From: phreadd AT powerup DOT com DOT au (David Orme) Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp Subject: Re: A DJ Web Browser Date: 1 Oct 1997 03:45:57 GMT Organization: Power Up Lines: 26 Message-ID: <60sh1l$n2k$2@grissom.powerup.com.au> References: <342DB71E DOT C33F119A AT uni-bremen DOT de> <60kimm$8r6 AT ds2 DOT acs DOT ucalgary DOT ca> <342E482E DOT 7795B653 AT uni-bremen DOT de> Reply-To: phreadd AT powerup DOT com DOT au NNTP-Posting-Host: ts1211.powerup.com.au Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp Precedence: bulk In article <342E482E DOT 7795B653 AT uni-bremen DOT de>, imme AT uni-bremen DOT de says... > >> Actually, Caldera released a DOS web browser called "Web Spyder", which >> was completely freeware. It worked great, but it was horribly slow on my > >I'm sure that there're already some DOS browsers (which are freeware, >too), but from what I've read here so far it seems that some people >still wait for any real alternative to Netscape or MSIE. When I think >about how Linux and especially DJGPP were made, I'm rather optimistic >that such a project as a Web-Browser would be possible as well. Maybe >this thread is the beginning of a new era... :) > I hope so. I'd like to see, and even be part of, a DOS based WWW browser. Not only would the graphics be better, but the overhead of accessing through the windows software interface wouldn't exist. Rather than having to ask windows if we can access the modem or screen, we can just do it. The only bottleneck that I can see is the server delays. Let's see this project lift-off! -- | David Orme <>< | "Striving for Excellence" | | phreadd AT powerup DOT com DOT au | "Professional Newbie" |