Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Internet

Internaut Day Might Not Be the Web Anniversary You're Looking For (fortune.com) 70

David Meyer, reporting for Fortune: The web arguably went public before August 23, 1991. Social media users are enthusiastically celebrating "Internaut Day" on Tuesday. They're thanking Tim Berners-Lee, the creator of the World Wide Web, for first providing public access to it on this day in 1991, precisely a quarter of a century back. The only problem is that the supposed importance of Internaut Day doesn't seem to be supported by much evidence. Berners-Lee submitted his seminal proposal for a new information management system to CERN on March 12, 1989, a date which Berners-Lee celebrates as the birthday of the web. The building blocks were specified and written up by October 1990, and the first webpage went live in December that year. So when somebody celebrates the "Internaut Day" today, it really doesn't seem like the right occasion. The report adds: According to Wikipedia, that's when "new users could [first] access" the web -- and that's what a gazillion news stories on Tuesday are supposedly celebrating. But it doesn't square with what the Web Foundation and CERN say.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Internaut Day Might Not Be the Web Anniversary You're Looking For

Comments Filter:
  • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @10:29AM (#52755853) Journal
    Isn't swarming around fads driven by shoddy information what 'social media' is for? It certainly seems to be the typical use case.
    • That this is being celebrated on a Tuesday is the only shocking thing to me, as almost all major events, including presidents' birthdays, are celebrated on a Monday.
  • The first real breakthrough that brought digital communications to the masses was the various Bulletin Board systems. What did people do with them? Looked for pr0n, buying and selling stuff, uploading and downloading software, pictures, etc., sending each other messages about what they were doing ... the medium (dial-up or tcp/ip) wasn't important from the people perspective.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      I would pin it on the introduction of Usenet News in 1979.

      Prior to that you were limited by the size of membership on the BBS you were dialing into.

      Usenet News made the interactions Global, and we have not looked back since then

    • The invention of the telegraph and the wide-scale availability to the paying masses through commercial telegraph operators was arguably the first real breakthrough in electronic digital communications, assuming you consider the "on/off" of Morse-code-type telegraphy to be digital, which I do.

      Smoke signals, semaphore signals, and other forms of non-electronic long-distance communication are also typically digital. As to whether they were "available to the masses" or not, that varies.

      Writing, whether using a

  • That reminds me of when I thought I was far too late in starting my first web business, in 1996. I lamented that there would have been a lot of potential if I had gotten in early, but the web had already been around for five years. Why hadn't I gotten in early, darn it! :)

  • Yeah, so? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ilsaloving ( 1534307 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @10:33AM (#52755893)

    Considering that a large portion of the globe believe and celebrate the birth of a god on Dec 25th, despite the fact that there is no evidence at all that this truely happened, I think we can probably let this inaccuracy slide.

    At least we know the internet really did happen.

    • The internet was created so that we could have OT posts like, "Internet Man Constantly Mentioning He Doesn't Have a Religion". [theonion.com]
    • by Calydor ( 739835 )

      Jesus was only a demigod - his mother was human.

      • Jesus was only a demigod - his mother was human.

        Then why he isn't in any of the Riordan novels?

  • Not sure why Tim gets credit when hyper-linking was demo'd back in 1968 ...

    The Mother of All Demos, presented by Douglas Engelbart (1968)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    Alan Kay points out the same thing @17:03

    Alan Kay - Normal Considered Harmful
    https://youtu.be/FvmTSpJU-Xc?t... [youtu.be]

    • There was a graphical BBS system (RoboBoard [wikipedia.org]) with a windowing interface, icons, mouse, pictures, vector fonts, links, 1024x768x245 graphics ... all on a DOS machine with a 1200 - 2400 baud modem. No need to install a winsock, or chameleon, or have windows or the extra ram and faster cpu. It looked a hell of a lot better than what the internet had to offer at the time.
      • by dissy ( 172727 )

        3-4 years prior to RoboBoard was a system called FirstClass (originally macintosh only) that was started to be a groupware 'learning management system' but was heavily utilized as BBS software as well.

        It provided email and forums (even with fidonet support, although mainly via 3rd party software as FCs remained pretty lacking), voice/fax, file transfer, etc and the protocol was multithreaded so you could be doing all of those things at the same time, and all over a 1200 baud modem.

        It was primary used with a

    • If you go by that "mother of demos", then apple did not invent the mouse and that is heresy. So its clearly a fake!

  • by cdrudge ( 68377 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @10:39AM (#52755957) Homepage

    It sounds like everyone is arguing about semantics. What is considered the actual "birth date"?

    I'm a web developer. What is considered the birth date of a website? When the client comes to me with a proposal or I go to them with one? If I was Berners-Lee, it sounds like that is the birth date of the website. If the site is ready for internal testing, is that the birth date? That sounds like what CERN says it is when it was available internally but possibly not externally. Or is the site's birth date when it's publicly available, ready for the world to see and use, which is what I would call it.

    Or putting it in human terms, Berners-Lee's birth date sounds more like the date of conception, CERN's date more like when you have an ultrasound and you know it's there and can "see" it but it's not ready for the world yet, and publicly accessible when the little guy actually shoots out of mom.

  • To commemorate this momentous occasion I suggest we play Green Day's "Wake me up when September Ends" with a Followup of a retelling of the classic tale "Rip Van Winkle"... Whadayamean I'm 2 years too soon? What the hell is a year? The current day is Tue Sep 8393 1993, isn't it?
  • The write-up and TFA conflate the Internet and (what became known as web). Maybe, the slines don't know any better, but Slashdot users ought to... The hyperlinked documents weren't the first "killer application" — e-mail [wikipedia.org] was. The first systems weren't even using the Internet, but, according to Wikipedia:

    And Sir Lee's was not even the first system for linking documents/files across the networks — Gopher [wikipedia.org] was. And Gopher was not merely proposed in 1991, that's when an actual system became available (though protocol was codified in an RFC [ietf.org] only in 1993).

    • by slew ( 2918 )

      The write-up and TFA conflate the Internet and (what became known as web). Maybe, the slines don't know any better, but Slashdot users ought to... The hyperlinked documents weren't the first "killer application" — e-mail [wikipedia.org] was. The first systems weren't even using the Internet, but, according to Wikipedia:

      And Sir Lee's was not even the first system for linking documents/files across the networks — Gopher [wikipedia.org] was. And Gopher was not merely proposed in 1991, that's when an actual system became available (though protocol was codified in an RFC [ietf.org] only in 1993).

      If you want to get "technical" the web (aka http/html) was first (1990 vs 1991 for gopher), but the graphical browser mosaic didn't appear until '93 and not to many folks were using the non-graphical web servers that were in existence at the time.

      If email was the killer app, inter-domain mail (via unix mail via rmail/UUCP) was probably the real killer app, not ARPANET email as ARPANET was mostly restricted to non-commercial use. Gopher like the "web" didn't really pop up until '91 when the NSFNET (the mode

      • by mi ( 197448 )

        If you want to get "technical" the web (aka http/html) was first (1990 vs 1991 for gopher)

        I would say, Lee's web was indistinguishable from Gopher back then. Certainly not until Mosaic offered graphical browsing.

        email was the killer app, inter-domain mail (via unix mail via rmail/UUCP) was probably the real killer app, not ARPANET

        But that too existed already in the 1970-80ies [wikipedia.org]... The actual interconnections remained scarce, but software and protocols for distinct computers to exchange "emails" appeared much

  • by VorpalRodent ( 964940 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @11:05AM (#52756167)
    Why no mention of Al Gore? I am outraged, I say!
  • Interwebinaut Day would be more fitting.

    The Internet was arguably invented either in 1969 or when IPv4 rolled out in the early 1980s, depending on whether you "count" the pre-IPv4 Internet as "the Internet" or not.

  • This is the kind of thing that Comic Book Guy gets excited about - and nobody else cares.
  • by TheSync ( 5291 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @03:38PM (#52758061) Journal

    Look, WWW is all nice and stuff, but frankly before NCSA Mosaic was released you could not really tell the difference between Gopher and WWW, and while they were interesting to play with, it was just play (unlike USENET News which had real value :). Somehow Viola never had much impact either.

    NCSA Mosaic was originally released January 23, 1993. I gasped when I first saw it, because I had been dreaming of a global hypermedia network, and it showed that was possible. That day changed my life from someone who was an electrical engineer to someone who designed early commercial web sites.

    Version 1.0 for Windows was released on November 11, 1993, and of course that is when "normal human beings" had any chance of getting on the Web.

  • Partying on the day you were conceived would just feel very awkward, I guess.

Business is a good game -- lots of competition and minimum of rules. You keep score with money. -- Nolan Bushnell, founder of Atari

Working...