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Wikipedia

History of the World Wide Web

The World Wide Web ("WWW", "W3" or simply "the Web") is a global information medium which users can access via computers connected to the Internet. The term is often mistakenly used as a synonym for the Internet, but the Web is a service that operates over the Internet, just as email and Usenet do. The history of the Internet and the history of hypertext date back significantly further than that of the World Wide Web.

World Wide Web
The Web's former logo designed by Robert Cailliau
InventorTim Berners-Lee
Inception12 March 1989; 34 years ago (1989-03-12)

Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web while working at CERN in 1989. He proposed a "universal linked information system" using several concepts and technologies, the most fundamental of which was the connections that existed between information.[1][2] He developed the first web server, the first web browser, and a document formatting protocol, called Hypertext Markup Language (HTML). After publishing the markup language in 1991, and releasing the browser source code for public use in 1993, many other web browsers were soon developed, with Marc Andreessen's Mosaic (later Netscape Navigator), being particularly easy to use and install, and often credited with sparking the Internet boom of the 1990s. It was a graphical browser which ran on several popular office and home computers, bringing multimedia content to non-technical users by including images and text on the same page.

Websites for use by the general public began to emerge in 1993–94. This spurred competition in server and browser software, highlighted in the Browser wars which was initially dominated by Netscape Navigator and Internet Explorer. Following the complete removal of commercial restrictions on Internet use by 1995, commercialization of the Web amidst macroeconomic factors led to the dot-com boom and bust in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

The features of HTML evolved over time, leading to HTML version 2 in 1995, HTML3 and HTML4 in 1997, and HTML5 in 2014. The language was extended with advanced formatting in Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) and with programming capability by JavaScript. AJAX programming delivered dynamic content to users, which sparked a new era in Web design, styled Web 2.0. The use of social media, becoming common-place in the 2010s, allowed users to compose multimedia content without programming skills, making the Web ubiquitous in every-day life.

Background edit

The underlying concept of hypertext as a user interface paradigm originated in projects in the 1960s, from research such as the Hypertext Editing System (HES) by Andries van Dam at Brown University, IBM Generalized Markup Language, Ted Nelson's Project Xanadu, and Douglas Engelbart's oN-Line System (NLS).[3][page needed][non-primary source needed] Both Nelson and Engelbart were in turn inspired by Vannevar Bush's microfilm-based memex, which was described in the 1945 essay "As We May Think".[4][title missing][5] Other precursors were FRESS and Intermedia. Paul Otlet's project Mundaneum has also been named as an early 20th-century precursor of the Web.

In 1980, Tim Berners-Lee, at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Switzerland, built ENQUIRE, as a personal database of people and software models, but also as a way to experiment with hypertext; each new page of information in ENQUIRE had to be linked to another page.[6][7]

When Berners-Lee built ENQUIRE, the ideas developed by Bush, Engelbart, and Nelson did not influence his work, since he was not aware of them. However, as Berners-Lee began to refine his ideas, the work of these predecessors would later help to confirm the legitimacy of his concept.[6][8]

During the 1980s, many packet-switched data networks emerged based on various communication protocols (see Protocol Wars). One of these standards was the Internet protocol suite, which is often referred to as TCP/IP. As the Internet grew through the 1980s, many people realized the increasing need to be able to find and organize files and use information. By 1985, the Domain Name System (upon which the Uniform Resource Locator is built) came into being.[9][better source needed][failed verification] Many small, self-contained hypertext systems were created, such as Apple Computer's HyperCard (1987).

Berners-Lee's contract in 1980 was from June to December, but in 1984 he returned to CERN in a permanent role, and considered its problems of information management: physicists from around the world needed to share data, yet they lacked common machines and any shared presentation software. Shortly after Berners-Lee's return to CERN, TCP/IP protocols were installed on Unix machines at the institution, turning it into the largest Internet site in Europe. In 1988, the first direct IP connection between Europe and North America was established and Berners-Lee began to openly discuss the possibility of a web-like system at CERN.[10] He was inspired by a book, Enquire Within upon Everything.

1989–1991: Origins edit

CERN edit

 
The NeXT Computer used by Tim Berners-Lee at CERN became the first Web server.
 
The corridor where the World Wide Web was born, on the ground floor of building No. 1 at CERN
 
Where the WEB was born

While working at CERN, Tim Berners-Lee became frustrated with the inefficiencies and difficulties posed by finding information stored on different computers.[11] On 12 March 1989, he submitted a memorandum, titled "Information Management: A Proposal",[1][12] to the management at CERN. The proposal used the term "web" and was based on "a large hypertext database with typed links". It described a system called "Mesh" that referenced ENQUIRE, the database and software project he had built in 1980, with a more elaborate information management system based on links embedded as text: "Imagine, then, the references in this document all being associated with the network address of the thing to which they referred, so that while reading this document, you could skip to them with a click of the mouse." Such a system, he explained, could be referred to using one of the existing meanings of the word hypertext, a term that he says was coined in the 1950s. Berners-Lee notes the possibility of multimedia documents that include graphics, speech and video, which he terms hypermedia.[1][2]

Although the proposal attracted little interest, Berners-Lee was encouraged by his manager, Mike Sendall, to begin implementing his system on a newly acquired NeXT workstation. He considered several names, including Information Mesh, The Information Mine or Mine of Information, but settled on World Wide Web. Berners-Lee found an enthusiastic supporter in his colleague and fellow hypertext enthusiast Robert Cailliau who began to promote the proposed system throughout CERN. Berners-Lee and Cailliau pitched Berners-Lee's ideas to the European Conference on Hypertext Technology in September 1990, but found no vendors who could appreciate his vision.

Berners-Lee's breakthrough was to marry hypertext to the Internet. In his book Weaving The Web, he explains that he had repeatedly suggested to members of both technical communities that a marriage between the two technologies was possible. But, when no one took up his invitation, he finally assumed the project himself. In the process, he developed three essential technologies:

With help from Cailliau he published a more formal proposal on 12 November 1990 to build a "hypertext project" called World Wide Web (abbreviated "W3") as a "web" of "hypertext documents" to be viewed by "browsers" using a client–server architecture.[14][15] The proposal was modelled after the Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML) reader Dynatext by Electronic Book Technology, a spin-off from the Institute for Research in Information and Scholarship at Brown University. The Dynatext system, licensed by CERN, was considered too expensive and had an inappropriate licensing policy for use in the general high energy physics community, namely a fee for each document and each document alteration.[citation needed]

At this point HTML and HTTP had already been in development for about two months and the first web server was about a month from completing its first successful test. Berners-Lee's proposal estimated that a read-only Web would be developed within three months and that it would take six months to achieve "the creation of new links and new material by readers, [so that] authorship becomes universal" as well as "the automatic notification of a reader when new material of interest to him/her has become available".

By December 1990, Berners-Lee and his work team had built all the tools necessary for a working Web: the HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP), the HyperText Markup Language (HTML), the first web browser (named WorldWideWeb, which was also a web editor), the first web server (later known as CERN httpd) and the first web site (http://info.cern.ch) containing the first web pages that described the project itself was published on 20 December 1990.[16][17] The browser could access Usenet newsgroups and FTP files as well. A NeXT Computer was used by Berners-Lee as the web server and also to write the web browser.[18]

Working with Berners-Lee at CERN, Nicola Pellow developed the first cross-platform web browser, the Line Mode Browser.[19]

1991–1994: The Web goes public, early growth edit

Initial launch edit

In January 1991, the first web servers outside CERN were switched on. On 6 August 1991, Berners-Lee published a short summary of the World Wide Web project on the newsgroup alt.hypertext, inviting collaborators.[20]

Paul Kunz from the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) visited CERN in September 1991, and was captivated by the Web. He brought the NeXT software back to SLAC, where librarian Louise Addis adapted it for the VM/CMS operating system on the IBM mainframe as a way to host the SPIRES-HEP database and display SLAC's catalog of online documents.[21][22][23][24] This was the first web server outside of Europe and the first in North America.[25]

The World Wide Web had several differences from other hypertext systems available at the time. The Web required only unidirectional links rather than bidirectional ones, making it possible for someone to link to another resource without action by the owner of that resource. It also significantly reduced the difficulty of implementing web servers and browsers (in comparison to earlier systems), but in turn, presented the chronic problem of link rot.

Early browsers edit

The WorldWideWeb browser only ran on NeXTSTEP operating system. This shortcoming was discussed in January 1992,[26] and alleviated in April 1992 by the release of Erwise, an application developed at the Helsinki University of Technology, and in May by ViolaWWW, created by Pei-Yuan Wei, which included advanced features such as embedded graphics, scripting, and animation. ViolaWWW was originally an application for HyperCard.[27] Both programs ran on the X Window System for Unix. In 1992, the first tests between browsers on different platforms were concluded successfully between buildings 513 and 31 in CERN, between browsers on the NexT station and the X11-ported Mosaic browser. ViolaWWW became the recommended browser at CERN. To encourage use within CERN, Bernd Pollermann put the CERN telephone directory on the web—previously users had to log onto the mainframe in order to look up phone numbers. The Web was successful at CERN and spread to other scientific and academic institutions.

Students at the University of Kansas adapted an existing text-only hypertext browser, Lynx, to access the web in 1992. Lynx was available on Unix and DOS, and some web designers, unimpressed with glossy graphical websites, held that a website not accessible through Lynx was not worth visiting.

In these earliest browsers, images opened in a separate "helper" application.

From Gopher to the WWW edit

In the early 1990s, Internet-based projects such as Archie, Gopher, Wide Area Information Servers (WAIS), and the FTP Archive list attempted to create ways to organize distributed data. Gopher was a document browsing system for the Internet, released in 1991 by the University of Minnesota. Invented by Mark P. McCahill, it became the first commonly used hypertext interface to the Internet. While Gopher menu items were examples of hypertext, they were not commonly perceived in that way[clarification needed]. In less than a year, there were hundreds of Gopher servers.[28] It offered a viable alternative to the World Wide Web in the early 1990s and the consensus was that Gopher would be the primary way that people would interact with the Internet.[29][30] However, in 1993, the University of Minnesota declared that Gopher was proprietary and would have to be licensed.[28]

In response, on 30 April 1993, CERN announced that the World Wide Web would be free to anyone, with no fees due, and released their code into the public domain.[31] This made it possible to develop servers and clients independently and to add extensions without licensing restrictions.[citation needed] Coming two months after the announcement that the server implementation of the Gopher protocol was no longer free to use, this spurred the development of various browsers which precipitated a rapid shift away from Gopher.[32] By releasing Berners-Lee's invention for public use, CERN encouraged and enabled its widespread use.[33]

Early websites intermingled links for both the HTTP web protocol and the Gopher protocol, which provided access to content through hypertext menus presented as a file system rather than through HTML files. Early Web users would navigate either by bookmarking popular directory pages or by consulting updated lists such as the NCSA "What's New" page. Some sites were also indexed by WAIS, enabling users to submit full-text searches similar to the capability later provided by search engines.

After 1993 the World Wide Web saw many advances to indexing and ease of access through search engines, which often neglected Gopher and Gopherspace. As its popularity increased through ease of use, incentives for commercial investment in the Web also grew. By the middle of 1994, the Web was outcompeting Gopher and the other browsing systems for the Internet.[34]

NCSA edit

The National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign (UIUC) established a website in November 1992. After Marc Andreessen, a student at UIUC, was shown ViolaWWW in late 1992,[27] he began work on Mosaic with another UIUC student Eric Bina, using funding from the High-Performance Computing and Communications Initiative, a US-federal research and development program initiated by US Senator Al Gore.[35][36][37] Andreessen and Bina released a Unix version of the browser in February 1993; Mac and Windows versions followed in August 1993. The browser gained popularity due to its strong support of integrated multimedia, and the authors' rapid response to user bug reports and recommendations for new features.[27] Historians generally agree that the 1993 introduction of the Mosaic web browser was a turning point for the World Wide Web.[38][39][40]

Before the release of Mosaic in 1993, graphics were not commonly mixed with text in web pages, and the Web was less popular than older protocols such as Gopher and WAIS. Mosaic could display inline images[41] and submit forms[42][43] for Windows, Macintosh and X-Windows. NCSA also developed HTTPd, a Unix web server that used the Common Gateway Interface to process forms and Server Side Includes for dynamic content. Both the client and server were free to use with no restrictions.[44] Mosaic was an immediate hit;[45] its graphical user interface allowed the Web to become by far the most popular protocol on the Internet. Within a year, web traffic surpassed Gopher's.[28] Wired declared that Mosaic made non-Internet online services obsolete,[46] and the Web became the preferred interface for accessing the Internet.[citation needed]

Early growth edit

The World Wide Web enabled the spread of information over the Internet through an easy-to-use and flexible format. It thus played an important role in popularising use of the Internet.[47] Although the two terms are sometimes conflated in popular use, World Wide Web is not synonymous with Internet.[48] The Web is an information space containing hyperlinked documents and other resources, identified by their URIs.[49] It is implemented as both client and server software using Internet protocols such as TCP/IP and HTTP.

In keeping with its origins at CERN, early adopters of the Web were primarily university-based scientific departments or physics laboratories such as SLAC and Fermilab. By January 1993 there were fifty web servers across the world.[50] By October 1993 there were over five hundred servers online, including some notable websites.[51]

Practical media distribution and streaming media over the Web was made possible by advances in data compression, due to the impractically high bandwidth requirements of uncompressed media. Following the introduction of the Web, several media formats based on discrete cosine transform (DCT) were introduced for practical media distribution and streaming over the Web, including the MPEG video format in 1991 and the JPEG image format in 1992. The high level of image compression made JPEG a good format for compensating slow Internet access speeds, typical in the age of dial-up Internet access. JPEG became the most widely used image format for the World Wide Web. A DCT variation, the modified discrete cosine transform (MDCT) algorithm, led to the development of MP3, which was introduced in 1991 and became the first popular audio format on the Web.

In 1992 the Computing and Networking Department of CERN, headed by David Williams, withdrew support of Berners-Lee's work. A two-page email sent by Williams stated that the work of Berners-Lee, with the goal of creating a facility to exchange information such as results and comments from CERN experiments to the scientific community, was not the core activity of CERN and was a misallocation of CERN's IT resources. Following this decision, Tim Berners-Lee left CERN for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he continued to develop HTTP.[citation needed]

The first Microsoft Windows browser was Cello, written by Thomas R. Bruce for the Legal Information Institute at Cornell Law School to provide legal information, since access to Windows was more widespread amongst lawyers than access to Unix. Cello was released in June 1993.

1994–2004: Open standards, going global edit

The rate of web site deployment increased sharply around the world, and fostered development of international standards for protocols and content formatting.[52] Berners-Lee continued to stay involved in guiding web standards, such as the markup languages to compose web pages, and he advocated his vision of a Semantic Web (sometimes known as Web 3.0) based around machine-readability and interoperability standards.

World Wide Web Conference edit

In May 1994, the first International WWW Conference, organized by Robert Cailliau, was held at CERN; the conference has been held every year since.

 
Robert Cailliau, Jean-François Abramatic, and Tim Berners-Lee at the tenth anniversary of the World Wide Web Consortium

World Wide Web Consortium edit

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) was founded by Tim Berners-Lee after he left the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in September/October 1994 in order to create open standards for the Web.[53] It was founded at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Laboratory for Computer Science (MIT/LCS) with support from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which had pioneered the Internet. A year later, a second site was founded at INRIA (a French national computer research lab) with support from the European Commission; and in 1996, a third continental site was created in Japan at Keio University.

W3C comprised various companies that were willing to create standards and recommendations to improve the quality of the Web. Berners-Lee made the Web available freely, with no patent and no royalties due. The W3C decided that its standards must be based on royalty-free technology, so they can be easily adopted by anyone. Netscape and Microsoft, in the middle of a browser war, ignored the W3C and added elements to HTML ad hoc (e.g., blink and marquee). Finally, in 1995, Netscape and Microsoft came to their senses and agreed to abide by the W3C's standard.[54]

The W3C published the standard for HTML 4 in 1997, which included Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), giving designers more control over the appearance of web pages without the need for additional HTML tags. The W3C could not enforce compliance so none of the browsers were fully compliant. This frustrated web designers who formed the Web Standards Project (WaSP) in 1998 with the goal of cajoling compliance with standards.[55] A List Apart and CSS Zen Garden were influential websites that promoted good design and adherence to standards.[56] Nevertheless, AOL halted development of Netscape[57] and Microsoft was slow to update IE.[58] Mozilla and Apple both released browsers that aimed to be more standards compliant (Firefox and Safari), but were unable to dislodge IE as the dominant browser.

 
1997 advertisement in State Magazine by the US State Department Library for sessions introducing the then-unfamiliar Web

Commercialization, dot-com boom and bust, aftermath edit

As the Web grew in the mid-1990s, web directories and primitive search engines were created to index pages and allow people to find things. Commercial use restrictions on the Internet were lifted in 1995 when NSFNET was shut down.

In the US, the online service America Online (AOL) offered their users a connection to the Internet via their own internal browser, using a dial-up Internet connection. In January 1994, Yahoo! was founded by Jerry Yang and David Filo, then students at Stanford University. Yahoo! Directory became the first popular web directory. Yahoo! Search, launched the same year, was the first popular search engine on the World Wide Web. Yahoo! became the quintessential example of a first mover on the Web.

Online shopping began to emerge with the launch of Amazon's shopping site by Jeff Bezos in 1995 and eBay by Pierre Omidyar the same year.

By 1994, Marc Andreessen's Netscape Navigator superseded Mosaic in popularity, holding the position for some time. Bill Gates outlined Microsoft's strategy to dominate the Internet in his Tidal Wave memo in 1995.[59] With the release of Windows 95 and the popular Internet Explorer browser, many public companies began to develop a Web presence. At first, people mainly anticipated the possibilities of free publishing and instant worldwide information. By the late 1990s, the directory model had given way to search engines, corresponding with the rise of Google Search, which developed new approaches to relevancy ranking. Directory features, while still commonly available, became after-thoughts to search engines.

Netscape had a very successful IPO valuing the company at $2.9 billion despite the lack of profits and triggering the dot-com bubble.[60] Increasing familiarity with the Web led to the growth of direct Web-based commerce (e-commerce) and instantaneous group communications worldwide. Many dot-com companies, displaying products on hypertext webpages, were added into the Web. Over the next 5 years, over a trillion dollars was raised to fund thousands of startups consisting of little more than a website.

During the dot-com boom, many companies vied to create a dominant web portal in the belief that such a website would best be able to attract a large audience that in turn would attract online advertising revenue. While most of these portals offered a search engine, they were not interested in encouraging users to find other websites and leave the portal and instead concentrated on "sticky" content.[61] In contrast, Google was a stripped-down search engine that delivered superior results.[62] It was a hit with users who switched from portals to Google. Furthermore, with AdWords, Google had an effective business model.[63][64]

AOL bought Netscape in 1998.[65] In spite of their early success, Netscape was unable to fend off Microsoft.[66] Internet Explorer and a variety of other browsers almost completely replaced it.

Faster broadband internet connections replaced many dial-up connections from the beginning of the 2000s.

With the bursting of the dot-com bubble, many web portals either scaled back operations, floundered,[67] or shut down entirely.[68][69][70] AOL disbanded Netscape in 2003.[71]

Web server software edit

Web server software was developed to allow computers to act as web servers. The first web servers supported only static files, such as HTML (and images), but now they commonly allow embedding of server side applications. Web framework software enabled building and deploying web applications. Content management systems (CMS) were developed to organize and facilitate collaborative content creation. Many of them were built on top of separate content management frameworks.

After Robert McCool joined Netscape, development on the NCSA HTTPd server languished. In 1995, Brian Behlendorf and Cliff Skolnick created a mailing list to coordinate efforts to fix bugs and make improvements to HTTPd.[72] They called their version of HTTPd, Apache.[73] Apache quickly became the dominant server on the Web.[74] After adding support for modules, Apache was able to allow developers to handle web requests with a variety of languages including Perl, PHP and Python. Together with Linux and MySQL, it became known as the LAMP platform.

Following the success of Apache, the Apache Software Foundation was founded in 1999 and produced many open source web software projects in the same collaborative spirit.

Browser wars edit

After graduating from UIUC, Andreessen and Jim Clark, former CEO of Silicon Graphics, met and formed Mosaic Communications Corporation in April 1994 to develop the Mosaic Netscape browser commercially. The company later changed its name to Netscape, and the browser was developed further as Netscape Navigator, which soon became the dominant web client. They also released the Netsite Commerce web server which could handle SSL requests, thus enabling e-commerce on the Web.[75] SSL became the standard method to encrypt web traffic. Navigator 1.0 also introduced cookies, but Netscape did not publicize this feature. Netscape followed up with Navigator 2 in 1995 introducing frames, Java applets and JavaScript. In 1998, Netscape made Navigator open source and launched Mozilla.[76]

Microsoft licensed Mosaic from Spyglass and released Internet Explorer 1.0 that year and IE2 later the same year. IE2 added features pioneered at Netscape such as cookies, SSL, and JavaScript. The browser wars became a competition for dominance when Explorer was bundled with Windows.[77][78] This led to the United States v. Microsoft Corporation antitrust lawsuit.

IE3, released in 1996, added support for Java applets, ActiveX, and CSS. At this point, Microsoft began bundling IE with Windows. IE3 managed to increase Microsoft's share of the browser market from under 10% to over 20%.[79] IE4, released the following year, introduced Dynamic HTML setting the stage for the Web 2.0 revolution. By 1998, IE was able to capture the majority of the desktop browser market.[66] It would be the dominant browser for the next fourteen years.

Google released their Chrome browser in 2008 with the first JIT JavaScript engine, V8. Chrome overtook IE to become the dominant desktop browser in four years,[80] and overtook Safari to become the dominant mobile browser in two.[81] At the same time, Google open sourced Chrome's codebase as Chromium.[82]

Ryan Dahl used Chromium's V8 engine in 2009 to power an event driven runtime system, Node.js, which allowed JavaScript code to be used on servers as well as browsers. This led to the development of new software stacks such as MEAN. Thanks to frameworks such as Electron, developers can bundle up node applications as standalone desktop applications such as Slack.

Acer and Samsung began selling Chromebooks, cheap laptops running ChromeOS capable of running web apps, in 2011. Over the next decade, more companies offered Chromebooks. Chromebooks outsold MacOS devices in 2020 to become the second most popular OS in the world.[83]

Other notable web browsers emerged including Mozilla's Firefox, Opera's Opera browser and Apple's Safari.

2004–present: The Web as platform, ubiquity edit

Web 2.0 edit

Web pages were initially conceived as structured documents based upon HTML. They could include images, video, and other content, although the use of media was initially relatively limited and the content was mainly static. By the mid-2000s, new approaches to sharing and exchanging content, such as blogs and RSS, rapidly gained acceptance on the Web. The video-sharing website YouTube launched the concept of user-generated content.[84] As new technologies made it easier to create websites that behaved dynamically, the Web attained greater ease of use and gained a sense of interactivity which ushered in a period of rapid popularization. This new era also brought into existence social networking websites, such as Friendster, MySpace, Facebook, and Twitter, and photo- and video-sharing websites such as Flickr and, later, Instagram which gained users rapidly and became a central part of youth culture. Wikipedia's user-edited content quickly displaced the professionally-written Microsoft Encarta.[85] The popularity of these sites, combined with developments in the technology that enabled them, and the increasing availability and affordability of high-speed connections made video content far more common on all kinds of websites. This new media-rich model for information exchange, featuring user-generated and user-edited websites, was dubbed Web 2.0, a term coined in 1999 and popularized in 2004 at the Web 2.0 Conference. The Web 2.0 boom drew investment from companies worldwide and saw many new service-oriented startups catering to a newly "democratized" Web.[86][87][88][89][90][91]

JavaScript made the development of interactive web applications possible. Web pages could run JavaScript and respond to user input, but they could not interact with the network. Browsers could submit data to servers via forms and receive new pages, but this was slow compared to traditional desktop applications. Developers that wanted to offer sophisticated applications over the Web used Java or nonstandard solutions such as Adobe Flash or Microsoft's ActiveX.

Microsoft added a little noticed feature in 1999 called XMLHttpRequest to MSIE. Developers at Oddpost used this feature in 2002 to create the first Ajax application, a webmail client that performed as well as a desktop application.[92] Ajax apps were revolutionary. Web pages evolved beyond static documents to full-blown applications. Websites began offering APIs in addition to webpages. Developers created a plethora of Ajax apps including widgets, mashups and new types of social apps. Analysts called it Web 2.0.[93]

Browser vendors improved the performance of their JavaScript engines[94] and dropped support for Flash and Java.[95][96] Traditional client server applications were replaced by cloud apps. Amazon reinvented itself as a cloud service provider.

The use of social media on the Web has become ubiquitous in everyday life.[97][98] The 2010s also saw the rise of streaming services, such as Netflix.

In spite of the success of Web 2.0 applications, the W3C forged ahead with their plan to replace HTML with XHTML and represent all data in XML. In 2004, representatives from Mozilla, Opera, and Apple formed an opposing group, the Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group (WHATWG), dedicated to improving HTML while maintaining backward compatibility.[99] For the next several years, websites did not transition their content to XHTML; browser vendors did not adopt XHTML2; and developers eschewed XML in favor of JSON.[100] By 2007, the W3C conceded and announced they were restarting work on HTML[101] and in 2009, they officially abandoned XHTML.[102] In 2019, the W3C ceded control of the HTML specification, now called the HTML Living Standard, to WHATWG.[103]

Microsoft rewrote their Edge browser in 2021 to use Chromium as its code base in order to be more compatible with Chrome.[104]

Security, censorship and cybercrime edit

The increasing use of encrypted connections (HTTPS) enabled e-commerce and online banking. Nonetheless, the 2010s saw the emergence of various controversial trends, such as internet censorship and the growth of cybercrime, including web-based cyberattacks and ransomware.[105][106]

Mobile edit

Early attempts to allow wireless devices to access the Web used simplified formats such as i-mode and WAP. Apple introduced the first smartphone in 2007 with a full-featured browser. Other companies followed suit and in 2011, smartphone sales overtook PCs.[107] Since 2016, most visitors access websites with mobile devices[108] which led to the adoption of responsive web design.

Apple, Mozilla, and Google have taken different approaches to integrating smartphones with modern web apps. Apple initially promoted web apps for the iPhone, but then encouraged developers to make native apps.[109] Mozilla announced Web APIs in 2011 to allow webapps to access hardware features such as audio, camera or GPS.[110] Frameworks such as Cordova and Ionic allow developers to build hybrid apps. Mozilla released a mobile OS designed to run web apps in 2012,[111] but discontinued it in 2015.[112]

Google announced specifications for Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP),[113] and progressive web applications (PWA) in 2015.[114] AMPs use a combination of HTML, JavaScript, and Web Components to optimize web pages for mobile devices; and PWAs are web pages that, with a combination of web workers and manifest files, can be saved to a mobile device and opened like a native app.

Web 3.0 and Web3 edit

The extension of the Web to facilitate data exchange was explored as an approach to create a Semantic Web (sometimes called Web 3.0). This involved using machine-readable information and interoperability standards to enable context-understanding programs to intelligently select information for users.[115] Continued extension of the Web has focused on connecting devices to the Internet, coined Intelligent Device Management. As Internet connectivity becomes ubiquitous, manufacturers have started to leverage the expanded computing power of their devices to enhance their usability and capability. Through Internet connectivity, manufacturers are now able to interact with the devices they have sold and shipped to their customers, and customers are able to interact with the manufacturer (and other providers) to access a lot of new content.[116]

Web3 (sometimes also referred to as Web 3.0) is an idea for a decentralized Web based on public blockchains, smart contracts, digital tokens and digital wallets.[117]

Historiography edit

Historiography of the Web poses specific challenges including, disposable data, missing links, lost content and archived websites, which have consequences for web historians. Sites such as the Internet Archive aim to preserve content.[118][119]

See also edit

References edit

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  3. ^ Engelbart, Douglas (1962). (Report). Archived from the original on 24 November 2005. Retrieved 25 November 2005.
  4. ^ Conklin, Jeff (1987), IEEE Computer, vol. 20, pp. 17–41
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  10. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 November 2015. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
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Further reading edit

  • Berners-Lee, Tim; Fischetti, Mark (1999). Weaving the Web : the original design and ultimate destiny of the World Wide Web by its inventor. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco. ISBN 0-06-251586-1. OCLC 41238513.
  • Brügger, Niels (2017). Web 25 : histories from the first 25 years of the World Wide Web. New York, NY. ISBN 978-1-4331-3269-8. OCLC 976036138.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Gillies, James; Cailliau, Robert (2000). How the Web was born : the story of the World Wide Web. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-286207-3. OCLC 43377073.
  • Herman, Andrew; Swiss, Thomas (2000). The World Wide Web and contemporary cultural theory. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-92501-0. OCLC 44446371.

External links edit

  • Web History: first 30 years
  • "A Little History of the World Wide Web: from 1945 to 1995", Dan Connolly, W3C, 2000
  • "The World Wide Web: Past, Present and Future", Tim Berners-Lee, August 1996
  • The History of the Web
  • Web Development History
  • A Brief(ish) History of the Web Universe, Brian Kardell
  • Web History Community Group, W3C
  • The history of the Web, W3C
  • info.cern.ch, the first website

history, world, wide, history, redirects, here, feature, browsers, browsing, history, world, wide, simply, global, information, medium, which, users, access, computers, connected, internet, term, often, mistakenly, used, synonym, internet, service, that, opera. Web history redirects here For the feature of web browsers see Web browsing history The World Wide Web WWW W3 or simply the Web is a global information medium which users can access via computers connected to the Internet The term is often mistakenly used as a synonym for the Internet but the Web is a service that operates over the Internet just as email and Usenet do The history of the Internet and the history of hypertext date back significantly further than that of the World Wide Web World Wide WebThe Web s former logo designed by Robert CailliauInventorTim Berners LeeInception12 March 1989 34 years ago 1989 03 12 Tim Berners Lee invented the World Wide Web while working at CERN in 1989 He proposed a universal linked information system using several concepts and technologies the most fundamental of which was the connections that existed between information 1 2 He developed the first web server the first web browser and a document formatting protocol called Hypertext Markup Language HTML After publishing the markup language in 1991 and releasing the browser source code for public use in 1993 many other web browsers were soon developed with Marc Andreessen s Mosaic later Netscape Navigator being particularly easy to use and install and often credited with sparking the Internet boom of the 1990s It was a graphical browser which ran on several popular office and home computers bringing multimedia content to non technical users by including images and text on the same page Websites for use by the general public began to emerge in 1993 94 This spurred competition in server and browser software highlighted in the Browser wars which was initially dominated by Netscape Navigator and Internet Explorer Following the complete removal of commercial restrictions on Internet use by 1995 commercialization of the Web amidst macroeconomic factors led to the dot com boom and bust in the late 1990s and early 2000s The features of HTML evolved over time leading to HTML version 2 in 1995 HTML3 and HTML4 in 1997 and HTML5 in 2014 The language was extended with advanced formatting in Cascading Style Sheets CSS and with programming capability by JavaScript AJAX programming delivered dynamic content to users which sparked a new era in Web design styled Web 2 0 The use of social media becoming common place in the 2010s allowed users to compose multimedia content without programming skills making the Web ubiquitous in every day life Contents 1 Background 2 1989 1991 Origins 2 1 CERN 3 1991 1994 The Web goes public early growth 3 1 Initial launch 3 2 Early browsers 3 3 From Gopher to the WWW 3 4 NCSA 3 5 Early growth 4 1994 2004 Open standards going global 4 1 World Wide Web Conference 4 2 World Wide Web Consortium 4 3 Commercialization dot com boom and bust aftermath 4 4 Web server software 4 5 Browser wars 5 2004 present The Web as platform ubiquity 5 1 Web 2 0 5 2 Security censorship and cybercrime 5 3 Mobile 5 4 Web 3 0 and Web3 6 Historiography 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground editSee also History of the Internet and History of hypertext The underlying concept of hypertext as a user interface paradigm originated in projects in the 1960s from research such as the Hypertext Editing System HES by Andries van Dam at Brown University IBM Generalized Markup Language Ted Nelson s Project Xanadu and Douglas Engelbart s oN Line System NLS 3 page needed non primary source needed Both Nelson and Engelbart were in turn inspired by Vannevar Bush s microfilm based memex which was described in the 1945 essay As We May Think 4 title missing 5 Other precursors were FRESS and Intermedia Paul Otlet s project Mundaneum has also been named as an early 20th century precursor of the Web In 1980 Tim Berners Lee at the European Organization for Nuclear Research CERN in Switzerland built ENQUIRE as a personal database of people and software models but also as a way to experiment with hypertext each new page of information in ENQUIRE had to be linked to another page 6 7 When Berners Lee built ENQUIRE the ideas developed by Bush Engelbart and Nelson did not influence his work since he was not aware of them However as Berners Lee began to refine his ideas the work of these predecessors would later help to confirm the legitimacy of his concept 6 8 During the 1980s many packet switched data networks emerged based on various communication protocols see Protocol Wars One of these standards was the Internet protocol suite which is often referred to as TCP IP As the Internet grew through the 1980s many people realized the increasing need to be able to find and organize files and use information By 1985 the Domain Name System upon which the Uniform Resource Locator is built came into being 9 better source needed failed verification Many small self contained hypertext systems were created such as Apple Computer s HyperCard 1987 Berners Lee s contract in 1980 was from June to December but in 1984 he returned to CERN in a permanent role and considered its problems of information management physicists from around the world needed to share data yet they lacked common machines and any shared presentation software Shortly after Berners Lee s return to CERN TCP IP protocols were installed on Unix machines at the institution turning it into the largest Internet site in Europe In 1988 the first direct IP connection between Europe and North America was established and Berners Lee began to openly discuss the possibility of a web like system at CERN 10 He was inspired by a book Enquire Within upon Everything 1989 1991 Origins editCERN edit nbsp The NeXT Computer used by Tim Berners Lee at CERN became the first Web server nbsp The corridor where the World Wide Web was born on the ground floor of building No 1 at CERN nbsp Where the WEB was bornWhile working at CERN Tim Berners Lee became frustrated with the inefficiencies and difficulties posed by finding information stored on different computers 11 On 12 March 1989 he submitted a memorandum titled Information Management A Proposal 1 12 to the management at CERN The proposal used the term web and was based on a large hypertext database with typed links It described a system called Mesh that referenced ENQUIRE the database and software project he had built in 1980 with a more elaborate information management system based on links embedded as text Imagine then the references in this document all being associated with the network address of the thing to which they referred so that while reading this document you could skip to them with a click of the mouse Such a system he explained could be referred to using one of the existing meanings of the word hypertext a term that he says was coined in the 1950s Berners Lee notes the possibility of multimedia documents that include graphics speech and video which he terms hypermedia 1 2 Although the proposal attracted little interest Berners Lee was encouraged by his manager Mike Sendall to begin implementing his system on a newly acquired NeXT workstation He considered several names including Information Mesh The Information Mine or Mine of Information but settled on World Wide Web Berners Lee found an enthusiastic supporter in his colleague and fellow hypertext enthusiast Robert Cailliau who began to promote the proposed system throughout CERN Berners Lee and Cailliau pitched Berners Lee s ideas to the European Conference on Hypertext Technology in September 1990 but found no vendors who could appreciate his vision Berners Lee s breakthrough was to marry hypertext to the Internet In his book Weaving The Web he explains that he had repeatedly suggested to members of both technical communities that a marriage between the two technologies was possible But when no one took up his invitation he finally assumed the project himself In the process he developed three essential technologies a system of globally unique identifiers for resources on the Web and elsewhere the universal document identifier UDI later known as uniform resource locator URL the publishing language Hypertext Markup Language HTML the Hypertext Transfer Protocol HTTP 13 With help from Cailliau he published a more formal proposal on 12 November 1990 to build a hypertext project called World Wide Web abbreviated W3 as a web of hypertext documents to be viewed by browsers using a client server architecture 14 15 The proposal was modelled after the Standard Generalized Markup Language SGML reader Dynatext by Electronic Book Technology a spin off from the Institute for Research in Information and Scholarship at Brown University The Dynatext system licensed by CERN was considered too expensive and had an inappropriate licensing policy for use in the general high energy physics community namely a fee for each document and each document alteration citation needed At this point HTML and HTTP had already been in development for about two months and the first web server was about a month from completing its first successful test Berners Lee s proposal estimated that a read only Web would be developed within three months and that it would take six months to achieve the creation of new links and new material by readers so that authorship becomes universal as well as the automatic notification of a reader when new material of interest to him her has become available By December 1990 Berners Lee and his work team had built all the tools necessary for a working Web the HyperText Transfer Protocol HTTP the HyperText Markup Language HTML the first web browser named WorldWideWeb which was also a web editor the first web server later known as CERN httpd and the first web site http info cern ch containing the first web pages that described the project itself was published on 20 December 1990 16 17 The browser could access Usenet newsgroups and FTP files as well A NeXT Computer was used by Berners Lee as the web server and also to write the web browser 18 Working with Berners Lee at CERN Nicola Pellow developed the first cross platform web browser the Line Mode Browser 19 1991 1994 The Web goes public early growth editInitial launch edit In January 1991 the first web servers outside CERN were switched on On 6 August 1991 Berners Lee published a short summary of the World Wide Web project on the newsgroup alt hypertext inviting collaborators 20 Paul Kunz from the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center SLAC visited CERN in September 1991 and was captivated by the Web He brought the NeXT software back to SLAC where librarian Louise Addis adapted it for the VM CMS operating system on the IBM mainframe as a way to host the SPIRES HEP database and display SLAC s catalog of online documents 21 22 23 24 This was the first web server outside of Europe and the first in North America 25 The World Wide Web had several differences from other hypertext systems available at the time The Web required only unidirectional links rather than bidirectional ones making it possible for someone to link to another resource without action by the owner of that resource It also significantly reduced the difficulty of implementing web servers and browsers in comparison to earlier systems but in turn presented the chronic problem of link rot Early browsers edit The WorldWideWeb browser only ran on NeXTSTEP operating system This shortcoming was discussed in January 1992 26 and alleviated in April 1992 by the release of Erwise an application developed at the Helsinki University of Technology and in May by ViolaWWW created by Pei Yuan Wei which included advanced features such as embedded graphics scripting and animation ViolaWWW was originally an application for HyperCard 27 Both programs ran on the X Window System for Unix In 1992 the first tests between browsers on different platforms were concluded successfully between buildings 513 and 31 in CERN between browsers on the NexT station and the X11 ported Mosaic browser ViolaWWW became the recommended browser at CERN To encourage use within CERN Bernd Pollermann put the CERN telephone directory on the web previously users had to log onto the mainframe in order to look up phone numbers The Web was successful at CERN and spread to other scientific and academic institutions Students at the University of Kansas adapted an existing text only hypertext browser Lynx to access the web in 1992 Lynx was available on Unix and DOS and some web designers unimpressed with glossy graphical websites held that a website not accessible through Lynx was not worth visiting In these earliest browsers images opened in a separate helper application From Gopher to the WWW edit Main article Gopher protocol In the early 1990s Internet based projects such as Archie Gopher Wide Area Information Servers WAIS and the FTP Archive list attempted to create ways to organize distributed data Gopher was a document browsing system for the Internet released in 1991 by the University of Minnesota Invented by Mark P McCahill it became the first commonly used hypertext interface to the Internet While Gopher menu items were examples of hypertext they were not commonly perceived in that way clarification needed In less than a year there were hundreds of Gopher servers 28 It offered a viable alternative to the World Wide Web in the early 1990s and the consensus was that Gopher would be the primary way that people would interact with the Internet 29 30 However in 1993 the University of Minnesota declared that Gopher was proprietary and would have to be licensed 28 In response on 30 April 1993 CERN announced that the World Wide Web would be free to anyone with no fees due and released their code into the public domain 31 This made it possible to develop servers and clients independently and to add extensions without licensing restrictions citation needed Coming two months after the announcement that the server implementation of the Gopher protocol was no longer free to use this spurred the development of various browsers which precipitated a rapid shift away from Gopher 32 By releasing Berners Lee s invention for public use CERN encouraged and enabled its widespread use 33 Early websites intermingled links for both the HTTP web protocol and the Gopher protocol which provided access to content through hypertext menus presented as a file system rather than through HTML files Early Web users would navigate either by bookmarking popular directory pages or by consulting updated lists such as the NCSA What s New page Some sites were also indexed by WAIS enabling users to submit full text searches similar to the capability later provided by search engines After 1993 the World Wide Web saw many advances to indexing and ease of access through search engines which often neglected Gopher and Gopherspace As its popularity increased through ease of use incentives for commercial investment in the Web also grew By the middle of 1994 the Web was outcompeting Gopher and the other browsing systems for the Internet 34 NCSA edit Main article Mosaic web browser The National Center for Supercomputing Applications NCSA at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign UIUC established a website in November 1992 After Marc Andreessen a student at UIUC was shown ViolaWWW in late 1992 27 he began work on Mosaic with another UIUC student Eric Bina using funding from the High Performance Computing and Communications Initiative a US federal research and development program initiated by US Senator Al Gore 35 36 37 Andreessen and Bina released a Unix version of the browser in February 1993 Mac and Windows versions followed in August 1993 The browser gained popularity due to its strong support of integrated multimedia and the authors rapid response to user bug reports and recommendations for new features 27 Historians generally agree that the 1993 introduction of the Mosaic web browser was a turning point for the World Wide Web 38 39 40 Before the release of Mosaic in 1993 graphics were not commonly mixed with text in web pages and the Web was less popular than older protocols such as Gopher and WAIS Mosaic could display inline images 41 and submit forms 42 43 for Windows Macintosh and X Windows NCSA also developed HTTPd a Unix web server that used the Common Gateway Interface to process forms and Server Side Includes for dynamic content Both the client and server were free to use with no restrictions 44 Mosaic was an immediate hit 45 its graphical user interface allowed the Web to become by far the most popular protocol on the Internet Within a year web traffic surpassed Gopher s 28 Wired declared that Mosaic made non Internet online services obsolete 46 and the Web became the preferred interface for accessing the Internet citation needed Early growth edit The World Wide Web enabled the spread of information over the Internet through an easy to use and flexible format It thus played an important role in popularising use of the Internet 47 Although the two terms are sometimes conflated in popular use World Wide Web is not synonymous with Internet 48 The Web is an information space containing hyperlinked documents and other resources identified by their URIs 49 It is implemented as both client and server software using Internet protocols such as TCP IP and HTTP In keeping with its origins at CERN early adopters of the Web were primarily university based scientific departments or physics laboratories such as SLAC and Fermilab By January 1993 there were fifty web servers across the world 50 By October 1993 there were over five hundred servers online including some notable websites 51 Practical media distribution and streaming media over the Web was made possible by advances in data compression due to the impractically high bandwidth requirements of uncompressed media Following the introduction of the Web several media formats based on discrete cosine transform DCT were introduced for practical media distribution and streaming over the Web including the MPEG video format in 1991 and the JPEG image format in 1992 The high level of image compression made JPEG a good format for compensating slow Internet access speeds typical in the age of dial up Internet access JPEG became the most widely used image format for the World Wide Web A DCT variation the modified discrete cosine transform MDCT algorithm led to the development of MP3 which was introduced in 1991 and became the first popular audio format on the Web In 1992 the Computing and Networking Department of CERN headed by David Williams withdrew support of Berners Lee s work A two page email sent by Williams stated that the work of Berners Lee with the goal of creating a facility to exchange information such as results and comments from CERN experiments to the scientific community was not the core activity of CERN and was a misallocation of CERN s IT resources Following this decision Tim Berners Lee left CERN for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT where he continued to develop HTTP citation needed The first Microsoft Windows browser was Cello written by Thomas R Bruce for the Legal Information Institute at Cornell Law School to provide legal information since access to Windows was more widespread amongst lawyers than access to Unix Cello was released in June 1993 1994 2004 Open standards going global editThe rate of web site deployment increased sharply around the world and fostered development of international standards for protocols and content formatting 52 Berners Lee continued to stay involved in guiding web standards such as the markup languages to compose web pages and he advocated his vision of a Semantic Web sometimes known as Web 3 0 based around machine readability and interoperability standards World Wide Web Conference edit Main article The Web ConferenceIn May 1994 the first International WWW Conference organized by Robert Cailliau was held at CERN the conference has been held every year since nbsp Robert Cailliau Jean Francois Abramatic and Tim Berners Lee at the tenth anniversary of the World Wide Web ConsortiumWorld Wide Web Consortium edit Main articles World Wide Web Consortium and Web standards See also Internet Information Services Browser extension and Acid1 The World Wide Web Consortium W3C was founded by Tim Berners Lee after he left the European Organization for Nuclear Research CERN in September October 1994 in order to create open standards for the Web 53 It was founded at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Laboratory for Computer Science MIT LCS with support from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency DARPA which had pioneered the Internet A year later a second site was founded at INRIA a French national computer research lab with support from the European Commission and in 1996 a third continental site was created in Japan at Keio University W3C comprised various companies that were willing to create standards and recommendations to improve the quality of the Web Berners Lee made the Web available freely with no patent and no royalties due The W3C decided that its standards must be based on royalty free technology so they can be easily adopted by anyone Netscape and Microsoft in the middle of a browser war ignored the W3C and added elements to HTML ad hoc e g blink and marquee Finally in 1995 Netscape and Microsoft came to their senses and agreed to abide by the W3C s standard 54 The W3C published the standard for HTML 4 in 1997 which included Cascading Style Sheets CSS giving designers more control over the appearance of web pages without the need for additional HTML tags The W3C could not enforce compliance so none of the browsers were fully compliant This frustrated web designers who formed the Web Standards Project WaSP in 1998 with the goal of cajoling compliance with standards 55 A List Apart and CSS Zen Garden were influential websites that promoted good design and adherence to standards 56 Nevertheless AOL halted development of Netscape 57 and Microsoft was slow to update IE 58 Mozilla and Apple both released browsers that aimed to be more standards compliant Firefox and Safari but were unable to dislodge IE as the dominant browser nbsp 1997 advertisement in State Magazine by the US State Department Library for sessions introducing the then unfamiliar WebCommercialization dot com boom and bust aftermath edit As the Web grew in the mid 1990s web directories and primitive search engines were created to index pages and allow people to find things Commercial use restrictions on the Internet were lifted in 1995 when NSFNET was shut down In the US the online service America Online AOL offered their users a connection to the Internet via their own internal browser using a dial up Internet connection In January 1994 Yahoo was founded by Jerry Yang and David Filo then students at Stanford University Yahoo Directory became the first popular web directory Yahoo Search launched the same year was the first popular search engine on the World Wide Web Yahoo became the quintessential example of a first mover on the Web Online shopping began to emerge with the launch of Amazon s shopping site by Jeff Bezos in 1995 and eBay by Pierre Omidyar the same year By 1994 Marc Andreessen s Netscape Navigator superseded Mosaic in popularity holding the position for some time Bill Gates outlined Microsoft s strategy to dominate the Internet in his Tidal Wave memo in 1995 59 With the release of Windows 95 and the popular Internet Explorer browser many public companies began to develop a Web presence At first people mainly anticipated the possibilities of free publishing and instant worldwide information By the late 1990s the directory model had given way to search engines corresponding with the rise of Google Search which developed new approaches to relevancy ranking Directory features while still commonly available became after thoughts to search engines Netscape had a very successful IPO valuing the company at 2 9 billion despite the lack of profits and triggering the dot com bubble 60 Increasing familiarity with the Web led to the growth of direct Web based commerce e commerce and instantaneous group communications worldwide Many dot com companies displaying products on hypertext webpages were added into the Web Over the next 5 years over a trillion dollars was raised to fund thousands of startups consisting of little more than a website During the dot com boom many companies vied to create a dominant web portal in the belief that such a website would best be able to attract a large audience that in turn would attract online advertising revenue While most of these portals offered a search engine they were not interested in encouraging users to find other websites and leave the portal and instead concentrated on sticky content 61 In contrast Google was a stripped down search engine that delivered superior results 62 It was a hit with users who switched from portals to Google Furthermore with AdWords Google had an effective business model 63 64 AOL bought Netscape in 1998 65 In spite of their early success Netscape was unable to fend off Microsoft 66 Internet Explorer and a variety of other browsers almost completely replaced it Faster broadband internet connections replaced many dial up connections from the beginning of the 2000s With the bursting of the dot com bubble many web portals either scaled back operations floundered 67 or shut down entirely 68 69 70 AOL disbanded Netscape in 2003 71 Web server software edit Further information Comparison of web server software Comparison of server side web frameworks and List of content management systems Web server software was developed to allow computers to act as web servers The first web servers supported only static files such as HTML and images but now they commonly allow embedding of server side applications Web framework software enabled building and deploying web applications Content management systems CMS were developed to organize and facilitate collaborative content creation Many of them were built on top of separate content management frameworks After Robert McCool joined Netscape development on the NCSA HTTPd server languished In 1995 Brian Behlendorf and Cliff Skolnick created a mailing list to coordinate efforts to fix bugs and make improvements to HTTPd 72 They called their version of HTTPd Apache 73 Apache quickly became the dominant server on the Web 74 After adding support for modules Apache was able to allow developers to handle web requests with a variety of languages including Perl PHP and Python Together with Linux and MySQL it became known as the LAMP platform Following the success of Apache the Apache Software Foundation was founded in 1999 and produced many open source web software projects in the same collaborative spirit Browser wars edit Main articles Browser wars and History of the web browser See also Comparison of web browsers List of web browsers and Usage share of web browsers After graduating from UIUC Andreessen and Jim Clark former CEO of Silicon Graphics met and formed Mosaic Communications Corporation in April 1994 to develop the Mosaic Netscape browser commercially The company later changed its name to Netscape and the browser was developed further as Netscape Navigator which soon became the dominant web client They also released the Netsite Commerce web server which could handle SSL requests thus enabling e commerce on the Web 75 SSL became the standard method to encrypt web traffic Navigator 1 0 also introduced cookies but Netscape did not publicize this feature Netscape followed up with Navigator 2 in 1995 introducing frames Java applets and JavaScript In 1998 Netscape made Navigator open source and launched Mozilla 76 Microsoft licensed Mosaic from Spyglass and released Internet Explorer 1 0 that year and IE2 later the same year IE2 added features pioneered at Netscape such as cookies SSL and JavaScript The browser wars became a competition for dominance when Explorer was bundled with Windows 77 78 This led to the United States v Microsoft Corporation antitrust lawsuit IE3 released in 1996 added support for Java applets ActiveX and CSS At this point Microsoft began bundling IE with Windows IE3 managed to increase Microsoft s share of the browser market from under 10 to over 20 79 IE4 released the following year introduced Dynamic HTML setting the stage for the Web 2 0 revolution By 1998 IE was able to capture the majority of the desktop browser market 66 It would be the dominant browser for the next fourteen years Google released their Chrome browser in 2008 with the first JIT JavaScript engine V8 Chrome overtook IE to become the dominant desktop browser in four years 80 and overtook Safari to become the dominant mobile browser in two 81 At the same time Google open sourced Chrome s codebase as Chromium 82 Ryan Dahl used Chromium s V8 engine in 2009 to power an event driven runtime system Node js which allowed JavaScript code to be used on servers as well as browsers This led to the development of new software stacks such as MEAN Thanks to frameworks such as Electron developers can bundle up node applications as standalone desktop applications such as Slack Acer and Samsung began selling Chromebooks cheap laptops running ChromeOS capable of running web apps in 2011 Over the next decade more companies offered Chromebooks Chromebooks outsold MacOS devices in 2020 to become the second most popular OS in the world 83 Other notable web browsers emerged including Mozilla s Firefox Opera s Opera browser and Apple s Safari 2004 present The Web as platform ubiquity editWeb 2 0 edit Main article Web 2 0 See also Web application Single page application Dynamic web page Rich web application Web framework and Web platform Web pages were initially conceived as structured documents based upon HTML They could include images video and other content although the use of media was initially relatively limited and the content was mainly static By the mid 2000s new approaches to sharing and exchanging content such as blogs and RSS rapidly gained acceptance on the Web The video sharing website YouTube launched the concept of user generated content 84 As new technologies made it easier to create websites that behaved dynamically the Web attained greater ease of use and gained a sense of interactivity which ushered in a period of rapid popularization This new era also brought into existence social networking websites such as Friendster MySpace Facebook and Twitter and photo and video sharing websites such as Flickr and later Instagram which gained users rapidly and became a central part of youth culture Wikipedia s user edited content quickly displaced the professionally written Microsoft Encarta 85 The popularity of these sites combined with developments in the technology that enabled them and the increasing availability and affordability of high speed connections made video content far more common on all kinds of websites This new media rich model for information exchange featuring user generated and user edited websites was dubbed Web 2 0 a term coined in 1999 and popularized in 2004 at the Web 2 0 Conference The Web 2 0 boom drew investment from companies worldwide and saw many new service oriented startups catering to a newly democratized Web 86 87 88 89 90 91 JavaScript made the development of interactive web applications possible Web pages could run JavaScript and respond to user input but they could not interact with the network Browsers could submit data to servers via forms and receive new pages but this was slow compared to traditional desktop applications Developers that wanted to offer sophisticated applications over the Web used Java or nonstandard solutions such as Adobe Flash or Microsoft s ActiveX Microsoft added a little noticed feature in 1999 called XMLHttpRequest to MSIE Developers at Oddpost used this feature in 2002 to create the first Ajax application a webmail client that performed as well as a desktop application 92 Ajax apps were revolutionary Web pages evolved beyond static documents to full blown applications Websites began offering APIs in addition to webpages Developers created a plethora of Ajax apps including widgets mashups and new types of social apps Analysts called it Web 2 0 93 Browser vendors improved the performance of their JavaScript engines 94 and dropped support for Flash and Java 95 96 Traditional client server applications were replaced by cloud apps Amazon reinvented itself as a cloud service provider The use of social media on the Web has become ubiquitous in everyday life 97 98 The 2010s also saw the rise of streaming services such as Netflix In spite of the success of Web 2 0 applications the W3C forged ahead with their plan to replace HTML with XHTML and represent all data in XML In 2004 representatives from Mozilla Opera and Apple formed an opposing group the Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group WHATWG dedicated to improving HTML while maintaining backward compatibility 99 For the next several years websites did not transition their content to XHTML browser vendors did not adopt XHTML2 and developers eschewed XML in favor of JSON 100 By 2007 the W3C conceded and announced they were restarting work on HTML 101 and in 2009 they officially abandoned XHTML 102 In 2019 the W3C ceded control of the HTML specification now called the HTML Living Standard to WHATWG 103 Microsoft rewrote their Edge browser in 2021 to use Chromium as its code base in order to be more compatible with Chrome 104 Security censorship and cybercrime edit The increasing use of encrypted connections HTTPS enabled e commerce and online banking Nonetheless the 2010s saw the emergence of various controversial trends such as internet censorship and the growth of cybercrime including web based cyberattacks and ransomware 105 106 Mobile edit Main article Mobile web See also Mobile browser and Mobile development framework Early attempts to allow wireless devices to access the Web used simplified formats such as i mode and WAP Apple introduced the first smartphone in 2007 with a full featured browser Other companies followed suit and in 2011 smartphone sales overtook PCs 107 Since 2016 most visitors access websites with mobile devices 108 which led to the adoption of responsive web design Apple Mozilla and Google have taken different approaches to integrating smartphones with modern web apps Apple initially promoted web apps for the iPhone but then encouraged developers to make native apps 109 Mozilla announced Web APIs in 2011 to allow webapps to access hardware features such as audio camera or GPS 110 Frameworks such as Cordova and Ionic allow developers to build hybrid apps Mozilla released a mobile OS designed to run web apps in 2012 111 but discontinued it in 2015 112 Google announced specifications for Accelerated Mobile Pages AMP 113 and progressive web applications PWA in 2015 114 AMPs use a combination of HTML JavaScript and Web Components to optimize web pages for mobile devices and PWAs are web pages that with a combination of web workers and manifest files can be saved to a mobile device and opened like a native app Web 3 0 and Web3 edit The extension of the Web to facilitate data exchange was explored as an approach to create a Semantic Web sometimes called Web 3 0 This involved using machine readable information and interoperability standards to enable context understanding programs to intelligently select information for users 115 Continued extension of the Web has focused on connecting devices to the Internet coined Intelligent Device Management As Internet connectivity becomes ubiquitous manufacturers have started to leverage the expanded computing power of their devices to enhance their usability and capability Through Internet connectivity manufacturers are now able to interact with the devices they have sold and shipped to their customers and customers are able to interact with 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32892005 Archived from the original on 14 December 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 Craig William The Importance of Historiography on the Web WebFX Archived from the original on 14 December 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 Further reading editBerners Lee Tim Fischetti Mark 1999 Weaving the Web the original design and ultimate destiny of the World Wide Web by its inventor San Francisco HarperSanFrancisco ISBN 0 06 251586 1 OCLC 41238513 Brugger Niels 2017 Web 25 histories from the first 25 years of the World Wide Web New York NY ISBN 978 1 4331 3269 8 OCLC 976036138 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Gillies James Cailliau Robert 2000 How the Web was born the story of the World Wide Web Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 286207 3 OCLC 43377073 Herman Andrew Swiss Thomas 2000 The World Wide Web and contemporary cultural theory New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 92501 0 OCLC 44446371 External links editWeb History first 30 years A Little History of the World Wide Web from 1945 to 1995 Dan Connolly W3C 2000 The World Wide Web Past Present and Future Tim Berners Lee August 1996 The History of the Web Web Development History A Brief ish History of the Web Universe Brian Kardell Web History Community Group W3C The history of the Web W3C info cern ch the first website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of the World Wide Web amp oldid 1202415754, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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