Mosaic Communications Corporation in NCSA Mosaic 1.0 in 1993
On April 22, 1993, students Marc Andreessen and Eric Bina from the University of Illinois programmed one of the first web browsers with a graphical interface. Mosaic 1.0 (full name NCSA Mosaic) worked on multiple platforms including Windows and was available for free, thanks to which it gained worldwide popularity among the general public shortly after being launched. Its development officially ended on January 7, 1997.
https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/old-software/web-browsers/ncsa-mosaic-1-0
Twitter: https://twitter.com/WebDesignMuseum
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/webdesignmuseum
Other Videos By Web Design Museum
2020-02-23 | Microsoft FrontPage 97 in 1996 |
2020-02-21 | CreateLabs flash intro in 2001 |
2020-02-19 | Windows 95 website in 1996 in Internet Explorer 2.0 |
2020-02-17 | The White House website in 1995 in Netscape Navigator 2.01 |
2020-02-13 | Nokia website in 1996 in Netscape Navigator 2.01 |
2020-02-11 | Netscape Communicator 4.01 in 1997 |
2020-02-09 | Internet Explorer 4.0 in 1997 |
2020-02-07 | Saul Bass flash website in 1998 |
2020-02-04 | Interview with interactive designer Brendan Dawes in 2000 |
2020-02-03 | Shaman King flash website 2005 |
2020-02-02 | Mosaic Communications Corporation in NCSA Mosaic 1.0 in 1993 |
2020-01-30 | Jubes flash website in 2004 |
2020-01-28 | Sundown flash website in 2006 |
2020-01-24 | Acidtwist flash website in 2004 |
2020-01-23 | Tishara flash website in 2004 |
2020-01-21 | Lori Ann Music flash website in 2004 |
2020-01-20 | Internet Explorer 3.0 in 1996 |
2020-01-19 | Jeep Trail flash website in 2004 |
2020-01-15 | Also flash website in 2004 |
2020-01-13 | Web Design: The Next Generation CD-ROM in 1998 |
2020-01-12 | Internet Explorer 2.0 in 1995 |
Other Statistics
Mosaic Statistics For Web Design Museum
Web Design Museum presently has 3,605 views for Mosaic across 1 video, with his channel publishing less than an hour of Mosaic content. This makes up less than 0.21% of the total overall content on Web Design Museum's YouTube channel.