Site icon MacDailyNews

The Web at 25: Created by Sir Tim Berners-Lee on Steve Jobs’ NeXTcube

“This World Wide Web you’re looking at right now wasn’t always something most people considered worth a second glance — let alone hours days weeks years of nonstop staring,” Eric Mack reports for CNET. “In fact, even some of the big info-nerds of the day ignored or dismissed it early on.”

“One of the earliest public demonstrations of the Web came back in 1991, when a man named Tim Berners-Lee sat at a table with a computer in a Texas hotel conference room, willing to give anyone with a few minutes to spare a personal introduction to his invention — a concept and a structure that would soon spark a worldwide information revolution,” Mack reports. “Every person in the room that day likely came to depend on this invention by the close of the 1990s, if not sooner. But when first confronted with the Web in that hotel, most simply said whatever the equivalent of ‘meh’ was at the time, and went in search of a drink.”

At the end of the 80s, Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web using this NeXTcube computer as the first Web server
“‘It was quite a warm December evening in San Antonio,’ recalled Professor Wendy Hall of the UK’s University of Southampton, who was in that room for the 1991 Hypertext Conference where Berners-Lee had been denied a speaking spot to show off the most important human creation of a generation or three,” Mack reports. “‘In the courtyard outside the demo room was a tequila fountain and everybody was outside drinking free margaritas, so nobody was inside. This was the first demo of the World Wide Web in America.'”

Much more in the full article – recommended – here.

MacDailyNews Take: It’s impossible to overstate how much the Web changed most people’s lives, certainly including ours. Sir Tim Berners-Lee’s invention dramatically changed our lives. Thank you, Tim!

Related articles:
World Wide Web creator (and Apple Mac user) Berners-Lee fears for Web’s future – November 3, 2006
The Web, Apple, Steve Jobs’ NeXT and the evolution of search – August 4, 2011
Apple Mac OS X forerunner used to create World Wide Web – September 29, 2004
Inventor of World Wide Web uses Apple PowerBook, Mac OS X, and Safari browser – September 23, 2003

Exit mobile version