About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 59. Chapters: Netscape Navigator, Mosaic, Galeon, Cello, Beonex Communicator, AWeb, Voyager, MidasWWW, IBrowse, Cyberdog, Netscape Communicator, Arena, Internet Explorer 5, TkWWW, Prodigy, UdiWWW, Internet Explorer 4, Internet Explorer 3, Internet Explorer for Mac, Mozilla Application Suite, Netscape Browser, Internet Explorer for UNIX, Netscape Navigator 9, Agora, Internet Explorer 2, ViolaWWW, WorldWideWeb, IBM WebExplorer, AmiZilla, Minimo, Arachne, SlipKnot, ViOS, Erwise, IBM Home Page Reader, MacWWW, NetCaptor, AMosaic, Argo, Netscape 6, HotJava, NetPositive, Internet Explorer 1, MediaBrowser, Minnesota Internet Users Essential Tool, Cyberjack, AirMosaic, AOL OpenRide, MacWeb, Mothra, Gnuzilla, Odysseys, Ghostzilla, Fresco, AMSD Ariadna, AT&T Pogo, NeoPlanet, Oregano, MSN for Mac OS X, ALynx, Oracle PowerBrowser, WebRouser. Excerpt: Cello was an early shareware 16-bit multipurpose web browser for Windows 3.1 developed by Thomas R. Bruce of the Legal Information Institute at Cornell Law School. It was the first web browser for Microsoft Windows, and thus was among the first free winsock browsers. It was reported that it worked without any problems on Windows NT 3.5 and with small modifications on OS/2. Cello was created because, at the time, lawyers used Microsoft Windows on their computers, but the web browsers available at the time were mostly for Unix operating systems. This meant many legal experts were unable to access legal information made available in hypertext on the World Wide Web. Cello was popular during 1993/1994, but fell out of favor following the release of Mosaic and Netscape, during which development was abandoned. Cello was first publicly released on June 8, 1993. Although a version 2.0 had been announced, development was abandoned prior to a public release leaving version 1.01a, released on April 16, 1994, ...