Blog #7



         I wrote a paper back in high school about the world wide web so I was happy to have learned more through our class presentations. The world wide web was created back in the late 1980s by Tim Berners-Lee. Tim worked for a company called Cern which as he called it an “extensive community” of thousands of scientists from all over the world. Since Cern was such a big company, it was a struggle to share information between coworkers. They needed a fast and automated way to share their findings and research with not only each other but also outside groups like universities and institutions. Hence the creation of the world wide web. The plan was never to expand the world wide web past the scientific field. However, once they realized its potential they opened it up to the public. 


The first website made public was essentially an info screen that told users how the web worked and how to use it. This website was creatively named info.cern. The web was still in a very primitive state and it wasn’t until Berners-Lee himself set out to optimize it before any major developments were made. Tim created the first web browser and called it NeXT. Although it was the first of its kind, NeXT had many of the features that are considered standards even in modern search engines. The most important feature however was the ability to modify web pages from the browser. This made NeXT the first web editor. Creativity bloomed leading to the world wide web as we know it today.


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