history_of_the_web 44
0sil8.old school browsing
october 2011 by Preoccupations
http://kottke.org/11/10/early-1990s-web-browsers: "I compiled a bunch of old browsers for download back in the day".
browsers
Jason_Kottke
1998
history
history_of_the_web
archive
october 2011 by Preoccupations
alt.hypertext | Google Groups
august 2010 by Preoccupations
http://twitter.com/adactio/statuses/20479033986 : "Reading emails from nineteen years ago today. http://tinyurl.com/3xhsh54"
1991
email
history
WWW
web
Tim_Berners-Lee
history_of_the_web
from delicious
august 2010 by Preoccupations
www-talk from September to October 1991: Re: status. Re: X11 BROWSER for WWW
august 2010 by Preoccupations
http://twitter.com/adactio/statuses/20472111722 : "Well, I'll be! @timberners_lee proposed HTML5's outline algorithm for sections and headings 19 years ago. "
1991
history
web
WWW
Tim_Berners-Lee
history_of_the_web
from delicious
august 2010 by Preoccupations
Hypertext Links
august 2010 by Preoccupations
http://twitter.com/adactio/statuses/20470534348 : "The earliest document ever published on the web is *almost* valid HTML5"
Tim_Berners-Lee
1992
hypertext
web
WWW
history
history_of_the_web
from delicious
august 2010 by Preoccupations
BBC News - Dotcom web address celebrates silver anniversary
march 2010 by Preoccupations
"The internet celebrates a landmark event on the 15 March - the 25th birthday of the day the first dotcom name was registered. In March 1985, Symbolics computers of Cambridge, Massachusetts entered the history books with an internet address ending in dotcom. That same year another five companies jumped on a very slow bandwagon.<br />
It took until 1997, well into the internet boom, before the one millionth dotcom was registered."
history_of_the_web
BBC
1985
ICT_teaching
from delicious
It took until 1997, well into the internet boom, before the one millionth dotcom was registered."
march 2010 by Preoccupations
NCSA Mosaic for X 0.10 available. - alt.hypertext | Google Groups
october 2009 by Preoccupations
"Beta version 0.10 of Mosaic, NCSA's X/Motif-based networked information systems browser, including full source code and binaries (for SunOS 4.x, SGI IRIX 4.x, AIX 3.2, and DEC Ultrix), is now at ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in /Web/xmosaic"
1993
browsers
Mosaic
Marc_Andreessen
Usenet
history
history_of_computing
web
history_of_the_web
Google_Groups
october 2009 by Preoccupations
Google is driving web standards forward. That is why Zoho is firmly aligned with them | Zoho Blogs
may 2009 by Preoccupations
"Microsoft just has so much bad karma in this industry that I cannot imagine a company like us trusting them on much of anything. ... Let's recap some ancient history here: Microsoft used to have IE for Solaris and even had a beta of IE for Linux. That was when IE was way behind Netscape and was trying to catch up. Once Netscape was safely vanquished, Microsoft's commitment to support IE on other platforms vanished. In fact, Microsoft intentionally pulled IE on other platforms, because it was clear to them that making the web experience suck on other platforms was a way to keep Windows firmly entrenched. I am glad they adopted that strategy, because that strategy eventually paved the way for Firefox (and Safari and Chrome ...), and together those browsers have rendered the operating system utterly irrelevant. Apple's resurgence - based on design prowess, not platform dominance - and Vista's failure, have demonstrated that convincingly"
web
browsers
Zoho
Microsoft
Google
IE
2009
reputation
history_of_the_web
Google_Wave
Silverlight
open_source
may 2009 by Preoccupations
The Internet at 40 - The Open University
april 2009 by Preoccupations
"2009 is the 40th anniversary of the first computer network - the precursor of the internet - and the 20th anniversary of the brilliant idea that led to the creation of the world wide web. What exactly is the internet, and how does it differ from the world wide web? Who were its pioneers, and what technological surprises has it sprung? This album opens with a specially recorded interview with John Naughton, Professor of the Public Understanding of Technology at the Open University and author of 'A brief history of the future - the origins of the internet'. He explores some of the key moments in the short but spectacular history of an extraordinary phenomenon, the people who made them happen, and some of the problems that have emerged. The album also features archive interviews with Tim Berners-Lee, Vint Cerf, Donald Davies and other pioneers of the internet age, recorded in the late 1990s."
ICT_teaching
OU
John_Naughton
2009
history_of_the_internet
history_of_the_web
internet
web
history
april 2009 by Preoccupations
The world wide web at 20 - vnunet.com
march 2009 by Preoccupations
"Ideas around the formation of a web first began to gain traction when the desktop PC landed in the late 1980s, but it was Berners-Lee who focused on the notion of using the internet to share documents, according to Wendy Hall, professor of computer science at Southampton University, and founding director of the Web Science Research Initiative. "Tim pulled together ideas of a markup language, getting files on the internet and hypertext," she explained. "The things that made it work were open standards and protocols so anyone could set up their own web server and HTML documents, the fact that it was completely distributed and scalable, and that it worked over the network.""
WWW
web
internet
history
history_of_the_web
Tim_Berners-Lee
CERN
1989
2009
ICT_teaching
march 2009 by Preoccupations
World Wide Web@20
march 2009 by Preoccupations
"Twenty years ago this month, something happened at CERN that would change the world forever: Tim Berners-Lee handed a document to his supervisor Mike Sendall entitled "Information Management : a Proposal". "Vague, but exciting" is how Mike described it, and he gave Tim the nod to take his proposal forward. The following year, the World Wide Web was born. This week, it's a pleasure and an honour for us to welcome the Web's inventor back to CERN to mark this special anniversary at the place the Web was born." + http://www.webfoundation.org/2009/03/post-4.html, http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/happy_20th_birthday_world_wide_web.php, http://www.broom.org/epic/ols-master.html
WWW
web
internet
history
history_of_the_web
Tim_Berners-Lee
CERN
1989
2009
ICT_teaching
march 2009 by Preoccupations
David Weinberger: The view from 1978
october 2008 by Preoccupations
"because the prognosticators didn't foresee that the Net would be so simple and stupid, they couldn't foresee how everyone with a keyboard would pitch in. Sidney Fernback assumed a government would have to build a National Data Library. Daniel Bell assumed that because information is a collective good, no individual would have an incentive to build it out. They couldn't foresee the power of the market to build a Google, and they would have been flabbergasted by the way we all pitched in to build Wikipedia, or LibraryThing, or even to find the continuity errors in beloved films. The amount we've built together for free surpasses not only assumptions about technological predictions but many assumptions about human motivation and human nature. The fact that this book by remarkably insightful men — yes, all men — failed to predict the most important change computers would bring is a sign not of their failure but of the unpredictable transformative human power the Internet has unleashed."
David_Weinberger
1978
internet
web
predictions
Man
history_of_the_internet
history_of_the_web
ICT_teaching
october 2008 by Preoccupations
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