Sunday, June 29, 2008

The History of the Web

The first rumblings toward this concept began immediately after World War II, when scientists were desperately seeking ways to organize and share their accumulated wartime research. In 1945, noted scientist Vannevar Bush published an essay in Atlantic Monthly titled "As We May Think," which proposed a massive information index that people from all over the world could access and search. Although Bush's system was mechanical (and was never developed), his essay had a profound impact on many who would one day help design the Internet and the World Wide Web. For this reason, Vannevar Bush is often hailed as the theoretical father of the Web.

Given this background, the actual Web was originally conceived as a way for physicists to share their research data. In 1989, Tim Berners-Lee led a team at Switzerland's European Particle Physics Laboratory (CERN) in developing the initial World Wide Web standards. Key among these was the use of hypertext, or "hot" portions of an online document that, when selected, take the user to a related, or "linked," document. For instance, if a user was reading a Web document about dinosaurs and selected the hypertext word "Tyrannosaurus," he or she would go directly to a document dealing specifically with that species of dinosaur.

No comments: