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Aug 7, 2012

Visit the First Website Ever Right Now to Celebrate Its 21st Birthday

ht tim berners lee next computer ll 120806 wblog Visit the First Website Ever Right Now to Celebrate Its 21st Birthday

Image credit: CERN

Twenty-one years ago today the first website was published. It looked just like this — basic text, with some words oddly highlighted.

On Aug. 6, 1991, Tim Berners-Lee, who is widely credited with inventing the World Wide Web, published that site from CERN, the world’s largest physics lab in Geneva, Switzerland. He used the machine pictured above — a NeXT computer — to create the page.

The page, as you can see now, explained the World Wide Web or W3 as a “wide-area hypermedia information retrieval initiative aiming to give universal access to a large universe of documents.” The first page has been preserved and republished by CERN, and according to ZDNet, the first web server is still powered on at the lab with a sign warning, “This machine is a server. DO NOT POWER DOWN!”

About a year after that website was published, in July 1992, the first photo was posted on the Web. It was of a comedian musical group. Berners-Lee was honored during the opening ceremony of the 2012 Olympics.


Source : abcnews[dot]go[dot]com

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