Inventing The Internet [TOP]

Tim Berners-Lee , a British scientist, was frustrated that information was trapped in individual computers. He imagined a "web" of information where anything could be linked to anything else. He invented , HTTP , and the first web browser, creating the World Wide Web .

In the late 1960s, while much of the world was looking toward the moon, a different kind of frontier was being explored in windowless university labs across the United States. Computers at the time were "islands"—massive, room-sized machines that couldn't speak to one another. If a scientist at wanted to share data with a colleague at Stanford , they had to physically mail magnetic tapes or stacks of punch cards. The First "Login" Inventing the Internet

On October 29, 1969, the first real bridge was built. Under the guidance of Leonard Kleinrock at , a team prepared to send the first message to Stanford Research Institute via ARPANET . The plan was simple: type "LOGIN." They typed L —it worked. They typed O —it worked. They typed G —and the system crashed. Tim Berners-Lee , a British scientist, was frustrated

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