25 years of the World Wide Web: Tim Berners-Lee explains how it all began

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From a single machine in Switzerland to a global network of computers, laptops, smartphones and tablets - the web has spread far and wide


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Read more: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-s...erslee-explains-how-it-all-began-9185040.html
 
Yes, definitely the greatest invention of my lifetime. I'm surprised his name hasn't become a household name like Einstein.
 
The Internet Will Be Everywhere In 2025, For Better Or Worse

In 2025, the Internet will enhance our awareness of the world and ourselves while diminishing privacy and allowing abusers to "make life miserable for others," according to by the Pew Research Center and Elon University.

But more than anything, experts say, it will become ubiquitous and embedded in our lives — the same way electricity is today.

"The Internet will shift from the place we find cat videos to a background capability that will be a seamless part of how we live our everyday lives," says Joe Touch, director of the University of Southern California's Information Sciences Institute. "We won't think about 'going online' or 'looking on the Internet' for something. We'll just be online, and just look."

The report follows a on how the Internet has affected our lives in the 25 years since Sir Tim Berners-Lee released proposing the World Wide Web. By 1989, the Internet had already been around for nearly two decades, but it wasn't widely accessible. Berners-Lee's ideas became the foundation of the way we access the Internet today.

So the Pew report asked: What do you expect to be the most significant overall impacts of our uses of the Internet on humanity between now and 2025? Here are some of the 1,800 respondents' predictions:


Survey Highlights

The Internet will allow us to collect information on every aspect of our lives and become more aware of our behavior — at the peril of privacy.

"We'll have a picture of how someone has spent their time, the depth of their commitment to their hobbies, causes, friends, and family. This will change how we think about people, how we establish trust, how we negotiate change, failure, and success," says Judith Donath, a fellow at Harvard University. Other experts predict that this can also effectively personalize health care and disease prevention.

But the conveniences come with tradeoffs. Llewellyn Kriel, head of a media services company in South Africa, has a far less rosy view. "Everything will be available online with price tags attached. Cyberterrorism will become commonplace. Privacy and confidentiality of any and all personal will become a thing of the past," he says.

Some predict that privacy in 2025 will be a luxury reserved for the upper class.

The Internet's pervasiveness will spread both education and ignorance.

"The smartest person in the world currently could well be stuck behind a plow in India or China," says Hal Varian, chief economist for Google. "Enabling that person — and the millions like him or her — will have a profound impact on the development of the human race."

The downside? Group-think, mob mentality and manipulation."The Internet will be used as the most effective force of mind control the planet has ever seen, leaving the Madison Avenue revolution as a piddling, small thing by comparison,"says Mikey O'Connor, an elected representative to ICANN's GNSO Council, representing the ISP and Connectivity Provider Constituency.

http://www.npr.org/blogs/alltechcon...ill-be-everywhere-in-2025-for-better-or-worse
 
I'm a little off on the timeline, here. I know that the HTTP was invented in 1991, but we date the WWW in 1989. Is that right?
 
I'm a little off on the timeline, here. I know that the HTTP was invented in 1991, but we date the WWW in 1989. Is that right?

The first documented version was in 1991 but it existed before that. Tim Berners-Lee and his team are credited with inventing the original HTTP along with HTML and the associated technology for a web server and a text-based web browser. The first version of the protocol had only one method, namely GET, which would request a page from a server.[SUP][/SUP] The response from the server was always an HTML page.
 
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