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To: Harvey Allen who wrote (22989)3/18/1999 8:04:00 PM
From: Harvey Allen  Respond to of 24154
 
Gates did refer to Internet Explorer as a "browser" several times during his presentation, a distinction the company has taken pains to minimize as part of its antitrust case.

IE 5's facelift part of Gates's grand plan

news.com

Next Bill will let the word "monopoly" slip.



To: Harvey Allen who wrote (22989)3/18/1999 11:36:00 PM
From: Harvey Allen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24154
 
Netscape To Announce Big Layoffs
By Spencer E. Ante
Staff Reporter
3/18/99 9:55 PM ET

The America Online (AOL:NYSE)-Netscape
Communications (NSCP:Nasdaq) get-together might begin
with a goodbye.

In what could turn out to be the Internet economy's biggest
instance of downsizing, sources close to Netscape say the
pioneering company is close to laying off as much as 30% of
its workforce. The layoffs could take place as soon as next
week, say observers close to the company.

The cutback in Netscape's workforce is part of the move by
AOL to integrate Netscape into its operations, creating one
giant Internet media conglomerate. On Wednesday,
Netscape shareholders voted to approve AOL's acquisition of
the Mountain View, Calif.-based company. When the merger
was announced last November, the deal was valued at $4.2
billion but it is now worth nearly $9 billion. In that period,
AOL's share price has more than doubled and its stock split
2-for-1 last month. Netscape's stock has also surged on the
deal, increasing 145% since it was announced.

Founded in April 1994 by James H. Clark and Marc
Andreessen, Netscape is arguably the granddaddy of the
Internet craze. The founders helped create the NCSA
Mosaic software that was further developed into the
Netscape Navigator Web browser. Netscape briefly
threatened to dethrone Microsoft (MSFT:Nasdaq) after
staging a high-profile and successful IPO in August 1995,
only 16 months after its founding.

Netscape has approximately 2,500 employees scattered
throughout 17 countries, but the majority of them work at the
Mountain View headquarters. About 700 employees could be
shed from the company. However, one source close to the
company says some employees may be rehired in new
positions as the merged behemoth hatches new initiatives in
e-commerce and extends its portal strategy.

A Netscape official deflected questions about the layoffs.
"That's premature at this point," says Patty Pierson, a
Netscape spokeswoman. "I'm not really in a position to
comment on rumors."

AOL spokesman Jim Whitney would only say: "We'll have
more information next week about how the two companies
are going to operate going forward."

"Nobody knows exactly what's going to happen," says one
observer close to the company. "Management is sending out
a lot of mixed messages. That's the reason there's
something to this."

Initially, one of AOL's biggest fears about the merger was
that Netscape employees -- especially the company's highly
valued engineers -- would run for the exits when the merger
went through. To stave off such an exodus, AOL offered an
extra month's salary to every Netscape employee who
remained until the deal closed.

Observers familiar with the negotiations say Netscape
engineers are the least likely to be affected by the layoffs.
"The word down here is 'do not fire the engineers,'" says a
source close to the company. "If you're an engineer and
you're at Netscape, you're not going to go anywhere. AOL is
starved for engineers."