Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Twenty years ago, CERN announced the World Wide Web, the Internet for all - The Press

Into The World Wide Web, known more simply as the Web, celebrates 20 years of “freedom”: April 30, 1993, the CERN in Geneva in fact made public the technology used and made available freely without rights.

Into Known by the acronym WWW or Web, the Internet service was created in 1989 by Tim Berners-Lee, a researcher at CERN, to facilitate the sharing of information among physicists from universities and research institutes. At the point of conception, the World Wide Web was only one of many similar services available on the internet.

Into The ease of use and especially the decision to make it a free service with no rights and it led to the rapid spread, so much so that today the most widely used standard tra nsmission on the Internet.

Into To celebrate the anniversary of the publication of the document that has made Free Web technology, CERN has launched a project to restore the first network site , now no longer in line, created by Berners-Lee just to spread the use of the Web and hosted on a NeXT computer.

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