
Web revolutions
Get flash to fully experience Pearltrees
The WorldWideWeb application is now available as an alpha release in source and binary form from info.cern.ch . WorldWideWeb is a hypertext browser/editor which allows one to read information from local files and remote servers. It allows hypertext links to be made and traversed, and also remote indexes to be interrogated for lists of useful documents. Local files may be edited, and links made from areas of text to other files, remote files, remote indexes, remote index searches, internet news groups and articles. All these sources of information are presented in a consistent way to the reader.
WorldWideWeb wide-area hypertext app available - comp.sys.next.announce | Google Groupes
A hand conversion to HTML of the original MacWord (or Word for Mac?) document written in March 1989 and later redistributed unchanged apart from the date added in May 1990. Provided for historical interest only.
Here is the idea!
Here is the Web!
Yes it is - The founding document of the web! by Mar 1
The WorldWideWeb (W3) is a wide-area hypermedia information retrieval initiative aiming to give universal access to a large universe of documents. Everything there is online about W3 is linked directly or indirectly to this document, including an executive summary of the project, Mailing lists , Policy , November's W3 news , Frequently Asked Questions . What's out there? Pointers to the world's online information, subjects , W3 servers , etc. Help on the browser you are using
The project
Weaving the Web
Author: , Date: 26 Jan 2010, Views: 1989, Tim Berners-Lee, Weaving the Web: The Original Design and Ultimate Destiny of the World Wide Web Harper Paperbacks | ISBN-10: 006251587X | November 7, 2000 | 256 pages | File type: PDF | 1.5 mb If you can read this review (and voice your opinion about his book on Amazon.com), you have Tim Berners-Lee to thank. When you've read his no-nonsense account of how he invented the World Wide Web, you'll want to thank him again, for the sheer coolness of his ideas. One day in 1980, Berners-Lee, an Oxford-trained computer consultant, got a random thought: Suppose all the information stored on computers everywhere were linked?The first visual browser
Interesting to see that what makes Web browser really public is the ability to visualize the Web graphically... by Aug 24
How Long Did It Take for the World to Identify Google?
Wikipedia by Wikipedia
Apple iphone presentation
The first step toward a truely mobile Web by Aug 24

