
MidasWWW - Wikipedia
MidasWWW is one of the earliest (now discontinued) web browsers, developed at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). [1] It ran under Unix [1] and OpenVMS. The last release …
MidasWWW Status - World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
MidasWWW Browser Browser for X11 written using the "Midas" hypertext gadgetry. Motif look and feel. Author: Tony Johnson, Boston University, [email protected], a SLAC …
MidasWWW | Browsers | Ancient Web Browsers - Flanigan
MidasWWW Tony Johnson of SLAC's Motif browser, notable for its ability to display PostScript files and for Chung Huynh 's Chinese language support version . Links
Ancient Web Browsers
This is an archive of the very earliest World Wide Web browsers: those developed between late 1990, when the World Wide Web was invented, and mid-1993, when Mosaic " set the Web …
MidasWWW - Motif based WWW browser by Tony Johnson at …
To install this version of MidasWWW you will need a Unix system with X. windows (X11R4 or X11R5) and Motif (version 1.1.0 or greater). The current version has been tested on the …
Timeline | Ancient Web Browsers
Tony Johnson's MidasWWW 1.0 for X/Motif is released; Tom Fine's w3browser, an elegant Perl-based terminal browser, is released. (At CERN, it is referred to as FineWWW, and others …
Early Web Chronology and Documents (1991-1994)
Fall: Tony Johnson releases the MidasWWW browser. Based on Motif/X, MidasWWW allows viewing of PostScript files on the Web from Unix and VMS, and even handles compressed …
MidasWWW, one of the earliest graphical web browsers from 1992
Sep 5, 2017 · However someone uploaded the source on GitHub, so i decided to try and build it. The source is pretty much how it was in 1992 and was written for the Unix systems (and Motif …
SLAC’s Tony Johnson remembers the WWW Wizards and the birth …
Dec 13, 2021 · So, I created my own web browser, which was called MidasWWW. It was unique in that you could search for publications in the SPIRES database but also view the documents …
MidasWWW - Wikiwand
MidasWWW is one of the earliest web browsers, developed at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). It ran under Unix and OpenVMS. The last release was ve...
- Some results have been removed