The Web Is 16 Today
GuNgA-DiN writes, "Today marks the 16th anniversary of the World Wide Web. According to the timeline on the W3.org site: 'The first web page [was] http://nxoc01.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/TheProject.html. Unfortunately CERN no longer supports the historical site. Note from this era too, the least recently modified web page we know of, last changed Tue, 13 Nov 1990 15:17:00 GMT (though the URI changed.)' A lot has happened in 16 years and this little 'baby' has grown into quite the teenager."
For the real historian:
a 77343f9175b24c3?output=gplain
:)
s c.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!math.lsa.umich.edu !math.lsa.umich.edu!emv " for the bucks ?)
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.archives/msg/
There you have it all (and there is not much new yet
bang "gmdzi!unido!mcsun!uunet!aplcen!uakari.primate.wi
a public domain version of Lisp
and, of course
"Don't forget to send in your license form. Enjoy."
CC.
TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
I was back in '81. Heck, I spent the 80's flame warring on GEnie and CompuServe, and paying by the hour to do it!
And then there was FidoNet.
And everyone's own homebrewed BBS software.
87? 87 was for the latecomers.
it was, appropriately enough for the web and its future as the pr0n superhighway, of scantily clad women
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
The longest-serving web server (the search engine behind the current celt.ucc.ie) was the 9th web server in the world and it's still sitting there, still serving the project it was bought for. Something of a two-edged sword: kudos to Sun for making a machine that has never crashed and never dropped a bit, and to Tim Bray for the PAT search engine which runs on it; but a victim of its own success in that it's only now being scheduled for replacement as the project moves from SGML to XML.
Well, the content is still the original one and (surprise!) is still almost 100% valid HTML 4.01 Transitional! I kid you not: try it for yourself!
The only missing thing is the DOCTYPE declaration, but everything else is just fine: call it a tribute to the incredible backward/forward/whatever compatibility and flexibility of HTML!
There's a hidden treasure in Python 3.x: __prepare__()
OK, who was the last person to surf the entire Web? By this I mean visit every site manually. I did that sometime in November 1992. Took me about 8 hours. At the time there were about 100 sites that were linked to the CERN list of sites.
Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/