Spyglass: A web browsing pioneer’s IPO

Spyglass: A web browsing pioneer’s IPO

Quick: Who was the first browser manufacturer to hold an IPO in the dotcom era? Netscape? WRONG! Its competitor Spyglass beat it out, holding its IPO June 27, 1995. Its IPO did rather well too, issuing two million shares at a cost of $17 per share and raising $28.5 million. A week later, it was trading for $28.25 per share.

The same week Spyglass went public, Netscape filed plans with the SEC for its own IPO.

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VA Linux’s transformation after leaving the hardware business

VA Linux’s transformation after leaving the hardware business

In the wake of the dotcom bubble bursting, the record-setting startup VA Linux made a difficult decision. On June 26, 2001, it exited the hardware business. It was a curious decision but probably the right decision, because it survived nearly 14 more years as an independent company before being acquired by Gamestop.

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Windows 98 shipped June 25, 1998

Windows 98 shipped June 25, 1998

It was late and it was overhyped. But it was better than Windows 95. On June 25, 1998, Microsoft shipped Windows 98, and while it didn’t get the fanfare Windows 95 did, it was better than Windows 95. And if you want a retro PC box today, you’re usually better off running Windows 98 or, better yet, 98SE on it than Windows 95.

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What went wrong with 3DO

What went wrong with 3DO

3DO sounded like a great premise. Several great minds came together to design a game console that they could license to any consumer electronics manufacturer who wanted to make it. It could have been the VHS or the IBM PC clone of the video game console market. But it didn’t catch on and 3DO exited the game console market June 24, 1997.

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AMD Athlon: AMD’s game changing CPU from 1999

AMD Athlon: AMD’s game changing CPU from 1999

On June 23, 1999, AMD announced its much anticipated Athlon CPU, the successor to its very successful K6. It launched less than two months later, on August 9, 1999. The Athlon proved to be the CPU that separated AMD from all of the other x86 CPU manufacturers who fell by the wayside. It was the first non-Intel x86 CPU that outperformed Intel’s fastest CPU at the time.

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Jay Miner, Atari and Amiga computer designer

Jay Miner, Atari and Amiga computer designer

I’m just going to put this out there. Jay Miner is my hero. He designed the Atari 2600 game console, the Atari 8-bit computers, and the Amiga computer. But he made contributions to humanity outside of that, working on medical devices when he wasn’t making the greatest computers of whatever decade he was working in. He did this in spite of not being able to invent something to save himself, and he died much too soon, aged 62, on June 20, 1994.

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Windows ME released June 19, 2000

Windows ME released June 19, 2000

Windows Millenium Edition, or Windows Me or Windows ME, was released June 19, 2000. It was the successor to Windows 98 SE and Microsoft’s least successful operating system since the late 1980s. It was Microsoft’s last operating system based on MS-DOS.

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How a Microsoft product from June 1979 led to the IBM PC

How a Microsoft product from June 1979 led to the IBM PC

June 1979 is a significant month in history for Microsoft for two reasons. That month, they crossed the threshold of having installed base of 200,000 on its flagship 8080 Basic. And on June 18, 1979, Microsoft released a version of Basic for a new CPU called the Intel 8086. They had no way of knowing how significant the 8086 product would become.

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GIF’s June 1987 debut

GIF’s June 1987 debut

On June 16, 1987, the GIF file format made its debut. That’s right, GIF predates the modern Internet. The first web browsers supported GIF because it was already very popular in the early 1990s and well supported.

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The failed 3Com and US Robotics merger

The failed 3Com and US Robotics merger

On June 12, 1997, 3Com and US Robotics merged at a cost of $8.5 billion. At the time, it was the merger of the two biggest names in their respective fields, and it seemed poised to become a telecommunications giant. Instead, it ended up being the beginning of the end for one storied brand and the beginning of a sharp decline for the other. In this blog post, we will look at what went wrong. Read more