In today’s technology based culture, internet browsers are plentiful, yet the compatibility between websites and individual applications is surprising and very mismatched. Many specific websites encourage a specific browser use. Over the past ten years, internet browsers have been developed to “surf the web” and to ultimately become the booming browser for the years to come. Some of the most popular internet browsers since the beginning of the internet have been: Internet Explorer, Netscape Navigator, Netscape Communicator, Netscape, Apple’s Safari, Google Chrome, Opera, Mozilla Firefox, Mozilla Thunderbird, OmniWeb, NetSurf, Camino, and Sputnik. There are more browsers that could be added to this list from the past, but imagine how this list will look in fifteen years from now. Prior to the overwhelming interest in internet browsers, the development of the world wide web, commonly known as the W3, is an important factor to look at. The web/internet was created as a “system of interlinked hypertext documents accessed via the Internet,” states Wikipedia. Internet browsers serve as outlets for computer users to view text, various types of images, streaming videos, and navigate through each web page by Uniform Resource Locator (URL). Sir Tim Berners-Lee, World Wide Web Consortium Director, was an English engineer and computer scientist who was initially the main creative mind and innovator of the World Wide Web. Web 2.0 became a thing of the future beginning in 2002. Weblogs and RSS feeds were some of the first ideas that were shared with the web consortium. The Web 2.0 is known for allowing hands-on, user-friendly, do it yourself websites. This service allows a company to create steps and mechanisms for full product, web development. The current innovators of the World Wide Web 2.0 expect this to be the bridge into Berners-Lee vision of the Semantic Web.