About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 68. Chapters: Netscape Navigator, Mosaic, K-Meleon, Galeon, Cello, Lynx, Beonex Communicator, W3m, IBrowse, ICab, Netscape Communicator, Squid, Firefox, Arena, Internet Explorer 5, TkWWW, Firefox 3, Internet Explorer 4, Internet Explorer 3, SeaMonkey, Line Mode Browser, Internet Explorer for Mac, Firefox 3.5, Mozilla Application Suite, Songbird, Netscape Browser, Firefox 3.6, Flock, Camino, Netscape Navigator 9, Agora, Internet Explorer 2, Classilla, Epiphany, Firefox 2, Amaya, Minimo, Firefox for mobile, Arachne, OmniWeb, SlipKnot, XeroBank Browser, Argo, ELinks, Conkeror, Internet Explorer 1, Minnesota Internet Users Essential Tool, VMS Mosaic, Sleipnir, Cyberjack, Mothra, Gnuzilla, Kazehakase, AT&T Pogo, Mosaic-CK. Excerpt: Mozilla Firefox is a free and open source web browser descended from the Mozilla Application Suite and managed by Mozilla Corporation. As of August 2011, Firefox is the second most widely used browser, with approximately 30% of worldwide usage share of web browsers. The browser has had particular success in Germany and Poland, where it is the most popular browser with 55% usage and 47% respectively. To display web pages, Firefox uses the Gecko layout engine, which implements most current web standards in addition to several features that are intended to anticipate likely additions to the standards. The latest Firefox features include tabbed browsing, spell checking, incremental find, live bookmarking, a download manager, private browsing, location-aware browsing (also known as "geolocation") based exclusively on a Google service and an integrated search system that uses Google by default in most localizations. Functions can be added through extensions, created by third-party developers, of which there is a wide selection, a feature that has attracted many of Firefox's users. Firefox runs on various operatin...