Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Yahoo! Site Explorer (YSE) was a Yahoo! service which allowed users to view information on websites in Yahoo!'s search index. The service was closed on November 21, 2011 and merged with Bing Webmaster Tools , a tool similar to Google Search Console (previously Google Webmaster Tools) . [ 1 ]
The Yahoo! Toolbar has a well-known and dark history of being bundled with other software. The toolbar often installs itself without the user's knowledge or consent. Yahoo! is known for paying developers to place the toolbar into programs in such a way that inexperienced users may unwillingly install it.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Yahoo Widgets is a discontinued free application platform for Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows, specifically Windows XP, Vista and Windows 7. The software was previously called Konfabulator , but after being acquired by computer services company Yahoo on July 25, 2005, it was rebranded.
Yahoo! Messenger (sometimes abbreviated Y!M) was an instant messaging client and associated protocol created and formerly operated by Yahoo!.Yahoo! Messenger was provided free of charge and could be downloaded and used with a generic "Yahoo ID", which also allowed access to other Yahoo! services, such as Yahoo!
The first general purpose SSB is believed to be Bubbles [2] which launched late 2005 on the Windows platform and later coined the term "Site Specific Extensions" for SSB userscripts and introduced the SSB Javascript API. On 2 September 2008, the Google Chrome web browser was released for Windows.
GeoCities, later Yahoo!GeoCities, was a web hosting service that allowed users to create and publish websites for free and to browse user-created websites by their theme or interest, active from 1994 to 2009.
This meant that a legacy extension could read or modify the data used by another extension or any file accessible to the user running Mozilla applications. [15] But the current WebExtensions API imposes security restrictions. [16] Starting with Firefox 40, Mozilla began to roll out a requirement for extension signing. [17]