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Internet History In Pictures

prostoalex writes "Tired of reading black-on-white text on Internet history and its celebrities? The Faces in front of the Monitors features the Internet history in pictures. See the legendary BBN IMP team, Linus naked and drinking beer, Bill Gates and Paul Allen and other luminaries."

4 of 288 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Gates and Allen by reiggin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You're wrong. Point your finger towards Palo Alto. Not Billy Boy "Why Invent When You Can Copy" Gates.

  2. Re:Not just Internet history by adept256 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Charles Babbage designed a working mechanical computer.

    Mechanical.
    Computer.

    Sheesh, what does it take to get your respect?

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    I ran a benchmark on my quantum computer, now I can't find it anywhere!
  3. Re:Gates and Allen by rmpotter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sigh... try looking at this bit of HISTORY from a historical perspective. Consider the other names on the list. Some of them were relatively minor players in the grand scheme. Do you seriously believe the people who had a major hand in creating OS's which drive hundreds of millions of PCs should be ignored because you don't believe they "contributed"? It's history. It's evolution. It took MS a long time to create a usable, reliable (though not yet secure) desktop OS which has been deployed on millions of desktops with countless hardware combinations. Linux is inching toward the desktop. but it's not there yet. In the meantime, let's not re-write history.

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    Is this sig nificant?
  4. Extraneous names and photos by FreeUser · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Some names (and photos) seem to be missing.

    Not only that, but some names and photos are extraneous and have no relevence to Internet history whatsoever.

    To wit, what do Bill Gates and Paul Allen have to do with the history of the Internet? Absolutely nothing. Neither of them innovated a single thing with respect to the Internet, indeed, the Internet blindsided them while they were busy trying to setup a Microsoft version of CompuServe embedded in the windows desktop. Hell, they're still trying, by dumbing down the Internet to CompuServe-esque levels and embedding it into their desktop in the form of a pansy candy-assed butterfly by the name of MSN.

    Unless Bill Gates is going down as the End of the History of Internet, killed by his desktop monopoly and wide deployment of DRM (events which have yet to happen, and arguably may never occur), his presence, while perhaps relevant to the history of personal computing, certainly isn't with repect to the history of the 'net.

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    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy