All listed user-interfaces for the World Wide Web can be obtained by anonymous ftp, meaning they are available for free. Browsers exist for many computer and operating system platforms:
www.w3.org
,
is a text-browser for dumb terminals.
ftp2.cc.ukans.edu
.
archive.cis.ohio-state.edu
.
moose.cs.indiana.edu
. It is a text-browser
and editor. Recent versions of Emacs (Lucid Emacs and Epoch) can use multiple
fonts.
ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu
.
Versions exist for Unix with X-windows (and Motif), for VMS with
DecWindows (and Motif), MS-Windows, Macintosh and Amiga.
It can display text in multiple fonts and inline images.
Both text and (parts of) images can be used as anchors for links.
External programs are used to display some types of images, mpeg movies
and sound.
www.netscape.com
.
Versions exist for Unix with X-windows (but only a limited number of
Unix versions are supported and there is no free source code available for
porting Navigator to other platforms), MS-Windows (3.11 and 95),
and for Macintosh.
Navigator displays text and images, and can offer many more visual and
interactive effects through Java Applets and Plug-In libraries of code
for supporting new media types.
www.microsoft.com
.
Microsoft attempts to match Netscape Navigator's functionality.
So far the Explorer is only available for MS-Windows and the Macintosh.
Plans supposedly exist for supporting other platforms, and by the time
you read this such versions may be available (but don't hold your breath).
fatty.law.cornell.edu
.
www.w3.org
.
export.lcs.mit.edu
.
ftp.cs.unlv.edu
.
www.w3.org
and uses NeXTStep 3.0.
www.w3.org
some other experimental browsers
are available, including Arena which is used to demonstrate the
cascading stylesheets feature of HTML-3.2, and Amaya,
a browser-editor which is supposed to become the "reference" browser
of the World Wide Web Consortium.