A Brief History of the Internet |
The origins of the Internet influence its structure today, from URLs to www. | |
Understanding the roots of the Internet is essential for understanding how computers store and retrieve information. |
The Internet has military and academic roots. | |
In the 1960s, the Department of the Defense funded experimental computer networks at universities so government and academic researchers could more easily share computer files. |
The military did not want a few centralized computers (that might be knocked out in a war). | |
There was a need for a network of computers that could communicate with each other. |
Each computer on the network became a server and was assigned its own numerical Internet Protocol address (such as 133.456.77.1). | |
Internet Protocol is the language used by computers to communicate. | |
By the late 1960s, researchers around the world communicated over this network. |
In the late 1980s, supercomputers were established. Thousands of researchers in universities and government agencies were connected. | |
Regional networks were established and connected. | |
Companies and non-profit organizations asked to be connected. |
In the early 1990s, Tim Berners-Lee created a protocol that could “link” information residing on different computers. | |
The collection of linked computers is called the World Wide Web, an essential part of the Internet. | |
Tim Berners-Lee is the true “father” of the World Wide Web. |
Not long after, also in the early 1990s, University of Illinois researchers and students, including student Marc Andreesen, developed an exciting way to access – or browse – the Web. | |
The graphical interface, called Mosaic, allowed people to click on text, buttons and icons to move around the Web. | |
Andreesen went on to help create Netscape, which created the browser Netscape Navigator. |
For awhile, Netscape was the dominant browser with 90 percent of the market. | |
Microsoft saw the incredible success of the Web and began offering the browser Internet Explorer. | |
Given away free by Microsoft, Explorer eventually became the most used browser. | |
With browsers, use of the World Wide Web exploded. Millions of Web sites were created. Millions of people went online. |
The explosion of Web sites has been spectacular. Remember, all this only started happening in the early 1990s. | |
In 1993, less than 1,000 Web pages could be found. | |
Today, the number may be close to a billion. |