Lou Montulli
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Louis J. Montulli II (best known as Lou Montulli) is a programmer who is well known for his work in producing web browsers.
In 1991 he wrote a text web browser called Lynx while he was at the University of Kansas. This web browser was one of the first available and is still in use today.
In 1994 he became a founding engineer of Netscape Communications and programmed the networking code for the first versions of the Netscape web browser. He was also responsible for several browser innovations, such as HTTP cookies, the blink tag, server push and client pull, HTTP proxying, HTTP over SSL, and encouraging the implementation of animated GIFs into the browser. While at Netscape, he also was a founding member of the HTML working group at the W3C and was a contributing author of the HTML 3.2 specification.
In 1998 he became a founding engineer of Epinions.com [1] which is now Shopping.com [2].
In 2004 he became co-founder and CEO of Memory Matrix, which was acquired by Shutterfly Inc. [3] in May of 2005.
Lou served as Vice President of Client Engineering at Shutterfly through the summer of 2007. He is now "spending time with [his] family and researching a new company idea."[1]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Lou Montulli's Personal Web Page
- Where cookies come from from DominoPower Magazine.
- HNSource History Montulli's first conversion to HTML page for WWW-VL