

I would like to say, first off, that I am by no means an expert at this type of software I am simply another Amiga user who uses such programs from day to day. In this "Feature Review," if you will, I will be looking at the latest versions of these three browsers. IBrowse, Voyager, and AWeb have all brought significant improvements over AMosaic, and make almost any Amiga with a hard disk and some extra memory fully Web-capable. Well within the last two years, three major Amiga-native browsers (as opposed to AMosaic, which was a port of the original Mosaic) have been developed and introduced. It could render different font sizes and styles, and display images, but that was about it.

While seemingly remarkable at the time, in retrospect, AMosaic was quite simplistic. Graphical Internet connections were soon all the rage, and Mosaic paved new pathways along with the newly developing World Wide Web.Īmiga programmers had an answer, however, in the form of AMosaic, a graphical browser capable of using AmiTCP which, albeit difficult to configure and understand, was effective. There was a time, not too many years ago, when many Amiga users had to wonder if their computers could dream of keeping up with PC's and Macintoshes in the new, emerging world of the Internet. Amiga Browsers: The Big Three A comparative look at the most popular modern Amiga web browsers
