The most popular browser on the net today is Microsoft Internet Explorer. However, this is definitely not the only browser available, and not necessarily the best either.
A list of web browsers, in alphabetical order:
- Amaya (Open-source, W3 supported)
- Arachne (For DOS and Linux)
- Arena (Open-source, previously W3 supported, replaced by Amaya)
- AWeb (For the Amiga)
- Camino (For Mac OS X only, previously Chimera)
- Cello (Produced by Thomas Bruce at the Cornell Law School, for Windows)
- Charlotte (For 3270 terminal-based systems)
- Emacs in w3-mode (Yes, it can browse the web)
- Galeon (Open-source Gnome wrapper for the Mozilla/Gecko engine)
- HotJava (Cross-platform JAVA)
- Konqueror (integrated with KDE)
- Lynx (Open-source, Text-only)
- Microsoft Internet Explorer
- MS Internet Explorer Mac (Different codebase than MSIE, so good that MS will no longer develop it)
- Mnemonic (Open-source, modular)
- Mosaic (Open-source, no longer developed)
- Mozilla (Open-source)
- Mozilla Firebird (The successor of Mozilla, lean and mean, to be renamed Mozilla Browser in the future)
- MSN Explorer (Internet Explorer with bells-and-whistles added)
- Netscape Navigator
- Omniweb (For NextStep)
- Opera (Very fast, for Windows, Linux, BeOS, Mac, OS/2)
- Safari (Max OS X)
- SPIN (MS-DOS)
- Voyager (For the Amiga)
See also: http://browsers.evolt.org/.