This article needs to be updated.(October 2021) |
The following is a list of web browsers that are notable.
This is a table of personal computer web browsers by year of release of major version. The increased growth of the Internet in the 1990s and 2000s means that current browsers with small market shares have more total users than the entire market early on. For example, 90% market share in 1997 would be roughly 60 million users, but by the start of 2007 9% market share would equate to over 90 million users.[1]
Current and maintained projects are listed in boldface.
Other software publishers have built browsers and other products around Microsoft's Trident engine. The following browsers are all based on that rendering engine:
Browsers that use both Trident and Gecko include:
Browsers that can use Trident, Gecko and Blink include:
Status | Browser |
---|---|
Aloha Browser (iOS and Android) | |
experimental | Amazon Kindle NetFront Browser |
discontinued | Arora |
discontinued | BOLT browser |
Google Chrome for iOS | |
Dolphin Browser (Android and Bada) | |
discontinued | Dooble (qtwebkit version discontinued) (up to Version 1.56) |
DuckDuckGo for Mac[23] | |
Firefox for iOS | |
discontinued | Flock (version 3.0 and above) |
GNOME Web (Epiphany) | |
iCab (version 4 uses WebKit; earlier versions used its own rendering engine) | |
discontinued | Iris Browser |
Konqueror (version 4 can use WebKit as an alternative to its native KHTML)[24] | |
Maxthon (version 3.0 to 5.0. Since version 6 Maxthon uses Chromium[25]) | |
Midori (versions released after acquisition in 2019 use Gecko) | |
Microsoft Edge for iOS | |
Nintendo 3DS NetFront Browser | |
Nintendo Wii U NetFront Browser NX | |
discontinued | OmniWeb |
Otter Browser (uses Blink and WebKit; aims to recreate the features of old Opera) | |
discontinued | OWB |
discontinued | QtWeb |
qutebrowser (a Blink-based backend is currently used by default) | |
discontinued | Rekonq |
Safari | |
discontinued | PhantomJS (a headless browser) |
discontinued | Shiira |
SlimBoat[26] (versions released since 2019 use Gecko) | |
discontinued | Steel for Android |
surf | |
discontinued | Uzbl |
discontinued | Web Browser for S60, used in all Nokia Symbian smartphones |
discontinued | webOS, used in the Palm Pre, Palm Pixi, Pre 2, HP Veer, Pre 3, and TouchPad mobile devices |
WebPositive, browser in Haiku | |
discontinued | xombrero |
Browsers created for enhancements of specific browsing activities.
Mosaic was the first widely used web browser. The National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) licensed the technology and many companies built their own web browser on Mosaic. The best known are the first versions of Internet Explorer and Netscape.
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