![]() ![]() A list of home pages of early Netscape programmers can be found linked on the Netscape About page.( Here under the name “”, and here under the name “mosaic.2.1.ps” for Revision 2.1 from 8 May.) Andreessen, Marc NCSA Mosaic Technical Summary National Center for Supercomputing Applications February 20, 1993.The following references provide more information: The NCSA stopped developing Mosaic in January 1997, since Netscape and Microsoft began to bring large development teams to bear on development of their own browsers. Spyglass subsequently licensed their technology to several other companies, including Microsoft for use in Internet Explorer. In August, 1994, NCSA assigned all commercial rights to Mosaic to Spyglass, Inc. Mosaic quickly became the most popular web browser, helping accelerate the growth in web use and availability even more. Mosaic was created during a four-month period in late 1992 and early 1993 by Marc. Innovations with the use of bookmarks and history files were added. Web browsers: Mosaic, Netscape, Lynx, Microsofts Internet Explorer. ![]() An early version introduced forms of support, enabling many powerful new uses and applications. Mosaic built on Berners-Lee’s server, and provided support for graphics, sound, and video clips, maximizing the capabilities of the DSL-based connections of the time. One of the NCSA’s missions is to aid scientific research by producing non-commercial software, giving Hardin and Thompson a ready-made vehicle to set up a funded project to develop Mosaic as a free, publicly available browser, managed by Hardin, and with Andreessen as the software lead. Andreessen provided excellent customer support, monitoring the newsgroups continuously to ensure that they knew about and could fix any bugs and make desired enhancements.Ī version of Mosaic for the Macintosh was developed by Aleks Totic and released a few months later, making Mosaic the first browser with cross-platform support. His release message was forwarded to the newsgroups by Berners-Lee six days later, seeding subsequent redistribution and wider awareness. When they heard about Tim Berners-Lee’s work, they downloaded the ViolaTwo students from the group, Marc Andreessen and Eric Bina, began work on a browser version for X-Windows on Unix computers, first released as version 0.5 on January 23, 1993. In 1992, Joseph Hardin and Dave Thompson worked at the NCSA (National Center for Supercomputer Applications), a research institute at the University of Illinois. Marc Andreessen and his team invented Mosaic ( original NCSA page), the first popular Web browser, which greatly helped spread use and knowledge of the web across the world. – Marc Andreessen, NCSA Mosaic Technical Summary, Feb 20, 1993. For more information on the NCSA Mosaic project in general, please feel free to contact the author. For information, please contact the author. NCSA Mosaic is free for internal use by commercial organizations, and is also available for licensing by commercial organizations for modification and/or distribution. ![]()
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