Overall, the Netscape 8 interface is clean and pleasantly efficient. Across the top are four main buttons: Back, Forward, Stop/Refresh, and Home. A search box is prominent along the top as well, and you can customize your search engine choice (however, at press time, Google was still the only option available). Adjacent to the address box are four more buttons: Popup Blocker, Passcard, Clear Cache, and Print. We were happy to see that Popup Blocker and Clear Cache are high-level buttons. Within IE, you must dig down through several menus to change these settings. Passcard is Netscape's version of a form filler. Form fillers are a convenient way to store password and other personal information specific to a Web site, making return visits as easy as the click of a button.
Below the top row are five buttons and a pull-down menu to toggle to different toolbars. Some are preset upon loading Netscape, but most toolbars are empty, allowing you to create one for your music interests and another for news, for example. We like the live features on the default toolbar, which includes current weather conditions and live international newsfeeds from Netscape.

Along the left side is the sidebar. Here you can access your AOL AIM Buddy List to initiate IM chats, perform a Web search, choose a favorite bookmark, or get driving instructions from AOL-owned MapQuest.
Netscape 8 is based on Mozilla.org's successful and mostly secure Firefox browser, but Netscape's inclusion of the Internet Explorer engine code as well makes it highly versatile and capable of rendering pages filled with code optimized for Internet Explorer. Netscape switches between Firefox and Internet Explorer automatically, eliminating the hassle of having to figure out which engine is best for which Web site. Whenever Netscape does use Internet Explorer, it uses an internal white list of sites certified by TrustE as safe. There's also an internal blacklist of sites known to be used for dispensing spyware or viruses or for being involved in phishing scams; those sites are blocked by default. If you feel that the browser is in error, you can still visit the site, but Netscape disables cookie and JavaScript functionality so that your desktop remains safe from malicious code.

Sites not white- or black-listed will render with the default Firefox engine. Should you want to change any of the default decisions made by Netscape, simply right-click the green shield on the browser's tabbed header for the site in question. This opens the site's control panel, allowing you to override the browser engine used and micromanage the use of pop-ups, cookies, Java, JavaScript, and ActiveX for a given Web site. We like this much better than the silly security zones created by Microsoft for use in Internet Explorer; the functionality in Netscape is top level, so you don't have to dig through layers of menus just to turn off JavaScript.
Unfortunately, Netscape does not include an RSS feed reader. Rather, RSS feeds must be added manually to a toolbar of your choice. We would have preferred to have the RSS reader as part of the left-hand sidebar, as found in Apple Safari RSS or Opera.
Also, having access to multiple toolbars (up to 10) seems like a cool idea, but in practice, the access proves difficult to manage. Most people will have use for only 1 or 2 toolbars. The rest are overkill for all but the most advanced Netscape users.
Check out our slide show of Netscape 8 to learn more about its new features.
Product Specifications:
Distribution Media:
Download
OS Required:
Microsoft Windows
Product Basic Spec:
Distribution media:
Download
Min hard drive space:
29.5 MB