
http://info.cern.ch
http://info.cern.ch - home of the first website. From here you can: Browse the first website; Browse the first website using the line-mode browser simulator; Learn about the birth of the web; …
The World Wide Web project - CERN
World Wide Web The WorldWideWeb (W3) is a wide-area hypermedia information retrieval initiative aiming to give universal access to a large universe of documents.
cern.info.ch - TIm Berners-Lee's original WorldWideWeb browser
The first ever web browser was also an editor, making the web an interactive medium, the problem was that it only ran on the NeXTStep operating system. With recent phenomena like …
World Wide Web@20 - CERN
With 2009 being declared the Year of Creativity and Innovation by the European Union, the 20th anniversary of the Web serves as a timely reminder of the powerful role that creativity in basic …
Summary -- /WWW - CERN
Making a web is as simple as writing a few SGML files which point to your existing data. Making it public involves running the FTP or HTTP daemon, and making at least one link into your web …
People involved in the WorldWideWeb project - CERN
This is a list of some of those who have contributed to the WWW project, and whose work is linked into this web. Unless otherwise stated they are at CERN, Phone +41(22)767 plus the …
World Wide Web@20 - CERN
More information on the beginnings of the web at CERN can be found in the following sites: CERN - where the web was born The first ever web server: http://info.cern.ch/
What is HyperText - CERN
Apparently Ted Nelson was the first to use this term too. Hypertext and HyperMedia are concepts, not products. See also: A list of terms used in hypertext litterature. Conferences; Commercial …
Tim Berners-Lee's original WorldWideWeb browser in 1993
Tim Berners-Lee's original WorldWideWeb browser in 1993. This screen shot was taken in 1993 from a NeXT computer. As one can see, there is not much of a difference between these …
cern.info.ch - The first universal line-mode browser
The first universal line-mode browser. During the 1990s a visitor to CERN’s early homepage would have seen something like this. This looks much more primitive than the NeXT screen …