The first web browser, called
WorldWideWeb, was created in 1990 by Sir
Tim Berners-Lee. He then recruited
Nicola Pellow to write the
Line Mode Browser, which displayed web pages on
dumb terminals. The
Mosaic web browser was released in April 1993, and was later credited as the first web browser to find mainstream popularity. Its innovative
graphical user interface made the
World Wide Web easy to navigate and thus more accessible to the average person. This, in turn, sparked the Internet boom of the 1990s, when the Web grew at a very rapid rate.
Microsoft debuted
Internet Explorer in 1995, leading to a
browser war with Netscape. Within a few years, Microsoft gained a dominant position in the browser market for two reasons: it bundled Internet Explorer with its popular
Windows operating system and did so as
freeware with no restrictions on usage. The market share of Internet Explorer peaked at over 95% in the early 2000s. In 1998, Netscape launched what would become the
Mozilla Foundation to create a new browser using the
open-source software model. This work evolved into the
Firefox browser, first released by Mozilla in 2004. Firefox's market share peaked at 32% in 2010.
Apple released its
Safari browser in 2003; it remains the dominant browser on Apple devices, though it did not become popular elsewhere.
Google debuted its
Chrome browser in 2008, which steadily took market share from Internet Explorer and became the most popular browser in 2012. Chrome has
remained dominant ever since. In 2020, this legacy version was replaced by a new
Chromium-based version of
Edge. Since the early 2000s, browsers have greatly expanded their
HTML,
CSS,
JavaScript, and
multimedia capabilities. One reason has been to enable more sophisticated websites, such as
web apps. Another factor is the significant increase of
broadband connectivity in
many parts of the world, enabling people to access data-intensive content, such as
streaming HD video on
YouTube, that was not possible during the era of
dial-up modems. Starting in the mid-2020s, browsers with integrated
artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities, known as
AI browsers, have become increasingly common. This includes both new entrants to the browser market, such as
Perplexity Comet and
ChatGPT Atlas, and established browsers that added AI features, such as Chrome with the
Gemini chatbot and Edge with the
Copilot chatbot. ==Features==