1971 -
Ray Tomlinson (Bolt Beranek and Newman) wrote/sent first email program
through ARPANET (Internet) between two machines side by side; selected @
symbol to separate login name from host name in email.
May 22, 1975
- Robert M. Metcalfe, of Woodside, CA, David R. Boggs/Charles P. Thacker
of Oalo Alto, CA and Butler W. Lampson, of Portola Valley, CA, received
a patent for a "Multipoint Data Communication System with Collision
Detection"; Ethernet; assigned to Xerox Corporation.
December 13, 1977
- Robert M. Metcalfe, of Woodside, CA, David R. Boggs, of Palo Alto, CA,
Charles P. Thacker; of Palo Alto, CA, Butler W. Lampson of Portola
Valley, CA, received a patent for a "Multipoint Data Communication
System with Collision Detection" ("apparatus for enabling communications
between two or more data processing stations comprising a communication
cable arranged in branched segments including taps distributed thereover");
ethernet; assigned to Xerox Corporation.
December 1984 -
Stanford University computer scientists Len Bosack, Sandy Lerner
co-founded Cisco Systems; named for San Francisco, gateway to Pacific Rim; 1991 - John Chambers hired as Senior Vice
President, Worldwide Sales and Operations; January 1995 -
Chambers appointed CEO.
1986 -
Eric Thomas, engineering student in Paris, wrote first version of
LISTSERV, first email list management software; prior to invention, all
email lists administered manually.
November 12, 1990 - Tim
Berners-Lee, consulting software engineer at CERN (European Laboratory
for Particle Physics, originally known as Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire),
largest Internet node in Europe, wrote program for first web
browser (browser-editor), called
WorldWideWeb, on NeXT computer; December 25,
1990
- communicated with first web server at
info.cern.ch; August 6, 1991
- put first website online, CERN telephone book (immediately useful,
rapidly accepted);
1994 - founded World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology; comprised companies willing to
create standards, recommendations to improve quality of Internet;
December 2004 - accepted chair in Computer Science at School
of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton, UK.
April 21, 1993
- Mosaic web browser 1.0 released; written at National Center for
Supercomputing Applications (NCSA); Marc Andreesen one of founders
of Netscape, Jim Clark one of founders of Silicon Graphics led
development team.
February 1994 -
Stanford University Ph.D students Jerry Yang, David Filo created
Yahoo! (acronym for Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle!).
April 4, 1994
- Jim Clark, Marc Andreessen founded Mosaic Communications, renamed
Netscape Communications; first commercial browser enabled better links,
faster moves through Internet; October 1994
- Netscape web browser 1.0 released; August 10, 1995 - Netscape, developer of Navigator, popular software for surfing World Wide Web, went public; largest Initial Public Offering (IPO) in
Wall Street history - five million shares priced at $28, traded to high
of $72 (market value of $1.96 billion).
April 12, 1994
- Laurence Canter, attorney in Arizona, used first Internet spamming
program; created software program, simple Perl script, that
flooded Usenet message board readers with notice for "Green Card
Lottery" to solicit business for his law firm of Canter & Siegel;
reaction from online community vigorously critical, condemned
advertising; new, burgeoning business of unsolicited mass
Internet advertising spawned; term "spam" coined from sketch in "Monty Python's Flying Circus" BBC television show
(waitress
offered menu full of variations of spam to unwilling patron).
August 1995
- Microsoft released Internet Explorer 1.0; released Windows 95,
sold more than 1 Million copies within 4 days.
December 15, 1995
- Alta Vista web site, developed by researchers at Digital Equipment
Research Laboratories in Palo Alto, CA, made public; first web-page discovery tool to gain
wide popularity; initially indexed 16 million
web pages; January 5, 1996 - handled 2 million requests
per day; November 1996 - 22 million requests per day.
January 1996
- Larry Page, Sergey Brin began collaboration on search engine
called BackRub (named for unique ability to analyze "back links"
pointing to given website); September 1998 - Google Inc. opened (play on word googol, coined by Milton Sirotta,
nephew of American mathematician Edward Kasner, popularized in
book, Mathematics and the Imagination by Kasner and James Newman;
refers to number represented by numeral 1 followed by 100 zeros; reflected company's mission to organize seemingly infinite amount of information available on web);
September 21, 1999 - beta label came off website,
search engine launched; August 19, 2004 - initial public
offering; priced at $85 per share. Traded above $300 per share within
first year; November 6, 2007 - traded at $747.24, all-time
high.
July 4, 1996
- Hotmail went online (created by Sabeer Bhatia, Jack Smith);
acquired by Microsoft for $400 million.
December 23, 1997
- Jorn Barger, of Robot Wisdom, regarded as first blogger; began
business of hunting, gathering links to things in which he was
interested; David Winer (Scripting News), Cameron
Barrett (CamWorld) early proponents.
October 1, 1998
- ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) created
through Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between U.S. Department of
Commerce, ICANN to transition management of Domain Name System (DNS)
from U.S. government to global community; not-for-profit public/private
partnership dedicated to keeping Internet secure, stable, interoperable;
assumed responsibility for selling top-level domain names for Internet
(coordination role of Internet’s naming system).
June 28, 1998
- Microsoft released Windows 98.
April 1, 1999
- David Smith, of New Jersey, arrested, charged with originating
"Melissa" e-mail virus, infected more than 1 million computers
worldwide, caused more than $80 million in damage (served 20
months in federal prison in exchange for helping FBI track
authors of other computer viruses).
October 25, 2001
- Microsoft released Windows XP.
2002 - Blake Ross (17), Dave
Hyatt launched Mozilla Firefox project, community-made Web browser;
November 9, 2004 - released Firefox 1.0, open-source and
non-profit web browser; 2006 - Interbrand named Firefox
one of top ten brands in world (over 15% of world’s Web users use it);
with Joe Hewitt formed Parakey, Inc. to develop software billed as
Web-based operating system; July 2007 - acquired by
Facebook.
2002 - Jonathan H. Abrams founded
Friendster in Mountain View, CA; April 2004 - removed as
CEO; June 27, 2006 - Abrams, of Sunnyvale, CA, received a
patent for a "System, Method and Apparatus for Connecting Users in an
Online Computer System Based on Their Relationships Within Social
Networks" ("...computer system collects descriptive data about various
individuals and allows those individuals to indicate other individuals
with whom they have a personal relationship").
August 2003 - Tom Anderson, Chris
DeWolfe founded MySpace, interactive, user-submitted network of friends,
personal profiles, blogs, groups, photos, music, videos for teenagers
and adults internationally, in Beverly Hills, CA; revenues generated by
advertising, no paid-for features for end user; July 2005
- acquired by News Corporation for $580 million.
February 2004 - Mark Zuckerberg,
Dustin Moskovitz, Chris Hughes launched Facebook from Harvard dormitory
room as a
social utility to help people
communicate more efficiently with friends, family, coworkers;
June 2004 - moved operations to Palo Alto, CA.
February 14, 2005 - Chad Hurley,
Steve Chen, Jawed Karim founded YouTube, Inc. in Menlo Park, CA;
November 2006 - acquired by Google for $1.65 billion.
November 2006
- Google paid $1.65 billion in stock for YouTube,19-month old
video-sharing start-up
November 2007 - Growth in email
users (% change in visitors from November 2006 - November 2007)


(source: comScore)
February 1, 2008 - Microsoft made
an unsolicited $44.7 billion bid for Yahoo in attempt to better compete
with Google.

Search engine
timeline (February 2, 2008)
-- 1990 - World
Wide Web server prototype built; Archie file transfer protocol
developed. Semi-crawler search engine
built.
-- 1991 - Gopher
created at University of Minnesota; grew into worldwide network
of universities, governments.
-- 1994 -
University of Washington's Brian Pinkerton released WebCrawler,
Infoseek, Lycos. Text of the Encyclopaedia Britannica available
online. Yahoo founded.
-- 1995 -
Metacrawler search-engine technology
developed; AltaVista released; Amazon.com created; Microsoft
introduced MSN Internet services.
-- 1996 - Inktomi
Corp. founded; Hotmail released; Yahoo went public.
-- 1997 - Ask
Jeeves Inc. released.
-- 1998 - Google
crawler search engine released;
Infoseek acquired by Disney, renamed Go.com.
-- 1999 - Web logs
(blogs) invented; more than 1,000 World Wide Web search
engines existed.
-- 2000 - Baidu,
leading Chinese search engine,
founded; AltaVista allowed multimedia searching; Google, Yahoo
partnered to provide search on yahoo.com; Google
indexeed more than 1 billion pages, largest index on Web; Microsoft
outlined strategy for .NET Web services.
-- 2001 - InfoSpace
acquired WebCrawler; Wikipedia released.
-- 2002 - Google's
index surpassed 3 billion pages; Yahoo acquired Inktomi.
-- 2003 - Yahoo
acquired Overture (owner of AltaVista, AlltheWeb); started own
search engine, stopped using Google
for search.
-- 2004 - Google's
index surpassed 8 billion pages; released Gmail (targeted ads to
users); went public.
-- 2005 - Microsoft
released MSN Search (powered by its own internally
developed search engine); previously
relied on Yahoo for search function.
-- 2006 - Microsoft
retired MSN Search in favor of Live Search
brand' Google acquired YouTube.
-- 2007 - Google
had 56% of the U.S. Internet search market;
Yahoo's share sanks below 20%; Microsoft's share grew to 14%.
2008
- Microsoft bid nearly $45 billion for Yahoo.
Sources: The companies,
Seattle P-I research, Dr. T. Matthew Ciolek of Australian National
University, Bloomberg News
(http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/
businesstechnology/2004159856_msfttimeline02.html)
(Cisco Systems), David Bunnell with Adam Brate. (2000).
Making the Cisco Connection: The Story Behind the Real Internet
Superpower (New
York, NY: Wiley, 218 p.). Cisco Systems, Inc.; Cisco Systems, Inc.;
Telecommunication; Telecommunication--Equipment and supplies; Routers
(Computer networks).
(Cisco Systems), Jeffrey A. Young (2000).
Cisco Unauthorized:
Inside the High-Stakes Race to Own the Future (Roseville, CA: Forum,
310 p.). Cisco Systems, Inc.; Internet industry--United States;
Internetworking (Telecommunication)--United States.
(Cisco Systems), Ed Paulson (2001).
Inside Cisco: The Real Story
of Sustained M & A Growth. (New York, NY: Wiley, 314 p.). Cisco
Systems, Inc.; Computer industry--Mergers--California; Consolidation and
merger of corporations--California.
(Cisco Systems), John K. Waters (2002).
John Chambers and the
CISCO Way: Navigating Through Volatility. (New York, NY: Wiley,
192 p.). Chambers, John T.; Cisco Systems, Inc.; Chief executive
officers--United States--Biography; Internet industry--United
States--Management.
(Cisco Systems), Robert Slater (2003).
The Eye of the Storm: How
John Chambers Steered Cisco Through the Internet Collapse. (New
York, NY: HarperBusiness, 289
p.). Chambers, John, 1949- ; Cisco Systems, Inc.--Management;
Corporate turnarounds--United States--Case studies; Computer
industry--United States--Management--Case studies; Data transmission
equipment industry--United States--Management--Case studies; Computer
industry--United States--History; Data transmission equipment
industry--United States--History; Internet industry--United
States--History.
(Google), John Battelle (2005).
The Search: The Inside Story of How Google and Its Rivals Changed
Everything. (New York, NY: Portfolio, 288 p.). Co-founding
Editor of Wired, Founder of The Industry Standard. Google (Firm);
Google; Internet industry--United States; Web search engines; Internet
searching; Information society--United States.
Story of Google's success: how search technology works, power of
targeted advertising, impact on society.
(Google), Neil Taylor (2005).
Search Me: The Surprising Success of Google. (London: Cyan,
192 p.). Google; Google (Firm); Google; Internet industry--United
States; Brand name products -- Case studies.
(Google), David Vise, Mark Malseed (2005).
The Google Story. (New York, NY: Delacorte Press, 336
p.). Reporter (Washington Post); Researcher. Google (Firm);
Google; Internet industry--United States; Web search engines;
Internet searching; Information society--United States.
Account of
the populist which media company.
(Lycos), Bob Davis (2001).
Speed Is Life: Street Smart Lessons
from the Front Lines of Business. (New York, NY: Currency, 203 p.).
Former CEO of Lycos. Davis, Bob, 1956- ; Lycos, Inc.; Telecommunications
engineers--United States--Biography; Executives--United
States--Biography.
(Netscape), Michael A. Cusumano and David B. Yoffie (1998).
Competing on Internet Time: Lessons from Netscape and Its Battle with
Microsoft (New York, NY: Free Press, 361 p.). Internet Software
Industry, Netscape Communications, Microsoft Corporation.
(Netscape), Joshua Quittner and Michelle Slatalla (1998).
Speeding the Net: The inside Story of Netscape and How It Challenged
Microsoft (New York, NY: Atlantic Monthly Press, 323 p.).
Netscape Communications Corporation--History; Microsoft
Corporation--History; Internet software industry--United
States--History.
(Netscape), Jim Clark with Owen Edwards (1999).
Netscape Time: The
Making of the Billion-Dollar Start-up That Took on Microsoft (New
York, NY: St. Martin's Press, 276 p.). Netscape Communications
Corporation -- History; Internet software industry -- United States --
History.
(Yahoo!), Anthony Vlamis & Bob Smith (2001). Do You?
Business
the Yahoo! Way: Secrets of the World's Most Popular Internet Company.
(Milford, CT: Capstone, 231 p.). Yahoo! Inc.; Internet
industry--United States.
(Yahoo!), Karen Angel (2002).
Inside Yahoo!: Reinvention and the
Road Ahead. (New York, NY: Wiley, 276 p.). Yahoo! Inc.; Success in
business.
Janet Abbate (1999). Inventing the Internet. (Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press, 264 p.). Internet, Computer Network.
Eds. William Aspray, Paul. E. Ceruzzi (2008).
The Internet and American Business. (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press,
596 p.). Rudy Professor of Informatics Indiana University in
Bloomington); Curator of the National Air and Space Museum,
Smithsonian Institution. Internet--United States--Economic aspects;
Electronic commerce--United States; Internet industry--United States;
Internet--United States--Social aspects; Information
technology--United States--Economic aspects.
Impact of commercialized
Internet since 1995 on American business and society; new business
models, new companies, adjustments by established companies, rise of
e-commerce, community building; dot-com busts, difficulties
encountered by traditional industries; new problems (copyright
violations associated with music file-sharing, proliferation of
Internet pornography).
Tim Berners-Lee with Mark Fischetti (1999).
Weaving the Web: The
Original Design and Ultimate Destiny of the World Wide Web by Its
Inventor. (San Francisco, CA: Harper, 226 p.). Berners-Lee, Tim;
World Wide Web (Information retrieval system)--History.
Edward Castronova (2005).
Synthetic Worlds: The Business and Culture of Online Games.
(Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Associate Professor of
Telecommunications (Indiana University). Internet games--Social
aspects; Internet games--Economic aspects.
Implications of online game industry for business and culture.
Jack Goldsmith and Tim Wu (2006).
Who Controls the Internet?: Illusions of a Borderless World.
(New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 240 p.). Internet--Social
aspects; Internet--Government policy; Internet--Law and legislation.
Internet's challenge to governmental rule in the
1990s, ensuing battles with governments around the world.
Katie Hafner and Matthew Lyon (1996).
Where Wizards Stay Up
Late: The Origins of the Internet. (New York, NY: Simon &
Schuster, 304 p.). Internet.
Shannon Henry (2002).
The Dinner Club: How the Masters of the
Internet Universe Rode the Rise and Fall of the Greatest Boom in
History. (New York, NY: Free Press, 288 p.). Technology Reporter
(Washington Post). Chief executive officers--Washington Metropolitan
Area; Internet industry--Washington Metropolitan Area; High technology
industries--Washington Metropolitan Area; Stocks--Washington
Metropolitan Area; Investments--Washington Metropolitan Area.
Leslie S. Hiraoka (2005).
Underwriting the Internet: How Technical Advances, Financial
Engineering, and Entrepreneurial Genius Are Building the Information
Highway. (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, Inc., 297 p.). Department
of Management Science (Kean University). Internet; Internet--Economic
aspects; Information superhighway.
Internet's commercial development.
Michael Indergaard (2003).
Silicon Alley: The Rise and Fall of a New Media District. (New
York, NY: Routledge, 256 p.). Associate Professor of Sociology (St.
John's University). Internet industry--New York (State)--New York;
High technology industries--New York (State)--New York; Internet;
Electronic commerce.
Casey Kait and Stephen Weiss (2001).
Digital Hustlers: Living Large and Falling Hard in Silicon Alley.
(New York, NY: Regan Books, 344 p.). Internet industry--New York
(State)--New York--Case studies; Entrepreneurship--New York
(State)--New York--Case studies.
Philip J. Kaplan (2002).
F'd Companies: Spectacular Dot.com Flameouts. (New York, NY:
Simon & Schuster, 191 p.). President of PK Interactive. F'd companies
: spectacular dot.com flameouts / Philip J. Kaplan; Business
failures--United States--Case studies; Internet industry--United
States--Case studies; Electronic commerce--United States--Case
studies.
Byung-Keun Kim (2005).
Internationalising the Internet: The Co-Evolution of Influence and
Technology. (Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 300
p.). Professor, School of Industrial Management (Korea University of
Technology and Education). Internet--Economic aspects;
Internet--Social aspects; Technological innovations--Economic aspects;
Technological innovations--Social aspects.
Global formation of Internet system, how digital economy formed.
Sarah Lacy (2008).
Once You're Lucky, Twice You're Good: The Rebirth of Silicon
Valley and the Rise of Web 2.0. (New York, NY: Gotham, 304
p.). Reporter (BusinessWeek). Web site development
industry--California; Internet industry--California; Web 2.0.
Where the "dot.bomb" books left off -
growth of social networking (Facebook, Digg, Youtube),
entrepreneurs (Marc Andressen, Paypal's Max Levchin); futuristic hyperbole
of dot.com era not wrong, just early.
Michael Lewis (2001).
Next: The Future Just Happened. (New York, NY: Norton, 236
p.). Internet--Social aspects; Internet--Economic aspects.
Charlene Li, Josh Bernoff (2008).
Groundswell: Winning in a World Transformed by Social Technologies.
(Boston, MA: Harvard Business Press, 286 p). Vice President and
Principal Analyst (Forrester Research); Vice President (Forrester
Research). Online social networks --Economic aspects; Information
society --Economic aspects. Global groundswell
of people using online social technologies to discuss products, companies, write news, find deals; affects every industry, foreign to powerful companies
(feel vulnerable); how to turn threat into opportunity: 1)
evaluate new social technologies as they emerge, 2) determine how
different groups of consumers participate in social technology arenas,
3) apply four-step process for formulating future strategy, 4) build
social technologies into business .
Eds. Robert E. Litan and Alice M. Rivlin (2001).
The Economic
Payoff from the Internet Revolution. (Washington, DC: Brookings
Institution Press, 292 p.). Technological innovations--Economic
aspects; Business enterprises--Computer network resources; Internet;
Evolutionary economics.
Robert E. Litan, Alice M. Rivlin (2001).
Beyond the Dot.coms: The
Economic Promise of the Internet. (Washington, DC: Brookings
Institution Press, 130 p.). Internet--Economic aspects--United
States--Forecasting; Industrial productivity--United States; Labor
productivity--United States.
D. Quinn Mills (2002).
Buy, Lie, and Sell High: How Investors
Lost Out on Enron and the Internet Bubble. (New York, NY:
Financial Times Prentice Hall, 288 p.).
Internet industry--Finance; Internet industry--United States; Online
information services industry--Finance; Investments.
Christos P. Moschovitis (1999).
History of the Internet : A
Chronology, 1843 to the Present. (Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 312
p.). Internet (Computer network); Telecommunication--History.
Greg Pelling and the Cisco Systems IBSG Asia Pacific and Japan Team
(2005).
Cisco Net Impact: Competitive Advantage from Internet Innovators in
Asia Pacific and Japan. (Singapore: Wiley (Asia), 323 p.).
Managing Director Asia Pacific and Japan for Cisco Systems Internet
Business Solutions Group; Former Senior Partner for PWC Technology
Consulting Practice. Internet--Economic aspects--Asia;
Internet--Economic aspects--Pacific Area; Internet--Economic
aspects--Japan; Business enterprises--Asia--Computer network
resources; Business enterprises--Pacific Area--Computer network
resources; Business enterprises--Japan--Computer network resources;
Computer networks--Economic aspects--Asia--Case studies.
How to achieve visible benefits from the
Internet and how to use it to manage organizations in Asia Pacific.
Anthony B. Perkins, Michael C. Perkins (2001).
The Internet
Bubble: The Inside Story on Why It Burst--and What You Can Do To
Profit Now. (New York, NY: HarperBusiness, 327 p.). Internet
industry--Finance; Online information services industry--Finance.
Robert H. Reid (1997).
Architects of the Web: 1,000 Days That
Built the Future of Business. (New York, NY: Wiley, 370 p.).
Computer software industry--United States--History;
Businesspeople--United States--Biography; World Wide Web--History.
Stephen Segaller (1998).
Nerds 2.0.1: A Brief History of the
Internet. (New York, NY: TV Books, 399 p.). Internet--History;
Computer networks--History; Telecommunications engineers--United
States; Information technology--History--20th century.
Clifford Stoll (1995).
Silicon Snake Oil: Second Thoughts on the
Information Highway. (New York, NY: Doubleday, 247 p.). Computers
and civilization; Internet; Information technology.
Linus Torvalds and
David Diamond (2001).
Just for Fun: The Story of an Accidental Revolutionary. (New
York, NY: HarperBusiness, 262 p.). Torvalds, Linus, 1969- ; Linux;
Computer programmers--Finland--Biography.
Walter B. Wriston (2007).
Bits, Bytes, and Balance Sheets: The New Economic Rules of Engagement in
a New Wireless World. (Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press,
Stanford University, 160 p.). Former Chairman, CEO of Citicorp.
Internet--Economic aspects; Information technology; Electronic commerce.
Consequences of changes produced by new economy of Internet; new rules
(based on economic dogma not human nature), intellectual capital more important
than physical capital;
information revolution has radically affected business, government
practices, political policymaking throughout world; personal ethics of
good people should regulate new economy, not increased government
regulation, not more laws.
Jonathan Zittrain (2008).
The Future of the Internet and How To Stop It. (New Haven, CT:
Yale University Press, 342 p.). Professor of Internet Governance and
Regulation (Oxford University), co-founder of Harvard Law School’s
Berkman Center for Internet & Society. Internet; Internet--Social
aspects; Internet--Security measures.
As 'tethered appliances',
applications eclipse PC, very nature of Internet, "generativity,"
or innovative character, is at risk; sputtering because of
its runaway success; generative Internet is on path to lockdown, ending
its cycle of innovation, facilitating new kinds of control.
Matthew A. Zook
(2005).
The Geography of the Internet Industry: Venture Capital, Dot-Coms, and
Local Knowledge. (Malden, MA: Blackwell Pub., 200 p.,). Internet
industry--Location.
________________________________________________
Business History Links
First U.S. Web Site: Documentation of the Early Web at SLAC
(1991-1994)
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/history/earlyweb/
This collection documents the installation of the first United States
Web server at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). Features a
chronology, images of the first SLAC Web pages, a list of some of the
people involved in Web activities at SLAC (along with publications such
as "The Virtual Library in Action"), and other related documents. From
Archivist Jean Marie Deken of the SLAC Archives and History Office.
Geek's History of the Internet
http://www.wbglinks.net/pages/history/
How The Web Was One: An Oral History of the
Internet
http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2008/07/ internet200807
Vanity Fair set out to compile an oral history of the Internet, speaking
with scores of people involved in every stage of the Internet’s
development, from the 1950s onward. From more than 100 hours of
interviews we have distilled and edited their words into a concise
narrative of the past half-century—a history of the Internet in the
words of the people who made it.
Internet Evolution: Riding the Waves of "Web
2.0"
http://www.pewinternet.org/PPF/r/189/report_display.asp
This October 2006 report looks at "Web 2.0," a "catch-all buzzword that
people use to describe a wide range of online activities and
applications." It provides an overview of Web 2.0 and some of the
concepts (such as blogs, wikis, and podcasts) that have been associated
with the trend, and statistics showing the rise of services such as
Photobucket, Wikipedia, and MySpace. From the Pew Internet & American
Life project.
La Historia Económica en Internet
http://www.historia-actual.com/index.php?pg=f051&tp= 12&id=
Three parts; 1) evolution of computers and the development of the net;
2) economic history, trying to look for the topics of their own; 3)
interesting sites in the net, for economic history. Economic History,
Internet, computers, data base, resources of information.
Net History
http://www.nethistory.info/index.html Not-for-profit project, started by Internet expert and historian Ian
Peter, as overview portal for Internet history materials.
TechCrunch
www.techcrunch.com
Founded on June 11, 2005 as weblog dedicated to obsessively profiling
and reviewing new Internet products and companies. In addition to
covering new companies, we profile existing companies that are making an
impact (commercial and/or cultural) on the new web space.
What Are CERN's Greatest
Achievements?: The World Wide Web
http://public.web.cern.ch/public/Content/Chapters/
AboutCERN/Achievements/WorldWideWeb/WWW-en.htm History of the
invention of the World Wide Web (WWW) in 1989 by Tim Berners-Lee, a
scientist at CERN (European Organization for Nuclear Research). "The
basic idea of WWW was to merge the technologies of personal computers,
computer networking and hypertext into a powerful and easy to use global
information system." Discusses early Web pages, Web servers, browsers,
how the Web is not identical to the Internet, and how the Web works.
From CERN.
W3C: History
http://www.w3.org/Consortium/history
History of the creation of the Web in 1989 by Tim Berners-Lee and of the
origins of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), founded in 1994.
Highlights include Berners-Lee's original proposal for the Web, a
biography and FAQ from Berners-Lee, and archival documents about the
organization and uses of the Web. From W3C.