Five Years Ago: Spyglass Wants Web-able Petrol Pumps, Copiers
News Web browser pioneer Spyglass is moving into the UK as it ramps efforts to make Web access ubiquitous on televisions, telephones and myriad other devices. Despite being a key early developer of Web access software with the Mosaic browser, Illinois...
[January 14, 2002, 6:01]
Spyglass Merger Speeds Net Devices
News Interactive television software pioneer OpenTV will buy 10-year-old Spyglass, which helped develop the Web when it began distributing the Mosaic browser in 1994, for about $2.5bn (£1.6bn) in stock. For the last five years Spyglass has focused on...
[March 29, 2000, 13:41]
Spyglass Flaunts Web-device Customer List
News Spyglass today added some beef to its mission statement of putting the Web everywhere by publicising an impressive list of customers including IBM, NEC, WebTV Networks, Oracle, Thomson, Philips, Xerox, Geoworks and Worldgate.
[September 16, 1997, 16:07]
Spyglass Sets Up In UK, Wants Web-able Petrol Pumps, Copiers
News Web browser pioneer Spyglass is moving into the UK as it ramps efforts to make Web access ubiquitous on televisions, telephones and myriad other devices. Despite being a key early developer of Web access software with the Mosaic browser, Illinois...
[January 14, 1997, 14:32]
The Day Ahead: Web Pioneer Spyglass Dies Happy
News Spyglass closed Friday with a market capitalisation of roughly $1.2bn. OpenTV paid a hefty premium for Spyglass, the company that helped create the Web browser, in a stock deal valued at $2.5bn (£1.55bn).
[March 27, 2000, 13:09]
Sony To Use Spyglass Software In Set-tops
News Spyglass Inc.said Tuesday it has inked a deal with Sony Corp.that calls for Sony to include Spyglass' Internet software in its information appliances. The products, which are likely to include advanced digital set-top boxes, will come bundled with...
[April 21, 1999, 6:12]
Q&A: Spyglass's Harris-Evans On Putting The Web Everywhere
News ZDNN spoke yesterday with David Harris-Evans, UK managing director of Spyglass, the company that developed the Mosaic Web browser and is now pushing its technology as a means of accessing the Web from a wide variety of devices including TVs...
[September 17, 1997, 17:14]
Pocket Browser Wars Magnified By Spyglass Return
News Spyglass will rejoin the browser battle with a new slimline version of Mosaic that vies with Microsoft's Pocket Internet Explorer and Netscape's Navio software. Palo Alto, California-based Spyglass's Prism technology strips down the HTML code from...
[December 3, 1996, 17:08]
Spyglass (2) - Sees Mosaic In Name-brand Devices
News Spyglass can be contacted by telephone on 01753-831956. "Netscape and Microsoft are focused on desktop devices with lots of memory and mass storage capabilities," Harris-Evans says. Our technology is as thin as possible at the client end and is...
[January 14, 1997, 14:40]
US Report: Motorola Plans Set-top Box
News The company is expected to announce Sept.a new consumer set-top box that uses Spyglass' Device Mosaic browser and MicroServer. The announcement will build on an agreement reached this week for Motorola to use Spyglass technology in a variety of...
[August 25, 1998, 6:37]
Science For Sales And Marketing
White Papers Sales force automation software solutions have opened a spyglass to the underlying activities of sales, but have not provided a framework for repeatable and dependable selling processes and workflow. The concept and approach of Impression Selling...
[December 22, 2005, 23:00]
Benefits Management Group, Inc., Automates Claims Processing, Trims Training Costs, Enables Remote Web Access
White Papers The company implemented SpyGlass from Beacon Technologies Group, IBM WebSphere Application Server - Express, IBM DB2 Universal Database Express Edition 8.2, Linux and AIX operating systems and the IBM eServer family.
[December 2, 2007, 23:00]
COM One Delivers Set-top Box
News It lets users toggle between TV and the Web thanks to the inclusion of a Spyglass HTML 3.2 Web browser. SurfTV Plus is based on Cyrix's MediaGX-133 processor and runs the QNX Unix variant. A smart card lets users store ID and preferences and the...
[December 3, 1997, 16:53]
Mozilla Hits Back At Browser Security Claim
Talkback Mozilla have developed their own Internet-related technology from the "ground up" while Microsoft's IE is derived from licensing of Spyglass Mosaic browser back in 1995 (see http://tinyurl.com/dwbux ).
[September 21, 2005, 10:01]
A Year Ago: COM One Delivers Set-top Box
News It lets users toggle between TV and the Web thanks to the inclusion of a Spyglass HTML 3.2 Web browser. French communications firm COM One today announced what will be one of one the first companies to deliver a set-top box in the UK.
[December 2, 1998, 6:42]
Internet Explorer 'most Influential' Tech Product
News Originally based on the little-known Spyglass Mosaic browser, its main competitor at the time was Netscape. The most influential technology product of the past 25 years is Microsoft's oft-derided web browser, Internet Explorer, according to a...
[July 31, 2007, 16:04]
The Week In Review
News The third company back is Spyglass, the developer of Mosaic. This was the week that Novell came back in from the cold with a tidy financial quarter. Several analysts who really should know better wrote off the Provo, Utah networking giant through a...
[December 6, 1996, 16:48]
War Of Words Greets Microsoft's UK Anti-Linux Campaign
Talkback They did it to the world on IE (Spyglass), and obviously haven't learned. Microsoft is afraid of Linux because they lost money on X-Box and MSN. Their server licenses will never go down in price, and their stability will never get better.
[January 30, 2004, 13:13]
Why Google Need Not Fear Microsoft
Talkback Spyglass had been given permission to sell "branding rights", the ability to change logos and configure preset shortcuts, but not the ability to significantly modify code or add proprietary extensions.
[February 10, 2004, 22:06]
Quotes Of The Week, Sept 15-19
News Spyglass's David Harris-Evan takes aim at the Three Egos. "We know why they were put in place but a lot of the reasoning is not applicable. There is no Cold War and the argument about drug traffickers is over - these people can get easy access to...
[September 19, 1997, 9:31]

