One of the cool things about early implementations of the Web that has been, now, mostly lost down the memory hole is that when originally developed,
all browsers were both viewports
and HTML editors. One of the "controversies" around Mosaic, early on in fact, was that it "wasn't the real web" because you couldn't edit pages with it (it was a passive viewing browser only, which we now just call a web browser).
On the original WorldWideWeb browser, you could click "edit" on any page and start changing things right there without switching apps. That ability to edit inline didn't return until many, many years later, and was part of the original inspiration to build Wikis.
While I heard about the newfangled Web thing early on, I didn't have the cash to buy a Next Cube, so I had to wait a while before jumping on that bandwagon. But Usenet was pretty cool back then, so there was plenty to do, and plenty of flamewars to get in over random stuff.