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Mosaic, the First HTML Browser That Could Display Images Alongside Text, Turns 25 (wired.com)

NCSA Mosaic 1.0, the first web browser to achieve popularity among the general public, was released on April 22, 1993. It was developed by a team of students at the University of Illinois' National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), and had the ability to display text and images inline, meaning you could put pictures and text on the same page together, in the same window. Wired reports: It was a radical step forward for the web, which was at that point, a rather dull experience. It took the boring "document" layout of your standard web page and transformed it into something much more visually exciting, like a magazine. And, wow, it was easy. If you wanted to go somewhere, you just clicked. Links were blue and underlined, easy to pick out. You could follow your own virtual trail of breadcrumbs backwards by clicking the big button up there in the corner. At the time of its release, NCSA Mosaic was free software, but it was available only on Unix. That made it common at universities and institutions, but not on Windows desktops in people's homes.

The NCSA team put out Windows and Mac versions in late 1993. They were also released under a noncommercial software license, meaning people at home could download it for free. The installer was very simple, making it easy for just about anyone to get up and running on the web. It was then that the excitement really began to spread. Mosaic made the web come to life with color and images, something that, for many people, finally provided the online experience they were missing. It made the web a pleasure to use.

3 of 132 comments (clear)

  1. First HTML Browser That Could Display Images? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2, Informative

    You mean something like WorldWideWeb

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    Ezekiel 23:20
    1. Re:First HTML Browser That Could Display Images? by The+Evil+Atheist · · Score: 1, Informative
      You need to read better. The title says "Display Images Alongside Text".

      Following your own link: https://www.w3.org/People/Bern...

      The inline images such as the world/book icon and the CERN icon, would have been displayed in separate windows, as it didn't at first do inline images.

      --
      Those who do not learn from commit history are doomed to regress it.
  2. Marc Andreessen by tomhath · · Score: 4, Informative

    Shortly after Mosaic was released, Andreessen made a copy of the source code, moved to San Francisco and repackaged it as Netscape Navigator. That was one of the most profitable copies of code anyone ever made.