World Wide Web

World wide web
  • The World Wide Web (WWW) is a library of billions of pages of information known as web pages.
  • The pages are written using hypertext, which links them.
  • A program called a browser on your computer uses a web address (URL) to request a page.
  • The request is routed through the Internet to the correct server, and the page is sent back to your computer.

How Does It Work?

  • The world wide web is like a global filing system that runs on the internet.
  • Each entry in this filing system is a website, which can consist of many webpages.
  • Each webpage brings code, text, and multimedia files together.
  • Hyperlinks are special interconnections between webpages that help users navigate through the world wide web.

History

  • As the internet grew it became difficult to find information.
  • Data was stored in a tree structure, the way files are stored on a personal computer.
  • In 1989, English engineer Tim Berners-Lee came up with a solution to flatten the tree by making related files link to each other with clickable hyperlinks.
  • This meant that to find something, users could simply jump from one relevant document to the next, instead of backtracking through a maze of folders.
  • In 1993, Marc Andreessen developed the first browser program -Mosaic- with text, pictures, and hypertext links

What Does It Look Like?

  • As the name suggests, the world wide web would look like an incredibly complex tangle if visualized.
  • A webpage would be a dot, and a hyperlink would be a line linking two pages together.
  • Popular websites would be incredibly knotted as they have many webpages linking to and from them.

The worldwide web today

  • Nowadays, there are more than a billion websites on the internet.
  • To store all this information on CD-ROMs would require a stack of disks reaching up to the moon.
  • Search engines such as Google, Yahoo, and Bing are invaluable tools to help users find relevant information in a sea of advertisements, social media, and artistic content.

Interesting Facts

  • A lot of people think that the world wide web and the internet are the same, but they are not.
  • By the end of 1993, there were only 623 websites on the World Wide Web.
  • The first website is still online.
  • Initially, Tim B Lee wanted to name the WWW as Information Mesh, Mine of Information, or Information Mine.
  • WWW was made available to everyone for free in 1993.
  • The first-ever Web page was just about the information on the World Wide Web project.
  • WWW is the fastest-growing communication medium of all time.
    • It took just four years to reach 50 million people.
    • Radio took 38 years and TV took 13 years to achieve that mark.
  • The first photo uploaded on the Web was in 1992.
    • The image was of CERN’s in-house band called Les Horribles Cernettes.
  • Mike Sendall, Tim Berners-Lee’s boss said it is a “Vague, but exciting” on the first proposal document for the worldwide web.

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