NCSA Mosaic explained

NCSA Mosaic
Developer:NCSA
Discontinued:yes
Released:0.5 / [1]
Programming Language:C[2]
Language:English
Genre:Web browser
License:Proprietary

NCSA Mosaic was among the first widely available web browsers, instrumental in popularizing the World Wide Web and the general Internet by integrating multimedia such as text and graphics.[3] [4] [5] Mosaic was the first browser to display images inline with text (instead of a separate window).[6]

Named for supporting multiple Internet protocols, including Hypertext Transfer Protocol, File Transfer Protocol, Network News Transfer Protocol, and Gopher,[7] its intuitive interface, reliability, personal computer support, and simple installation all contributed to Mosaic's initial popularity.[8] Mistakenly described as the first graphical web browser, it was preceded by WorldWideWeb, the lesser-known Erwise,[9] and ViolaWWW.

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,[10] with official development and support until January 1997.[11] Mosaic lost market share to Netscape Navigator in late 1994, [12] 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.

History

In December 1991, the High Performance Computing Act of 1991 was passed, which provided funding for new projects at the NCSA, where after trying ViolaWWW, David Thompson demonstrated it to the NCSA software design group.[13] This inspired Marc Andreessen and Eric Bina – two programmers working at NCSA – to create Mosaic. Andreessen and Bina began developing Mosaic in December 1992 for Unix's X Window System, calling it xmosaic.[14] Marc Andreessen announced the project's first release, the "alpha/beta version 0.5," on January 23, 1993.[15] Version 1.0 was released on April 21, 1993.[16] Ports to Microsoft Windows and Macintosh were released in September. A port of Mosaic to the Amiga was available by October 1993. NCSA Mosaic for Unix (X Window System) version 2.0 was released on November 10, 1993[17] and was notable for adding support for forms, thus enabling the creation of the first dynamic web pages. From 1994 to 1997, the National Science Foundation supported the further development of Mosaic.[18]

Marc Andreessen, the leader of the team that developed Mosaic, left NCSA and, with James H. Clark, one of the founders of Silicon Graphics, Inc. (SGI), and four other former students and staff of the University of Illinois, started Mosaic Communications Corporation. Mosaic Communications eventually became Netscape Communications Corporation, producing Netscape Navigator. Mosaic's popularity as a separate browser began to decrease after the 1994 release of Netscape Navigator, the relevance of which was noted in The HTML Sourcebook: The Complete Guide to HTML: "Netscape Communications has designed an all-new WWW browser Netscape, that has significant enhancements over the original Mosaic program."

In 1994, SCO released Global Access, a modified version of SCO's Open Desktop Unix, which became the first commercial product to incorporate Mosaic.[19] However, by 1998, the Mosaic user base had almost completely evaporated as users moved to other web browsers.

Licensing

The licensing terms for NCSA Mosaic were generous for a proprietary software program. In general, non-commercial use was free of charge for all versions (with certain limitations). Additionally, the X Window System/Unix version publicly provided source code (source code for the other versions was available after agreements were signed). Despite persistent rumors to the contrary, however, Mosaic was never released as open source software during its brief reign as a major browser; there were always constraints on permissible uses without payment.

, license holders included these:[20]

Features

Robert Reid notes that Andreessen's team hoped:

Mosaic is based on the libwww library[22] [23] [24] and thus supported a wide variety of Internet protocols included in the library: Archie, FTP, gopher, HTTP, NNTP, telnet, WAIS.

Mosaic is not the first web browser for Microsoft Windows; this is Thomas R. Bruce's little-known Cello. The Unix version of Mosaic was already famous before the Microsoft Windows, Amiga, and Mac versions were released. Other than displaying images embedded in the text (rather than in a separate window), Mosaic's original feature set is similar to the browsers on which it was modeled, such as ViolaWWW. But Mosaic was the first browser written and supported by a team of full-time programmers, was reliable and easy enough for novices to install, and the inline graphics proved immensely appealing. Mosaic is said to have made the Internet accessible to the ordinary person.

Mosaic was the first browser to explore the concept of collaborative annotation in 1993[25] but never passed the test state.[26]

Mosaic was the first browser that could submit forms to a server.[27] [28]

Impact

Mosaic led to the Internet boom of the 1990s. Other browsers existed during this period, such as Erwise, ViolaWWW, MidasWWW, and tkWWW, but did not have the same effect as Mosaic on public use of the Internet.[29]

In the October 1994 issue of Wired magazine, Gary Wolfe notes in the article titled "The (Second Phase of the) Revolution Has Begun: Don't look now, but Prodigy, AOL, and CompuServe are all suddenly obsolete – and Mosaic is well on its way to becoming the world's standard interface":

Reid also refers to Matthew K. Gray's website, Internet Statistics: Growth and Usage of the Web and the Internet, which indicates a dramatic leap in web use around the time of Mosaic's introduction.

David Hudson concurs with Reid:

Ultimately, web browsers such as Mosaic became the killer applications of the 1990s. Web browsers were the first to bring a graphical interface to search tools the Internet's burgeoning wealth of distributed information services. A mid-1994 guide lists Mosaic alongside the traditional, text-oriented information search tools of the time, Archie and Veronica, Gopher, and WAIS[30] but Mosaic quickly subsumed and displaced them all. Joseph Hardin, the director of the NCSA group within which Mosaic was developed, said downloads were up to 50,000 a month in mid-1994.[31]

In November 1992, there were twenty-six websites in the world[32] and each one attracted attention. In its release year of 1993, Mosaic had a What's New page, and about one new link was being added per day. This was a time when access to the Internet was expanding rapidly outside its previous domain of academia and large industrial research institutions. Yet it was the availability of Mosaic and Mosaic-derived graphical browsers themselves that drove the explosive growth of the Web to over 10,000 sites by August 1995 and millions by 1998.[33] Metcalfe expressed the pivotal role of Mosaic this way:

Legacy

Netscape Navigator was later developed by Netscape, which employed many of the original Mosaic authors; however, it intentionally shared no code with Mosaic. Netscape Navigator's code descendant is Mozilla Firefox.[34]

Spyglass, Inc. licensed the technology and trademarks from NCSA for producing its own web browser but never used any of the NCSA Mosaic source code.[35] Microsoft licensed Spyglass Mosaic in 1995 for US$2 million, modified it, and renamed it Internet Explorer. After a later auditing dispute, Microsoft paid Spyglass $8 million.[36] [37] The 1995 user guide The HTML Sourcebook: The Complete Guide to HTML, specifically states, in a section called Coming Attractions, that Internet Explorer "will be based on the Mosaic program".[38] Versions of Internet Explorer before version 7 stated "Based on NCSA Mosaic" in the About box. Internet Explorer 7 was audited by Microsoft to ensure that it contained no Spyglass Mosaic code,[39] and thus no longer credits Spyglass or Mosaic.

After NCSA stopped work on Mosaic, development of the NCSA Mosaic for the X Window System source code was continued by several independent groups. These independent development efforts include mMosaic (multicast Mosaic)[40] which ceased development in early 2004, and Mosaic-CK and VMS Mosaic.

VMS Mosaic, a version specifically targeting OpenVMS operating system, is one of the longest-lived efforts to maintain Mosaic. Using the VMS support already built-in in original version (Bjorn S. Nilsson ported Mosaic 1.2 to VMS in the summer of 1993),[41] developers incorporated a substantial part of the HTML engine from mMosaic, another defunct flavor of the browser.[42] As of the most recent version (4.2), released in 2007, VMS Mosaic supported HTML 4.0, OpenSSL, cookies, and various image formats including GIF, JPEG, PNG, BMP, TGA, TIFF and JPEG 2000 image formats.[43] The browser works on VAX, Alpha, and Itanium platforms.[44]

Another long-lived version, Mosaic-CK, developed by Cameron Kaiser, was last released (version 2.7ck9) on July 11, 2010; a maintenance release with minor compatibility fixes (version 2.7ck10) was released on January 9, 2015, followed by another one (2.7ck11) in October 2015.[45] The stated goal of the project is "Lynx with graphics" and runs on Mac OS X, Power MachTen, Linux and other compatible Unix-like OSs.

Release history

The X, Windows, and Mac versions of Mosaic all had separate development teams and code bases.

Key:
Internal BuildPre-releaseStable release

NCSA Mosaic for X

Seriesstyle=width:6.5em Versionstyle=width:6.9em Release dateNotes & FeaturesSupported Platforms
0.1Dec, 1992Browse plaintext and HTML documents, Gopher servers, anonymous FTP servers, and local files; HTTP/0.9
0.2Fixed fatal bug in 0.1
0.3Support for NCSA's DTM (broadcasts documents to real-time networked workgroup collaboration sessions)
0.4
0.5Jan 23, 1993Initial public release (as NCSA X Mosaic). Save/mail/print; History list; On-the-fly font selection; Hotlist
0.6Jan 31, 1993Different colors for visited links; Specify a start page
0.7Feb 11, 1993Links are now underlined; Able to mouse-select each character of text on a web page; Annotations; Program logo in top-right corner (predecessor to throbber)
0.8Feb 14, 1993
0.9Mar 4, 1993Audio annotations (SGI only); Product name changed to NCSA Mosaic for the X Window System
0.10Mar 14, 1993Introduced <IMG> tag: inlined images (GIF & XBM) in HTML documents; Find in page
0.11Mar 17, 1993
0.12Apr 5, 1993Support for <OL>, <TT>, <B>, <I>, <EM>, <STRONG>, <CODE>, <SAMP>, <KBD>, <VAR>
0.13Apr 12, 1993
1.0Apr 21, 1993
1.1-pre1May 31, 1993
1.1-pre2Jun 2, 1993
1.1Jun 4, 1993Image map support; Print/save to PostScript; Support for <CITE> and <BLOCKQUOTE>; Support for group annotation servers
1.2Jun 30, 1993Support for file://localhost/ scheme for accessing local files; Many bug fixes and under-hood improvements
2.0-pre0Jul 21, 1993Displays the URL when mouse hovers over a link; "Search Keyword" area removed from bottom (moved to menu dialog box)
2.0-pre1Aug 2, 1993
2.0-pre2Aug 10, 1993Reload button now also reloads images
2.0-pre3Sep 5, 1993Support for forms; Support for <BR>, <HR>, <STRIKE>; HTTP/1.0 compliant
2.0-pre4Sep 29, 1993Can stop page loading; <IMG ALIGN> attribute support
2.0-pre5Oct 10, 1993Form INPUT types of RADIO, PASSWORD, OPTION added; Program logo becomes a throbber (now animates during page loads)
2.0-pre6Oct 20, 1993
2.0-pre7Nov 2, 1993
2.0-pre8Nov 7, 1993New colorful spinning globe throbber
2.0Nov 10, 1993
2.1Dec 11, 1993
2.2Feb 9, 1994
2.3Apr 8, 1994
2.4Apr 11, 1994Fixes a major bug with forms introduced in 2.3; Last widely used release of NCSA Mosaic for X
2.5 alpha 1Sep 22, 1994Limited support for tables; Kiosk Mode; Nested Hotlists; Common Client Interface (CCI) API
2.5 beta 1Support for <SUP> and <SUB>
2.5 beta 2Oct 11, 1994Removed the word "Document" from the Title and URL fields
2.5 beta 3Dec 22, 1994Support for <U> (underline)
2.5 beta 4
2.5 beta 5Mar 4, 1995
2.5Mar 12, 1995
2.6 alpha 1Inline JPEGs; Can now enter URLs directly into the address bar and press return to load them; Support for mailto: links
2.6 alpha 2
2.6 beta 1Apr 6, 1995
2.6 beta 2May 20, 1995
2.6 beta 3
2.6Jul 6, 1995Official "final" release
2.7 beta 1Jul 27, 1995Inline PNGs; Support for SSL (MD5 & Kerberos 4/5); Security Icon in lower-left corner of window; Keepalive connections
2.7 beta 2Oct 19, 1995Document title moved to window Title Bar; Load progress bar in lower-right corner of window
2.7 beta 3Feb 26, 1996Background colors; Can enter URLs without http:// prefix; Detachable Toolbar; Contextual right-click menus; Support for border attribute for linked images; action=mailto support in forms; Splash screen; Customizable Throbber; New application icons
2.7 beta 4Mar 30, 1996Background Images; Cleaned up and colorized toolbar icons; User Agent spoofing
2.7 beta 5Jul 18, 1996Printing in Kiosk Mode
2.8 alpha 1Aug 20, 1996A complete re-write code named "Project: Hyperion": Supports HTML 3.2; Options for loose or strict HTML parsing; Style sheets
2.8 alpha 2Sep 10, 1996
2.8 alpha 3Nov 14, 1996

NCSA Mosaic for Windows

Seriesstyle=width:6.5em Versionstyle=min-width:7em Release dateNotes & Features
0.1aJun, 1993Support for inline GIFs; Support for .au sound files; Optional status bar to display hyperlink destinations; Customizable font selection
0.2aLocal file support; User-configurable Hotlist
0.3aSupport for inline XBMs; Option to set a start page; Support for AIFF sound files
0.4aSupport for <BR>, <B>, and <I>
0.5aSep 16, 1993Find in page; Image caching; Much faster scrolling; Hyperlinks to anchors within a document; Standard file dialog to open files on local disk; Drag and Drop local files into browser
0.6bSep 28, 1993Image map support; Support for <HR>; Scrolling via keys
0.7bOct 17,1993Document caching; HTTP/1.0 compliant
1.0Nov 11, 1993Can stop page loading; Images can now be aligned middle, top, or bottom; Better looking horizontal rules
2.0 alpha 1Jan 31, 1994Support for forms; Inlined image caching across pages
2.0 alpha 2Feb 28, 1994New Hotlist/Menu UI; DNS caching; Faster GIF decoding; Support for form INPUT type HIDDEN
2.0 alpha 3Apr 6, 1994Application is now 32-bit; Can now print documents; Viewing and saving document source; Support for <EM> and <STRONG>; Horizontal scrollbars for documents wider than the screen
2.0 alpha 4Apr 14, 1994
2.0 alpha 5Jun 24, 1994Can now enter URLs directly into the address bar and press return to load them; Colorized toolbar icons; XBM images decode 100 times faster
2.0 alpha 6Jul 27, 1994"Document Title:" bar removed (document title moved to window Title Bar), "Document URL:" caption shortened to just "URL:" for address bar; Smaller Throbber; Links are now underlined; Kiosk Mode; Speed improvements; Memory issue fixes
2.0 alpha 7Sep 7, 1994Throbber changes size relative to how many toolbars are shown; Mouse-over tooltips added
2.0 alpha 8Dec 20, 1994Support for tables; Support for <U>, <S>/<STRIKE>, <SUP>/<SUPER>, <SUB>; Support for transparent GIFs; No longer crashes when encountering bad HTML; Refined Throbber graphics (wires)
2.0 alpha 9Jan 25, 1995Cancel and Check buttons added next to address bar; Presentation mode; Right-click menu options; Support for mailto: links
2.0.0 beta 1Mar 13, 1995Inline JPEGs; Support for ALT information in IMG tags; Can now tab from one form field to another; Hotlist Manager; Splash screen; +/- keys to change font sizes;
2.0.0 beta 2Mar 23, 1995Support for multiple mailto:
2.0.0 beta 3Mar 28, 1995256 character URL limit fixed
2.0.0 beta 4Apr 6, 1995Global History; New HTML 3.0 tag attributes; URL bar is now also a list box
2.0.0 final betaJul 12, 1995Speed and printing improvements
2.0.0Oct 11, 1995Discrete Stop Button in toolbar; Collaborative Sessions; Advanced Hotlist Manager; Internal support for .wav sound files; Internal .au support removed; Printing improvements
2.1.0Mar 14, 1996Support for client-side image maps; Support for Kodak Photo CD (.pcd) image format
2.1.1Mar 25, 1996Fixed inline JPEGs not working with inline Kodak Photo CD images
3.0Jan 7, 1997Final Release

NCSA Mosaic for Macintosh

Seriesstyle=width:6.5em Versionstyle=min-width:7em Release dateNotes & Features
1.0Nov 10, 1993Background color is white by default (differing from X and Windows versions)
1.0.1Nov 29, 1993
1.0.2Dec 17, 1993
1.0.3Jan 27, 1994Fixed serious crashes; Improved speed
2.0 alpha 1Jun 10, 1994Support for forms and tables; Users can now enter URLs directly into the address bar and press return to load them (URL bar is hidden by default); Background color is now gray by default (like X and Windows versions); Support for <S>, <SUP>, <SUB>; Reload button; New Hotlist interface
2.0 alpha 2Jun 21, 1994
2.0 alpha 3Jul 12, 1994
2.0 alpha 6Jul 26, 1994
2.0 alpha 8Sep 16, 1994
2.0 alpha 17Nov 14, 1994
2.0 beta 1Mar 6, 1995Inline JPEGs; Support for mailto: links
2.0 beta 2
2.0 beta 3Mar 15, 1995
2.0 beta 4
2.0 beta 5Apr 6, 1995
2.0 beta 6HTML Parser is much faster; Throbber globe wires now display moving arrows and yellow ball proportional to percent of page loaded; Support for <CENTER>, <BIG>, <SMALL>, and IMG tag ALIGN=LEFT/RIGHT attributes
2.0 beta 7Apr 27, 1995
2.0 beta 8Support for <P ALIGN>; Image alignment improvements
2.0 beta 9May 5, 1995
2.0 beta 10
2.0 beta 11
2.0 beta 12Jun 1, 1995
2.0 beta 13Support for background images
2.0 beta 14
2.0.0
2.0.1Sep 28, 1995Fixed some table rendering bugs
3.0.0 beta 1Apr 15, 1996
3.0.0 beta 2Apr 25, 1996
3.0.0 beta 3Jul 30, 1996
3.0.0 beta 4Sep 12, 1996
3.0Jan 7, 1997Final Release - Nested tables; Removed frames support that was present in 3.0.0 betas

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Stewart. William. Mosaic – The First Global Web Browser. 22 February 2011. 2 July 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20070702183017/http://www.livinginternet.com/w/wi_mosaic.htm. dead.
  2. Web site: [ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Web/Mosaic/Unix/source/old/ xmosaic 1.2 source code]. https://web.archive.org/web/20160619204029/ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Web/Mosaic/Unix/source/old/. dead. 2016-06-19. 1994-06-29. NCSA. 2009-06-02.
  3. Web site: Gregersen . Erik . Browser Computer Program . Britannica.com . Encyclopedia Britannica . 28 September 2020.
  4. Web site: NCSA Mosaic . NCSA . National Center for Supercomputing Applications . 28 September 2020 . 18 August 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140818071607/http://www.ncsa.illinois.edu/enabling/mosaic . dead .
  5. Web site: The Second International WWW Conference '94: Mosaic and the Web . Internet Archive . 19 October 1994 . 28 September 2020.
  6. Web site: What were the first WWW browsers?. World Wide Web Consortium. Tim . Berners-Lee. 2010-06-15.
  7. Douglas Crockford . Sep 10, 2011 . Crockford on JavaScript – Volume 1: The Early Years . https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211118/JxAXlJEmNMg. 2021-11-18 . live. . 1:35:50.
  8. Web site: Mosaic – The First Global Web Browser . Andreessen . Marc . 2006-12-16 . 2007-07-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070702183017/http://www.livinginternet.com/w/wi_mosaic.htm . dead .
  9. Web site: The World's First Graphical Browser: Erwise. Holwerda. Thom. 3 Mar 2009. OSNews. 2009-06-02.
  10. Web site: Vetter. Ronald J.. Mosaic and the World-Wide Web. October 1994. North Dakota State University. 20 November 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20140824192903/http://vision.unipv.it/wdt-cim/articoli/00318591.pdf. 24 August 2014.
  11. Web site: Exhibits – Internet History – 1990's . Computer History Museum . 2006 . 2006-12-16.
  12. Web site: Behlendorf . Brian . 13 Oct 1994 . Re: Netscape v NCSA . 30 August 2023 . The World Wide Web History Project.
  13. Web site: Berners-Lee. Tim. A Brief History of the Web. World Wide Web Consortium. 16 August 2010.
  14. Andreessen. Marc. Bina. Eric. NCSA Mosaic: A Global Hypermedia System. Internet Research. 4. 1. 7–17. Emerald Group Publishing Limited. Bingley, UK. 1994. 1066-2243. 10.1108/10662249410798803.
  15. Web site: NCSA X Mosaic 0.5 released. 2013-07-06.
  16. Web site: Andreessen . Marc . 21 April 1993 . NCSA Mosaic 1.0 released . 30 August 2023 . The World Wide Web History Project.
  17. Web site: NCSA Mosaic for X 2.0 available . 2013-07-06.
  18. Web site: Mosaic Launches an Internet Revolution. www.nsf.gov.
  19. News: InfoWorld . SCO brings Internet access to PCs . Scott . Mace . 7 March 1994 . 47.
  20. Gary . Wolfe . The (Second Phase of the) Revolution Has Begun . . 2 . 10 . October 1994 . January 7, 2015.
  21. Web site: Sink . Eric . 15 April 2003 . Memoirs From the Browser Wars . 30 August 2023.
  22. Web site: Kahan. José. Change History of libwww. World Wide Web Consortium. 30 May 2010. 7 June 2002.
  23. Web site: Petrie. Charles. Interview Robert Cailliau on the WWW Proposal: "How It Really Happened.". Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. 18 August 2010. Robert Cailliau. Robert. Cailliau. November 1997. https://web.archive.org/web/20110106041256/http://www.computer.org/portal/web/computingnow/ic-cailliau. 6 January 2011. dead.
  24. Web site: Why Libwww?. 15 June 2010. 5 August 1999. José. Kahan.
  25. Web site: Andreessen. Marc. 1993-05-31. group annotation server guinea pigs?. 2017-11-08. webhistory.org.
  26. Web site: Marc Andreessen – Why Andreessen Horowitz Is Investing in Rap Genius. 2021-10-17. Genius.
  27. Web site: Wilson . Brian . Mosaic . Index D O T Html . Brian Wilson . 15 February 2022.
  28. Web site: Clarke . Roger . The Birth of Web Commerce . Roger Clarke's Web-Site . XAMAX . 15 February 2022.
  29. Web site: A Little History of the World Wide Web From 1960s to 1995. 2001-05-05. 2006-12-16. CERN. https://web.archive.org/web/20071219114722/http://ref.web.cern.ch/ref/CERN/CNL/2001/001/www-history/. 2007-12-19. dead.
  30. Lucey. Sean. Internet tools help navigate the busy virtual highway.. MacWeek. 9 May 1994. 51.
  31. Levitt. Jason. A Matter of Attribution: Can't Forget to Give Credit for Mosaic Where Credit is Due. Open Systems Today. 9 May 1994. 71.
  32. Web site: home of the first website. 2014-06-16.
  33. http://news.netcraft.com/archives/category/web-server-survey/ Web Server Survey | Netcraft
  34. Book: Clark, Jim. Netscape Time. registration. St. Martin's Press. 1999. 9780312199340.
  35. Web site: Memoirs From the Browser Wars. Sink. Eric. Eric Sink's Weblog. 2003-05-15. 2006-12-16.
  36. Web site: Microsoft and Spyglass kiss and make up. https://archive.today/20120919002551/http://www.windowsitpro.com/article/news2/microsoft-and-spyglass-kiss-and-make-up.aspx. dead. 19 September 2012. Thurrott. Paul. Paul Thurrott. 22 January 1997. 9 February 2011.
  37. MICROSOFT'S $8 MILLION GOODBYE TO SPYGLASS. https://web.archive.org/web/19970629174318/http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/january/new0122d.htm. dead. June 29, 1997. 9 February 2011. Peter. Elstrom. 22 January 1997. Bloomberg Businessweek.
  38. Book: Graham, Ian S. . The HTML Sourcebook: The Complete Guide to HTML . New York . John Wiley & Sons . 1995 . First . 0-471-11849-4 . registration .
  39. Web site: The History of Internet Explorer Hatred. Tedium: The Dull Side of the Internet.. 21 March 2015 .
  40. Web site: W3C mMosaic . dauphin . Gilles . World Wide Web Consortium . 1996 . 2007-11-02.
  41. Web site: [ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Web/Mosaic/Contrib/README.VMS README.VMS ]. 1993 . National Center for Supercomputing Applications . Bjorn . Nilsson . 2007-11-02 .
  42. Web site: NCSA and VMS Mosaic Version Information . 2012-08-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080704121456/http://wvnvms.wvnet.edu/vmswww/mosaic/versions.html . 2008-07-04 . dead .
  43. Web site: OpenVMS.org – OpenVMS Community Portal (VMS Mosaic V4.2) . OpenVMS.org . 2007 . 2007-11-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070911192043/http://www.openvms.org/stories.php?story=07%2F09%2F03%2F1740114 . 2007-09-11 . dead .
  44. Web site: Mosaic 4.0 freeware_readme.txt . 2006 . Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P . 2007-11-02 .
  45. Web site: Floodgap Mosaic-CK: an unsupported updated port of the NCSA Mosaic web browser. www.floodgap.com.