Jon Mittelhauser

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Jon E. Mittelhauser (born May 1970) is considered a founding father of the web browser.[1]

In 1993 as a graduate student at the University of Illinois, he co-wrote NCSA Mosaic for Windows with fellow student Chris Wilson while working at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA)[1]. Mittelhauser was part of the original team of 5 programmers of Mosaic which included: Marc Andreessen (Unix version), Eric Bina (Unix version), Aleks Totic (Mac version) and Chris Wilson (Windows version). The MS Windows version which Mittelhauser and Wilson wrote was the first browser with over a million downloads and is often pointed to as the first widely used web browser.

Mittelhauser attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, graduating from there with a Bachelor of Science degree in Computer Science in 1992 and a Master's degree in 1994.

In May 1994, Mittelhauser left the University of Illinois and was one of the founders of Netscape Communications.

Mittelhauser is married with two daughters.

[edit] Trivia

Template:Trivia

  • While at NCSA, Mittelhauser created the first ever NCAA pool online as a (free) demonstration site for the new web form functionality which the team had added to the various versions of Mosaic.
  • Mittelhauser is believed to be the first person to ever have a URL in his email signature.
  • Mittelhauser was the first person to ever see an image embedded within a web page. The NCSA team created the original specification for the IMG tag (much to many SGML purists horror) and the presence of Object Linking and Embedding in windows allowed that platform to support the new feature first. Prior to that time, images only existed on the web as files which were dispayed in external applications.
  • Mittelhauser pronounces the extension "GIF" with a hard g. When pressed on the matter he claims that having added the first support for GIF images in a web browser, he should be able to have a deciding opinion on the pronunciation.
  • Mittelhauser joined eta chapter of Alpha Sigma Phi at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1990.

[edit] Other Interests

[edit] References

  1. Legacy: A brave new World Wide Web | CNET News.com
  2. Tesla Motors - hear
  3. http://blog.tiltboys.com/2008/03/how-tiltboys-saved-world-wide-web.html
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