Web browser
The program that serves as your front end to the Web on the Internet. In order to view a site, you type its address (URL) into the browser's Location field; for example, www.computerlanguage.com, and the home page of that site is downloaded to you. The home page is an index to other pages on that site that you can jump to by clicking an underlined hyperlink or an icon. Links on that site may take you to other related sites.
Bookmarks
Browsers have a Bookmark or Favorites feature that lets you store references to your favorite sites. Instead of having to type in the URL to visit the site again, you select the bookmark.
It Started with Mosaic
The Mosaic browser put the Web on the map in 1993, but by the mid-1990s, Netscape Navigator (commonly called "Netscape") had 80% of the market. Vying for top spot, Netscape and Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE) constantly added new features and functions that fragmented Web sites into competing camps.
Best Viewed By...
In the early days of the Web, there was a feature battle, and sites would often say "best viewed by Netscape" or "best viewed by Internet Explorer." This notice is rarely seen today as all browsers support standards that render most Web pages the same. See Mosaic, Opera, Firefox, Mozilla, Safari, Google Chrome, Maxthon, hyperlink, World Wide Web, HTML and microbrowser.
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