Web Design History Timeline
Explore the timeline of milestones in the history of web design from 1990 to the present.
1990 September 10th
Archie – the first search engine
1990 December 25th
WorldWideWeb – the first browser
1991 April
Gopher
Gopher system was created at the University of Minnesota as a text-based system that used the hierarchical menu structure for navigation. It was a system working on a client-server basis. Gopher integrated the services of FTP, Usenet, Veronica, Archie and WAIS. Since 1996, Gopher has been on a decline and is currently used very rarely.
1991 May 14th
Line Mode Browser
1991 August
World Wide Web Virtual Library
1991 August 6th
Tim Berners-Lee created the first website
1991 October 29th
Tim Berners-Lee published a document called HTML Tags
1991 November
HTTP v0.9
1991 December 6th
The first web server in the USA
1992 March 9th
ViolaWWW
Pei-Yuan Wei developed the ViolaWWW browser for Unix while he was working at the University of California at Berkeley. ViolaWWW was the first browser to support scripting, table rendering and forms. The browser also contained a simple stylesheet to define the website’s visual appearance. In March 1994, Pei-Yuan Wei released its last version, the lone developer no longer being able to keep up with the Mosaic Communications Corporation, which launched the Mosaic Netscape 0.9 browser the same year.
1992 April 12th
BBEdit HTML and text editor
1992 July 18th
Les Horribles Cernettes, one of the first image on the Web
1992 November
Veronica search engine
1993 April 22nd
Mosaic 1.0
Mosaic (full name NCSA Mosaic) worked on multiple platforms including Windows and was available for free, thanks to which it gained worldwide popularity among the general public shortly after being launched. Its development officially ended on January 7, 1997.
1993 November 30th
Aliweb
Aliweb did not have a web crawler to search and index web pages. Sites were added to the database upon request from users using special files that contained their exact description and location.
1994 January
Yahoo!
Jerry Yang and David Filo, two Ph.D. students from Stanford University, created a list of websites entitled “Jerry and David’s Guide to the World Wide Web.” In March 1994, the portal was renamed Yahoo! and the yahoo.com domain was registered on January 18, 1995. Yahoo is an acronym for “Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle”. In March 1995, the Yahoo! search engine was launched as part of the portal.
1994 July 3rd
Robots.txt
Martijn Koster presented the robots.txt standard (Robots exclusion standard or Robots exclusion protocol) as part of the W3C www-talk mailing list. The rules defined in the robots.txt file are used to prevent or restrict indexing robots from accessing a website.
1994 July 13th
The first HTML validator
1994 October 1st
W3C.org
Tim Berners-Lee founded an international organization called World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). The main objective of the consortium is the development of Web standards for the World Wide Web (WWW). For example, W3C developed standards for HTML, XHML, XML, or CSS markup languages. Another aim of the organization is education and development of Web Accessibility Rules (WCAG).
1994 October 13th
Mosaic Netscape 0.9
1994 October 27th
The first web banner
1994 November
GeoCities
1995 April 10th
Opera 1.0
1995 April 13th
Lycos
1995 May
The term User Experience
1995 May 25th
Batman Forever website
1995 June 8th
PHP 1.0
1995 July 16th
Amazon.com
1995 August 16th
Internet Explorer 1.0
1995 September 3rd
eBay
1995 September 18th
Netscape Navigator 2.0
1995 November
FrontPage 1.0
1995 November 24th
HTML 2.0
1995 December
Adobe PageMill 1.0
1995 December
Lynda.com
Lynda Weinman, a computer instructor and graphic designer, launched one of the first online libraries of training courses for web developers at lynda.com.
1995 December 4th
JavaScript 1.0
Brendan Eich of Netscape designed the first version of an object-oriented JavaScript that became widely used to create interactive websites. JavaScript later become the basis for other programming languages, such as ActionScript used in Macromedia Flash. In 1998, JavaScript was standardized by ISO.
1995 December 15th
AltaVista
1996 April 1st
Alexa
Brewster Kahle and Bruce Gilliat founded a company called Alexa Internet. The company’s original vision was to develop advanced web navigation that would continually improve itself on the basis of user-generated data. For this purpose, the Alexa toolbar 1.0 was created in 1997 as an extension of the browser. In 1999, Alexa Internet was bought by Amazon.
1996 May 12th
Internet Archive
1996 September
JScript 1.0
1996 December
ASP 1.0
1996 December 17th
CSS1
1996 December 18th
Macromedia Flash 1.0
1997 January 14th
HTML 3.2
1997 April 7th
WAI
1997 May
SEO
Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is a term indicating a set of techniques and rules that are applied to provide a better position of websites in search results for selected keywords. The first use of the term is not fully documented. According to Danny Sullivan, founder of Search Engine Watch, the term Search Engine Optimization first appeared in May 1997.
1997 June 11th
Netscape Communicator 4.0
1997 September 30th
Internet Explorer 4.0
1997 October
DHTML
1997 December
Dreamweaver 1.0
1997 December 18th
W3C HTML Validator
1997 December 18th
HTML 4.0
1998 January 22nd
A List Apart
Jeffrey Zeldman and Brian Platz began publishing the mailing list called A List Apart, which provided readers with regular news from the world of web design, web standards, and web development. The project gained popularity among its readers, and within a few months, A List Apart acquired more than 16,000 subscribers. In January 1999, Jeffrey Zeldman started publishing A List Apart as a webzine.
1998 February 10th
XML 1.0
1998 March
Design is Kinky
Design is Kinky, founded by Andrew Johnstone, was one of the first design community websites. The website regularly presents graphic works, photographs, expert articles or profiles of artists who have decided to publish their work online. In 2018, the project Design is Kinky terminated its activity.
1998 March 31st
Mozilla
1998 April
Macromedia Fireworks 1.0
1998 May 12th
CSS2
1998 June 5th
DMOZ.org
1998 July
Adobe ImageReady 1.0
1998 September 4th
1998 October
K10k
1998 October
Box Acid Test
Todd Fahrner began working on the Box Acid Test (Acid1) project, which tested if web browsers supported the CSS language. The test itself is a simple web page that contains several HTML elements modified by CSS. The browser either displays the page correctly and passes the test or it fails. Most of the browsers of the time failed the Acid1 test. In January 1999, the Box Acid Test was included in the W3C’s official CSS1 set of tests.
1999 March
Favicon
Favicon (a combination of the words favorite and icon) first appeared in Internet Explorer 5.0. The term favicon refers to a webpage icon that appeared in older browsers in the address bar next to the URL or in favorites. Originally, favicon had to be placed in the root directory of the website under the name favicon.ico, and its dimensions were typically 16×16 px or 32×32 px. In December 1999, favicon was standardized by W3C in the recommendation for HTML 4.01.
1999 March 18th
Internet Explorer 5.0
1999 April
Web 2.0
Darcy DiNucci published an article entitled “Fragmented Future” in the Print magazine, in which the term Web 2.0 was first introduced. The term refers to the development phase of the Web in which the content of websites is created and shared primarily by the users themselves. Typical Web 2.0 examples include social networking sites, web forums, internet encyclopedias, or photo/video sharing portals. In 2004, Tim O’Reilly and Dale Dougherty held the first Web 2.0 conference, during which the term Web 2.0 was brought to the attention of a wider public.
1999 May 5th
WCAG 1.0
1999 June
Adobe Photoshop 5.5
1999 August 23rd
Blogger.com
1999 November
2Advanced Studios
Eric Jordan, Tony Novak and John Carrol founded a digital creative agency called 2Advanced Studios. The agency was renowned for its innovative, high-end design using Flash technology. In the field of web design, the 2Advanced Studio received many prestigious awards.
1999 November
Zombo.com
1999 December
Designing Web Usability: The Practice of Simplicity
Jakob Nielsen, an expert in web design and web usability, published Designing Web Usability: The Practice of Simplicity. The book became one of the basic handbooks in the field of web usability and the emerging field of user experience design (UX). In 1998, Jakob Nielsen and Donald Norman founded the Nielsen Norman Group, which engages in research, consulting and education in the field of user experience and computer interface design.
2000 January 26th
XHTML 1.0
2000 May 5th
The FWA
Rob Ford established the Favorite Website Awards (The FWA). The FWA website was originally conceived as a prestigious gallery of unique and innovative websites in terms of design created with Macromedia Flash. Due to a decline of the Flash technology, it is now possible to submit websites, mobile applications, or any creative projects regardless of the technology used. A panel of experts selects from nominated websites the winners in the categories FWA of the day, FWA of the month and FWA of the year.
2000 May 22nd
PHP 4.0 and Zend Engine
PHP 4.0 is based on an open source scripting engine called Zend Engine. The name Zend is a composite of its creators’ names Zeev and Andi. The Zend Engine is written as a highly optimized and powerful backend that can also be used outside PHP applications.
2000 August 7th
DeviantArt
2000 August 24th
Macromedia Flash 5.0 and ActionScript 1.0
2000 October
Requiem for a Dream
Hi-ReS!, a London-based digital agency, designed a website for Darren Aronofsky’s film, Requiem for a Dream. Hi-ReS! used Flash technology to design the website in a fresh and creative way to provide a strong artistic and visual experience for its visitors.
2000 October 13th
Steve Krug published a book Don’t Make Me Think
Steve Krug, a UX designer and information architect, published Don’t Make Me Think. The book deals with web usability and the interdisciplinary field of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI). In his publication, Steve Krug develops the idea that a well-designed computer program or website should allow users to perform their intended tasks in the simplest way possible, without having to think hard about how to perform them.
2001 January 15th
Wikipedia
Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger founded Wikipedia, a multilingual internet encyclopedia. The content of the encyclopedia is shared under a free and open license of the Creative Commons. Volunteer contributors from around the world participate in the creation of Wikipedia entries. Wikipedia’s precursor was the Nupedia web encyclopedia, to which, unlike Wikipedia, only experts were allowed to contribute. At the beginning of 2023, Wikipedia contained articles written in 331 languages.
2001 March
Pixelsurgeon
2001 April 4th
Media Queries
2001 August 27th
Internet Explorer 6.0
2001 September 4th
SVG 1.0
Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) is a graphical vector file format based on the XML markup language. SVG has become the basic open format for vector graphics on web pages. The SVG format has been developed since 1998 by W3C and is currently fully supported by all major browsers.
2001 October 24th
Wayback Machine
The Internet Archive organization launched a free digital archive of websites for the general public called the Wayback Machine. The oldest pages stored in the archive date back to 1996. In October 2024, the Wayback Machine maintained more than 866 billion versions of websites from various time intervals.
2001 December
Audi.com, the first partially “responsive” website
2002 April
Box Model Hack
2002 June 5th
Mozilla 1.0
2002 September
RSS 2.0
2003 May 8th
CSS Zen Garden
2003 May 14th
Jeffrey Zeldman published Designing with Web Standards
2003 May 27th
WordPress 0.7
2003 June 23rd
Safari 1.0
2003 August 1st
MySpace
2003 September
Delicious
2003 September 10th
Macromedia Flash MX 2004 and ActionScript 2.0
2004 February 10th
Flickr
2004 March 5th
CSS Sprites
2004 August 29th
sIFR
Scalable Inman Flash Replacement (sIFR) was a dynamic, open source web fonts implementation for JavaScript and Adobe Flash developed by Mike Davidson and improved by Mark Wubben. sIFR functioned by embedding fonts in a Flash element that displayed text, which helped fonts specified in CSS and HTML to display as intended.
2004 November 9th
Mozilla Firefox 1.0
2005 February 8th
Google Maps
Google Maps for desktop was designed to provide a simplified solution to “get from point A to point B.” Clicking and dragging a map or following step-by-step navigation directions allowed users to explore locations near and far. Months after its launch, Google shared Google Maps API so that maps could be embedded on websites. In December 2005, Portland, Oregon became the first city to use Google Transit Trip Planner, incorporating public transit options and schedules in Google Maps. By the end of 2007, Google Maps incorporated real-time traffic news, interactive panoramas via Street View, and mobile device compatibility.
2005 February 14th
YouTube
2005 June 23rd
2005 August 10th
Opera Mini
2005 August 26th
Million Dollar Homepage
Alex Tew, a British student, launched the Million Dollar Homepage, which soon became an example of successful viral marketing and an Internet phenomenon. The page was a million pixels divided into a 1000×1000 px grid. Alex Tew offered to sell 1 pixel for a dollar, with the smallest advertising space an advertiser could buy for their link being 10×10 px. The Million Dollar Homepage gained unprecedented popularity in a very short time, and the last 1000 pixels were sold on January 1, 2006 at an eBay auction.
2005 November 14th
Google Analytics
2005 December 3rd
Adobe purchased Macromedia
Adobe Systems bought its rival company, Macromedia, for $ 3.4 billion. Programs such as ColdFusion, Captivate, Director, Dreamweaver, Fireworks, Flash, Flex, FreeHand, and HomeSite were added to the Adobe software portfolio.
2006 January 14th
jQuery
2006 March 21st
2006 August
Smashing Magazine
Sven Lennartz and Vitaly Friedman created a portal for web designers and developers called Smashing Magazine. The portal provides regular news from the world of web design, user experience, or web development. Smashing Magazine also publishes research publications and organizes regular conferences and workshops. Smashing Magazine is currently the most visited web site for web design and related fields.
2006 October 5th
Sass 0.1.0
2006 November 14th
Zune Media Player and Flat Design
2007 January 9th
Steve Jobs introduced the first iPhone
2007 July 4th
CSS-Tricks
2007 August
Behance Network 1.0
2007 September 5th
CSS Grid
2007 September 5th
Microsoft Silverlight
2008 September 2nd
Google Chrome
2008 September 15th
Stack Overflow
Stack Overflow was created by Jeff Atwood and Joel Spolsky as part of the Stack Exchange Network to serve as a question-and-answer website for programmers. Participation on Stack Overflow was encouraged by a reputation system; users would earn points and badges based on the quality of questions asked and answers given, as determined by user votes. At the end of 2022, Stack Overflow served more than 100 million people each month.
2008 December 11th
WCAG 2.0
2009 February 9th
Facebook “like” button
2009 March
BEM
2009 June
Less 1.0
2009 June 3rd
Microsoft Bing
2009 July 8th
Dribbble.com
2009 July 23rd
2009 September 9th
Typekit
2009 September 23rd
The CSS Awards
2010 March 6th
2010 April 8th
WOFF 1.0
2010 April 29th
Steve Jobs and his Thoughts on Flash
Steve Jobs penned a controversial open letter titled “Thoughts on Flash” while he was CEO of Apple, criticizing Adobe Flash and outlining why it would not be permitted on Apple’s iOS hardware. Jobs’ reasons included poor security, high energy consumption, a lack of touch support, and a claim that Flash was effectively a closed system. Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen described the letter as an attack. Publications initially had varied responses to the letter, though tended to agree retrospectively that Jobs was right.
2010 May 19th
Google Web Fonts
2010 May 25th
Responsive Web Design
2010 September 7th
Sketch 1.0
2010 October 6th
2010 October 21st
Flat design and Windows Phone 7
2011 January 31st
Stylus 0.0.1, by TJ Holowaychuk
2011 August 19th
Bootstrap 1
2012 June 18th
CodePen.io
2012 June 19th
Media Queries
2012 October 1st
TypeScript 0.8
TypeScript is a free, open source programming language created by Microsoft in response to complex JavaScript code. A demand for custom tools that would make developing components within JavaScript easier to write led to this specific superset of JavaScript that allows optional static typing.
2013 May 29th
React
2013 August 19th
Bootstrap 3
2014 June 25th
Material Design
Google introduced a new graphic style called Material Design at the Google I/O conference. Since 2015, Google has redesigned most of its applications and services using the consistent visual style of Material Design. According to Google’s definition, Material Design is a “visual language that synthesizes the classic principles of good design with the innovation and the possibility of technology and science.”
2014 October 28th
HTML5
2015 March 30th
Microsoft Edge
2016 September 27th
Figma
2017 June 25th
Adobe announced termination of Flash
Adobe Systems announced that it would cease support for Flash in 2020 and would no longer issue additional security updates for Adobe Flash Player. In the field of web multimedia and interactivity, Flash became gradually replaced by HTML5, WebGL, or WebAssembly technology.
2022 September 15th
Adobe to acquire Figma
Adobe announced the tentative acquisition of Figma, the first design tool that combined native application functionality and browser-based accessibility, for approximately $20 billion USD.