[Chapter-delegates] press release: World Wide Web's 20thBirthdayHighlights Value Of Open Internet
Mike Todd
miketodd at miketodd.com
Thu Mar 12 11:06:18 PDT 2009
Olivier,
I suppose you may be surprised that the 30th anniversary of the
Internet was celebrated at UCLA (Vint Cerf's alma mater) in September
1999. Of course, a lot of people think that "the Internet" is "the
Web" but they are a bit different though email and the web are major
components that use the Internet...
Mike Todd
President, Mike Todd Associates - www.MikeTodd.com
Supporting the Digital Coast
President, Internet Society Los Angeles Chapter - www.ISOC-LA.org
toddm at isoc-la.org
Founder, Digital Divide Task Force, www.ddtf.org (undergoing updates)
miketodd at ddtf.org
Western Research Application Center, Viterbi School of Engineering,
University of Southern California
Center for Entrepreneurship and Technology Law
Pepperdine University School of Law
714-893-6684 Office
310-698-1620 FAX
714-222-3700 Cell
Alt email: mike.todd92 at gmail.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond" <ocl at gih.com>
To: "Gerard Ross" <ross at isoc.org>; "Chapter Delegates"
<chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org>
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2009 10:28
Subject: Re: [Chapter-delegates] press release: World Wide Web's
20thBirthdayHighlights Value Of Open Internet
> Gerard:
>
> 20th birthday? Already?
> I thought the first Web browser was designed in late 1990?
> Ref: http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/WorldWideWeb.html
>
> Or is the date taken as the date the first paper about the World
> Wide
> Web was published?
>
> Or is it the date of the first publicly widely available Web browser
> sometime in 1993 - after Mark Andreessen sent out the notice for the
> first release of NCSA Mosaic from University of Illinois at
> Urbana-Champaign on Usenet mailing lists? (note that NCSA Mosaic
> wasn't the first browser but it was easier to install on Sun & SGI
> machines at the time than other browsers which would need much more
> hacking on compiling...)
>
> How time flies...
>
>
>
> (this is a screen shot that I made of IBM's first Web page running
> on
> a very early version of NCSA Mosaic, back in the days... :-)
> Note the link to view the documents "without images" - because most
> computers did not display the images correctly. At the time, I was
> using a Silicon Graphics SGI IRIS Indigo box - which was the top
> stuff
> for graphics in its era... Sorry for being nostalgic... :-)
>
> Kind regards,
>
> Olivier
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Gerard Ross" <ross at isoc.org>
> To: "Chapter Delegates" <chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org>
> Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2009 4:48 PM
> Subject: [Chapter-delegates] press release: World Wide Web's 20th
> BirthdayHighlights Value Of Open Internet
>
>
>> Hello everyone
>>
>> For your reference, here is a press release that we will be issuing
>> shortly.
>>
>> Regards
>> - Gerard
>>
>> -------------------------------------------
>> Press release - for immediate distribution
>> -------------------------------------------
>>
>> WORLD WIDE WEB'S 20TH BIRTHDAY HIGHLIGHTS VALUE OF OPEN INTERNET
>>
>> Geneva, Switzerland - 12 March 2009 - As the inventor of the World
>> Wide Web returns to Geneva for the twentieth birthday of his
>> creation, the Internet Society celebrates both his achievement and
>> the open, standardised Internet platform that made it possible.
>>
>> Tim Berners-Lee, helped change the course of history by inventing
>> the World Wide Web, while working at the CERN physics laboratory
>> in
>> Geneva, 20 years ago. What some may not realise is that the
>> Internet
>> itself had at that time already been running for more than 15
>> years.
>>
>> "People often confuse the Internet and the Web," explains Lynn
>> St.Amour, President and CEO of the Internet Society. "The Internet
>> is a vast network of networks, interconnected in many different
>> physical ways, yet all speaking a common language, specified by
>> standardised protocols. The Web is one - albeit, the most
>> influential and well known - of many different applications which
>> run over the Internet."
>>
>> Part of the genius of the Internet is that it allows anyone to
>> create new applications and to deploy them without needing the
>> permission of any central authority. It achieves this through a
>> unique model of development, relying on inclusive processes and
>> open, freely accessible standards. This has become known as the
>> Internet Model, and it has always been crucial in bringing to
>> fruition the vision of the Internet's founders for globally
>> interconnected and accessible information.
>>
>> "The great achievement of Tim Berners-Lee was to recognise the
>> power
>> and potential in the Internet," said Ms St.Amour. "In many ways,
>> the
>> extraordinary success of the Web illustrates the value of the
>> Internet's robust, open model of development and use."
>>
>> "The 'killer applications' like the Web, email, and instant
>> messaging have certainly played a huge part in bringing the
>> Internet into the popular consciousness and establishing it as
>> vital to so many aspects of modern life and business. The Internet
>> Model makes that possible, by allowing innovators like Berners-Lee
>> to create, develop, and turn their visions into reality. The
>> success of the Web and the many other Internet applications in
>> turn
>> enriches the Internet and increases its value for people
>> everywhere," she said.
>>
>>
>> About the Internet Society
>> ---------------------------
>> The Internet Society is an international, non-profit organisation
>> founded in 1992 to provide leadership in Internet related
>> standards,
>> education, and policy. With offices in Washington, DC, and Geneva,
>> Switzerland, it is dedicated to ensuring the open development,
>> evolution, and use of the Internet for the benefit of people
>> throughout the world.
>>
>>
>> Further details
>> ----------------
>>
>> Gerard Ross
>> Senior Communications Manager, Internet Society
>> E-mail: ross at isoc.org
>> Telephone: +41-228-071-444 x2261
>> 4, rue des Falaises
>> CH-1205-Geneva
>> Switzerland
>>
>>
>> Greg Wood
>> Senior Communications Manager, Internet Society
>> E-mail: wood at isoc.org
>> Telephone: +1-703-439-2120 x2145
>> 1775 Wiehle Avenue
>> Suite 201
>> Reston, VA
>> 20190-5108 U.S.A.
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Chapter-delegates mailing list
>> Chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org
>> http://elists.isoc.org/mailman/listinfo/chapter-delegates
>>
>
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