The InformationWeek -- Blogs

Google

Topics:   Google

  • Email this page E-mail this page
  • Print this page Print this page
  • Bookmark and Share
  • icon

Thank Heaven For The Web


Posted by Valerie Potter, Sep 14, 2006 05:05 PM

A significant tech anniversary quietly slipped by last month. Fifteen years ago, Tim Berners-Lee made public a little project he was working on. He called it the WorldWideWeb.


In our story "The Online Supernova: 15 Years Of The World Wide Web," we trace the history of this meteoric medium, from its beginnings as an obscure information-sharing tool for scientific researchers to its status today as social networking mecca. It's truly an amazing journey.

Nowadays the Web even has its own holiday: OneWebDay, to be celebrated for the first time one week from today. According to its Web site, "The mission of OneWebDay is to create, maintain, advance, and promote a global day to celebrate online life." How do we do that? The site has a few decidedly Web 2.0 suggestions:

  • Post a picture to Webshots.com and tag it with the keyword "onewebday"--it will become part of a huge, worldwide photo collage.

  • Make a video in honor of the Web and post it on Blip.tv with a "onewebday" tag to have it included in a video presentation on Dabble.com.

  • Blog about how the Web has changed your life.

    Well, shoot--you don't have to ask me twice.

    In 1994, I was working for a computer book publisher in San Francisco when I began hearing buzz about a new medium: the World Wide Web. ("It's the Internet, but with pictures.") After a quick demo, I was hooked. I maneuvered my way onto Web-related book projects, learned HTML, and won the envy of my colleagues by being one of the first editors in my office to get Netscape. (We didn't call it getting Internet access or getting a Web browser. We called it getting Netscape.)

    By late 1995, the dot-com hiring boom had begun in earnest. Book editors began jumping ship left and right to join online startups. Who wouldn't? Why stay with boring old book publishing when you could be creating a new form of media? I went to CNET.com in 1996, and I've been in Web publishing ever since.

    While it's only natural that I was excited about the Web back then, what surprises me is that I'm still excited about it, if for different reasons. It's fascinating to look back at the early browsers and Web sites--they were indeed technological marvels--but today's Web tools let us do so much more. These days you don't have to be in publishing to have a public voice: Anyone with a computer and Net access (preferably broadband) can write a blog, upload a video, or map their friends on Google Maps.

    It's not all sunshine and lollipops, of course. Today's social networking sites must deal with issues of copyright, privacy, cyberstalking, and more. We all have to worry about what private information--true or false--about us is out there somewhere on the Web, and who might have access to it. But overall I can't help but be glad I work in a medium that's changing and growing every day.

    OneWebDay is fast approaching. Come on, pitch in: What was your first experience with the Web? What's your favorite thing about the Web today? How would you like to see the Web change in the future? Share your thoughts and stories below.

    « Daily Podcast For Thursday, September 14 | Main | Daily Podcast For Friday, September 15 »



  • Sign Up Now
    For InformationWeek News Alerts




    This is a public forum. United Business Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. United Business Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers.

    Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of United Business Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in United Business Media's Terms of Service.

    Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.




     
    Sign Up For The Grok on Google Newsletter
    Every Thursday, Tom Claburn and his fellow analysts offer all the news, insight, analysis, and strategic thinking you need to understand the company and complex phenomenon known as Google.

    Sign up for our free, weekly newsletter today!

    Newsletter Archives


      :: THE LATEST GOOGLE NEWS ::



     

    1. HPC Joins the Dummy Revolution?
    2. Detecting Scalability Problems With Intel Parallel Universe Portal
    3. Just Say No To SFAQL Parallelism


    Join The InformationWeek Group On LinkedIn


                               


    1. Top Resources To Save Big On Cyber Monday
    2. Google Branded Phone Rumored in 2010
    3. Murdoch And Microsoft Redefine Search
    4. LG Intros eXpo WinMo Smartphone With Pico Projector
    5. Sprint Targets Cyber Monday Instead Of Black Friday


    1. Global CIO: Fear Of Facebook For The Enterprise
    2. Sun Upgrades VirtualBox Virtualization Software
    3. Barnes & Noble Struggles To Fill Nook Demand
    4. IBM Buys Database Security Company
    5. Online Shopping Gains Following Black Friday
    6. Survey: Android Developers Unhappy

     

      Ars Technica
    Boing Boing
    Channel 9 Forums
    CRN Blogs
    Dr.Dobb's Portal: Blogs
    Engadget
    Gizmodo
    GrokLaw
      Lifehacker
    Schneier on Security
    Slashdot
    TechCrunch
    Techdirt
    Techmeme
    Valleywag

      DECEMBER 2008
    NOVEMBER 2008
    OCTOBER 2008
    SEPTEMBER 2008
    AUGUST 2008
    JULY 2008
    JUNE 2008
    MAY 2008
      APRIL 2008
    MARCH 2008
    FEBRUARY 2008
    JANUARY 2008
    DECEMBER 2007
    NOVEMBER 2007
    OCTOBER 2007
    SEPTEMBER 2007