Triggered mostly by the release of the Windows and the Mac version of Mosaic, 1994 was distinctly different than 1993. The staff at NCSA went and founded Netscape in April 1994. The first World Wide Web Conference was held in Switzerland. Shortly thereafter, the other first World Wide Web conference was held in Chicago. There's some interesting stuff about that in these books. [laugh]. The books, Robert Cailliau's and Tim Berners-Lee's book talks a little bit about that. In October, 1994 Tim left CERN and went to form the World Wide Web Consortium. And then by the end of the year, Windows 95 Beta 2 with an Internet browser was there, with TCP/IP built in. And so if you really think about, I mean it's not even a whole year, it's almost six months where the world changed forever. And so, at this point, now money is coming into it. Up to that point, it was mostly ideas and research, but now money is coming in and we start seeing a transition. So Netscape was on the forefront of doing this, and Netscape basically took the open source product, they started kind of competing just to build a browser. But they quickly decided that they would go turn the browser and their web server more proprietary and try to create distributed computing applications using proprietary things that Netscape would build unique to themselves, and they would attack Microsoft. The moment it became clear that Netscape was going to produce a way, to, to develop software on Mac, Windows, and Linux portably, then Microsoft got worried. Because then the operating system wouldn't matter, and Window, Microsoft had put so much into the Windows operating system, that if the operating system didn't matter, it would really, tremendously threaten Microsoft's business, hence Windows 95, with TCP/IP and a free web browser. So, Netscape sort of scared. Now, as Microsoft tried to buy Netscape, Netscape refused to sell, wanting more money. And then Microsoft vowed to destroy it. And as Microsoft was coming after Netscape, first Netscape tried to compete by building better and better software, like the JavaScript language, which we'll meet Brendan Eich in a moment. And then after that they tried to sort of switch from being the proprietary bad guys and go become more the open source good guys. And that kind of blew up in their face and they built this open source Mozilla, which eventually became the Mozilla Foundation, which eventually begat Firefox. So now, what I want to do is I want to, you to meet two people, both of whom now are the senior leadership at the Mozilla Foundation. Brendan Eich is the CTO of the Mozilla Foundation, but he'll really tell us about 1995, where he invented JavaScript in ten days as part of Netscape. And then we'll meet Mitchell Baker, who was the founder of, one of the founders of Mozilla. And she will talk about how Netscape kind of, fortunes declined, got purchased by AOL, and fortunes declined even worse. And how they basically pulled the Netscape codebase out to form the Mozilla codebase, which then became Firefox codebase. And the Firefox, of course, had this great idea, that Mitchell will tell you about, of having a search box. And they made tons and tons of money, as Mitchell will tell you about. So, up next, Brendan Eich of the Mozilla Foundation and Mitchell Baker of the Mozilla Foundation.