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Toll Free 1-888-275-9840
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Read - Think +
Act
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Who Invented The Internet - Who Was The First To Use The
Internet
Tim Berners-Lee
Invented the Internet
From the thousands of interconnected
threads of the Internet, he wove the World Wide Web and created a mass medium
for the 21st century
Want to see how much the world has changed in the past decade? Log on to the
Internet, launch a search engine and type in the word enquire (British
spelling, please). You'll get about 30,000 hits.
It turns out you can "enquire" about nearly anything on line these days, from
used Harley Davidsons for sale in Sydney, Australia ("Enquire about touring
bikes. Click here!"), to computer-training-by-e-mail courses in India ("Where
excellence is not an act but a habit"). Click once to go to a site in Nairobi
and enquire about booking shuttle reservations there.
Click again, and zip off to Singapore, to a company that specializes in "pet
moving." Enquire about buying industrial-age nuts and bolts from "the Bolt
Boys" in South Africa, or teddy bears in upstate New York. Exotic cigar labels!
Tantric sex guides! Four-poster beds for dogs!
So what, you say? Everybody knows that with a mouse, a modem and access to the
Internet, these days you can point-and-click anywhere on the planet,
unencumbered by time or space or long-distance phone tariffs.
Ah, but scroll down the list far enough, hundreds of entries deep, and you'll
find this hidden Rosebud of cyberspace: "Enquire Within Upon Everything" a
nifty little computer program written nearly 20 years ago by a lowly software
consultant named Tim Berners-Lee. Who knew then that from this modest hack
would flow the civilization-altering, millionaire-spawning, information
suckhole known as the World Wide Web?
Unlike so many of the inventions that have moved the world, this one truly was
the work of one man. Thomas Edison got credit for the light bulb, but he had
dozens of people in his lab working on it. William Shockley may have fathered
the transistor, but two of his research scientists actually built it. And if
there ever was a thing that was made by committee, the Internet with its
protocols and packet switching is it. But the World Wide Web is Berners-Lee's
alone. He designed it. He loosed it on the world. And he more than anyone else
has fought to keep it open, nonproprietary and free.
It started, of all places, in the Swiss Alps. The year was 1980. Berners-Lee,
doing a six-month stint as a software engineer at CERN, the European Laboratory
for Particle Physics, in Geneva, was noodling around with a way to organize his
far-flung notes. He had always been interested in programs that dealt with
information in a "brain-like way" but that could improve upon that occasionally
memory-constrained organ. So he devised a piece of software that could, as he
put it, keep "track of all the random associations one comes across in real
life and brains are supposed to be so good at remembering but sometimes mine
wouldn't." He called it Enquire, short for Enquire Within Upon Everything, a
Victorian-era encyclopedia he remembered from childhood.
Building on ideas that were current in software design at the time, Berners-Lee
fashioned a kind of "hypertext" notebook. Words in a document could be "linked"
to other files on Berners-Lee's computer; he could follow a link by number
(there was no mouse to click back then) and automatically pull up its related
document. It worked splendidly in its solipsistic, Only-On-My-Computer
way.
But what if he wanted to add stuff that resided on someone else's computer?
First he would need that person's permission, and then he would have to do the
dreary work of adding the new material to a central database. An even better
solution would be to open up his document and his computer to everyone and
allow them to link their stuff to his. He could limit access to his colleagues
at CERN, but why stop there? Open it up to scientists everywhere! Let it span
the networks! In Berners-Lee's scheme there would be no central manager, no
central database and no scaling problems. The thing could grow like the
Internet itself, open-ended and infinite. "One had to be able to jump," he
later wrote, "from software documentation to a list of people to a phone book
to an organizational chart to whatever."
So he cobbled together a relatively easy-to-learn coding system HTML (HyperText
Mark-up Language) that has come to be the lingua franca of the Web; it's the
way Web-content creators put those little colored, underlined links in their
text, add images and so on. He designed an addressing scheme that gave each Web
page a unique location, or url (universal resource locator). And he hacked a
set of rules that permitted these documents to be linked together on computers
across the Internet. He called that set of rules HTTP (HyperText Transfer
Protocol).
And on the seventh day, Berners-Lee cobbled together the World Wide Web's first
(but not the last) browser, which allowed users anywhere to view his creation
on their computer screen. In 1991 the World Wide Web debuted, instantly
bringing order and clarity to the chaos that was cyberspace. From that moment
on, the Web and the Internet grew as one, often at exponential rates. Within
five years, the number of Internet users jumped from 600,000 to 40 million. At
one point, it was doubling every 53 days.
Raised in London in the 1960s, Berners-Lee was the quintessential child of the
computer age. His parents met while working on the Ferranti Mark I, the first
computer sold commercially.
They taught him to think unconventionally; he'd play games over the breakfast
table with imaginary numbers (what's the square root of minus 4?). He made
pretend computers out of cardboard boxes and five-hole paper tape and fell in
love with electronics. Later, at Oxford, he built his own working electronic
computer out of spare parts and a TV set. He also studied physics, which he
thought would be a lovely compromise between math and electronics. "Physics was
fun," he recalls. "And in fact a good preparation for creating a global
system."
It's hard to overstate the impact of the global system he created. It's almost
Gutenbergian. He took a powerful communications system that only the elite
could use and turned it into a mass medium. "If this were a traditional
science, Berners-Lee would win a Nobel Prize," Eric Schmidt, CEO of Novell,
once told the New York Times. "What he's done is that significant."
You'd think he would have at least got rich; he had plenty of opportunities.
But at every juncture, Berners-Lee chose the nonprofit road, both for himself
and his creation. Marc Andreessen, who helped write the first popular Web
browser, Mosaic which, unlike the master's browser, put images and text in the
same place, like pages in a magazine went on to co-found Netscape and become
one of the Web's first millionaires.
Berners-Lee, by contrast, headed off in 1994 to an administrative and academic
life at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. From a sparse office at
M.I.T., he directs the W3 Consortium, the standard-setting body that helps
Netscape, Microsoft and anyone else agree on openly published protocols rather
than hold one another back with proprietary technology. The rest of the world
may be trying to cash in on the Web's phenomenal growth, but Berners-Lee is
content to labor quietly in the background, ensuring that all of us can
continue, well into the next century, to Enquire Within Upon Anything.
By JOSHUA QUITTNER
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