Eureka People: How Tim Berners-Lee invented the Web

The Web is twenty one this year. To celebrate, we take a look at the man who made it happen.

Published by Joel Willans on November 4, 2012

Our lives are so mediated by the web today that it’s hard to recall life in the pre-digital era. I faintly recall hearing URLs read out on the radio in the mid-nineties, and puzzling over whether I ought to spell out the word ‘dot’– but just try explaining that to the kids! This year the Web celebrates its 21st birthday. In honor of it finally growing up, we’ve taken a look at the story of its conception and the man who made it all happen, Tim Berners-Lee.

A computer genius family 

A Londoner by birth, and the son of a pair of computer geeks – Conway Berners-Lee and Mary Lee Woods, who themselves worked on the first commercially available computer, the Ferranti Mark 1 – Berners-Lee studied physics at Queen’s College, Oxford, in the late 1970s. While he was there, he built his own first computer using little other than a soldering iron, an M6800 processor, and an old television.

Enquiring mind

It all must have paid off, because in 1980, within four years of graduation, he was taken on as a contractor at CERN – the European Particle Physics Laboratory in Geneva that’s more recently hit the news because of its Large Hadron Collider and investigations into the Higgs Boson particle. Well, CERN’s always been cutting-edge; while Berners-Lee was there, he kept himself busy writing a hypertext program called Enquire – a method for storing information using random associations – which was just for personal use, and never published, but which formed the conceptual basis for the behemoth we now call the World Wide Web.

“An act of desperation”

After a few years away – developing his networking skills by working on a real-time remote procedure calls project in Bournemouth, England – Berners-Lee came back to CERN on a fellowship, and this time, it went stellar. He took his earlier hypertext work and the existing nuts and bolts of the internet and jammed them together in what he called ‘an act of desperation’ to create a ‘larger documentation system’. Although the internet, in its most basic form, had been knocking around since the late 1960s Berners-Lee’s innovations now allowed any document to be linked to any other document.

It’s alive!

He wrote the hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP ring any bells?) that made that possible, and he came up with HTML, the language in which hypertext pages were (and are) written. Voila: the Web! The first website went live in 1991. Sadly, there are no available screenshots of the original content, but here’s a scree shot taken from a NeXT computer running Tim Berners-Lee’s original World Wide Web browser.

Free and democratic

Berners-Lee – who’s now Sir Tim Berners-Lee – went on, in 1994, to form the Worldwide Web Consortium, or W3C, at MIT, in the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, or CSAIL. This was set up to create standards and recommendations to improve everybody’s web experience. Berners-Lee made his idea, the web, freely available, with no royalties due, so that we can all easily use it, and today he’s co-director of the Open Data Institute. Smart and democratic – that’s what we like in an inventor!

The next 21 years?

In twenty one years, Berners- Lee’s creation has transformed our lives beyond belief, but what about the next couple of decades? While predicting the future is always a risky business, one thing we can say for certain is the web will be ever more mobile. In fact, according to Gartner, already in 2013, mobile phones will overtake PCs as the most common web access devices worldwide. Pretty impressive for something that started off as a hobby.

Image credits: Silvio Tanaka

Comments

  • realjjj

    This is ironic because mobile devices might kill the web,well, not so much the devices but the carriers that are trying to get rid of net neutrality.

  • http://www.facebook.com/zunnat.zunnat Zunnat Zunnat

    the devices but the carriers that are trying to get rid of net neutrality ?

  • http://twitter.com/ennovatesols Dona Chakraborty ツ

    it’s a revolution

  • http://twitter.com/easyhiker101 Michael

    There have been so many web developments and with such speed. Who would have thought these were all possible 10 or even 5 years ago.

  • http://www.facebook.com/MarkAReynolds Mark Reynolds

    I remember fondly working as a computing officer for a University commencing in 1992, and took on as one of my tasks researching NCSA’s Mosaic, the original web browser on which Marc Andreesen, who later went on to found Netscape, was one of the developers. In 1993 and onwards I followed the development of Netscape with great interest, through its Beta development phases (pre-version 1.0), with updates sometimes occurring four times a day! Later we watched with equal fascination events that were made available on the internet such as the Mars Rover mission and the Schumaker-Levy comet impact into Jupiter. While things have moved on in even more exciting ways in terms of abilities of use of the internet, those early days seemed rather heady and exciting!

  • http://twitter.com/mbazaluk Mike Bazaluk

    an amazing and very underrated man IHMO. With the foresight to try to make the web accessible, although others try to clamp it down

  • http://www.facebook.com/lucas.wyrsch Lucas Wyrsch

    It all started in Geneva, Switzerland, at the CERN or, as you mentioned, the European Particle Physics Laboratory where Sir Tim Berners-Lee created the world wide web which has empowered the wisdom of the crowds in a very basic democratic, bottom-up culture!

    The really funny thing in quantum physics is that we have the quarks like up, down, bottom, top, strange and charm but we don’t have “left” and “right” which still may contribute a lot to political controversy!

  • SEOWebGirl

    It’s hard to comprehend what the internet will be when the youth, who have never even known a life without the web, take over.

  • http://twitter.com/haroldlgardner Harold Gardner

    Such an amazing man who changed so many lives. I can’t believe how many people have never heard of him or his story.

  • DianaRusso

    An amazing legacy that changed the world x

  • Ikohaus Avante-garde

    Those who were in the Avante-garde all new of Tim Berners Lee and awaited with anticipation what his discoveries would mean for their respective creative fields. It was his web that brought the Avante-garde artist back to create in a new fashion

  • http://twitter.com/qkarmark qkarmark

    isn’t it interesting how the mainstream notion of online technology these days is not even remotely tied to history, as though it just appeared out of nowhere and people just ‘use’ it?

  • http://www.salesdrive.com.au/ Ivor Kellock

    Where we going for the next 21 years?

  • GreatLakesdan

    Has anyone let Al Gore know this yet?

  • http://twitter.com/gizmo4me2 gizmo4me2

    Al Gore all ready knows

  • http://twitter.com/tammikibler Tammi Kibler

    I am in awe of the humility that builds something as valuable as the Web and gives it away to further progress.

  • http://www.facebook.com/claudia.navadaschi Claudia Navadaschi

    Where we going for the next 21 years?…In the Tesla’s world! ;-)

  • http://www.meshorizons.com/ Mes horizons

    Nice to learn that, thx

  • http://www.facebook.com/tomlaing Tom Laing

    Thank you Tim