The World Wide Web turned 25 last week so to celebrate we’ve picked out some of its milestones and some things to remember.
On 6th August 1991, Tim
Berners-Lee launched the first ever website but it was on March 12 1989
when he first wrote the proposal for it, describing an information
management system. He shows it to his boss at CERN who described it as
‘vague, but exciting.’ The following year, along with Belgian computer
scientist Robert Cailliau, Berners-Lee wrote a proposal for a ‘web’ of
‘hypertext documents accessible by ‘browsers’. Berners-Lee created the
World Wide Web on a NeXT Computer – the company founded by Steve Jobs
when he left Apple in the late eighties.
Buying Stuff
In 1994, things started to get
commercial. Online banking popped up, as did Pizza Hut’s online ordering
system, then came Amazon and eBay in 1995. Today, online shopping is
huge. In 2012, there were 242 million people shopping online in China
and in 2015, the US online retail industry is expected to be worth $279
billion.
Searching Stuff
Google was founded in 1998 in California
by Larry Page and Sergey Brin while they were PhD students at Stanford
University. Search engines were already around, but the Googlers
invented a different system to how pages were found. They invented
Pagerank, which looks at relevance, not just the number of keywords on a
web page. In fact they tried to sell Google in 1999 because they felt
it was taking too much time away from their studies. They offered Excite
CEO George Bell the opportunity to buy the company for $1 million but
he rejected the offer. Today, Google’s total assets amount to $110
billion and it pulled in $59 billion in revenue in 2013. It has over a
billion unique visitors every month.
Social Stuff
Facebook may be the biggest social
networking site in the world today but it was certainly not the first.
The first of the social networking sites as we know them today popped up
in 1997 and lasted until 2001. It was called SixDegrees.com and users
could list friends, send messages and post bulletin board items to
people in their first, second and third degree lists. Eventually it was
overtaken by more popular sites such as Friendster, MySpace and Bebo.
Facebook was launched in 2004 as a Harvard-only social network.
Crime stuff
Unfortunately, one of the few bad things
about the web is the storing of people’s personal information, hacking
and cyber-attacks, fraud and other crimes. Websites that require or
store personal information such as payment details, bank records or
phone records all need to be secure, but sometimes secure isn’t enough.
The web has allowed for a different platform for criminals to commit
crimes.
One of the greatest achievements of the
Web is the ability for large amounts of people to come together in
support of something. Change.org
is a website that allows anybody to sign a petition and support change.
In 2010, a revolutionary wave of demonstrations and protests emerged
all over the Middle East and North Africa and helped to overthrow four
different governments including President Muburak in Egypt and Libyan
leader Gaddafi. Nine out of ten Tunisians responding to a poll, said
they used Facebook to organise protests and spread awareness. The use of
social networking sites was a major tool for people coming together
quickly in numbers to make change.
Annoying Stuff
The World Wide Web has changed the world
but it wasn’t always as big, as fast or as easy to access. There are
some things that only those old enough will have the pleasure of
remembering:
the awful dial-up tone, external modems,
disconnecting the phone to use the internet, paying by the minute, chat
rooms and a/s/l, very slow loading times, images loading line by line,
MSN Messenger, Ask Jeeves and the huge box computers we used to access
it all on. Those were the days.
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