a percieved increase in 
performance, as is the interlaced display of slowly-loading inline images. Being 
able to interact with, say, a form at the top of the page while inline images 
further down are still being pulled in is also a plus.

The news interaction is excellent. I worry, though, if they have a URL to 
subscribe, unsubscribe, catch up etc from newsgroups does this mean random 
documents can contain these URLs and merrily go writing to your .newsrc?

Are the various extended html tags implementations of HTML 3.0 or are they mcom 
specific extensions (like, for example, the viola-specific extensions)? I would 
appreciate a pointer to a site containing known HTML 3.0 documents especially 
tables, to test out what this puppy can do. The otherwise good documentation is 
rather silent on this point, and if Netscape has 3.0 support you would think 
they would promote it.

Fonts are a pain to customise, you have to brass your way through two or three 
levels of defensive comments in the app-defaults file. A worrying comment says 
not to change things because then content-providers html will not look right. 
Uh? They are encouraging creation of browser specific html?

Pages with multiple inline images all of which have different colourmaps look 
rather better than, say, the M-entity for X (my version has the default number 
of colours to allocate for inline GIFs upped from 50 to 200, yet Netscape still 
looks better). It appears to do some sort of error diffusion dithering. This 
does mean that pages with single, multicolour images (like mcom's home page!!)do 
not look as good as with the M-entity, though. Same with pages where multiple 
inlines are all adjusted to use the same colourmap (for example, all greyscale).

I have yet to test it out on a proper colour system ;-) I have been using an 
8-bit pseudocolour X terminal.

The documentation says something about mcom giving out some specifications to 
help interface it with other programs. This may compensate to some extent for 
the lack of source code.

I will be interested to see what internationalisation support it has: I have a 
feeling there is some in there ;=>

--
Chris

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