Image of the first day of web browsers 199x
Today, Tipsmake will provide the look and feel of the early days of early websites!
MacWWW (Samba)
MacWWW aka Samba, is the first Mac web browser, released in 1993. It is also a text-based web browser. The downside of the MacWWW browser is… clutter. Today, it is probably the most obscure web browser of all the early browsers.
Lynx
The first web browsers, such as Lynx, were text-based web browsers, without a graphical user interface. Compared to today's modern web browsers, it looks very rudimentary, but was great between 1991 and 1993. Unlike most early browsers, Lynx - launched in 1992 - still exists. To this day, Unix and Linux shell users still use it.
Viola
Viola was the first graphical web browser, created in 1991. Heavily influenced by Apple HyperCard, this Unix X Windows System browser was invented by Pei-Yuan Wei, a computer science student who was a computer science student. Taiwan. Pei-Yuan Wei works on hyperlinks and the Internet. Had Wei been a little faster, he could have become the inventor of the World Wide Web.
Mosaic
Mosaic was the first popular web browser. It was available on Unix in 1993, but soon appeared on Mac and Windows PC. Mosaic defines the look and feel of today's web browsers. Both Firefox and Internet Explorer can trace their origins to Mosaic's native code.
Cello
In 1993, people outside the scientific community learned about the web and wanted to use it from a Windows PC instead of a Unix workstation. So Tom Bruce developed the first web browser specifically for Windows: Cello. Bruce both created the website and built the Legal Information Institute, the first legal information site on the web.
Spry "Internet in a Box"
Internet company Spry teamed up with O'Reilly & Associates to create the first commercial Internet software package. The browser itself, also known as AirMosaic, is often bundled with Windows Internet and networking software - sold in bundles as Internet in a Box (IBox).
Spyglass: Forerunner of Internet Explorer
Eric Sink led the project on Spyglass Mosaic (1994). Sink shared that although "we license the technology and trademarks from the NCSA (of the University of Illinois)…we have never used any code". Microsoft discovered Spyglass and decided to combine the code. its with Internet Explorer.
Internet Explorer 1.0
Do you think Internet Explorer 1.0 looks a lot like Mosaic? It is actually a version of Mosaic, which has been customized for Windows by the Spyglass company. As you can see, when he started building the web, Bill Gates didn't think it would be worth that much. Until 1995, he realized the error in his way and brought IE to Windows 95.
Netscape
Mosaic's inventors went on to produce their own commercial web browser, called Netscape. It was released in 1994. In its early years, Netscape was the dominant web browser in the world. However, Microsoft forced the company to go out of business in the late 90s. Although Microsoft was eventually found guilty of anti-trust behavior, it was too late to put Netscape back in place. there. However, its code became the seed that gave birth to Mozilla and the Firefox browser.
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