The WordVision word processor The
NeWS version of UniPress's
Gosling Emacs text editor was another early product with multiple tabbed windows in 1988. It was used to develop an authoring tool for
Ben Shneiderman's
hypermedia browser
HyperTIES (the NeWS workstation version of The Interactive Encyclopedia System), in 1988 at the
University of Maryland Human-Computer Interaction Lab. HyperTIES also supported
pie menus for managing windows and browsing hypermedia documents with
PostScript applets. While
Boeing Calc already utilized tabbed sheets (as so-called
word pads) since at least 1987,),
Galeon in early 2001,
Mozilla 0.9.5 in October 2001, Phoenix 0.1 (now
Mozilla Firefox) in October 2002,
Konqueror 3.1 in January 2003, and
Safari in 2003. With the release of
Internet Explorer 7 in 2006, all major web browsers featured a tabbed interface. Users quickly adopted the use of tabs in web browsing and web search. A study of tabbed browsing behavior in June 2009 found that users switched tabs in 57% of tab sessions, and 36% of users used new tabs to open
search engine results at least once during that period. Numerous additional browser tab capabilities have emerged since then. One example is visual tabbed browsing in
OmniWeb version 5, which displays preview images of pages in a drawer to the left or right of the main browser window. Another feature is the ability to re-order tabs and to
bookmark all of the webpages opened in tab panes in a given window in a group or bookmark folder (as well as the ability to reopen all of them at the same time).
Microsoft Internet Explorer marks tab families with different colours. ==Development==