The world's first web page. |
Twenty-five years ago today, the World Wide Web was born.
It was conceived in 1989 by Tim Berners-Lee, a Briton working
at the European Organization for Nuclear Research. But August 23, 1991 is the day the first public website went public.
Now August 23 is now called “Internaut
Day,” a name that combines “Internet” and “astronaut,” as early technical
Internet users were called.
Since the Web is so ubiquitous today,
it is hard to remember that it is really a young technology —or how novel it was to create one back then.
Which is what I did, in 1994, with my creative and inventive friend Ryan Rempel.
It was for my employer at the time, Mennonite Central Committee. Ryan came up with the idea, at his home in Ottawa. He invited me over to see what he had made, and asked if MCC would want it.
I said yes, and the rest is history.
(At the time, I had colleagues who wondered why anyone would bother with such a thing; who would want to use a computer to find information? It's easy to smirk now but, to be fair, nobody knew back then what the Web would become.)
It was for my employer at the time, Mennonite Central Committee. Ryan came up with the idea, at his home in Ottawa. He invited me over to see what he had made, and asked if MCC would want it.
I said yes, and the rest is history.
(At the time, I had colleagues who wondered why anyone would bother with such a thing; who would want to use a computer to find information? It's easy to smirk now but, to be fair, nobody knew back then what the Web would become.)
At
the time there were fewer than 3,000 websites in the world. Today there are over a
billion.
I also remember going to a technology conference around that time about this new thing called World Wide Web.
To demonstrate how it worked, the presenter used overhead slides. He put up on slide, pretended to click a button, then replaced it with another slide to show how the Web would work.
I
created another website in
1997 for a national Faith and Media conference I was organizing.
To make it, I learned HTML code—everything on it was created manually.
To make it, I learned HTML code—everything on it was created manually.
Faith and Media home page, 2000 |
We’ve come a long way since then!
Today,
the Web is already being considered a legacy media, as
Brodie Fenlon, Senior Director for Digital News at CBC, noted. The CBC “still has a huge desktop audience,” he says, “but
future growth is phone.”
That sentiment is echoed by Chad
Millman, ESPN's new vice president and editorial director for domestic digital
content.
According
to Millman, for ESPN "mobile is everything. We always
have to be thinking about mobile first. If we’re thinking about anything else,
we’re failing the audience."
Fun fact: Model Railroading played a role in the invention of
the Web. Berners-Lee, as it turns out, enjoyed
trains a young boy, tinkering with the electronics.
As a result
of making gadgets for his model railway, he “ended up getting more interested
in electronics than trains.”
He went on
to build his own computer out of an old TV, study physics at Oxford and then, in
1989, laid out his vision for what would become the World Wide Web.
As Stephanie
Lynn put it on her blog, “the boy who
tinkered with circuits for his model trains became the man who invented the
single most valuable creation of our time.”
So, once again, happy anniversary World Wide Web!