Timeline
Calendar | Historical date | Name | Description | Tags | Medias | 🧿 NEWS | Source | Created time |
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BC | - 5 000 000 000 | Gravity makes dust and gaz gathering and forming stars and planets | Dec 1, 2022 7:51 AM | |||||
BC | - 13 000 000 000 | Space and time starts | Dec 1, 2022 7:49 AM | |||||
BC | -500 | As early as the 5th century BC, Greek civilizations designed their tools and workplaces based on ergonomic principles. According to the International Ergonomics Association, ergonomics*—or human factors—*is “the scientific discipline concerned with the understanding of interactions among humans and other elements of a system, and the profession that applies theory, principles, data and methods to design and optimize human well-being and overall system performance.” One of the strongest indications that the Ancient Greeks were well aware of ergonomic principles is the way that Hippocrates described how a surgeon’s workplace should be set up. He refers to the lighting in the room, the surgeon’s positioning*—“the surgeon may stand or be seated, in a posture comfortable for him”—*and the arrangement of tools; “they must be positioned in such a way as to not obstruct the surgeon, and also be within easy reach when required.” | Oct 27, 2022 10:09 PM | |||||
BC | -500 | Panini: the Indian Mathematician introduces the forerunner to modern formal language theory | Oct 27, 2022 10:07 PM | |||||
BC | -4000 | Dating back some 6,000 years, Feng Shui literally translates as “wind” and “water”, and refers to the spatial arrangement of objects (e.g. furniture) in relation to the flow of energy (chi). In practice, Feng Shui is all about arranging your surroundings in the most optimal, harmonious or user-friendly way— be it an office, bedroom or entire building. It concerns everything from layout and framework to materials and colors. | Oct 22, 2022 11:00 PM | |||||
AD | 1492 | Leonardo da Vinci: Drawings by Leonardo da Vinci depict inventions such as flying machines, including a helicopter, the first mechanical calculator and one of the first programmable robots | Oct 22, 2022 11:00 PM | |||||
AD | 1614 | ** John Napier:** invents a system of moveable rods (Napier's Rods) based on logarithms which were able to multiply, divide and calculate square and cube roots John Napier invents Napier’s Bones computing machine, a manual calculation device for calculating number quotas. | Oct 23, 2022 9:03 PM | |||||
AD | 1624 | Wilhelm Schickard constructs the first mechanical computer, which used techniques such as toothed wheels. This computer was called a “computer clock” because the wheels used were originally developed for watches. | Oct 24, 2022 10:23 PM | |||||
AD | 1642 | Blaise Pascal creates the barometer, the first automatic computing machine, built to help his father in calculating taxes. The machine was doing assemblies and subtractions using wheels numbered from zero to nine. | Oct 24, 2022 10:23 PM | |||||
AD | 1671 | Gottfried Leibniz: becomes known as one of the founding fathers of calculus | Oct 23, 2022 9:04 PM | |||||
AD | 1679 | Gottfried Leibniz perfects the binary system, thus laying the foundations for computing machines. | Oct 24, 2022 10:23 PM | |||||
AD | 1692 | Philosopher and mathematician Gottfried von Leibniz carried on Pascal’s invention through a more advanced computing machine, which could perform multiplications through repeated assembly. | Oct 24, 2022 10:24 PM | |||||
AD | 1725 | Basile Bouchon used a perforated paper loop in a weaving war to reproduce a template on a fabric. | Oct 24, 2022 10:24 PM | |||||
AD | 1726 | Jean-Baptiste Falcon, Basile Bouchon’s collaborator, came up with improvements by creating the semi-automatic weaving war, which used perforated paper cards caught together. | Oct 24, 2022 10:25 PM | |||||
AD | 1751 | Ben Franklin conducts his famous experiment with a kite proving the connection between lightning and small electric sparks. | Oct 24, 2022 10:25 PM | |||||
AD | 1801 | Joseph-Marie Jaquard invents the first semi-automatic weaving war using the concept of punching cards to weave complex patterns into canvas. This invention becomes the foundation of a programmable machine. | Oct 24, 2022 10:26 PM | |||||
AD | 1820 | Arithmometer: The Arithmometer was the first mass-produced calculator invented by Charles Xavier Thomas de Colmar | Oct 23, 2022 9:05 PM | |||||
AD | 1826 | Oct 14, 2024 10:04 PM | ||||||
AD | 1831 | Michael Faraday creates electric dynamite and manages to obtain electricity in a continuous and practical way, an invention that will be used for information technology in the contemporary era. | Oct 24, 2022 10:26 PM | |||||
AD | 1833 | Charles Babbage designs Analytical Engine, a general-purpose mechanical computer. The idea was too complex for the time because parts could not be made with such precision, so the project was abandoned. | Oct 24, 2022 10:26 PM | |||||
AD | 1853 | Tabulating Machine: is invented by Per Georg Scheutz and his son Edvard | Oct 23, 2022 9:06 PM | |||||
AD | 1854 | George Boole publishes the article An Investigation into the Laws of Thought, which lays the foundations of Boolean algebra and develops a new kind of logic, mathematical logic. | Oct 24, 2022 10:27 PM | |||||
AD | 1867 | Charles Sanders Peirce introduces Boolean algebra in the United States. In addition, Peirce defined concepts such as: inductive reasoning, mathematical induction and logical inference. He noted that logical operations can be performed through electrical switching circuits idea used decades later to produce digital computers. | Oct 24, 2022 10:27 PM | |||||
AD | 1878 | Thomas Edison and Joseph Swan manage to invent the incandescent filament bulb. | Oct 24, 2022 10:28 PM | |||||
AD | 1882 | The first power generation station was opened on Pearl Street in Lower Manhattan, New York. | Oct 24, 2022 10:28 PM | |||||
AD | 1884 | Comptometer: The Comptometer which is operated by pressing keys is developed by Dorr E. Felt | Oct 23, 2022 9:07 PM | |||||
AD | 1890 | Herman Hollerith: invents a counting machine which has increment mechanical counters Herman Hollerith builds the mechanical tab with perforated cards for the American census, arising from a crisis that by 1880 the population of the United States had grown so large that it took more than seven years to calculate the results of the census. | Oct 23, 2022 9:08 PM | |||||
AD | 1900s (early) | Frederick Winslow Taylor, a mechanical engineer and pioneer of Taylorism*—*otherwise known as Scientific Management. On a mission to make human labor more efficient, Taylor conducted extensive research into the interactions between workers and their tools. In 1911, he wrote “The Principles of Scientific Management” in which he asserted that systematic management is the solution to inefficiency. Although Taylorism was widely criticised for the way it reduced people to mere cogs in a machine, Taylor’s focus on optimizing the relationship between humans and their tools. | Oct 24, 2022 10:30 PM | |||||
AD | 1910 | The Mundaneum was an institution which aimed to gather together all the world's knowledge and classify it according to a system called the Universal Decimal Classification by Paul Otlet. | Oct 28, 2022 8:19 AM | |||||
AD | 1922 | n 1922, the world was just emerging from the aftermath of the Spanish flu—1922 ushered in a new era for progress and rebirth. In that year, in the United States: There were ~12 million cars on the road The price of gas was 11 cents per gallon The Ford Model-T cost a mere $319 Only 40% of Americans had electricity in their homesOnly 35% had a telephone Life expectancy was 58 years for men and 61 years for women (about 20 years less than today)Top breakthrough inventions 1922? There were ONLY 7 (that I could find)... The first water skis were demonstrated using wooden boards and a clothesline The first manually retractable, convertible car hardtop was invented The electric blender was invented for making malts and milkshakes The radial arm saw was invented to cut and shape long pieces of stock materialThe use of insulin for the first time in a person to treat diabetesVitamin E was discoveredThe Australians invented Vegemite | Oct 27, 2022 10:11 PM | |||||
AD | 1924 | Hollerith’s company joins with others to create the IBM corporation, which would later be the world market leader from 1950 to 1980. | Dec 28, 2022 7:27 PM | |||||
AD | 1930 | Vannevar Bush: develops a partly electronic Difference Engine (the precursor to the digital computer) | Oct 23, 2022 9:09 PM | |||||
AD | 1934 | Paul Otlet préfigure le concept d’internet. | Nov 2, 2022 5:17 PM | |||||
AD | 1936 | Allan Turing designs the cars that bear his name. He argued that they could solve any mathematical problem based on an algorithmic procedure. Turing machines will later be the base of modern computers. | Oct 24, 2022 10:30 PM | |||||
AD | 1937 | Dr. John V. Atanasoff together that Clifford Berry’s assistant built the first digital electronic computer. In 1973, he won the case to cancel the ENIAC patent, and Atanasoff received the merits of inventor of the first digital electronic computer. | Oct 24, 2022 10:31 PM | |||||
AD | 1938 | Konrad Zuse: creates the Z1 Computer a binary digital computer using punch tape | Oct 23, 2022 9:09 PM | |||||
AD | 1939 | John Vincent Atanasoff and Clifford Berry: develop the ABC (Atanasoft-Berry Computer) prototype | Oct 23, 2022 9:10 PM | |||||
AD | 1940’s | Continuing on the quest for workplace efficiency, Toyota developed their famous human-centered production system. Unlike Taylorism, the Toyota Production System was based upon respect for people, and much attention was paid to creating the optimal working environment. Not only that: human input was considered crucial, and was actively encouraged. Toyota factory workers could pull a cord to stop the assembly line if they had feedback or suggestions to improve the process, for example*—*like usability testing in action, if you will. This represents a key step in UX history as it really brought attention to the importance of how humans interact with machines. No matter how advanced technology is, its value is limited to its usability*—*and that’s exactly what UX design is all about. | Oct 23, 2022 9:10 PM | |||||
AD | 1943 | Colossus: Alan Turing develops the code-breaking machine Colossus The British Colossus computer, the first fully programmable digital electronic computer built by Tommy Flowers, is used during World War II and manages to crack Lord Lorenz’s code. | Oct 27, 2022 10:13 PM | |||||
AD | 1945 | John von Neumann, a renowned mathematician and computer pioneer, talks about the ability of computers to store programs in the preliminary speech on the logical design of an electronic computing tool. Most modern computers are built on von Neumann architecture and implement the functional model of the Turing machine. | Oct 24, 2022 10:33 PM | |||||
AD | 1945 | ** ENIAC:** John Presper Eckert & John W. Mauchly develop the ENIAC ( Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer) John von Neumann, a renowned mathematician and computer pioneer, talks about the ability of computers to store programs in the preliminary speech on the logical design of an electronic computing tool. Most modern computers are built on von Neumann architecture and implement the functional model of the Turing machine. | Oct 23, 2022 9:11 PM | |||||
AD | 1945 | ** Computer Bug:** the term computer ‘bug’ is first used by Grace Hopper | Oct 24, 2022 10:33 PM | |||||
AD | 1946 | F.C. Williams: develops his cathode-ray tube (CRT) storing device, the forerunner to random-access memory (RAM) | Oct 23, 2022 9:11 PM | |||||
AD | 1947 | ** Pilot ACE:** Donald Watts Davies joins Alan Turing to build the fastest digital computer in England at the time, the Pilot ACE Douglas Engelbart: theorises on interactive computing with keyboard and screen display instead of on punchcards | Oct 23, 2022 9:12 PM | |||||
AD | 1948 | ** Frederic Calland Williams & Tom Kilburn:** develop the SSEM "Small Scale Experimental Machine" digital CRT storage which was soon nicknamed the "Baby" The computer called “Baby” was activated, the first computer with a stored program that used the binary system, in the Manchester University laboratory. Small Scale Experimental Machine was the official name and was the first computer to use von Neumann architecture and perform several operations. | Oct 23, 2022 9:12 PM | |||||
AD | 1950 | Hideo Yamachito: creates the first electronic computer in Japan Alan Turing: publishes his paper - Computing Machinery and Intelligence which helps create the Turing Test | Oct 23, 2022 9:13 PM | |||||
AD | 1951 | John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert complete UNIVAC1, the first commercial and administrative computer produced in the United States. It was used by the United States Census Bureau for the population census. The fifth such computer was used by CBS television station in 1952 to successfully predict the outcome of the election using only 1% of the vote. | Oct 24, 2022 10:35 PM | |||||
AD | 1951 | LEO: T. Raymond Thompson and John Simmons develop the first business computer, the Lyons Electronic Office (LEO) at Lyons Co. UNIVAC: UNIVAC I (UNIVersal Automatic Computer I) is introduced - the first commercial computer made in the United States and designed principally by John Presper Eckert & John W. Mauchly EDVAC: The EDVAC (Electronic Discrete Variable Automatic Computer) begins performing basic tasks. Unlike the ENIAC, it was binary rather than decimal | Oct 23, 2022 9:14 PM | |||||
AD | 1953 | The IBM 701 becomes available and a total of 19 are sold to the scientific community | Oct 23, 2022 9:19 PM | |||||
AD | 1955 | Another key figure in the history of UX design is Henry Dreyfuss, an American industrial engineer who was renowned for designing and improving the usability of some of the most iconic consumer products*—*including the Hoover vacuum cleaner, the tabletop telephone and the Royal Typewriter Company’s Quiet DeLuxe model. Dreyfuss’ design philosophy was based on common sense and scientific approaches. In 1955, he wrote Designing for People, which pretty much explains UX design in a nutshell: “When the point of contact between the product and the people becomes a point of friction, then the [designer] has failed. On the other hand, if people are made safer, more comfortable, more eager to purchase, more efficient—or just plain happier—by contact with the product, then the designer has succeeded.” | Oct 27, 2022 10:15 PM | |||||
AD | 1956 | Optical fibre is invented by Basil Hirschowitz, C. Wilbur Peters, and Lawrence E. Curtiss | Oct 23, 2022 9:19 PM | |||||
AD | 1957 | Seymor Cray and William Norris founded Control Data (CDC). In the 1960s it produced the fastest computers in the world. In 1972 Seymor Cray, known as the “father of supercomputers”, left the CDC and founded his own company Cray Research, which still exists today as CRAY Inc. | Oct 24, 2022 10:35 PM | |||||
AD | 1958 | Bell Labs announces the first transistor, which becomes the basis of the electronic age. After this invention it becomes possible to make smaller computers. | Oct 24, 2022 10:41 PM | |||||
AD | 1958 | Silicon chip: the first integrated circuit, or silicon chip, is produced by Jack Kilby & Robert Noyce | Oct 23, 2022 9:19 PM | |||||
AD | 1959 | Paul Baran: theorises on the "survivability of communication systems under nuclear attack", digital technology and symbiosis between humans and machines | Oct 23, 2022 9:20 PM | |||||
AD | 1961 | Unimate: General Motors puts the first industrial robot, Unimate, to work in a New Jersey factory | Oct 23, 2022 9:20 PM | |||||
AD | 1962 | The first computer game: the Spacewar Computer Game is created invented by Steve Russell & MIT 1961 – Stephen Russell, along with Martin Graetz and Wayne Wiitanen, invents the first video game. Spacewar! initially run on a PDP-1 computer, the first computer that allowed multiple users to exist at once. | Oct 23, 2022 9:21 PM | |||||
AD | 1962 | At MIT, a wide variety of computer experiments are going on. Ivan Sutherland uses the TX-2 to write Sketchpad, the origin of graphical programs for computer-aided design. J.C.R. Licklider writes memos about his Intergalactic Network concept, where everyone on the globe is interconnected and can access programs and data at any site from anywhere. He is talking to his own ‘Intergalactic Network’ of researchers across the country. In October, ‘Lick’ becomes the first head of the computer research program at ARPA, which he calls the Information Processing Techniques Office (IPTO). Leonard Kleinrock completes his doctoral dissertation at MIT on queuing theory in communication networks, and becomes an assistant professor at UCLA. The SAGE (Semi Automatic Ground Environment), based on earlier work at MIT and IBM, is fully deployed as the North American early warning system. Operators of ‘weapons directing consoles’ use a light gun to identify moving objects that show up on their radar screens. SAGE sites are used to direct air defense. This project provides experience in the development of the SABRE air travel reservation system and later air traffic control systems. | Oct 22, 2022 9:05 PM | |||||
AD | 1963 | The Computer Mouse: Douglas Engelbart invents and patents the first computer mouse (nicknamed the mouse because the tail came out the end) The American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII) is developed to standardize data exchange among computers 1963 – Douglas Engelbart and Bill English invent the mouse. Engelbart was also the leader of the team that invented the computer network and hypertext. | Oct 23, 2022 9:21 PM | |||||
AD | 1963 | Licklider starts to talk with Larry Roberts of Lincoln Labs, director of the TX-2 project, Ivan Sutherland, a computer graphics expert whom he has hired to work at ARPA and Bob Taylor, who joins ARPA in 1965. Lick contracts with MIT, UCLA, and BBN to start work on his vision. Syncom, the first synchronous communication satellite, is launched. NASA’s satellite is assembled in the Hughes Aircraft Company’s facility in Culver City, California. Total payload is 55 pounds. A joint industry-government committee develops ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange), the first universal standard for computers. It permits machines from different manufacturers to exchange data. 128 unique 7-bit strings stand for either a letter of the English alphabet, one of the Arabic numerals, one of an assortment of punctuation marks and symbols, or a special function, such as the carriage return. | Oct 22, 2022 9:05 PM | |||||
AD | 1964 | Clays CDC 6600 becomes the fastest computer. | Oct 24, 2022 10:43 PM | |||||
AD | 1964 | Engineers aren’t the only ones who had a part to play in the history of UX. He might not seem like the most obvious candidate, but Walt Disney is often hailed as one of the first UX designers in history. Indeed, Disney was obsessed with creating magical, immersive, near-perfect user experiences, and the way he set about building Disney World was a true stroke of UX genius. In his article for UX Magazine, Joseph Dickerson outlines Walt Disney’s guiding principles for his team of engineers*—*or Imagineers, as he called them: know your audience, wear your guest’s shoes, communicate with color, shape, form and texture… Disney envisioned a place where “the latest technology can be used to improve the lives of people” | Oct 23, 2022 9:22 PM | |||||
AD | 1964 | Simultaneous work on secure packet switching networks is taking place at MIT, the RAND Corporation, and the National Physical Laboratory in Great Britain. Paul Baran, Donald Davies, Leonard Kleinrock, and others proceed in parallel research. Baran is one of the first to publish, On Data Communications Networks. Kleinrock’s thesis is also published as a seminal text on queuing theory.IBM’s new System 360 computers come onto the market and set the de facto worldwide standard of the 8-bit byte, making the 12-bit and 36-bit word machines almost instantly obsolete. The $5 billion investment by IBM into this family of six mutually compatible computers pays off, and within two years orders for the System 360 reach 1,000 per month.On-line transaction processing debuts with IBM’s SABRE air travel reservation system for American Airlines. SABRE (Semi-Automatic Business Research Environment) links 2,000 terminals in sixty cities via telephone lines.Licklider leaves ARPA to return to MIT, and Ivan Sutherland moves to IPTO. With IPTO funding, MIT’s Project MAC acquires a GE-635 computer and begins the development of the Multics timesharing operating system. | Oct 22, 2022 9:05 PM | |||||
AD | 1965 | DEC unveils the PDP-8, the first commercially successful minicomputer. Small enough to sit on a desktop, it sells for $18,000 — one-fifth the cost of a low-end IBM/360 mainframe. The combination of speed, size, and cost enables the establishment of the minicomputer in thousands of manufacturing plants, offices, and scientific laboratories. With ARPA funding, Larry Roberts and Thomas Marill create the first wide-area network connection. They connect the TX-2 at MIT to the Q-32 in Santa Monica via a dedicated telephone line with acoustic couplers. The system confirms the suspicions of the Intergalactic Network researchers that telephone lines work for data, but are inefficient, wasteful of bandwidth, and expensive. As Kleinrock predicts, packet switching offers the most promising model for communication between computers.Late in the year, Ivan Sutherland hires Bob Taylor from NASA. Taylor pulls together the ideas about networking that are gaining momentum amongst IPTO’s computer-scientist contractors.The ARPA-funded JOSS (Johnniac Open Shop System) at the RAND Corporation goes on line. The JOSS system permits online computational problem solving at a number of remote electric typewriter consoles. The standard IBM Model 868 electric typewriters are modified with a small box with indicator lights and activating switches. The user input appears in green, and JOSS responds with the output in black. | Oct 22, 2022 9:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1966 | Another key figure in the history of UX design is Henry Dreyfuss, an American industrial engineer who was renowned for designing and improving the usability of some of the most iconic consumer products*—*including the Hoover vacuum cleaner, the tabletop telephone and the Royal Typewriter Company’s Quiet DeLuxe model. Dreyfuss’ design philosophy was based on common sense and scientific approaches. In 1955, he wrote Designing for People, which pretty much explains UX design in a nutshell: “When the point of contact between the product and the people becomes a point of friction, then the [designer] has failed. On the other hand, if people are made safer, more comfortable, more eager to purchase, more efficient—or just plain happier—by contact with the product, then the designer has succeeded.” | Oct 27, 2022 10:17 PM | |||||
AD | 1966 | Taylor succeeds Sutherland to become the third director of IPTO. In his own office, he has three different terminals, which he can connect by telephone to three different computer systems research sites around the nation. Why can’t they all talk together? His problem is a metaphor for that facing the ARPA computer research community. Taylor meets with Charles Herzfeld, the head of ARPA, to outline his issues. Twenty-minutes later he has a million dollars to spend on networking. The idea is to link all the IPTO contractors. After several months of discussion, Taylor persuades Larry Roberts to leave MIT to start the ARPA network program. Simultaneously, the English inventor of packet switching, Donald Davies, is theorizing at the British National Physical Laboratory (NPL) about building a network of computers to test his packet switching concepts. Honeywell introduces the DDP-516 minicomputer and demonstrates its ruggedness with a sledgehammer. This catches Roberts' eye. | Oct 22, 2022 9:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1967 | Larry Roberts convenes a conference in Ann Arbor, Michigan, to bring the ARPA researchers together. At the conclusion, Wesley Clark suggests that the network be managed by interconnected ‘Interface Message Processors’ in front of the major computers. Called IMPs, they evolve into today’s routers. Roberts puts together his plan for the ARPANET. The separate strands of investigation begin to converge. Donald Davies, Paul Baran, and Larry Roberts become aware of each other’s work at an ACM conference where they all meet. From Davies, the word ‘packet’ is adopted and the proposed line speed in ARPANET is increased from 2.4 Kbps to 50 Kbps. The acoustically coupled modem, invented in the early sixties, is vastly improved by John van Geen of the Stanford Research Institute (SRI). He introduces a receiver that can reliably detect bits of data amid the hiss heard over long-distance telephone connections. | Oct 22, 2022 9:49 PM | |||||
AD | 1968 | Roberts and the ARPA team refine the overall structure and specifications for the ARPANET. They issue an RFQ for the development of the IMPs. At Bolt, Beranek and Newman (BBN), Frank Heart leads a team to bid on the project. Bob Kahn plays a major role in shaping the overall BBN designs. BBN wins the project in December. Roberts works with Howard Frank and his team at Network Analysis Corporation designing the network topology and economics. Kleinrock’s team prepares the network measurement system at UCLA, which is to become the site of the first node. The ILLIAC IV, the largest supercomputer of its time, is being built at Burroughs under a NASA contract. More than 1,000 transistors are squeezed onto its RAM chip, manufactured by the Fairchild Semiconductor Corporation, yielding 10 times the speed at one-hundredth the size of equivalent core memory. ILLIAC-IV will be hooked to the ARPANET so that remote scientists can have access to its unique capabilities. | Oct 22, 2022 9:49 PM | |||||
AD | 1969 | ARPANET: The U.S. Department of Defence sets up the Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET) with the intention of creating a computer network that can withstand any type of disaster. It becomes the first building block for what the internet is has become today | Oct 23, 2022 9:22 PM | |||||
AD | 1969 | Frank Heart puts a team together to write the software that will run the IMPs and to specify changes in the Honeywell DDP- 516 they have chosen. The team includes Ben Barker, Bernie Cosell, Will Crowther, Bob Kahn, Severo Ornstein, and Dave Walden. Four sites are selected. At each, a team gets to work on producing the software to enable its computers and the IMP to communicate. At UCLA, the first site, Vint Cerf, Steve Crocker, and Jon Postel work with Kleinrock to get ready. On April 7, Crocker sends around a memo entitled ‘Request for Comments.’ This is the first of thousands of RFCs that document the design of the ARPANET and the Internet. The team calls itself the Network Working Group (RFC 10), and comes to see its job as the development of a ‘protocol,’ the collection of programs that comes to be known as NCP (Network Control Protocol). The second site is the Stanford Research Institute (SRI), where Doug Engelbart saw the ARPA experiment as an opportunity to explore wide-area distributed collaboration, using his NLS system, a prototype ‘digital library.’ SRI supported the Network Information Center, led by Elizabeth (Jake) Feinler and Don Nielson. At the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) Glen Culler and Burton Fried investigate methods for display of mathematical functions using storage displays to deal with the problem of screen refresh over the net. Their investigation of computer graphics supplies essential capabilities for the representation of scientific information. After installation in September, handwritten logs from UCLA show the first host-to-host connection, from UCLA to SRI, is made on October 29, 1969. The first 'Log-In' crashes the SRI host, but the next attempt works! | Oct 22, 2022 9:49 PM | |||||
AD | 1970 | RAM: Intel introduces the world's first available dynamic RAM ( random-access memory) chip and the first microprocessor, the Intel 4004 | Oct 23, 2022 9:23 PM | |||||
AD | 1970 | Nodes are added to the ARPANET at the rate of one per month. Programmers Dennis Ritchie and Kenneth Thompson at Bell Labs complete the UNIX operating system on a spare DEC minicomputer. UNIX combines many of the time-sharing and file-management features offered by Multics and wins a wide following, particularly among scientists. Bob Metcalfe builds a high-speed (100 Kbps) network interface between the MIT IMP and a PDP-6 to the ARPANET. It runs for 13 years without human intervention. Metcalfe goes on to build another ARPANET interface for Xerox PARC’s PDP-10 clone (MAXC). DEC announces the Unibus for its PDP-11 minicomputers to allow the addition and integration of myriad computer-cards for instrumentation and communications. In December, the Network Working Group (NWG) led by Steve Crocker finishes the initial ARPANET Host-to-Host protocol, called the Network Control Protocol (NCP). | Oct 22, 2022 9:49 PM | |||||
AD | 1970’s | The 1970s kicked off the era of personal computers, with psychologists and engineers working together to focus on the user experience. Many of the most influential developments came out of Xerox’s PARC research center, such as the graphical user interface and the mouse. In many ways, PARC set the tone for personal computing as we know it today. And now over to Apple. In 1984, the original Macintosh was released*—*Apple’s first mass-market PC featuring a graphical user interface, built-in screen and mouse. Since then, Apple has been a true innovator of user experience, from the first iPod in 2001 to the iPhone in 2007. The tech giant even had a hand in coining the term UX design… | Oct 27, 2022 10:19 PM | |||||
AD | 1971 | Pocket calculator: is invented by Sharp Corporation Floppy Disk: is created by David Noble with IBM - Nicknamed the "Floppy" for its flexibility. | Oct 23, 2022 9:25 PM | |||||
AD | 1971 | The ARPANET begins the year with 14 nodes in operation. BBN modifies and streamlines the IMP design so it can be moved to a less cumbersome platform than the DDP-516. BBN also develops a new platform, called a Terminal Interface Processor (TIP) which is capable of supporting input from multiple hosts or terminals. The Network Working Group completes the Telnet protocol and makes progress on the file transfer protocol (FTP) standard. At the end of the year, the ARPANET contains 19 nodes as planned. Intel’s release of the 4004, the first ‘computer on a chip,’ ushers in the epoch of the microprocessor. The combination of memory and processor on a single chip reduces size and cost, and increases speed, continuing the evolution from vacuum tube to transistor to integrated circuit. Many small projects are carried out across the new network, including the demonstration of an aircraft-carrier landing simulator. However, the overall traffic is far lighter than the network’s capacity. Something needs to stimulate the kind of collaborative and interactive atmosphere consistent with the original vision. Larry Roberts and Bob Kahn decide that it is time for a public demonstration of the ARPANET. They choose to hold this demonstration at the International Conference on Computer Communication (ICCC) to be held in Washington, DC, in October 1972. | Oct 22, 2022 9:49 PM | |||||
AD | 1972 | The ARPANET grows by ten more nodes in the first 10 months of 1972. The year is spent finishing, testing and releasing all the network protocols, and developing network demonstrations for the ICCC. At BBN, Ray Tomlinson writes a program to enable electronic mail to be sent over the ARPANET. It is Tomlinson who develops the ‘user@host’ convention, choosing the @ sign arbitrarily from the non-alphabetic symbols on the keyboard. Unbeknownst to him, @ is already in use as an escape character, prompt, or command indicator on many other systems. Other networks will choose other conventions, inaugurating a long period known as the e-mail ‘header wars.’ Not until the late 1980s will ‘@’ finally become a worldwide standard. Following the lead of Intel’s 4004 chip, hand-held calculators ranging from the simple Texas Instruments four-function adding machines to the elaborate Hewlett-Packard scientific calculators immediately consign ordinary slide rules to oblivion. Xerox PARC develops a program called Smalltalk, and Bell Labs develops a language called ‘C.’ Steve Wozniak begins his career by building one of the best-known ‘blue boxes;’ tone generators that enable long-distance dialing while bypassing the phone company’s billing equipment. The ICCC demonstrations are a tremendous success. One of the best known demos features a conversation between ELIZA, Joseph Weizenbaum’s artificially-intelligent psychiatrist located at MIT, and PARRY, a paranoid computer developed by Kenneth Colby at Stanford. Other demos feature interactive chess games, geography quizzes, and an elaborate air traffic control simulation. An AT&T delegation visits ICCC but leaves in puzzlement. | Oct 22, 2022 9:49 PM | |||||
AD | 1972 | BBN’s Ray Tomlinson introduces network email. The Internet Working Group (INWG) forms to address need for establishing standard protocols. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1972 | In 1972 Seymor Cray, known as the “father of supercomputers”, left the CDC and founded his own company Cray Research, which still exists in 2020 as CRAY Inc. | Nov 8, 2022 7:18 PM | |||||
AD | 1973 | ** Personal computer:** The minicomputer Xerox Alto (1973) was a landmark step in the development of personal computers Gateways: Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn develop gateway routing computers to negotiate between the various national networks | Oct 23, 2022 9:26 PM | |||||
AD | 1973 | Thirty institutions are connected to the ARPANET. The network users range from industrial installations and consulting firms like BBN, Xerox PARC and the MITRE Corporation, to government sites like NASA’s Ames Research Laboratories, the National Bureau of Standards, and Air Force research facilities. The ICCC demonstrations prove packet-switching a viable technology, and ARPA (now DARPA, where the ‘D’ stands for ‘Defense’) looks for ways to extend its reach. Two new programs begin: Packet Radio sites are modeled on the ALOHA experiment at the University of Hawaii designed by Norm Abramson, connecting seven computers on four islands; and a satellite connection enables linking to two foreign sites in Norway and the UK. Bob Kahn moves from BBN to DARPA to work for Larry Roberts, and his first self-assigned task is the interconnection of the ARPANET with other networks. He enlists Vint Cerf, who has been teaching at Stanford. The problem is that ARPANET, radio-based PRnet, and SATNET all have different interfaces, packet sizes, labeling, conventions and transmission rates. Linking them together is very difficult. Kahn and Cerf set about designing a net-to-net connection protocol. Cerf leads the newly formed International Network Working Group. In September 1973, the two give their first paper on the new Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) at an INWG meeting at the University of Sussex in England. Meanwhile, at Xerox PARC, Bob Metcalfe is working on a wire-based system modeled on ALOHA protocols for Local Area Networks (LANs). It will become Ethernet. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1973 | Global networking becomes a reality as the University College of London (England) and Royal Radar Establishment (Norway) connect to ARPANET. The term internet is born. | Oct 22, 2022 10:40 PM | |||||
AD | 1974 | WYSIWYG: Charles Simonyi coins the term WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) to describe the ability of being able to display a file or document exactly how it is going to be printed or viewed | Oct 23, 2022 9:26 PM | |||||
AD | 1974 | Ethernet is demonstrated by networking Xerox PARC’s new Alto computers. BBN recruits Larry Roberts to direct a new venture, called Telenet, which is the first public packet-switched service. Roberts’ departure creates a crisis in the DARPA IPTO office. DARPA has fulfilled its initial mission. Discussions about divesting DARPA of operational responsibility for the network are held. Because it is DARPA-funded, BBN has no exclusive right to the source code for the IMPs. Telenet and other new networking enterprises want BBN to release the source code. BBN argues that it is always changing the code and that it has recently undergone a complete rewrite at the hands of John McQuillan. Their approach makes Roberts’ task of finding a new director for IPTO difficult. J.C.R. Licklider agrees to return to IPTO from MIT on a temporary basis. In addition to DARPA, The National Science Foundation (NSF) is actively supporting computing and networking at almost 120 universities. The largest NSF installation is at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado. There, scientists use a home-built ‘remote job entry’ system to connect to NCAR’s CDC 7600 from major universities. Bob Kahn and Vint Cerf publish "A Protocol for Packet Network Interconnection"" in the May 1974 issue of IEEE Transactions on Communications Technology. Shortly thereafter, DARPA funds three contracts to develop and implement the Kahn-Cerf TCP protocol described in their paper, one at Stanford (Cerf and his students), one at BBN (Ray Tomlinson), and one at University College London (directed by Peter Kirstein and his students). Daily traffic on the ARPANET exceeds 3 million packets. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1974 | The first Internet Service Provider (ISP) is born with the introduction of a commercial version of ARPANET, known as Telenet. | Oct 22, 2022 10:40 PM | |||||
AD | 1974 | Vinton Cerf and Bob Kahn (the duo said by many to be the Fathers of the Internet) publish "A Protocol for Packet Network Interconnection," which details the design of TCP. | Oct 22, 2022 10:45 PM | |||||
AD | 1975 | Portable computers: The Altair 8800 is developed by Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems (MITS) | Oct 23, 2022 9:27 PM | |||||
AD | 1975 | The ARPANET geographical map now shows 61 nodes. Licklider arranges its administration to be turned over to the Defense Communications Agency (DCA). BBN remains the contractor responsible for network operations. BBN agrees to release the source code for IMPs and TIPs. The Network Working Group maintains its open system of discussion via RFCs and e-mail lists. Discomfort grows with the bureaucratic style of DCA. The Department of Energy creates its own net to support its own research. This net operates over dedicated lines connecting each site to the computer centers at the National Laboratories. NASA begins planning its own space physics network, SPAN. These networks have connections to the ARPANET so the newly developed TCP protocol begins to get a workout. Internally, however, the new networks use such a variety of protocols that true interoperability is still an issue. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1975/01/23 | Microsoft Corporation: is founded April 4, 1975 by Bill Gates and Paul Allen to develop and sell BASIC interpreters for the Altair 8800 | Oct 23, 2022 9:28 PM | |||||
AD | 1976 | DARPA supports computer scientists at UC Berkeley who are revising a Unix system to incorporate TCP/IP protocols. Berkeley Unix also incorporates a second set of Bell Labs protocols, called UUCP, for systems to use dial-up connections. Seymour Cray demonstrates the first vector-processor supercomputer, the CRAY-1. The first customers include Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and NCAR. The CRAY-1 hardware is more compact and faster than previous supercomputers. No wire is more than 4 feet long, and the clock period is 12.5 nanoseconds (billionths of a second). The machine is cooled by freon circulated through stainless steel tubing bonded within vertical wedges of aluminum between the stacks of circuit boards (Cray patents the bonding process). The CRAY-1’s speed and power attract researchers, who want access to it over networks. Vint Cerf moves from Stanford to DARPA to work with Bob Kahn on networking and the TCP/IP protocols. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1976 | Queen Elizabeth II hits the “send button” on her first email. | Oct 23, 2022 9:29 PM | |||||
AD | 1976/04/01 | Apple: Apple Computers is founded by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs on 1 Apr 1976 (April Fools Day) | Oct 22, 2022 10:40 PM | |||||
AD | 1977 | Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs announce the Apple II computer. Apple Computer’s Apple II, the first personal computer with colour graphics, is demonstrated | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1977 | Tandy TRS-80 and the Commodore Pet. These off-the-shelf machines create the consumer and small business markets for computers. (with Apple II) | Nov 8, 2022 7:46 PM | |||||
AD | 1977 | Cerf and Kahn mount a major demonstration, ‘internetting’ among the Packet Radio net, SATNET, and the ARPANET. Messages go from a van in the Bay Area across the US on ARPANET, then to University College London and back via satellite to Virginia, and back through the ARPANET to the University of Southern California’s Information Sciences Institute. This shows its applicability to international deployment. Larry Landweber of the University of Wisconsin creates THEORYNET providing email between over 100 researchers and linking elements of the University of Wisconsin in different cities via a commercial packet service like Telenet. | Nov 8, 2022 7:47 PM | |||||
AD | 1978 | The appearance of the first very small computers and their potential for communication via modem to dial up services starts a boom in a new set of niche industries, like software and modems. Vint Cerf at DARPA continues the vision of the Internet, forming an International Cooperation Board chaired by Peter Kirstein of University College London, and an Internet Configuration Control Board, chaired by Dave Clark of MIT. The ARPANET experiment formally is complete. This leaves an array of boards and task forces over the next few years trying to sustain the vision of a free and open Internet that can keep up with the growth of computing. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1979 | Over half a million computers are in use in the United States | Oct 23, 2022 9:33 PM | |||||
AD | 1979 | USENET forms to host news and discussion groups. | Oct 22, 2022 10:40 PM | |||||
AD | 1980 | Paul Allen and Bill Gates: IBM hires Paul Allen and Bill Gates to create an operating system for a new PC. They buy the rights to a simple operating system manufactured by Seattle Computer Products and use it as a template to develop DOS | Oct 23, 2022 9:33 PM | |||||
AD | 1980 | Larry Landweber at Wisconsin holds a meeting with six other universities to discuss the possibility of building a Computer Science Research Network to be called CSNET. Bob Kahn attends as an advisor from DARPA, and Kent Curtis attends from NSF’s computer research programs. The idea evolves over the summer between Landweber, Peter Denning (Purdue), Dave Farber (Delaware), and Tony Hearn (Utah). In November, the group submits a proposal to NSF to fund a consortium of eleven universities at an estimated cost of $3 million over five years. This is viewed as too costly by the NSF. USENET starts a series of shell scripts written by Steve Bellovin at UNC to help communicate with Duke. Newsgroups start with a name that gives an idea of its content. USENET is an early example of a client server where users dial in to a server with requests to forward certain newsgroup postings. The server then ‘serves’ the request. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1980 | Landweber’s proposal has many enthusiastic reviewers. At an NSF-sponsored workshop, the idea is revised in a way that both wins approval and opens up a new epoch for NSF itself. The revised proposal includes many more universities. It proposes a three-tiered structure involving ARPANET, a TELENET-based system, and an e-mail only service called PhoneNet. Gateways connect the tiers into a seamless whole. This brings the cost of a site within the reach of the smallest universities. Moreover, NSF agrees to manage CSNET for two years, after which it will turn it over to the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR), which is made up of more than 50 academic institutions. The National Science Board approves the new plan and funds it for five years at a cost of $5 million. Since the protocols for interconnecting the subnets of CSNET include TCP/IP, NSF becomes an early supporter of the Internet. NASA has ARPANET nodes, as do many Department of Energy (DOE) sites. Now several Federal agencies support the Internet, and the number is growing. Research by David Patterson at Berkeley and John Hennessy at Stanford promotes ‘reduced instruction set’ computing. IBM selects the disk operating system DOS, developed by Microsoft, to operate its planned PC. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1981 | Microsoft: MS-DOS Computer Operating System increases its success | Oct 23, 2022 9:35 PM | |||||
AD | 1981 | The National Science Foundation (NSF) provided a grant to establish the Computer Science Network (CSNET) to provide networking services to university computer scientists. | Oct 22, 2022 10:40 PM | |||||
AD | 1982 | Commodore 64: becomes the best-selling computer of all time. SMTP: SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) is introduced for the first time | Oct 23, 2022 9:36 PM | |||||
AD | 1982 | By the beginning of the year, more than 200 computers in dozens of institutions have been connected in CSNET. BITNET, another startup network, is based on protocols that include file transfer via e-mail rather than by the FTP procedure of the ARPA protocols. The Internet Working Group of DARPA publishes a plan for the transition of the entire network from the Network Control Protocol to the TCP/IP protocols developed since 1974 and already in wide use (RFC 801). At Berkeley, Bill Joy incorporates the new TCP/IP suite into the next release of the Unix operating system. The first ‘portable’ computer is launched in the form of the Osborne, a 24-pound suitcase-sized device. The IBM PC is launched in August 1981. Meanwhile, Japan mounts a successful challenge to US chip makers by producing 64-kbit chips so inexpensively that U.S. competitors charge the chips are being ‘dumped’ on the U.S. market. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1982 | Time magazine names ‘the computer’ its ‘Man of the Year.’ Cray Research announces plans to market the Cray X-MP system in place of the Cray-1. At the other end of the scale, the IBM PC ‘clones’ begin appearing. An NSF panel chaired by the Courant Institute’s Peter Lax reports that U.S. scientists lack access to supercomputers. It contains the testimony of University of Illinois astrophysicist Larry Smarr that members of his discipline have been forced to travel to Germany to use American-made supercomputers. The period during which ad hoc networking systems have flourished has left TCP/IP as only one contender for the title of ‘standard.’ Indeed, the International Organization for Standards (ISO) has written and is pushing ahead with a ‘reference’ model of an interconnection standard called Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) — already adopted in preliminary form for interconnecting DEC equipment. But while OSI is a standard existing for the most part on paper, the combination of TCP/IP and the local area networks created with Ethernet technology are driving the expansion of the living Internet. Drew Major and Kyle Powell write Snipes, an action game to be played on PC’s over the network. They package the game as a ‘demo’ for a PC software product from SuperSet Software, Inc. This is the beginning of Novell. Digital Communications Associates introduces the first coaxial cable interface for micro-to-mainframe communications. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1982 | Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and Internet Protocol (IP), as the protocol suite, commonly known as TCP/IP, emerge as the protocol for ARPANET. This results in the fledgling definition of the internet as connected TCP/IP internets. TCP/IP remains the standard protocol for the internet. | Oct 22, 2022 10:41 PM | |||||
AD | 1983 | More than 10 million computers are in use in the United States ** Domain Name System (DNS):** is pioneered by Jon Postel, Paul Mockapetris and Craig Partridge. Seven 'top-level' domain names are initially introduced: edu, com, gov, mil, net, org and int. Microsoft Windows: is introduced eliminating the need for a user to have to type each command, like MS-DOS, by using a mouse to navigate through drop-down menus, tabs and icons | Oct 23, 2022 9:37 PM | |||||
AD | 1983 | The Domain Name System (DNS) establishes the familiar .edu, .gov, .com, .mil, .org, .net, and .int system for naming websites. This is easier to remember than the previous designation for websites, such as 123.456.789.10. | Oct 22, 2022 10:41 PM | |||||
AD | 1984 | Dell Computer is founded in Austin Texas on 3 May, 1984 | Oct 23, 2022 9:38 PM | |||||
AD | 1984 | In January, the ARPANET standardizes on the TCP/IP protocols adopted by the Department of Defense (DOD). The Defense Communications Agency decides to split the network into a public ‘ARPANET’ and a classified ‘MILNET, ‘ with only 45 hosts remaining on the ARPANET. Jon Postel issues an RFC assigning numbers to the various interconnected nets. Barry Leiner takes Vint Cerf’s place at DARPA, managing the Internet. Numbering the Internet hosts and keeping tabs on the host names simply fails to scale with the growth of the Internet. In November, Jon Postel and Paul Mockapetris of USC/ISI and Craig Partridge of BBN develop the Domain Name System (DNS) and recommend the use of the now familiar user@host.domain addressing system. The number of computers connected via these hosts is much larger, and the growth is accelerating with the commercialization of Ethernet. Having incorporated TCP/IP into Berkeley Unix, Bill Joy is key to the formation of Sun Microsystems. Sun develops workstations that ship with Berkeley Unix and feature built-in networking. At the same time, the Apollo workstations ship with a special version of a token ring network. In July 1983, an NSF working group, chaired by Kent Curtis, issues a plan for ‘A National Computing Environment for Academic Research’ to remedy the problems noted in the Lax report. Congressional hearings result in advice to NSF to undertake an even more ambitious plan to make supercomputers available to US scientists. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1984 | n January, Apple announces the Macintosh. Its user-friendly interface swells the ranks of new computer users. Novelist William Gibson coins the term cyberspace in Neuromancer, a book that adds a new genre to science fiction and fantasy. The newly developed DNS is introduced across the Internet, with the now familiar domains of .gov, .mil, .edu, .org, .net, and .com. A domain called .int, for international entities, is not much used. Instead, hosts in other countries take a two-letter domain indicating the country. The British JANET explicitly announces its intention to serve the nation’s higher education community, regardless of discipline. Most important for the Internet, NSF issues a request for proposals to establish supercomputer centers that will provide access to the entire U.S. research community, regardless of discipline and location. A new division of Advanced Scientific Computing is created with a budget of $200 million over five years. Datapoint, the first company to offer networked computers, continues in the marketplace, but fails to achieve critical mass. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1984 | William Gibson, author of "Neuromancer," is the first to use the term "cyberspace.” | Oct 22, 2022 10:41 PM | |||||
AD | 1985 | Paul Brainard introduces Pagemaker for the Macintosh creating the desktop publishing field Nintendo: The Nintendo Entertainment System makes its debut. Microsoft Windows 1.0 is introduced on 19 Nov, 1985 and is initially sold for $100.00 | Oct 23, 2022 9:39 PM | |||||
AD | 1985 | NSF announces the award of five supercomputing center contracts: • Cornell Theory Center (CTC), directed by Nobel laureate Ken Wilson; • The John Von Neumann Center (JVNC) at Princeton, directed by computational fluid dynamicist Steven Orszag; • The National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), directed at the University of Illinois by astrophysicist Larry Smarr; • The Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC), sharing locations at Westinghouse, the University of Pittsburgh, and Carnegie Mellon University, directed by Michael Levine and Ralph Roskies; • The San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC), on the campus of the University of California, San Diego, and administered by the General Atomics Company under the direction of nuclear engineer Sid Karin. • By the end of 1985, the number of hosts on the Internet (all TCP/IP interconnected networks) has reached 2,000. MIT translates and publishes Computers and Communication by Dr. Koji Kobayashi, the Chairman of NEC. Dr. Kobayashi, who joined NEC in 1929, articulates his clear vision of ‘C & C’, the integration of computing and communication. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1985 | Symbolics.com, the website for Symbolics Computer Corp. in Massachusetts, becomes the first registered domain. | Oct 22, 2022 10:41 PM | |||||
AD | 1986 | More than 30 million computers are in use in the United States. | Oct 23, 2022 9:40 PM | |||||
AD | 1986 | The 56Kbps backbone between the NSF centers leads to the creation of a number of regional feeder networks - JVNCNET, NYSERNET, SURANET, SDSCNET and BARRNET - among others. With the backbone, these regionals start to build a hub and spoke infrastructure. This growth in the number of interconnected networks drives a major expansion in the community including the DOE, DOD and NASA. Between the beginning of 1986 and the end of 1987 the number of networks grows from 2,000 to nearly 30,000. TCP/IP is available on workstations and PCs such as the newly introduced Compaq portable computer. Ethernet is becoming accepted for wiring inside buildings and across campuses. Each of these developments drives the introduction of terms such as bridging and routing and the need for readily available information on TCP/IP in workshops and manuals. Companies such as Proteon, Synoptics, Banyan, Cabletron, Wellfleet, and Cisco emerge with products to feed this explosion. At the same time, other parts of the U.S. Government and many of the traditional computer vendors mount an attempt to validate their products being built to the OSI theoretical specifications, in the form of the Corporation for Open Systems. USENET starts a major shakeup which becomes known as the ‘Great Renaming’. A driving force is that, as many messages are traveling over ARPANET, desirable new news groups such as ‘alt.sex’ and ‘alt.drugs’ are not allowed. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1986 | he National Science Foundation’s NSFNET goes online to connected supercomputer centers at 56,000 bits per second — the speed of a typical dial-up computer modem. Over time the network speeds up and regional research and education networks, supported in part by NSF, are connected to the NSFNET backbone — effectively expanding the Internet throughout the United States. The NSFNET was essentially a network of networks that connected academic users along with the ARPANET. | Oct 22, 2022 10:41 PM | |||||
AD | 1987 | The NSF, realizing the rate and commercial significance of the growth of the Internet, signs a cooperative agreement with Merit Networks which is assisted by IBM and MCI. Rick Adams co-founds UUNET to provide commercial access to UUCP and the USENET newsgroups, which are now available for the PC. BITNET and CSNET also merge to form CREN. The NSF starts to implement its T1 backbone between the supercomputing centers with 24 RT-PCs in parallel implemented by IBM as ‘parallel routers’. The T1 idea is so successful that proposals for T3 speeds in the backbone begin. In early 1987 the number of hosts passes 10,000 and by year-end there have been over 1,000 RFCs issued. Network management starts to become a major issue and it becomes clear that a protocol is needed between routers to allow remote management. SNMP is chosen as a simple, quick, near term solution. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1987 | The number of hosts on the internet exceeds 20,000. Cisco ships its first router. | Oct 22, 2022 10:47 PM | |||||
AD | 1987 | Microsoft introduces Microsoft Works | Oct 23, 2022 9:41 PM | |||||
AD | 1987 | Perl: Larry Wall introduces Perl 1.0 | Nov 23, 2022 9:23 PM | |||||
AD | 1988 | Over 45 million PCs are in use in the United States. | Oct 23, 2022 9:42 PM | |||||
AD | 1988 | The upgrade of the NSFNET backbone to T1 completes and the Internet starts to become more international with the connection of Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Iceland, Norway and Sweden. In the US more regionals spring up - Los Nettos and CERFnet both in California. In addition, Fidonet, a popular traditional bulletin board system (BBS) joins the net. Dan Lynch organizes the first Interop commercial conference in San Jose for vendors whose TCP/IP products interoperate reliably. 50 companies make the cut and 5,000 networkers come to see it all running, to see what works, and to learn what doesn’t work. The US Government pronounces its OSI Profile (GOSIP) is to be supported in all products purchased for government use, and states that TCP/IP is an interim solution! The Morris WORM burrows on the Internet into 6,000 of the 60,000 hosts now on the network. This is the first worm experience and DARPA forms the Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) to deal with future such incidents. CNRI obtains permission from the Federal Networking Council and from MCI to interconnect the commercial MCI Mail service to the Internet. This broke the barrier to carrying commercial traffic on the Internet backbone. By 1989 MCI Mail, OnTyme, Telemail and CompuServe had all interconnected their commercial email systems to the Internet and, in so doing, interconnected with each other for the first time. This was the start of commercial Internet services in the United States (and possibly the world). | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1989 | The number of hosts increases from 80,000 in January to 130,000 in July to over 160,000 in November! Australia, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand and the United Kingdom join the Internet. Commercial e-mail relays start between MCIMail through CNRI and Compuserve through Ohio State. The Internet Architecture Board reorganizes again reforming the IETF and the IRTF. Networks speed up. NSFNET T3 (45Mbps) nodes operate. At Interop 100Mbps LAN technology, known as FDDI, interoperates among several vendors. The telephone companies start to work on their own wide area packet switching service at higher speeds - calling it SMDS. Bob Kahn and Vint Cerf at CNRI hold the first Gigabit (1000Mbps) Testbed workshops with funding from ARPA and NSF. Over 600 people from a wide range of industry, government and academia attend to discuss the formation of 6 gigabit testbeds across the country. The Cray 3, a direct descendant of the Cray line, starting from the CDC 6600, is produced. In Switzerland at CERN Tim Berners-Lee addresses the issue of the constant change in the currency of information and the turn-over of people on projects. Instead of an hierarchical or keyword organization, Berners-Lee proposes a hypertext system that will run across the Internet on different operating systems. This was the World Wide Web. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1989 | World.std.com becomes the first commercial provider of dial-up access to the internet. | Oct 22, 2022 10:47 PM | |||||
AD | 1989-1990 | 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.[9] 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. 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).[10] 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.[11][12] 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.[13][14] 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.[15] Working with Berners-Lee at CERN, Nicola Pellow wrote a simple text browser that could run on almost any computer, the Line Mode Browser, which worked with a command-line interface. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1990 | ARPANET formally shuts down. In twenty years, ‘the net’ has grown from 4 to over 300,000 hosts. Countries connecting in 1990 include Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Chile, Greece, India, Ireland, South Korea, Spain, and Switzerland. Several search tools, such as ARCHIE, Gopher, and WAIS start to appear. Institutions like the National Library of Medicine, Dow Jones, and Dialog are now on line. More ‘worms’ burrow on the net, with as many as 130 reports leading to 12 real ones! This is a further indication of the transition to a wider audience. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1990 | Tim Berners-Lee, a scientist at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, develops HyperText Markup Language (HTML). This technology continues to have a large impact on how we navigate and view the internet today. | Oct 22, 2022 10:47 PM | |||||
AD | 1990/02/19 | Adobe Systems released a raster graphics editor called Photoshop 1.0 . The program was only available for the Macintosh platform (Mac System 6.0.3) and required at least 2 MB of RAM and an 8 MHz processor for its operation. | Oct 22, 2022 11:28 PM | |||||
AD | 1990/09/10 | Three university students Alan Emtage, Peter Deutsch and Bill Heelen launched a search engine called Archie . The search engine enabled its users to find and download specific files on the Internet by indexing files stored on public FTP servers. Its name comes from the word archive, dropping the letter v. Archie is often considered to be the world's first Internet search engine ever . At the end of the 1990s, the search engine gradually ceased to exist. | Oct 22, 2022 11:30 PM | |||||
AD | 1990/12/25 | At CERN, a Swiss research center, a British physicist and internet pioneer Tim Berners-Lee created the world's first web browser, called WorldWideWeb . The browser was also a simple WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) editor for editing web pages. WorldWideWeb only worked with the NeXTStep operating system. Later, the browser was renamed Nexus to avoid confusion with the World Wide Web (WWW). | Oct 22, 2022 11:32 PM | |||||
AD | 1991 | The net’s dramatic growth continues with NSF lifting any restrictions on commercial use. Interchanges form with popular providers such as UUNET and PSInet. Congress passes the Gore Bill to create the National Research and Education Network, or NREN initiative. In another sign of popularity, privacy becomes an ‘issue,’ with proposed solutions such as PGP (Pretty Good Privacy). The NSFNET backbone upgrades to T3, or 44 Mbps. Total traffic exceeds 1 trillion bytes, or 10 billion packets per month! Over 100 countries are now connected with over 600,000 hosts and nearly 5,000 separate networks. WAIS’s and Gophers help meet the challenge of searching for information throughout this exploding infrastructure of computers. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1991 | CERN introduces the World Wide Web to the public. | Oct 22, 2022 10:47 PM | |||||
AD | 1991-1993 | 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.[16] 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.[17][18][19][20] This was the first web server outside of Europe and the first in North America.[21] 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,[22] 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.[23] 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. In less than a year, there were hundreds of Gopher servers.[24] 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.[25][better source needed] However, in 1993, the University of Minnesota declared that Gopher was proprietary and would have to be licensed.[24] 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.[26] 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.[27] By releasing Berners-Lee's invention for public use, CERN encouraged and enabled its widespread use.[28] 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.[29] 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,[23] 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.[30][31][32] 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.[23] Historians generally agree that the 1993 introduction of the Mosaic web browser was a turning point for the World Wide Web.[33][34][35] 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[36] and submit forms[37][38] 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.[39] Mosaic was an immediate hit;[40] 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.[24] Wired declared that Mosaic made non-Internet online services obsolete,[41] 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.[42] Although the two terms are sometimes conflated in popular use, World Wide Web is not synonymous with Internet.[43] The Web is an information space containing hyperlinked documents and other resources, identified by their URIs.[44] 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.[45] By October 1993 there were over five hundred servers online, including some notable websites.[46] 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. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1991/04 | Gopher system was created at the University of Minnesota as a text-based system that used the hierarchical menu structure for navigation. It was a system working on a client-server basis. Gopher integrated the services of FTP, Usenet, Veronica, Archie and WAIS . Since 1996, Gopher has been on a decline and is currently used very rarely. | Oct 23, 2022 5:06 PM | |||||
AD | 1991/05/14 | A team made up of Tim Berners-Lee, Henrik Frystyk Nielsen and Nicola Pellow designed a simple browser called Line Mode Browser (The Libwww Line Mode Browser). This was the second browser ever made for the World Wide Web. | Oct 23, 2022 5:07 PM | |||||
AD | 1991/08 | The creator of HTML and WWW, Tim Berners-Lee compiled the first index of websites called the WWW Virtual Library . The hyperlinks were organized into a tree of categories and subcategories depending on the individual fields of human activity or interest. | Oct 23, 2022 5:08 PM | |||||
AD | 1991/08/06 | he World Wide Web (WWW) creator, Tim Berners-Lee launched the world's first website at http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/TheProject.html . Unfortunately, the original website has not been preserved until today and the link shows only its 1992 copy. | Oct 23, 2022 5:10 PM | |||||
AD | 1991/10/29 | The internet pioneer, Tim Berners-Lee
, published a document entitled HTML Tags
. The document contained a description of the first 18 HTML tags: | Oct 23, 2022 5:11 PM | |||||
AD | 1991/11 | The Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is an Internet protocol designed to exchange hypertext documents (images, websites, etc.) between the server and the web browser. The first protocol design, later called HTTP v0.9, was created by Tim Berners-Lee as part of the WWW service specification. The HTTP v0.9 version was extremely simple, using only the GET method with one parameter, i.e. the name of the requested document. | Oct 23, 2022 5:14 PM | |||||
AD | 1991/12/06 | A particle physicist and software developer Paul Kunz launched the first web server in the USA in the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). Paul Kunz was inspired by the World Wide Web project directly from its creator Tim Berners-Lee, whom he met in person at the CERN Swiss Research Center in September of the same year. | Oct 23, 2022 5:15 PM | |||||
AD | 1992 | The Internet becomes such a part of the computing establishment that a professional society forms to guide it on its way. The Internet Society (ISOC), with Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn among its founders, validates the coming of age of inter-networking and its pervasive role in the lives of professionals in developed countries. The IAB and its supporting committees become part of ISOC. The number of networks exceeds 7,500 and the number of computers connected passes 1,000,000. The MBONE for the first time carries audio and video. The challenge to the telephone network’s dominance as the basis for communicating between people is seen for the first time; the Internet is no longer just for machines to talk to each other. During the summer, students at NCSA in University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign modify Tim Berners-Lee’s hypertext proposal. In a few weeks MOSAIC is born within the campus. Larry Smarr shows it to Jim Clark, who founds Netscape as a result. The WWW bursts into the world and the growth of the Internet explodes like a supernova. What had been doubling each year, now doubles in three months. What began as an ARPA experiment has, in the span of just 30 years, become a part of the world’s popular culture. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1992 | The first audio and video are distributed over the internet. | Oct 22, 2022 10:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1992 | The phrase "surfing the internet" is popularized. | Nov 23, 2022 9:17 PM | |||||
AD | 1992/03/09 | Pei-Yuan Wei developed the ViolaWWW browser for Unix while he was working at the University of California at Berkeley. ViolaWWW was the first browser to support scripting, table rendering and forms . The browser also contained a simple stylesheet to define the website's visual appearance. In March 1994, Pei-Yuan Wei released its last version, the lone developer no longer being able to keep up with the Mosaic Communications Corporation, which launched the Mosaic Netscape 0.9 browser the same year. | Oct 23, 2022 5:16 PM | |||||
AD | 1992/04/12 | Bare Bones Software released the first version of the BBEdit freeware HTML and text editor . The editor was designed for the Macintosh platform. | Oct 23, 2022 5:17 PM | |||||
AD | 1992/07/18 | Silvano de Gennaro, an Italian computer scientist who worked at CERN research labs, was asked by Tim Berners-Lee to scan and upload a photo of a parody pop-group called Les Horribles Cernettes (The Horrible CERN Girls) onto the info.cern.ch website. This photo became one of the first images to be published on the World Wide Web. | Oct 23, 2022 5:18 PM | |||||
AD | 1992/11 | Steven Foster and Fred Barrie developed a search engine called Veronica at the University of Nevada. The search engine was used to browse and index information in Gopher menu items. The name Veronica is an acronym for “Very Easy Rodent-Oriented Net-wide Index to Computer Archives”. | Oct 23, 2022 5:19 PM | |||||
AD | 1993 | At the beginning of the year only 50 World Wide Web servers are known to exist | Oct 23, 2022 9:42 PM | |||||
AD | 1993 | The number of websites reaches 600 and the White House and United Nations go online. Marc Andreesen develops the Mosaic Web browser at the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana. The number of computers connected to NSFNET grows from 2,000 in 1985 to more than 2 million in 1993. The National Science Foundation leads an effort to outline a new internet architecture that would support the burgeoning commercial use of the network. | Oct 22, 2022 10:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1993/04/22 | Students Marc Andreessen and Eric Bina from the University of Illinois programmed one of the first web browsers with a graphical interface. Mosaic (full name NCSA Mosaic) worked on multiple platforms including Windows and was available for free, thanks to which it gained worldwide popularity among the general public shortly after being launched. Its development officially ended on January 7, 1997. | Oct 23, 2022 5:20 PM | |||||
AD | 1993/11/30 | A Dutch software engineer Martijn Koster announced the first Aliweb search engine (Archie-Like Indexing in the Web) designed specifically for the World Wide Web service . In May 1994, Aliweb was introduced to the public at the first international WWW conference at the CERN Research Center in Geneva. Aliweb did not have a web crawler to search and index web pages. Sites were added to the database upon request from users using special files that contained their exact description and location. | Oct 23, 2022 5:20 PM | |||||
AD | 1994 | The World Wide Web Consortium is founded by Tim Berners-Lee to help with the development of common protocols for the evolution of the World Wide Web | Oct 23, 2022 9:43 PM | |||||
AD | 1994 | Netscape Communications is born. Microsoft creates a Web browser for Windows 95. | Oct 22, 2022 10:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1994 | Yahoo! is created by Jerry Yang and David Filo, two electrical engineering graduate students at Stanford University. The site was originally called "Jerry and David's Guide to the World Wide Web." The company was later incorporated in March 1995. Jerry Yang and David Filo, two Ph.D. students from Stanford University, created a list of websites entitled "Jerry and David's Guide to the World Wide Web." In March 1994, the portal was renamed Yahoo! and the yahoo.com domain was registered on January 18, 1995. Yahoo is an acronym for “Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle”. In March 1995, the Yahoo! search engine was launched as part of the portal. | https://www.livescience.com/20727-internet-history.html https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/yahoo-1994 | Oct 22, 2022 10:48 PM | ||||
AD | 1994-2003 | The rate of web site deployment increased sharply around the world, and fostered development of international standards for protocols and content formatting. 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 Conference 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]Main articles: World Wide Web Consortium and Web standardsSee 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.[47] 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.[48] 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 couldn't 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.[49] A List Apart and CSS Zen Garden were influential websites that promoted good design and adherence to standards.[50] Nevertheless, AOL halted development of Netscape[51] and Microsoft was slow to update IE.[52] 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.[53] With the release of Windows 95 and the popular Internet Explorer browser, many publicly 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.[54] 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.[55] In contrast, Google was a stripped-down search engine that delivered superior results.[56] It was a hit with users who switched from portals to Google. Furthermore, with AdWords, Google had an effective business model.[57][58] AOL bought Netscape in 1998.[59] In spite of their early success, Netscape was unable to fend off Microsoft.[60] 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,[61] or shut down entirely.[62][63][64] AOL disbanded Netscape in 2003.[65] 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.[66] They called their version of HTTPd, Apache. Apache quickly became the dominant server on the Web.[67] 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 browserSee 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.[68] 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.[69] 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.[70] 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%.[71] 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.[60] 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,[72] and overtook Safari to become the dominant mobile browser in two.[73] At the same time, Google open sourced Chrome's codebase as Chromium.[74] 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 Chrome OS 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.[75] Other notable web browsers emerged including Mozilla's Firefox, Opera's Opera browser and Apple's Safari. | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1994/07/03 | Martijn Koster presented the robots.txt standard (Robots exclusion standard or Robots exclusion protocol) as part of the W3C www-talk mailing list. The rules defined in the robots.txt file are used to prevent or restrict indexing robots from accessing a website. | https://www.livescience.com/20727-internet-history.html https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/yahoo-1994 | Oct 23, 2022 5:23 PM | ||||
AD | 1994/07/13 | Software engineers Dan Connolly and Mark Gaither created the first version of an online HTML validator. The tool served to check the validity of documents, i.e. compare the document code with valid standards and look for potential errors. | https://www.livescience.com/20727-internet-history.html https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/yahoo-1994 | Oct 23, 2022 5:24 PM | ||||
AD | 1994/10/01 | Tim Berners-Lee founded an international organization called World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) . The main objective of the consortium is the development of Web standards for the World Wide Web (WWW). For example, W3C developed standards for HTML , XHML , XML , or CSS markup languages. Another aim of the organization is education and development of Web Accessibility Rules (WCAG) . | https://www.livescience.com/20727-internet-history.html https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/yahoo-1994 | Oct 23, 2022 5:27 PM | ||||
AD | 1994/10/13 | The Mosaic Communications Corporation (renamed Netscape Communications Corporation on November 14, 1994) launched, under the name Mosaic Netscape 0.9 , the first one in a series of browsers, called Netscape Navigator in the subsequent versions. Shortly after being released, Mosaic Netscape 0.9 and Netscape Navigator 1.0 (released on December 15, 1994) became widely popular and, within a few months, assumed a dominant position on the market. | https://www.livescience.com/20727-internet-history.html https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/yahoo-1994 | Oct 23, 2022 5:28 PM | ||||
AD | 1994/10/27 | The AT&T Telecommunications Company placed the first web banner in Internet history on the HotWired magazine website. The first web banner in the world was 476x56 px and contained only the phrase "Have You Ever Clicked Your Mouse Right Here?". Clicking on the banner led to a virtual tour of world galleries and museums. | https://www.livescience.com/20727-internet-history.html https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/yahoo-1994 | Oct 23, 2022 5:29 PM | ||||
AD | 1994/11 | David Bohnett and John Rezner founded the Beverly Hills Internet web hosting company, which was renamed GeoCities in 1995. The original concept of the service was to create a virtual community of websites organized in "internet cities" . In its early years, GeoCities offered its users an unprecedented 2 MB of free disk space . In 1999, GeoCities was bought by Yahoo! and ten years later, on October 26, 2009, Yahoo! definitively terminated the GeoCities service. | https://www.livescience.com/20727-internet-history.html https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/yahoo-1994 | Oct 23, 2022 5:30 PM | ||||
AD | 1995 | EBay is founded by Pierre Omidyar on 20 Sep,1995 Hotmail is started by Jack Smith and Sabeer Bhatia on 20 Sep, 1995 | Oct 23, 2022 9:43 PM | |||||
AD | 1995 | Compuserve, America Online and Prodigy begin to provide internet access. Amazon.com, Craigslist and eBay go live. The original NSFNET backbone is decommissioned as the internet’s transformation to a commercial enterprise is largely completed. | Oct 22, 2022 10:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1995 | The first online dating site, Match.com, launches. | Oct 22, 2022 10:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1995/04/10 | The Norwegian company Opera Software first introduced to the public a new MultiTorg Opera 1.0 web browser that used MDI(Multiple Document Interface) technology. The use of MDI enabled users to simultaneously open several windows of webpages within the browser. As of version 2.0, the browser’s name was shortened to Opera. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/04/13 | Michael Loren Mauldin from Carnegie Mellon University developed one of Lycos's oldest search engines . The name of the search engine is derived from Lycosidae, a Latin name for a family of wolf spiders. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/05 | The term User Experience was probably first heard in public at the CHI '95 Conference Companion on Human Factors in Computing Systems held on May 7-11, 1995 in Denver, Colorado. The combination of the two words User Experience first appeared in a presentation by Donald Norman , Jim Miller and Austin Henderson of Apple Computer entitled What You See, Some of What's in the Future, And How We Go About Doing It: HI at Apple Computer, particularly in the sentence: “In this organizational overview, we cover some of the critical aspects of human interface research and application at Apple or, as we prefer to call it, the ‘User Experience.’” By this point, user experience design was very much happening*—*it just didn’t have a label yet. Cue Donald Norman! Donald Norman, a cognitive scientist, joined the team at Apple in the early 90s as their User Experience Architect*—*making him the first person to have UX in his job title. He came up with the term “user experience design” as a way of encompassing all that UX is. As he explains, “I invented the term because I thought human interface and usability were too narrow: I wanted to cover all aspects of the person’s experience with a system, including industrial design, graphics, the interface, the physical interaction, and the manual.” In 1988, Norman published The Psychology of Everyday Things (later updated to The Design of Everyday Things)*—*which continues to be a UX design staple to this day. This book dives into so many practical aspects of design, such as affordances, signifiers, feedback, and more What does Don Norman think about the way the term “UX design” is used in the modern-day context? He shares his thoughts in this video. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/05/25 | Three web designers - Jeffrey Zeldman , Steve McCarron and Alec Pollak - created an official website for Batman Forever . At the time, it was one of the first web projects that used the WWW service as a marketing and visual medium. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/06/08 | The Danish-Canadian programmer Rasmus Lerdorf designed the first version of the popular PHP 1.0 scripting language. The term PHP originally stood for Personal Home Page . In 1997, Israeli developers Andi Gutmans and Zeev Suraski rewrote the parser to create the basis for PHP 3. They also changed the name of the language to a recursive acronym for PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/06/16 | Amazon, founded by Jeff Bezos , launched one of the first online stores on Amazon.com on July 5, 1994 . Amazon first began as an online bookstore and later expanded its range of products to CDs, DVDs, software, clothes, toys, etc. In 1998, Amazon purchased the Internet Movie Database (IMDb) , and, a year later, the Alexa.com web service. In 2002, Amazon started running a cloud platform called Amazon Web Services (AWS) , and as of November 2007, the Amazon Kindle e-reader belongs to one of its major products. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/08/16 | Microsoft released, as a part of its bonus package, the Microsoft Plus! Internet Jumpstart Kit (later also known as the Internet Connection Wizard) for Windows 95, which included Internet Explorer 1.0 . In the original version of Windows 95 , a web browser was not available, as Microsoft underestimated the potential of the rapidly developing Internet. The source code for Internet Explorer 1.0 was based on the older Spyglass Mosaic browser for which Microsoft purchased license rights. Internet Explorer 1.0 occupied only 1 MB of disk space and its features were considerably limited compared to other browsers at the time. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:59 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/09/03 | An Iranian-American programmer, Pierre Omidyar , programmed a simple auction website called AuctionWeb . The first item Pierre Omidyar allegedly sold on the portal was his own broken laser pointer for $ 14.83. In September 1997, the portal was officially renamed to eBay . In October 2002, eBay switched to the PayPal online payment system and in 2005, eBay bought Skype VoIP. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:59 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/09/18 | The Netscape Communications Corporation launched Netscape Navigator 2.0
as its new major product. The browser contained a wide range of innovations and enhancements. Among other features, Netscape Navigator 2.0 supported JavaScript
, animated GIFs
, the HTML tag | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:59 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/11 | Vermeer Technologies developed the FrontPage 1.0 editor for WYSIWYG web development. In January 1996, Microsoft bought Vermeer and, in June, released an editor called Microsoft FrontPage 1.1. Microsoft expected that extending its software portfolio to a web editor would provide a considerable advantage in the impending browser wars. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 11:00 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/11/24 | The IETF organization published the RFC 1866 specification for HTML 2.0
. HTML 2.0 supported forms, tables, graphics, and a number of new tags, such as | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:59 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/12 | Adobe Systems released a WYSIWYG HTML editor called Adobe PageMill 1.0 . The editor allowed users to easily create websites without any knowledge of the basics of HTML. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:59 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/12 | Lynda Weinman , a computer instructor and graphic designer, launched one of the first online libraries of training courses for web developers at lynda.com . | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:59 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/12/15 | Brendan Eich of Netscape designed the first version of an object-oriented JavaScript that became widely used to create interactive websites. JavaScript later become the basis for other programming languages, such as ActionScript used in Macromedia Flash. In 1998, JavaScript was standardized by ISO. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:59 PM | ||||
AD | 1995/12/15 | In the Digital Equipment Corporation research laboratories, a team of researchers led by Louise Monier and Michael Burrows created the AltaVista search engine . Thanks to high-performance hardware, AltaVista was able to perform a quick full-text search across a wide range of websites. In 1997, the first free online translator Babel Fish became part of AltaVista. In 2003, AltaVista was taken over by Yahoo! and due to Google's dominant position among search engines, the AltaVista project was terminated on July 8, 2013. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:59 PM | ||||
AD | 1996 | The DVD Video format is first introduced by Toshiba in Japan in November, 1996 | Oct 23, 2022 9:44 PM | |||||
AD | 1996 | The browser war, primarily between the two major players Microsoft and Netscape, heats up. CNET buys tv.com for $15,000. | Oct 22, 2022 10:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1996 | A 3D animation dubbed "The Dancing Baby (opens in new tab)" becomes one of the first viral videos. | Oct 22, 2022 10:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1996/04/01 | Brewster Kahle and Bruce Gilliat founded a company called Alexa Internet . The company's original vision was to develop advanced web navigation that would continually improve itself on the basis of user-generated data. For this purpose, the Alexa toolbar 1.0 was created in 1997 as an extension of the browser. In 1999, Alexa Internet was bought by Amazon. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 10:59 PM | ||||
AD | 1996/05/12 | To archive various types of digital documents (websites, music, software, video, books, etc.), Brewster Kahle founded a non-profit organization called the Internet Archive. The Internet Archive digital library is currently the largest archive of digital documents in the world . Since 1996, more than 710 billion websites have been stored in the archive (*as of July 2022). | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 11:00 PM | ||||
AD | 1996/08 | Microsoft implemented JavaScript into Internet Explorer 3.0 under the name JScript 1.0. By changing the name to JScript, Microsoft wanted to avoid potential patent litigation with Sun Microsystems, which created the Java programming language. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 11:00 PM | ||||
AD | 1996/12 | Microsoft developed Active Server Pages (ASP 1.0) , a server-side script engine for dynamically generated websites. A distinctly modified and improved ASP technology, ASP.NET 1.0, was released in January 2002. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 11:00 PM | ||||
AD | 1996/12/07 | W3C issued official recommendations for language specification, Cascading Style Sheets, level 1 (CSS1) . Cascading styles describe how to display elements in documents written in HTML, XHTML, and XML markup languages. The first proposal of "Cascading HTML Style Sheets" was published in October 1994 by a Norwegian programmer Håkon Wium Lie , who was working at CERN under Tim Berners-Lee at the time. In the following months, Bert Bos, a Dutch developer, significantly contributed to CSS1 specification development. In 1997, Håkon Wium Lie and Bert Bos published one of the first cascading style books entitled Cascading style sheets: designing for the Web. | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 22, 2022 11:17 PM | ||||
AD | 1996/12/18 | In December 1996, Macromedia acquired FutureWave Software, which was developing the FutureSplash animator . The program was used to create vector animations that could be played with the FutureSplash Viewer plugin in the then popular Netscape Navigator and Internet Explorer. In December 18th 1996, Macromedia released an enhanced version of this program called Macromedia Flash 1.0 . | https://www.webdesignmuseum.org/web-design-history/timeline-1995-1997 | Oct 23, 2022 5:31 PM | ||||
AD | 1997 | Netflix is founded by Reed Hastings and Marc Randolph as a company that sends users DVDs by mail. | Oct 23, 2022 5:33 PM | |||||
AD | 1997 | PC makers can remove or hide Microsoft’s internet software on new versions of Windows 95, thanks to a settlement with the Justice Department. Netscape announces that its browser will be free. | Oct 22, 2022 10:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1997/01/14 | W3C issued a final recommendation specifying the HTML 3.2 markup language
. The original HTML 3.0 version had never become a standard, as it was too complicated, and the leading Microsoft and Netscape developers had a problem implementing it. In the HTML 3.2 specification, among others, new tags appeared, such as | Oct 22, 2022 10:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1997/04/047 | As part of the W3C consortium, the Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) officially launched its activity. The main goal of the WAI project is to improve the accessibility of websites and WWW services for users with disabilities. | Oct 23, 2022 5:35 PM | |||||
AD | 1997/05 | As part of the W3C consortium, the Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) officially launched its activity. The main goal of the WAI project is to improve the accessibility of websites and WWW services for users with disabilities. | Oct 23, 2022 5:36 PM | |||||
AD | 1997/06/11 | At the time of the culmination of the first browser war , Netscape released Netscape Communicator 4.0 , a web application suite. It included, for example, Netscape Navigator 4.0 web browser with CSS 1 support , Netscape Messenger email client, Netscape Composer HTML editor and Netscape Calendar. In January 1998, Netscape announced that the subsequent versions of the software will be developed as open source projects under Mozilla and will be available to users free of charge. | Oct 23, 2022 5:37 PM | |||||
AD | 1997/09/30 | Microsoft released Internet Explorer 4.0. IE 4.0 was integrated into the Windows 95 and Windows 98 operating systems and was freely available for the Mac OS, Solaris and HP-UX platforms. The distribution methods and integration of Internet Explorer into Windows subsequently became one of the subjects of legal proceedings between the US government and Microsoft over the abuse of a dominant market position. Internet Explorer 4.0 gained more than 60% market share at the beginning of 1999 , contributing significantly to Microsoft winning over Netscape in the so-called first browser war. | Oct 23, 2022 5:37 PM | |||||
AD | 1997/10 | The term Dynamic HTML (DHTML) was first introduced in connection with the release of Internet Explorer 4.0. It did not refer to a new stand-alone language, but only a combination of the HTML, CSS, and JavaScript technology to enhance interactivity and website dynamics. | Oct 23, 2022 5:39 PM | |||||
AD | 1997/12 | Macromedia released the first version of the popular Dreamweaver 1.0 website editor. The editor allowed users to switch between text and WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) mode. The first version of the Dreamweaver editor was only available for Mac OS, and in March 1998, a version for Windows was released. | Oct 23, 2022 5:41 PM | |||||
AD | 1997/12/18 | W3C announced the launch of the W3C HTML Validator . The tool for the validation of documents (HTML, XHTML, MathML, etc.) was based on an older project entitled The Kinder, Gentler HTML Validator, created by Gerald Oskoboina. | Oct 23, 2022 5:42 PM | |||||
AD | 1997/12/18 | W3C published official recommendations for the HTML 4.0 specification . The HTML 4.0 specification was divided into three variants: Strict , Transitional , and Frameset , and its aim was to separate the HTML semantics and the document layout (formatted using only CSS) into two separate parts. In December 1999, recommendations were published for a revised version, HTML 4.01. | Oct 23, 2022 5:44 PM | |||||
AD | 1998 | The Google search engine is born, changing the way users engage with the internet. | Oct 22, 2022 10:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1998 | The Internet Protocol version 6 introduced, to allow for future growth of Internet Addresses. The current most widely used protocol is version 4. IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses allowing for 4.3 billion unique addresses; IPv6, with 128-bit addresses, will allow 3.4 x 1038 unique addresses, or 340 trillion trillion trillion. | Oct 22, 2022 10:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1998/01/22 | Jeffrey Zeldman and Brian Platz began publishing the mailing list called A List Apart, which provided readers with regular news from the world of web design, web standards, and web development. The project gained popularity among its readers, and within a few months, A List Apart acquired more than 16,000 subscribers. In January 1999, Jeffrey Zeldman started publishing A List Apart as a webzine. | Oct 23, 2022 5:44 PM | |||||
AD | 1998/02/10 | W3C published the final recommendation for the XML 1.0 specification . Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a general markup language designed to easily exchange information between applications and to publish documents that contain at least partially structured data. XML is a simplified subset of the older SGML language . The XML language does not deal with document layout and consistently separates form and content. For different types of data, XML allows you to create custom markup languages (applications). By combining XML with HTML, the new XHTML markup language was created in 2000. | Oct 23, 2022 5:45 PM | |||||
AD | 1998/02/28 | Netscape Communications Corporation released the source code of the Netscape Communicator 5.0 web browser, which became the beginning of a community-based open source project called Mozilla . In 2003, the Mozilla Foundation, a non-profit organization, was founded on the basis of the original project. | Oct 23, 2022 5:46 PM | |||||
AD | 1998/03 | Design is Kinky , founded by Andrew Johnstone, was one of the first design community websites . The website regularly presents graphic works, photographs, expert articles or profiles of artists who have decided to publish their work online. In 2018, the project Design is Kinky terminated its activity. | Oct 23, 2022 5:48 PM | |||||
AD | 1998/04 | Macromedia released the Macromedia Fireworks 1.0 graphics program. The program was able to work with both vector and bitmap graphics and was designed specially for web designers. | Oct 23, 2022 5:49 PM | |||||
AD | 1998/05/12 | W3C issued official recommendations for CSS2 specification . The second cascade style specification included a number of new features such as absolute, relative and fixed positioning of elements, z-index for element overlap, minimum and maximum width or height of elements, type of media, etc. In June 2011, W3C published a revision of the second version of cascading styles, CSS 2.1 . | Oct 23, 2022 5:49 PM | |||||
AD | 1998/06/05 | Sun Microsystems developers Rich Skrenta and Bob Truel created a non-commercial, multilingual catalog of websites entitled the Open Directory Project (ODP or DMOZ, based on the original domain, directory.mozilla.org). The content of the catalog was created and maintained by a community of volunteers, and it was one of the largest internet catalogs at the time. The DMOZ project was owned by AOL for most of its duration. The project ended its activity on March 17, 2017. | Oct 23, 2022 5:50 PM | |||||
AD | 1998/07 | Adobe Systems released Adobe ImageReady 1.0 bitmap graphics editor. The program was designed to work with web graphics and to create rollover effects or short animations in the GIF format . Since version 2.0, ImageReady has been part of Photoshop. | Oct 23, 2022 5:51 PM | |||||
AD | 1998/09/04 | A pair of Ph.D. students from Stanford University, Larry Page and Sergey Brin , created the Google search engine . Google originally started as a research project whose aim was to find relevant search results using a mathematical algorithm. The algorithm, later called PageRank , analyzed relationships between individual webpages based on their cross-references, thus assessing their importance. The name Google is a deliberate misspelling of the word googol , which refers to a very high number – 1 followed by a hundred zeros (10100 ). | Oct 23, 2022 5:52 PM | |||||
AD | 1998/10 | Two Danish web designers, Michael Schmidt and Toke Nygaard, launched a community website for designers, called Kaliber10000 (K10k) . The K10k webzine published graphical works of talented designers on a regular basis and became an important source of inspiration for the first generation of designers who started using the web as a visual medium. In October 2011, K10k terminated its activity. | Oct 23, 2022 5:53 PM | |||||
AD | 1998/10 | Todd Fahrner began working on the Box Acid Test (Acid1) project, which tested if web browsers supported the CSS language. The test itself is a simple web page that contains several HTML elements modified by CSS. The browser either displays the page correctly and passes the test or it fails. Most of the browsers of the time failed the Acid1 test. In January 1999, the Box Acid Test was included in the W3C's official CSS1 set of tests. | Oct 23, 2022 5:53 PM | |||||
AD | 1999 | The music detection application mother company is created by its 3 founders | May 14, 2024 9:31 PM | |||||
AD | 1999 | AOL buys Netscape. Peer-to-peer file sharing becomes a reality as Napster arrives on the Internet, much to the displeasure of the music industry. | Oct 22, 2022 10:50 PM | |||||
AD | 1999/03 | Favicon (a combination of the words favorite and icon) first appeared in Internet Explorer 5.0. The term favicon refers to a webpage icon that appeared in older browsers in the address bar next to the URL or in favorites. Originally, favicon had to be placed in the root directory of the website under the name favicon.ico, and its dimensions were typically 16x16 px or 32x32 px. In December 1999, favicon was standardized by W3C in the recommendation for HTML 4.01. | Oct 23, 2022 5:55 PM | |||||
AD | 1999/03/18 | Microsoft released Internet Explorer 5.0 . The browser was integrated into the Windows 98 SE operating system, and version 5.01 was part of Windows 2000. In July 2000, Internet Explorer 5.5 was released, integrated into Windows ME. Internet Explorer 5.0 was also tied to Microsoft Office 2000. At the beginning of 2000, the fifth version of Internet Explorer had more than 50% market share . Internet Explorer 5.0 thus became one of the key participants in the first browser war. | Oct 23, 2022 5:57 PM | |||||
AD | 1999/04 | Darcy DiNucci published an article entitled "Fragmented Future" in the Print magazine, in which the term Web 2.0 was first introduced . The term refers to the development phase of the Web in which the content of websites is created and shared primarily by the users themselves. Typical Web 2.0 examples include social networking sites, web forums, internet encyclopedias, or photo/video sharing portals. In 2004, Tim O'Reilly and Dale Dougherty held the first Web 2.0 conference, during which the term Web 2.0 was brought to the attention of a wider public. | Oct 23, 2022 5:58 PM | |||||
AD | 1999/05/05 | W3C, in co-operation with the WAI initiative, issued the first recommendation for a set of Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG 1.0) . The WCAG 1.0 consists of 14 general rules that represent the basic principles of accessibility. In addition to these rules, WCAG 1.0 also includes checkpoints that explain given problems. Each checkpoint is assigned a priority on the following scale: the highest (priority 1), medium (priority 2) or lower (priority 3). | Oct 23, 2022 6:06 PM | |||||
AD | 1999/06 | Adobe Systems launched Adobe Photoshop 5.5. The new version of Photoshop included the Adobe ImageReady 2.0 program designed to work with web graphics. Another new feature of Adobe Photoshop 5.5 was Save for Web, which allowed designers to compress images for the web. | Oct 23, 2022 6:09 PM | |||||
AD | 1999/08/23 | Pyra Labs launched one of the oldest blogging tools at Blogger.com . The new blogging platform gained a large community of users in the subsequent years. In February 2003, Blogger.com was bought by Google. | Oct 23, 2022 6:09 PM | |||||
AD | 1999/11 | Eric Jordan, Tony Novak and John Carrol founded a digital creative agency called 2Advanced Studios . The agency was renowned for its innovative, high-end design using Flash technology . In the field of web design, the 2Advanced Studio received many prestigious awards. | Oct 23, 2022 6:11 PM | |||||
AD | 1999/11 | The Zombo.com website was created as a parody of the creative, but, from the user’s perspective, largely pointless flash intros, which were trending at the end of the 1990s. Zombo.com is a simple, several-minute flash intro constantly repeating the words: “Welcome... to ZomboCom. This... is... ZomboCom. Welcome. This is ZomboCom; welcome... to ZomboCom.” The website had gained considerable popularity over the years and had become one of the most popular internet memes in its time. | Oct 23, 2022 6:12 PM | |||||
AD | 1999/12 | Jakob Nielsen , an expert in web design and web usability, published Designing Web Usability: The Practice of Simplicity . The book became one of the basic handbooks in the field of web usability and the emerging field of user experience design (UX) . In 1998, Jakob Nielsen and Donald Norman founded the Nielsen Norman Group , which engages in research, consulting and education in the field of user experience and computer interface design. | Oct 23, 2022 6:12 PM | |||||
AD | 2000 | The dot-com bubble bursts. Websites such as Yahoo! and eBay are hit by a large-scale denial of service attack, highlighting the vulnerability of the Internet. AOL merges with Time Warner | Oct 22, 2022 10:50 PM | |||||
AD | 2000/01/26 | W3C issued official recommendations for the XHTML 1.0 specification . The Extensible HyperText Markup Language (XHTML) is a markup language for creating hypertext documents in an Internet environment. XHTML originated from an integration of XML and HTML and was divided into three versions: Strict, Transitional, and Frameset. According to W3C’s original plans, XHTML was supposed to be the successor to HTML, whose development was completed by version 4.01. However, in 2007, a new version of HTML started being developed, labeled HTML5 . | Oct 23, 2022 6:13 PM | |||||
AD | 2000/05/05 | Rob Ford established the Favorite Website Awards (The FWA) . The FWA website was originally conceived as a prestigious gallery of unique and innovative websites in terms of design created with Macromedia Flash. Due to a decline of the Flash technology, it is now possible to submit websites, mobile applications, or any creative projects regardless of the technology used. A panel of experts selects from nominated websites the winners in the categories FWA of the day, FWA of the month and FWA of the year. | Oct 23, 2022 6:14 PM | |||||
AD | 2000/05/22 | A pair of Israeli programmers, Zeev Suraski and Andi Gutmans, completely rewrote the interpreter used in PHP and created version PHP 4.0 . PHP 4.0 is based on an open source scripting engine called Zend Engine . The name Zend is a composite of its creators’ names Zeev and Andi. The Zend Engine is written as a highly optimized and powerful backend that can also be used outside PHP applications. | Oct 23, 2022 6:14 PM | |||||
AD | 2000/08/07 | Scott Jarkoff, Matthew Stephens and Angelo Sotira founded an art community portal called DeviantArt . In its beginnings, the portal brought together enthusiasts who modified the design of their computer programs and applications. At present, DeviantArt is the largest social networking site for artists and art enthusiasts . | Oct 23, 2022 6:15 PM | |||||
AD | 2000/08/24 | Macromedia launched the Macromedia Flash 5.0 multimedia software. It was the first version in which ActionScript 1.0 object-oriented programming language was fully implemented. Older versions of Macromedia Flash contained only sets of very simple programming commands. Thanks to ActionScript 1.0, users could create complex web applications or more complicated animations. ActionScript is based on a standardized JavaScript version called ECMAScript. | Oct 23, 2022 6:16 PM | |||||
AD | 2000/10 | Hi-ReS! , a London-based digital agency, designed a website for Darren Aronofsky’s film, Requiem for a Dream . Hi-ReS! used Flash technology to design the website in a fresh and creative way to provide a strong artistic and visual experience for its visitors. | Oct 23, 2022 6:17 PM | |||||
AD | 2000/10/13 | Steve Krug , a UX designer and information architect, published Don’t Make Me Think . The book deals with web usability and the interdisciplinary field of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) . In his publication, Steve Krug develops the idea that a well-designed computer program or website should allow users to perform their intended tasks in the simplest way possible, without having to think hard about how to perform them. | Oct 23, 2022 6:18 PM | |||||
AD | 2001 | A federal judge shuts down Napster, ruling that it must find a way to stop users from sharing copyrighted material before it can go back online. | Oct 22, 2022 10:50 PM | |||||
AD | 2001/01/15 | Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger founded Wikipedia, a multilingual internet encyclopedia. The content of the encyclopedia is shared under a free and open license of the Creative Commons. Volunteer contributors from around the world participate in the creation of Wikipedia entries. Wikipedia’s precursor was the Nupedia web encyclopedia, to which, unlike Wikipedia, only experts were allowed to contribute. At the beginning of 2018, Wikipedia contained articles written in nearly 300 languages. | Oct 23, 2022 6:19 PM | |||||
AD | 2001/03 | Photographer Jason Aber and illustrator Richard May started publishing the online magazine called Pixelsurgeon . The magazine website provided fans with regular news, interviews and tips on interesting sources from the world of design with a focus on the Internet. In November 2007, Pixelsurgeon ended its activities due to a lack of time. | Oct 23, 2022 6:22 PM | |||||
AD | 2001/04/04 | The W3C consortium released the first draft of the Media Queries specification . The original idea for the Media Queries module appeared in the first draft of the CSS specification by Norwegian programmer Håkon Wium Lie in October 1994. However, this proposal did not become part of CSS1. The CSS3 Media Queries module allows web developers to adjust the rendering of web page content according to various factors such as screen resolution. Currently, Media Queries are one of the basic techniques used in responsive web design. | Oct 23, 2022 6:22 PM | |||||
AD | 2001/07/27 | Less than two months before the official release of the Windows XP operating system, Microsoft released Internet Explorer 6.0 . IE 6 was integrated into Windows XP and was also compatible with previous versions of the system down to Windows 98. Despite a significant amount of security flaws and lack of support for web standards, Internet Explorer 6.0 gained more than 80% market share in 2004 . Together with earlier versions of IE 5.0 and IE 5.5, the proportion of Internet Explorer browsers in 2004 was more than 90%. | Oct 23, 2022 6:24 PM | |||||
AD | 2001/09/04 | Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) is a graphical vector file format based on the XML markup language. SVG has become the basic open format for vector graphics on web pages . The SVG format has been developed since 1998 by W3C and is currently fully supported by all major browsers. | Oct 23, 2022 6:25 PM | |||||
AD | 2001/10/24 | The Internet Archive organization launched a free digital archive of websites for the general public called the Wayback Machine . The oldest pages stored in the archive date back to 1996. In September 2021, the Wayback Machine maintained more than 606 billion versions of websites from various time intervals. | Oct 23, 2022 6:26 PM | |||||
AD | 2001/12 | The website designed for Audi by the Razorfish digital agency was one of the first to modify its content based on the size of the web browser window . Audi.com was “optimized” for 640x480 px, 800x600 px and 1024x768 px. However, Audi.com was not a classic example of responsive web design as we know it today, but rather a dynamic customization of design using JavaScript, based on a detection of browser resolution. | Oct 23, 2022 6:26 PM | |||||
AD | 2002 | Approximately 1 billion PCs have been sold | Oct 23, 2022 9:45 PM | |||||
AD | 2002 | Oct 22, 2022 11:00 PM | ||||||
AD | 2002/04 | The American-Turkish developer Tantek Çelik came up with a solution called Box Model Hack while working on Internet Explorer 5 for Mac. The application of this hack makes it possible to change the DOCTYPE declaration, which allows web developers to define which CSS Box Model will be used in Internet Explorer. | Oct 23, 2022 6:27 PM | |||||
AD | 2002/06/05 | Mozilla (also known as Mozilla.org) released the Mozilla 1.0 web browser. The basis for Mozilla 1.0 was Gecko, an open source rendering engine which significantly improved the support of web standards. | Oct 23, 2022 6:48 PM | |||||
AD | 2002/09 | The technology known as RSS (Rich Site Summary or more often also Really Simple Syndication ) belongs to the family of XML formats. The technology is designed to read content and news on websites or, in general, to syndicate content. The beginnings of the RSS format date back to 1999 when Netscape developed the first version of RSS 0.9. In 2002, UserLand Software released RSS 2.0 . | Oct 23, 2022 6:49 PM | |||||
AD | 2003 | The SQL Slammer worm spread worldwide in just 10 minutes. Myspace, Skype and the Safari Web browser debut. | Oct 22, 2022 10:50 PM | |||||
AD | 2003 | The blog publishing platform WordPress is launched | Oct 22, 2022 10:50 PM | |||||
AD | 2003/05/03 | The Canadian web designer Dave Shea launched a community gallery of websites called CSS Zen Garden . The project offered a simple HTML template to be downloaded, the graphic design of which could be customized by any web designer, but only with the help of cascading styles and one’s own pictures. The goal of the project was to demonstrate the various possibilities of CSS in creating visual web design. The CSS Zen Garden gallery exhibited hundreds of examples of diverse web design, all based on a single template containing the same HTML code. | Oct 23, 2022 6:50 PM | |||||
AD | 2003/05/14 | Web designer and founder of A List Apart magazine, Jeffrey Zeldman , published a book entitled Designing with Web Standards . In his book, Jeffrey Zeldman explores the benefits of implementing web standards. Using standards correctly allows web designers to create accessible and user-friendly websites that work well in a wide range of browsers. | Oct 23, 2022 6:50 PM | |||||
AD | 2003/05/27 | Web developers Matt Mullenweg and Mike Little created the first version of the open source content management system called WordPress 0.7 . The publishing system is based on PHP and MySQL technology and is developed under the GNU GPL free software license. The predecessor of WordPress was the b2/cafelog blogging platform. WordPress is currently the most popular content management system , and more than 30% of websites are using it worldwide. | Oct 23, 2022 6:51 PM | |||||
AD | 2003/06/23 | Apple introduced its own web browser, Safari 1.0 . The browser uses the WebKit renderer to display website content. Safari 1.0 was initially available for download as a standalone program, but, in October 2003, it became the default Mac OS X 10.3 operating system browser. | Oct 23, 2022 6:52 PM | |||||
AD | 2003/08/01 | Tom Anderson and Chris DeWolfe founded the MySpace social network . Its concept was inspired by the then popular social network called Friendster. MySpace popularity skyrocketed, and by February 2004, the network had acquired one million users. Between 2004 and 2010, MySpace was one of the largest social networks worldwide . In April 2008, however, the number of unique monthly users was surpassed by Facebook, and since then the popularity of MySpace has been on a continuous decline. | Oct 23, 2022 6:53 PM | |||||
AD | 2003/09 | Joshua Schachter launched Delicious (Del.icio.us) , a social bookmarking service for discovering, sharing and storing web bookmarks. One of its important innovations was the option to tag user bookmarks with any number of keywords. The user could also see other users’ bookmarks which contained the same tag. In December 2005, Delicious became part of Yahoo!. | Oct 23, 2022 6:54 PM | |||||
AD | 2003/09/10 | Macromedia released the Macromedia Flash MX 2004 multimedia program, which included a new version of the object-oriented programming language ActionScript 2.0 . | Oct 23, 2022 6:55 PM | |||||
AD | 2004 | Facebook goes online and the era of social networking begins. Mozilla unveils the Mozilla Firefox browser. | Oct 22, 2022 10:50 PM | |||||
AD | 2004–present | Web 2.0[edit]Main article: Web 2.0See 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.[76] 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.[77] 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.[78][79][80][81][82][83] 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.[84] 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.[85] Browser vendors improved the performance of their JavaScript engines[86] and dropped support for Flash and Java.[87][88] 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.[89][90] 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.[91] 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.[92] By 2007, the W3C conceded and announced they were restarting work on HTML[93] and in 2009, they officially abandoned XHTML.[94] In 2019, the W3C ceded control of the HTML specification, now called the HTML Living Standard, to WHATWG.[95] Microsoft rewrote their Edge browser in 2021 to use Chromium as its code base in order to be more compatible with Chrome.[96] 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.[97][98] Mobile[edit]Main article: Mobile webSee 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.[99] Since 2016, most visitors access websites with mobile devices[100] 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.[101] Mozilla announced Web APIs in 2011 to allow webapps to access hardware features such as audio, camera or GPS.[102] Frameworks such as Cordova and Ionic allow developers to build hybrid apps. Mozilla released a mobile OS designed to run web apps in 2012,[103] but discontinued it in 2015.[104] Google announced specifications for Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP),[105] and progressive web applications (PWA) in 2015.[106] 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[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.[107] 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.[108] Web3 (sometimes also referred to as Web 3.0) is an idea for a decentralized Web based on public blockchains, smart contracts, tokens and digital wallets.[109] | Oct 22, 2022 9:57 PM | |||||
AD | 2004/02/10 | Ludicorp launched a photo sharing community website called Flickr . In March 2005, Flickr was bought by Yahoo!. Flickr is a typical representative of Web 2.0, which means that the content of the website is created and shared primarily by the users themselves. Flickr was one of the first community websites which allowed tagging of photographs. In 2015, the number of photos posted on Flickr exceeded 10 billion. | Oct 23, 2022 6:56 PM | |||||
AD | 2004/03/05 | In “A List Apart” webzine, Dave Shea published an article entitled "CSS Sprite: Image Slicing's Kiss of Death." In the article, the author described a technique called CSS Sprites , the basis of which was to connect several smaller graphic elements into one larger image. The graphic elements are then placed on the website using the background-position feature. Thanks to CSS Sprites, a website loads faster because it only uploads one image, reducing the number of HTTP requests. | Oct 23, 2022 6:57 PM | |||||
AD | 2004/11/09 | Mozilla Corporation released a multiplatform web browser, Firefox 1.0 . Compared with browsers from the Internet Explorer family, Firefox 1.0 was characteristic for its higher security, better web standards support, and a number of plug-ins that could be additionally installed. As a result, Firefox gained major popularity among users and exceeded 1 billion downloads between 2004 and 2009 . The name Firefox was allegedly derived from the English translation of the Chinese name for the red panda. | Oct 23, 2022 6:57 PM | |||||
AD | 2005/02/14 | YouTube.com launches. The social news site Reddit is also founded. Three former PayPal employees, Chad Hurley , Steve Chen and Jawed Karim , launched the YouTube website for publishing and sharing video files. The first video called "Me at the zoo" was uploaded to YouTube on 23 April, 2005 by one of the co-founders, Jawed Karim. It was a short video from the San Diego zoo. In November 2006, YouTube was purchased by Google for $ 1.65 billion. | Oct 22, 2022 10:50 PM | |||||
AD | 2005/06/23 | Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian established the Reddit social network . Users on Reddit submit or share content that is then rated by the community. Content is divided into thematic categories called subreddits. The name Reddit is a play on the phrase "I read it". | Oct 23, 2022 6:59 PM | |||||
AD | 2005/08/10 | The Norwegian company Opera Software introduced Opera Mini , a web browser for mobile phones with J2ME (Java 2 Mobile Edition) support. The Opera Mini browser could be installed on most mobile phones in common use at the time, including those that could not otherwise run a normal web browser. The uniqueness of Opera Mini lay in the use of Small-Screen Rendering technology , where the requested pages were first data and appearance edited on Opera's servers and then displayed to the user in the Opera Mini browser only after optimization. | Oct 23, 2022 7:00 PM | |||||
AD | 2005/08/26 | Alex Tew, a British student, launched the Million Dollar Homepage , which soon became an example of successful viral marketing and an Internet phenomenon. The page was a million pixels divided into a 1000x1000 px grid. Alex Tew offered to sell 1 pixel for a dollar, with the smallest advertising space an advertiser could buy for their link being 10x10 px. The Million Dollar Homepage gained unprecedented popularity in a very short time, and the last 1000 pixels were sold on January 1, 2006 at an eBay auction. | Oct 23, 2022 7:01 PM | |||||
AD | 2005/11/14 | In April 2005, Google took over the Urchin Software Corporation , which was developing a tool for the acquisition of statistical data about website users. In November 2005, Google launched an enhanced version of this tool under the name Google Analytics . Since 2006, the basic version of this service has been available for free. Website owners can track traffic, analyze user behavior, and record conversions. Google Analytics is currently the most widely used web analytics tool. | Oct 23, 2022 7:01 PM | |||||
AD | 2005/12/03 | Adobe Systems bought its rival company, Macromedia, for $ 3.4 billion . Programs such as ColdFusion, Captivate, Director, Dreamweaver, Fireworks, Flash, Flex, FreeHand, and HomeSite were added to the Adobe software portfolio. | Oct 23, 2022 7:02 PM | |||||
AD | 2006 | AOL changes its business model, offering most services for free and relying on advertising to generate revenue. The Internet Governance Forum meets for the first time. | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM | |||||
AD | 2006 | Twitter launches. The company's founder, Jack Dorsey, sends out the very first tweet: "just setting up my twttr." | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM | |||||
AD | 2006/01/14 | The software engineer John Resig announced the creation of the jQuery JavaScript library at BarCamp NYC. The jQuery library emphasizes interaction between JavaScript and HTML. jQuery makes it easy for web developers to create recurring events, animations, or manipulate cascading style sheets. | Oct 23, 2022 7:07 PM | |||||
AD | 2006/03/21 | Jack Dorsey, Noah Glass, Evan Williams and Biz Stone officially launched the social networking and microblogging service Twitter . The social network Twitter allows users to read and send short posts referred to as "tweets". The length of individual tweets was initially limited to 140 characters. In November 2017, the post limit was doubled to 280 characters. On 23 August 2007, the first hashtag (#) appeared on Twitter , used by user Chris Messina in a tweet related to the #barcamp conference. Six years after its launch in March 2012, the microblogging service Twitter has reached more than 140 million active users who send 340 million tweets per day. | Oct 23, 2022 7:08 PM | |||||
AD | 2006/08 | Sven Lennartz and Vitaly Friedman created a portal for web designers and developers called Smashing Magazine . The portal provides regular news from the world of web design, user experience, or web development. Smashing Magazine also publishes research publications and organizes regular conferences and workshops. Smashing Magazine is currently the most visited web site for web design and related fields. | Oct 23, 2022 7:09 PM | |||||
AD | 2006/10/05 | Hampton Catlin and Natalie Weizenbaum designed a CSS preprocessor called Sass 0.1.0 (Syntactically awesome style sheets). Sass preprocessor is a scripting language interpreted or compiled into cascading styles. To the CSS syntax, Sass adds variables, mixins, selector inheritance, nesting rules, arithmetic operators, and other features. | Oct 23, 2022 7:10 PM | |||||
AD | 2007/01/09 | At Macworld Conference & Expo, Steve Jobs introduced the first iPhone smartphone model . The phone included the Safari web browser, allowing users to surf the web at ease. | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM | |||||
AD | 2007/07/07 | Chris Coyier, a web designer, established the CSS-Tricks portal . The portal brings web designers daily news and tutorials from the world of web design, particularly focusing on cascading styles. | Oct 23, 2022 7:11 PM | |||||
AD | 2007/08 | Scott Belsky founded the Behance 1.0 community platform , which allows designers, photographers, and artists from different fields to present their creative work in the form of online portfolios. In December 2012, Behance was purchased by Adobe Systems . | Oct 23, 2022 7:12 PM | |||||
AD | 2007/09/05 | W3C released the first proposal of the CSS Grid specification . This CSS module defines a set of properties for creating a layout fitted into a regular grid that consists of rows and columns. The CSS Grid makes it easy to create complex and full-page layouts without the need of using cascading style layout methods involving float and positioning. CSS Grid features are currently supported by most major browsers. | Oct 23, 2022 7:14 PM | |||||
AD | 2008/09/02 | Google released the beta version of Google Chrome's freeware browser for Windows. In December 2008, the first stable version of Google Chrome 1.0 was released . Since January 2009, Chrome has been available for MacOS, and in February 2012, its first beta version for Android 4 was released. At the turn of April and May 2012, Chrome surpassed the popularity of Internet Explorer and became the most widely used web browser. In 2018, Google Chrome had more than 66% of the global market share. | Oct 23, 2022 7:15 PM | |||||
AD | 2008/12/11 | W3C issued official recommendations for a second set of Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG 2.0) . WCAG 2.0 is divided into 4 basic principles, according to which the content and web control features must be perceptible, operable, understandable and robust enough to work with today's and future technologies. The basic principles of WCAG 2.0 consist of 12 general rules that are linked to the control criteria for which web content can be tested. There are three levels which refer to the extent to which the content satisfies the requirements: A (lowest), AA, AAA (highest). | Oct 23, 2022 7:16 PM | |||||
AD | 2009 | The internet marks its 40th anniversary. | Oct 23, 2022 7:10 PM | |||||
AD | 2009/02/09 | The internet social networking site Facebook introduced its “like button” feature for the first time. Clicking the button with a thumb up icon indicates a user's positive reaction to the content of the web page on which the button is located. In 2011, Google introduced a similar button to mark one’s favorite content called the +1 button for its Google+ social network. | Oct 23, 2022 7:16 PM | |||||
AD | 2009/03 | In 2005, a team of developers of the Russian search engine Yandex began working on a new methodology that allowed for unambiguous naming of classes in CSS. In 2009, the new CSS naming convention was called BEM , standing for Block , Element , Modifier . | Oct 23, 2022 7:17 PM | |||||
AD | 2009/06 | Alexis Sellier designed a CSS preprocessor called Less 1.0 , a dynamic styling language for cascading styles. The Less language was influenced by the existing Sass preprocessor. Less adds variables, mixins, arithmetic calculations, nesting rules and functions to the CSS syntax. | Oct 23, 2022 7:18 PM | |||||
AD | 2009/07/08 | Dan Cederholm and Rich Thornett founded the Dribbble design community portal . Graphic designers, illustrators, web designers, typographers, and other related creative professionals can share their work on Dribbble in 400x300 px. Dribbble is currently the largest community website for designers . | Oct 23, 2022 7:18 PM | |||||
AD | 2009/07/23 | W3C issued the first proposal of the CSS Flexible box layout (Flexbox) specification . Flexbox introduces a new way of creating web layout, an easier alignment of elements and a better distribution of space with respect to the device's display resolution. Flexbox features are currently supported in most major browsers. | Oct 23, 2022 7:20 PM | |||||
AD | 2009/09/09 | Small Batch launched a cloud library of web fonts called Typekit . Typekit works on a subscription basis and offers an extensive font library that developers can place on a website using the @font-face CSS rule . In October 2011, Typekit was purchased by Adobe Systems. | Oct 23, 2022 7:20 PM | |||||
AD | 2009/09/23 | A prestigious gallery of highly creative and innovative CSS-based websites in terms of design was launched under the name CSS Awards . The portal gives awards in several categories based on the vote of the community of visitors and a panel of judges. On February 24, 2011, the portal was named Awwwards , and as of 2014, it holds regular conferences. | Oct 23, 2022 7:21 PM | |||||
AD | 2009/11/14 | Microsoft started selling the first model of the Zune handheld multimedia player . The simple and clean design of Zune control features is considered to be one of the first uses of flat design in user interface. | Oct 23, 2022 7:22 PM | |||||
AD | 2010 | Facebook reaches 400 million active users. | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM | |||||
AD | 2010 | The social media sites Pinterest and Instagram are launched. | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM | |||||
AD | 2010/03/06 | Ben Silbermann, Paul Sciarra and Evan Sharp launched the first prototype of Pinterest , a social network that allows users to share photos, create collections of images and organize them by topics such as interests, hobbies, events and more. In October 2016, the social network Pinterest used more than 150 million active users per month. | Oct 23, 2022 7:23 PM | |||||
AD | 2010/04/08 | Mozilla Foundation, Opera Software and Microsoft submitted a proposal for the specification of a new Web Open Font Format (WOFF) to the W3C. The WOFF fonts are currently supported by all major browsers. | Oct 23, 2022 7:25 PM | |||||
AD | 2010/05/19 | Google launched an open source web font library, Google Web Fonts (now called Google Fonts). Fonts are hosted on Google's servers, and the library now has nearly 900 font families that users can use on their websites for free. | Oct 23, 2022 7:26 PM | |||||
AD | 2010/05/25 | Web designer Ethan Marcotte published an article entitled "Responsive Web Design" in the online magazine A List Apart. The author describes a new way of styling HTML documents which allows for an optimization of website content display with regard to resolution or display size. Basic responsive web design techniques include fluid grid, flexible images, and CSS3 module media queries. | Oct 23, 2022 7:27 PM | |||||
AD | 2010/09/07 | The Dutch company Bohemian Coding released the vector graphics editor Sketch 1.0 . Sketch is designed for MacOS only and has gained a lot of popularity among the web design community over the recent years. | Oct 23, 2022 7:28 PM | |||||
AD | 2010/10/06 | Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger published an Instagram app for sharing photos and short videos in the App Store. The app gained a lot of popularity among users within a few months and in December of the same year, more than 1 million users were using it. In April 2012, Instagram was acquired by Facebook for approximately $1 billion. In February 2013, the number of active monthly Instagram users reached the 100 million milestone. | Oct 23, 2022 7:28 PM | |||||
AD | 2010/10/21 | Microsoft launched Windows Phone 7 , a mobile phone whose user interface was created using flat design . The new visual style received positive feedback, and Microsoft used flat design elements in the design of the Windows 8 graphics interface. Flat design has also gained considerable popularity among web designers and has become one of the major visual trends in web design after 2010 along with skeuomorphism and material design styles. | Oct 23, 2022 7:29 PM | |||||
AD | 2011 | Twitter and Facebook play a large role in the Middle East revolts. | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM | |||||
AD | 2011/01/31 | TJ Holowaychuk created a dynamic styling language for cascading styles, Stylus 0.0.1 . The CSS preprocessor Stylus syntax was based on the existing Sass and Less preprocessors. | Oct 23, 2022 7:30 PM | |||||
AD | 2011/08/19 | Web developers Mark Otto and Jacob Thornton of Twitter began creating the CSS framework Bootstrap in mid-2011. The framework was originally developed to help maintain the HTML/CSS and JavaScript code consistency in Twitter applications. In August 2011, Bootstrap 1 was released as an open source tool and is currently one of the most popular CSS frameworks among web designers. In January 2012, Bootstrap 2 was released, supporting a responsive web layout. | Oct 23, 2022 7:31 PM | |||||
AD | 2012 | President Barack Obama's administration announces its opposition to major parts of the Stop Online Piracy Act and the Protect Intellectual Property Act, which would have enacted broad new rules requiring internet service providers to police copyrighted content. The successful push to stop the bill, involving technology companies such as Google and nonprofit organizations including Wikipedia and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, is considered a victory for sites such as YouTube that depend on user-generated content, as well as "fair use" on the internet. | Oct 22, 2022 10:53 PM |