World Wide Web

The World Wide Web (abbreviated as WWW or W3, commonly known as the Web), is a system of interlinked hypertext documents accessed via the Internet. With a web browser, one can view web pages that may contain text, images, videos, and other multimedia, and navigate between them via hyperlinks.

Using concepts from his earlier hypertext systems like ENQUIRE, British engineer, computer scientist and at that time employee of CERN, Sir Tim Berners-Lee, now Director of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), wrote a proposal in March 1989 for what would eventually become the World Wide Web. At CERN, a European research organisation near Geneva situated on Swiss and French soil, Berners-Lee and Belgian computer scientist Robert Cailliau proposed in 1990 to use hypertext "to link and access information of various kinds as a web of nodes in which the user can browse at will", and they publicly introduced the project in December of the same year.

Read more about World Wide Web:  History, Function, Web Servers, Privacy, Intellectual Property, Security, Standards, Accessibility, Internationalization, Statistics, Speed Issues, Caching

Famous quotes containing the words world, wide and/or web:

    If all things were eternall,
    And nothing their end bringing;
    If this should be, then how should we
    Here make an end of singing?
    —Unknown. If All the World Were Paper (l. 21–24)

    He’ll go along o’er the wide world with me.
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

    Our friendships hurry to short and poor conclusions, because we have made them a texture of wine and dreams, instead of the tough fibre of the human heart. The laws of friendship are austere and eternal, of one web with the laws of nature and of morals.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)