This article is about the browser produced by NCSA. For the browser that was later renamed, see 
Netscape Navigator.
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| Early research and development: Merging the networks and creating the Internet: Commercialization, privatization, broader access leads to the modern Internet: Examples of Internet services: 1989 (1989): AOL dial-up service provider, email, instant messaging, and web browser1990 (1990): IMDb Internet movie database1994 (1994): Yahoo! web directory1995 (1995): Amazon online retailer1995 (1995): eBay online auction and shopping1995 (1995): Craigslist classified advertisements1995 (1995): AltaVista search engine1996 (1996): Outlook (formerly Hotmail) free web-based e-mail1996 (1996): RankDex search engine1997 (1997): Google Search1997 (1997): Babel Fish automatic translation1998 (1998): Yahoo Groups (formerly Yahoo! Clubs)1998 (1998): PayPal Internet payment system1998 (1998): Rotten Tomatoes review aggregator1999 (1999): 2ch Anonymous textboard1999 (1999): i-mode mobile internet service1999 (1999): Napster peer-to-peer file sharing2000 (2000): Baidu search engine2001 (2001): 2chan Anonymous imageboard2001 (2001): BitTorrent peer-to-peer file sharing2001 (2001): Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia2003 (2003): LinkedIn business networking2003 (2003): Myspace social networking site2003 (2003): Skype Internet voice calls2003 (2003): iTunes Store2003 (2003): 4chan Anonymous imageboard2003 (2003): The Pirate Bay, torrent file host2004 (2004): Facebook social networking site2004 (2004): Podcast media file series2004 (2004): Flickr image hosting2005 (2005): YouTube video sharing2005 (2005): Reddit link voting2005 (2005): Google Earth virtual globe2006 (2006): Twitter microblogging2007 (2007): WikiLeaks anonymous news and information leaks2007 (2007): Google Street View2007 (2007): Kindle, e-reader and virtual bookshop2008 (2008): Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2)2008 (2008): Dropbox cloud-based file hosting2008 (2008): Encyclopedia of Life, a collaborative encyclopedia intended to document all living species2008 (2008): Spotify, a DRM-based music streaming service2009 (2009): Bing search engine2009 (2009): Google Docs, Web-based word processor, spreadsheet, presentation, form, and data storage service2009 (2009): Kickstarter, a threshold pledge system2009 (2009): Bitcoin, a digital currency2010 (2010): Instagram, photo sharing and social networking2011 (2011): Google+, social networking2011 (2011): Snapchat, photo sharing2012 (2012): Coursera, massive open online courses2016 (2016): TikTok, video sharing and social networking
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NCSA Mosaic is a discontinued web browser. It was instrumental in popularizing the World Wide Web and the general Internet during the 1990s by integrating multimedia such as text and graphics. Although not the first web browser (preceded by WorldWideWeb, Erwise, and ViolaWWW), it was the first browser to display images inline with text instead of a separate window.
It supported various Internet protocols such as HTTP, FTP, NNTP, and Gopher. Its interface, reliability, personal computer support, and simple installation contributed to Mosaic's initial popularity.
Mosaic was developed at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign beginning in late 1992, released in January 1993, with official development and support until January 1997. Mosaic lost market share to Netscape Navigator in late 1994, and had only a tiny fraction of users left by 1997, when the project was discontinued. Microsoft licensed one of the derivative commercial products, Spyglass Mosaic, to create Internet Explorer in 1995.