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Marc Andreessen is best known for his work as a creator of the Netscape web browser.
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Play NowMarc Andreessen. (2013). The Biography Channel website. Retrieved 03:46, May 23, 2013, from http://www.biography.com/people/marc-andreessen-9542208.
Marc Andreessen. [Internet]. 2013. The Biography Channel website. Available from: http://www.biography.com/people/marc-andreessen-9542208 [Accessed 23 May 2013].
"Marc Andreessen." 2013. The Biography Channel website. May 23 2013, 03:46 http://www.biography.com/people/marc-andreessen-9542208.
"Marc Andreessen," The Biography Channel website, 2013, http://www.biography.com/people/marc-andreessen-9542208 [accessed May 23, 2013].
"Marc Andreessen," The Biography Channel website, http://www.biography.com/people/marc-andreessen-9542208 (accessed May 23, 2013).
Marc Andreessen [Internet]. The Biography Channel website; 2013 [cited 2013 May 23] Available from: http://www.biography.com/people/marc-andreessen-9542208.
Marc Andreessen, http://www.biography.com/people/marc-andreessen-9542208 (last visited May 23, 2013).
Marc Andreessen. The Biography Channel website. 2013. Available at: http://www.biography.com/people/marc-andreessen-9542208. Accessed May 23, 2013.
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Early Life
Inventor, Businessman. Born July 9, 1971 in Cedar Falls, Iowa, Marc Andreessen, co-founder of Netscape and inventor of the graphical Web browser, got bored with computers before he even made it through high school. Although the tall, blond boy, who grew up in New Lisbon, Wisconsin, taught himself BASIC programming from a library book at age nine, by high school he'd run out of things to do with the his TRS-80, one of the primitive personal computers available in the mid-1980s. At the University of Illinois in Champaign, Andreessen only majored in computer science because he wasn't doing well in electrical engineering. Even with his new major, he frequently skipped class or dozed off, he later claimed.Creation of Mosaic
While working in a physics lab at college, Andreessen felt his old interest in computers rekindled when he noticed scientists sharing their work with other universities via the Internet in the early 1990s. Tim Berners-Lee, aresearcher at the CERN particle physics lab in Geneva, had recently developed the World Wide Web. Andreessen recruited a team of programmers to create a better way to explore the Web. After two months of 80-hour weeks in the computer lab, living on chocolate chip cookies and milk, Andreessen and his team churned out a graphical browser called Mosaic, which used pictures and mouse clicks to navigate through information. The team gave the Mosaic browser away free, and before long, some two million people were using it, enough to catch the attention of recently retired James Clark, founder of Silicon Graphics Inc., who was seeking new challenges.Clark sent an email to Andreessen soon after he graduated from college, inviting the young man to discuss business possibilities. Although Clark had been interested in pursuing opportunities in the interactive television arena, Andreessen convinced him over a bottle of wine that the Internet was the key to the future.
Launching Netscape
Together, the two launched a company devoted to the World Wide Web called Mosaic, but changed the name to Netscape when the University of Illinois strenuously objected. To avoid copyright infringement issues, Andreessen recruited his old pals from college, where some were still working for $6.85 an hour, and they created a new version of the browser from scratch. The browser, given away free with a plea to users to pay for it, caught on in a flash; more importantly, corporations began purchasing Web server software and other tools to publish their own Web sites.When Netscape went public in August 1995, the 24-year-old programmer found himself worth $56 million on paper. But it wasn't smooth sailing: Microsoft had announced its commitment to the Internet and had started giving its own browser away for free, seriously eroding Netscape's market share in a short period of time.
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