a viewer who looks around casually without seeking anything in particular
<noun.person>
a program used to view HTML documents
<noun.communication>
Browser \Brows"er\ (brouz"[~e]r), n. 1. An animal that browses.
2. (Computers) a computer program that permits the user to view multiple electronic documents in a flexible sequence by the process of activating hypertext ``buttons'' within one document, which serves as a reference to the location of related document. The term is currently (late 1990's) used mostly for programs which allow traversing hypertext paths in documents on the internet. A typical browser will permit the user to easily reverse direction, and view again documents previously accessed. [PJC]
We can't be all things to all people, but we can structure the report so that the browser gets as much from it as the cover-to-cover merchant.
"But I'm Catholic," says an Australian browser.
Yaohan offers a similar appeal to the American browser. The supermarket is fascinating, even if you don't buy anything.