The World Wide Web…Who Knew?
March 28th, 2007By Sophia Salis Kelter
Although he’s taken rightful credit for helping to popularize the Internet as we know it today, former U.S. Vice President Al Gore did not create the World Wide Web. Following the timeline, Gore was in his early twenties when the Internet was born. Research and endless hours of work at the hands of a handful contributed to the creation of the web that has so dramatically changed our lives in this twenty-first century. That’s why it’s hard, and almost unfair, to give full credit to any one individual or to exactly pinpoint the date and time of its birth. It’s especially difficult since the concept was reincarnated several times before it became what it is today.
For the sake of establishing context, we can say the web as a concept was born by Licklider and Kleinrock in the early ‘60s and, in its primitive functional form, in 1969. Co-crafted in Massachusetts by scientists at Stanford University and Cambridge’s Bolt Beranek & Newman, many involved in the web’s first incarnation acknowledged their work as having been built upon J.C.R. Licklider and Leonard Kleinrock’s research at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The web was first dreamt of as Licklider’s “Galactic Network,” a dream that materialized in the summer of 1969. That’s when a group of widely separated computers first “talked” to each other.
Vinton Cerf of Stafford and Robert Kahn of BB&N emerge in a variety of sources as the leading scientists behind the web’s development. Cerf and Kahn spent much of the 1970’s collaborating on a project for the Defense Department’s Advanced Research Programs Agency. The idea was to establish a transmission system that would enable the sending of data between networks of computers running incompatible operating systems. It took time for a series of transmission schematics, named TCP/IP, to become one spider, spinning its network of threads, webbing together people in different places, of different languages, cultures.
So, what does Al Gore have to do with any of this? He was the first politician to fight for aggressive funding of the Internet’s growth and accessibility. On June 6th, 2005, Gore received a “Webby” award by the hand of Vinton Cerf during a ceremony in New York. Gore was the first to utter the words, “information superhighway.”
Today, webmakers are giving the Internet a living, breathing identity. The notion sprouted from the brains of a few has become the most collaborative communications network the world has ever seen.
Some say the web is evil. Some say it really is the greatest thing since sliced bread, running water, indoor bathrooms and all that “good stuff.” Others, say the web is a canvas, reflecting the best and worst of our kind. Since the web brings us together in a way we’ve never been brought together before, it commands great capacity and possesses intrinsic power. With the Internet, comes a forum for enhanced personal communication and responsible commerce, along with an accessible market for corruption and propaganda. Ahhh, talk about sides of a coin.
The bottom line might shake out like this: who knew just how wide the World Wide Web would be? It’s not only wide-reaching in its capacity to network us, but wide-reaching in its power to steer commerce and communication. Those who refuse to acknowledge it, will fall to it. Good, bad or otherwise, the Internet monopolizes on our society’s frenzied, frantic pace. It provides a quick shop, look-up and is being seen more and more by each successive generation as an entertainment venue.
Learning the language of the Internet and having a presence there is of fundamental importance to today’s existing, and tomorrow’s new businesses. Visit
INET-OPTIMER.COM on Tuesday, March 19th for our next piece outlining recently released e-commerce data from the census bureau. We’ll look at how this information helps us chart complete online spending for 2006 and what it means to businesses throughout this year.
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Information for this article provided, in part, through:
-“Who ‘created’ the Internet? It’s a tangled web” By David L. Chandler for The Boston Globe. Published Friday, October 20th 2000. Article available on http://seattlepi.nwsource.com.
-“Man who claims he created the Internet gets award” By Nick Farell for www.TheInquirer.net.