Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on AOL, Netscape, and Explorer. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper which presents the history of the three
web browsers in relationship to the competition which exists between the three. A brief
illustration of each browser is illustrated, and then the conclusion is made that AOL will
win the competition, if it hasn't already. This is due to the fact that AOL offers a great deal
more, and has incorporated both Netscape and Explorer into its services in one way or
another. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAaolexpl.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
If a particular site happens to send us to a particular browser we merely accept the turn, paying little attention. But, there are many individuals who are unhappy with one
browser or another, looking for any option to make their research quicker and easier. In this world of computers, where competition is the name of the game, there are three
big browsers who have been competing for the prime spot on the Internet since the beginning of the personal computer age, if not before. Those browsers are AOL, Netscape Navigator,
and Microsoft Explorer. The Competition Back in 1995, when personal computers truly became a reality for many people, Wingfield (1995) stated that "Microsoft is encroaching on Netscape Communications
Web browser market share as it releases its Internet Explorer 2.0 World Wide Web browser for Windows 95. Microsoft claims to hold one-third of the Windows 95 Web browser market.
The other two-thirds are reportedly evenly split between America Onlines AOL Browser and Netscape Communications Navigator" (p. 8). However, at the time, there were many more Internet sources which indicated
that Netscape still maintained an incredibly strong hold as the top market position for all platforms browsers. "A Yahoo search site-related Web site browser statistics compiler indicates that 76.1% of
visitors employ Netscape Navigator and only 4.1% use Internet Explorer" (Wingfield, 1995; p. 8). It was feared that the users were going to lose out if the vendors continued to
engage in a Web browser tug-of-war. "Netscape is trying to control HTML [Hypertext Markup Language] by fiat, by running ahead of it, said Jerry Michalski, managing editor of Release
1.0, an industry newsletter based in New York. The disaster scenario is that it balkanizes the Web [browser vendors]. The positive scenario is that this rapid evolution [of HTML] drives
...