Fifteen years of the web

6 August, 1991

Tim BernersLee releases web software
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0Tim BernersLee formally
introduced his world wide web project to the world on
the alt.hypertext newsgroup. In the post he said the
project "aims to allow links to be made to any
detrmation anywhere". It did this by using hypertext a
method for linking between different documents.
Although
invented many years earlier Mr BernersLees invention
married hypertext with the internet. He also made
available all of the files necessary for people
to replicate his invention.

12 December, 1991

First web server outside Europe goes online
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0Following a trip the Cern labs
near Geneva where he met Tim BernersLee scientist Paul
Kunz of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
Slac in the US was inspired to set up North Americas
first web server. This was the next link in the chain
necessary to send the web worldwide. A server
is a computer that stores and delivers web pages to
other computers. The Slac server used the software
developed by Mr BernersLee and was the first web
site in the United States.

November, 1992

There are 26 web servers online

22 April, 1993

Mosaic web browser for Windows is released
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0Mosaic was the first web
browser to run on the Windows operating system. It was
developed at the National Center for Supercomputing
Applications in the US. It allowed the general public
to navigate the growing amount of detrmation on the
web in a userfriendly way.

30 April, 1993

Cern announce that the World Wide Web can be used for
free by anyone
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0Tim BernersLee managed to
persuade CERN to provide the web technology and
program code for free so that anyone could use and
improve
it. The decision is credited as one of the key reasons
the web grew so quickly.

May, 1993

The Tech published by the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology becomes the first newspaper to be published
on the web

June, 1993

HTML programming langauge used to create webpages is
released

November, 1993

First webcam goes online watching a coffee pot
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0The webcam was set up by a
group of computer scientists at Cambridge University.
Frustrated at having to navigate several flights
of stairs in search of coffee only to find the pot
empty the academics installed a webcam to monitor the
brew. The system was taken offline in 2001 and
the percolator sold to the German news magazine
Spiegel Online.

February, 1994

The precursor to Yahoo written by two US students goes
online
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0Yahoo was started by Stanford
University students David Filo and Jerry Yang. It was
originally called "Jerry's Guide to the World
Wide Web" a site featuring a hierarchical directory of
other sites. It was renamed Yahoo soon after. The name
stands for Yet Another Hierarchical Officious
Oracle. Some net ranking firms say that Yahoo is the
most visited site on the web today.

April, 1994

BBC launches its first website for TV programme The
Net

13 October, 1994

Bill Clinton puts whitehouse.gov on the web

25 October, 1994

Banner adverts for network firm ATT and a drink called
Zima appear on websites

February, 1995

Radio HK becomes the first fulltime web radio station

1 July, 1995

Online bookstore Amazon.com launched
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0The online book store was
originally founded as Cadabra.com by Jeff Bezos in
1994. It was one of the first major companies to sell
goods on the web. Although it started as an online
bookstore it now sells music electronics furniture and
even food.

August, 1995

There are now 18957 websites online

9 August, 1995

Dotcom boom begins on the stock markets
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0A number of web companies go
public. Web browser company Netscape receive the 3rd
largest ever NASDAQ IPO share value. The dotcom
bubble" began in 1997 after which stock markets around
the World saw their value increase rapidly from
investment in web startups. The bubble was marked
by the founding and failure of many web based
companies known as the dotcoms.

24 August, 1995

Microsofts Internet Explorer released as part of
Windows 95

4 September, 1995

Online auction site eBay founded as Auctionweb
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0The auction site was founded by
computer programmer Pierre Omidyar as Auctionweb. The
first item ever sold was a broken laser pointer
for 13.83. It has since become the world's largest
online auction site with thousands of transactions
taking place every day.

15 December, 1995

First multilingual search engine Alta Vista launched

4 July, 1996

Hotmail is launched on Independence Day in the US

August, 1996

There are now 342081 websites online

May, 1997

BBC News launches a website to cover the 1997 election

June, 1997

Domain name business.com sold for 150000 £80000

17 December, 1997

Web commentator Jorn Barger coins the term weblog
later shortened to blog

1 March, 1998

Kozmo.com that promised free onehour delivery of
anything launches
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0Kozmo.com was founded by
investment bankers Joseph Park and Yong Kang. The
company promised free onehour delivery of anything
from
DVDs to coffee. The company raised about 280 million
including 60 million from Amazon.com. Many analysts
pointed out that the business model would not
work. The company collapsed in April 2001 one of the
casualties of the bursting dot com bubble.

September, 1998

Google opens its first office in a garage in
California

19 October, 1998

Open diary the first blog community launches

May, 1999

Shawn Fanning a student in Boston founds Napster
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0Napster was the first widely
used peertopeer file sharing service. Fanning wrote
the original program at college to allow him and
his friends to find and share mp3 files. The program
was officially released on 01 June 1999. It
immediately caught the attention of the recording
industry
who accused it of massive copyright theft. After a
protracted legal battle the service was shutdown in
July 2001. A legal service was launched soon after.

16 August, 1999

Everquest a massively multiplayer online roleplaying
game is released

19 August, 1999

Original MySpace website launched as a file sharing
service
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0MySpace was originally an
online storage and file sharing firm btu was shutdown
in 2001. The social networking site in its present
form launched in July 2003. it was set up 2003 by Tom
Anderson Chris DeWolfe and a small team of
programmers. It now has close to 100 million users.
The
site lets users build a personalised home page. It
also contains blogs photos music and a messaging
system. In 2005 Media tycoon Rupert Murdoch paid 580m
for the site.

November, 1999

Boo.com launches selling branded fashion wear
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0Founded by Ernst Malmsten Kajsa
Leander and Patrik Hedelin the company aimed to sell
branded fashion wear. The site was widely criticised
for its poor design. It used 3D graphics animations
and Miss Boo a salesassistantstyle avatar to sell the
clothes. At the time most web users did not have
broadband and the graphic heavy site would take
several minutes to load. The site went bust on May 18
2000. LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0 LETTERSPACING0
KERNING0however
after spending vast sums of its venture capital it
eventually had to liquidate and was placed into
receivership on May 18 2000.

10 January, 2000

AOL buy Time Warner for 162bn the largest corporate
merger ever

14 January, 2000

The dotcom bubble reaches its peak
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0The dotcom bubble had been
growing since 1997. The excitement surrounding the web
caused share prices to soar. In January 2000 it
reached its peak when the Dow Jones Industrial Average
closed at a record level never reached before or
since. On March 10 the NASDAQ Composite Index also
reached an alltime high. Soon after the markets began
to crash and with it went many of the start up
companies bankrolled during the dotcom boom.

7 February, 2000

Eight websites including Yahoo CNN and Amazon crippled
by hackers

August, 2000

Nearly 20 million websites online

11 January, 2001

A Grateful Dead track demonstrates podcasting for the
first time

15 January, 2001

Online encyclopedia Wikipedia is founded by Jimmy
Wales

4 September, 2001

Google awarded a patent for its PageRank algorithm
used in its search engine

22 November, 2001

Pope John Paul II sends the first papal email from a
laptop in his office

11 December, 2002

The FBI starts virtual wanted posts

28 April, 2003

Apples iTunes music download service launches

May, 2003

The first flash mob is organized in Manhattanover the
web
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0A flash mob is a group of
people who assemble in a space to do something
unusual. They are often organised through the web. The
first
flash mob was organized in Manhattan in May 2003 by
Bill Wasik of Harper's Magazine. The first attempt was
unsuccessful but the second time Wasik managed
to get more than more than one hundred people to
converge in the rug department of a US department
store.

27 January, 2004

Amazon.com makes first ever full year profit since its
launch

5 February, 2004

Janet Jacksons breast becomes the most searchedfor
image in web history
LETTERSPACING0 KERNING0During a halftime show with
Justin Timberlake at the Superbowl the pop star had a
"wardrobe malfunction". Following the event search
engines reported a surge in searches for terms such as
Janet Jackson and Super Bowl as people looked for
images of the event.

July, 2004

Tim Berners Lee receives a knighthood

19 August, 2004

Google goes public. Shares are offered at 85. 15
months later they are worth over 400 each

9 November, 2004

Mozilla Firefox web browser launched

February, 2005

Video sharing site youtube.com goes online

October, 2005

The web grows more in 2005 than during the whole dot
com boom. 17 million new sites go online

12 April, 2006

Google launches a restricted service in China called
Gu Ge

2006

There are now 92615362 websites online


Regards
Sameer

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