Sir Tim Berners-Lee’s invention www is 25 years old today
12 Mar 2014
It was exactly 25 years ago today that a proposal was sent internally at a research company in Switzerland that was about to change the world.
Dubbed Information Management: A proposal, the document was created by a 34-year-old computer scientist called Tim Berners-Lee and was sent to his boss Mike Sendall.
That proposal, which Sendall described as ''vague but exciting'', led to the development of the world wide web and, ultimately, the internet as we know it today.
Sir Timothy Berners-Lee studied physics at Queen's College Oxford before graduating in 1976. He then started as an engineer in the telecommunications and microprocessor software industry.
In 1980, while working as an independent contractor at CERN, Sir Tim described the concept of a global system based on using hypertext to share information between researchers. He then built a prototype system called ENQUIRE, which formed the conceptual basis for the world wide web.
In 1989 he published his landmark paper, built the first server as well as the web browser 'WorldWideWeb.app.' The first website, based on these fundamental practices, then went live in August 1991.
Sir Tim said, 'In March 1989 I wrote a proposal for a universal linked information system that became the world wide web. Twenty-five years later, the web is a powerful enabler of people, economic activity and democracy - so important that some have argued that access to the web should be elevated to a human right.''
Lesley Cowley, chief executive officer of Nominet, added, ''The web is such as integral part of everyday life that we simply can't live without it.
''It has changed to something beyond what even Sir Tim and his colleagues could have imagined 25 years ago, when they were looking for an easier way to share and structure information.
''The social, political and economic impact of the web makes it a story we are all part of, and to which we all contribute daily, whether that's finding the answer to a question or connecting with friends and colleagues.''
(Also see: Internet inventor calls for user rights, end to snooping)