![]() Critics hailed IBM’s browser, but its exclusive availability on a less-dominant OS limited its reach and influence. ![]() IBM broke into the Web browser field relatively early with the Mosaic-based WebExplorer, designed for the company’s OS/2 Warp 3 operating system. (click on thumbnail to see the full sized picture) IBM WebExplorer (1994) ![]() NCSA Mosaic brought the WWW to the general public’s attention, thanks to its ease of use, its presence on Windows and Macintosh platforms (Unix XWindows version shown here), and its ability to display images inline with text. (click on thumbnail to see the full sized picture) NCSA Mosaic 1.0 (1993) Lynx continued the trend in 1993, and soon became the most popular text-only browser. Bruce, developed it so that lawyers could have access to legal information available only in hypertext at the time.ĬERN created the world’s second Web browser–the text-only “Line Mode Browser”–in 1990 so that the Web would be accessible across all platforms via Telnet. Viola(click on thumbnail to see the full sized picture)Ĭello was the first Web browser for Microsoft Windows (version 3.1, in fact). (click on thumbnail to see the full sized picture) The browser was a primitive affair with no graphics, but users could edit Web pages from within the browser itself. ![]() The earliest versions ran only on NeXTSTEP, an advanced graphical OS designed for Steve Jobs’s NeXT computers. ![]() Here it is: the world’s first Web browser. ![]()
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