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San Francisco - RockMelt, a new Web browser that highlights social networking, launched on Monday with backing from the co-founder of browsing pioneer Netscape. RockMelt, which launched in beta, or ...
RockMelt has uncanny parallels wih Flock, an earlier attempt at injecting social features directly into a Web browser. It debuted in 2005 and was originally based on the same open-source Mozilla ...
California-based Rockmelt was founded in 2010. Its web browser incorporates social media features such as Facebook chat, Twitter notifications and widgetised areas for other content providers such ...
California-based Rockmelt was founded in 2010. Its web browser incorporates social media features such as Facebook chat, Twitter notifications and widgetised areas for other content providers such ...
For many of you, Rockmelt has become a daily habit and for that we’re eternally grateful… so we’ve kept all your valuables safe. In each of our products, you’ll find a tile to click on ...
Rockmelt started by offering a web browser that was heavily integrated with Facebook and other social networking sites, but then the company pivoted to Flipboard-like social reader. Since it was ...
RockMelt's Web browser, which was launched in 2010, integrated social networking features directly within the browser, allowing users to send Facebook messages and browse Twitter postings.
Rockmelt soon found out that it was not a good idea. Like the other social media browser Flock, it failed to unseat your default browser with all its whiz-bang social features.
Yahoo today acquired Rockmelt, a company that tried to compete with Google, Microsoft and Mozilla in the cut-throat browser market, but failed. According to the Wall Street Journal‘s AllThingsD ...
Rockmelt, Free Rockemelt—known as the “social” news browser—is now available on Android. The app has long since been a favorite of both desktop and iOS users.
Rockmelt discovered that old habits die hard, and that’s especially true in the browser space. So it’s launching a new website touted as the next generation in Web navigation.
RockMelt made a bit of a splash a few months back when it launched a tablet version. The new version (available on iTunes, but only for iOS 6 and later) is much the same, but it has been scaled ...