What is the difference between netscape and lynx
A browser is an application you use to view files on the World Wide Web. There are text or terminal-based browsers such as Lynx that allow you to view only the text of a file on the Web. Most browsers now are graphical browsers that can be used to view text, graphics, and other multimedia information. Both claim to be better and faster than the other, but the choice of which one to use usually becomes a personal one. Because some Web pages are created for specific browsers, it can be important which browser you use.
Web pages may look different when accessed by different browsers. Microsoft Internet Explorer Internet Explorer holds the lion's share of the browser usage today, but it came into the game later than its main competitor.
Microsoft has met with a good deal of criticism in recent years concerning Internet Explorer because of its alleged intent to make IE an integral and necessary element of the Windows operating system. Competitors complained that Microsoft tries to lock them out of the market by making IE the only Web browser effectively usable by the Windows system.
Netscape Netscape was one of the first commercial browsers on the scene and dominated the browser market until Microsoft got serious about Internet Explorer. There are some Internet users who are fiercely loyal to Netscape and there are sites on the Web that are best viewed using Netscape.
In either of these browsers, if you want to save a Web site that you find useful and want to return to, try using the Favorites MS Internet Explorer or Bookmarks Netscape function found on the menu bars at the top of the browser screen. In the last couple of years, both have become very powerful. Netscape continues to offer Bookmark capabilities that IE's "Favorites" cannot match.
Most other features are pretty equivalent in both of these browsers. If you wish to use Netscape to access any of these applications or the World Wide Web, you may do so by opening Netscape and locating what you want beginning with the Library Home Page. The entire Web is accessible through both browsers. Return to Outline. Click on links or buttons within a document in the document window. Links are the highlighted areas of hypertext in the document itself.
They will retrieve other documents. To click on a link, move the mouse over the highlighted area and click once. Back the first toolbar button returns to the previous document.
Use the Forward toolbar button only after you've already backed up to a previous document. It will return you to the document you were viewing before you chose to go back. Go in Netscape and History in IE show you a list of sites you have recently visited. Using them may be faster than clicking BACK several times.
You will need to highlight and delete the text in that box before you can type in a new URL. A URL is the Internet address of a specific document. Want more help or instruction? To learn to search for documents using search engines and subject directories, please consult our Online Tutorial's Recommended Strategy for Finding Information on the Web , or start from the Library's convenient Search the Internet page.
You can also attend a free class on these topics. Click the mouse in the arrows at the ends of the scrollbars on the right or bottom side of the document to move through the document. You may hold the right mouse button down on the pad in the scroll bars and drag it to move the document as well. The space bar key will also take you down through the document, and the backspace key will bring you back up.
PageUp and PageDown keys or the arrow keys also let you move. A dialog box will appear. Follow instructions in the table below for each browser:. IE and Netscape handle images very differently when you save a document. Click on File from the Menu Bar, then Open Select your file from the menu that displays, scrolling down if necessary. Click OK. Printing is available a most of the Library's computers.
Procedures vary slightly for each of the these browsers:. Click File in the Menu Bar, then Print. Select desired options. You can change the size of the type in the display in the Library's public computers, but not the font face, colors, or other appearance factors.
Instructions below for changing the font face and document appearance should work on your own computer. Select an option. Changing display font size also changes font in printing in IE. IE works better than Netscape for some fonts. Click on View from the Menu Bar, then Encoding. If you do not see the character set you want, click More Copyright C by the Regents of the University of California.
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