1.19.2010

The Web: A History

Tim Berners-Lee is credited with the creation of the Internet as we know it. In truth, he created the skeleton that allowed us to insert our own meat. Since 1945, academia has discussed the concept of inserting "links" within informational documents to allow a reader to surf to other information. Others before Tim began to make prototypes for such a program, but it wasn't until 1989 that he finally finished the "WorldWideWeb," which allowed widespread usage of a single, universal programming language. Adoption of this language steadily rose, and soon browsers were created to help make it more palatable. The "Mosaic" browser was the first to display images along with the available text, making web usage more attractive to the layperson.

These steps made the Internet what it is today; a network of user-created content, infinitely linked by other user-created pages in a delicate "web." Without people to communicate with, the web would be empty and have no meaning. Berners-Lee revolutionized the way we communicate not only by creating a universal programming language, but also by pushing everyone he possibly could to adopt and share this language. From the very beginning, the Internet was about communication. File and information sharing through e-mail and then BBS made the Internet more attractive to academia than ever before.

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