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Joseph Hardin, the director of the NCSA group within which Mosaic was developed, said downloads were up to 50,000 a month in mid-1994. [34] In November 1992, there were twenty-six websites in the world [35] and each one attracted attention. In its release year of 1993, Mosaic had a What's New page, and about one new link was being added per day.
AirMosaic was an early commercial web browser based on the NCSA Mosaic browser. [2]The browser won Datamation's Best Product of the Year award for 1994. [3]The AirMosaic browser was available as part of several packages: the AIR Series, [citation needed] Internet in a Box [2] [4] and Mosaic In A Box, [citation needed] and separately. [4]
AMosaic was a port to the Amiga of the Mosaic web browser, developed beginning in 1993, [1] and was the first graphical web browser for the Amiga. AMosaic was based on NCSA's Mosaic, but was not distributed by the University of Illinois or NCSA.
Netscape Navigator was the name of Netscape's web browser from versions 1.0 through 4.8. The first version of the browser was released in 1994, known as Mosaic and then Mosaic Netscape until a legal challenge from the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (makers of NCSA Mosaic, which many of Netscape's founders had spent time developing) which led to the name change to Netscape ...
Spyglass' Mosaic code became the basis for Internet Explorer, which was released as an add-on to Windows 95 in the Microsoft Plus! software package. [ 7 ] Microsoft and Spyglass reached an updated agreement in 1997, following a dispute over Microsoft only paying the minimum amount required for each quarterly royalty. [ 10 ]
NCSA is one of the five original centers in the National Science Foundation's Supercomputer Centers Program. [1] The idea for NCSA and the four other supercomputer centers arose from the frustration of its founder, Larry Smarr, who wrote an influential paper, "The Supercomputer Famine in American Universities", in 1982, after having to travel to Europe in summertime to access supercomputers ...
Marc Lowell Andreessen (/ænˈdriːsən/ AN-dree-sen; born July 9, 1971) is an American businessman and former software engineer.He is the co-author of Mosaic, the first widely used web browser with a graphical user interface; co-founder of Netscape; and co-founder and general partner of Silicon Valley venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz.
NCSA Common log format, a file format for log files produced by web server software; NCSA HTTPd, a web server that introduced the Common Gateway Interface; NCSA Mosaic, an early web browser instrumental to the popularization of the World Wide Web; NCSA Telnet, a software implementation of the Telnet protocol