InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 245
Posts 55847
Boards Moderated 12
Alias Born 04/12/2001

Re: None

Tuesday, 04/04/2017 8:41:02 AM

Tuesday, April 04, 2017 8:41:02 AM

Post# of 48180
Web’s Inventor Tim Berners-Lee Wins the Nobel Prize of Computing

Berners-Lee says Web access is a human right—and the technology he created needs a rethink.

by Tom Simonite April 4, 2017
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/604052/webs-inventor-tim-berners-lee-wins-the-nobel-prize-of-computing/

The man who made it possible for you to read this page just received the highest honor in computer science.

In 1989 Tim Berners-Lee, a programmer at the physics laboratory CERN, proposed a system that would allow computers to publish and access linked documents and multimedia over the Internet. Today the world runs on the Web, and Berners-Lee has been awarded the ACM Turing Prize, considered something like the Nobel of computer science. He talked with MIT Technology Review about his invention’s past, present, and future.

Take us back to 1989. What was the problem you were setting out to solve when you started this work that led to the World Wide Web?

I was working at CERN and I was frustrated because people had brought along all kinds of wonderful computers—all different. Each would have some way of keeping track of documents and manuals and help files but they were all different as well. I felt, wouldn't it be wonderful if all of these systems could be somehow part of or considered part of one big meta-system?

The first thing we did was start a Web server at CERN for the phone book. It [previously] ran on a mainframe, which was a pain to have to log in to, and a lot of people just logged on to the mainframe to look up people’s phone numbers. The phone book got a few people to install a Web browser. It spread outside CERN in high-energy physics, and then ended up taking off exponentially.

The Web now feels indispensable, and is part of many people’s daily personal and professional life. What still needs working on?

Now we have to talk about it as a human right. It’s not as basic as water, but the difference in economic and social power between someone who has it and someone who doesn’t means they’re massively disadvantaged. If you're in a village in Africa and you don't have access because you can't afford it, or you do have access and you can't use it because you're not literate, then this is a problem.

When we started the World Wide Web foundation [in 2009] we started pointing out that if 20 percent of the world has it, they owe the other 80 percent to try and get them connected as quickly as possible. [The UN said last November that 47 percent of the world’s population is now online.] https://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=54931#.WOKP-GgrLRY
...
more
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/604052/webs-inventor-tim-berners-lee-wins-the-nobel-prize-of-computing/

Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.