


The browser was finally named Netscape Navigator, and the company was renamed Netscape Communications Corporation. The NCSA threatened legal action at the new company for using the Mosaic brand for the browser and company. That company released its first browser, called Mosaic Netscape, in late 1994. Later that year, Mosaic's co-creator Marc Andreessen left NCSA and helped to found Mosaic Communications Corporation. However, even then the writing was on the wall for the web browser's shutdown. Starting in 1994, the US National Science Foundation started funding for further development of Mosaic. The NCSA's official Mosaic website states that by December 1993 "more than 5,000 copies of the browser were being downloaded a month and the center was receiving hundreds of thousands of email inquiries a week." Keep in mind this is an era where most homes could only connect to the internet with a 28.8k phone modem. All you needed to access the internet was an ISP and Mosaic installed. The need for a closed internet service like AOL, Compuserve, Prodigy, and the other online services that popped up in the 1980s started to slowly go away.
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While originally launched for Unix systems, Mosaic versions were released later in 1993 for Windows and Macintosh. The now familiar buttons for going back or forward through sites, or refreshing a page, were in place with Mosaic. It had a user interface design that was easy to understand. Mosaic also let users click on hyperlinks to go to other pages or sites, instead of manually typing a URL address. It made looking at websites like you were reading a magazine page. Unlike earlier web browsers, which showed text and images in separate windows, Mosaic's biggest innovation was that it was capable of showing both text and images in the same window. The browser was first developed by Marc Andreessen and Eric Bina when they were graduate students at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Later other browsers like Viola and Cello were launched.

That honor belongs to WorldWideWeb, which was launched a few years before in 1990 by developer Tim Berners-Lee when he worked at CERN. Let's get this part out of the way: Mosaic was not the first web browser ever released. After a preliminary release in January 1993, version 1.0 of Mosaic was launched 30 years ago this month, on April 22, 1993. However, it definitely can be said that the release of the Mosaic web browser did just that. It's sometimes difficult to label a product or service that truly changed the world after it was released.
