March 2009 Archives

It was 20 years ago today: The Web turns 20........

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Original from CNET with more pictures of the original idea of 'http://www'  here


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An original imagining of the www world

Is it already 20 years since Tim Berners-Lee authored "Information Management: A proposal" and set the technology world on fire?

Back in 1989, Berners-Lee was a software consultant working at the European Organization for Nuclear Research outside of Geneva, Switzerland. On March 13 of that year, he submitted a plan to management on how to better monitor the flow of research at the labs. People were coming and going at such a clip that an increasingly frustrated Berners-Lee complained that CERN was losing track of valuable project information because of the rapid turnover of personnel. It did not help matters that the place was chockablock with incompatible computers people brought with them to the office.

"When two years is a typical length of stay, information is constantly being lost. The introduction of the new people demands a fair amount of their time and that of others before they have any idea of what goes on. The technical details of past projects are sometimes lost forever, or only recovered after a detective investigation in an emergency. Often, the information has been recorded, it just cannot be found."

So he got to work on a document, which is amazing to read with the benefit of 20-20 hindsight. But it would take Berners-Lee another couple of years before he could demo his idea. Even then, the realization of his theory had to wait until the middle of the 1990s when Jim Clark and Marc Andreessen popularized the notion of commercial Web browsing with Netscape.


And as prescient as the CERN document was, not even Berners-Lee could imagine where his basic design was about to lead. To wit, part of his very modest conclusions:

"We should work toward a universal linked information system, in which generality and portability are more important than fancy graphics techniques and complex extra facilities."

"The aim would be to allow a place to be found for any information or reference which one felt was important, and a way of finding it afterwards. The result should be sufficiently attractive to use that it the information contained would grow past a critical threshold, so that the usefulness the scheme would in turn encourage its increased use."

So it is that on Friday, Berners-Lee and other personages involved in the development of the Web will congregate at the particle physics lab to celebrate. I can't make the event, but from one side of the pond to the other, here's a virtual toast to Sir Tim Berners-Lee on a job very well done.

Career Development Conference 2009 - Working Local ~ Shaping Global, March 3rd and 4th, 2009

Greetings if you have arrived here fresh from the CDC conference presentation this morning.

Thanks for all the input, encouragement and support.

Comments, links and ideas can be posted below using the (duh!) "Comments" section

Should this post be removed from the front page on future visits, use the search function to click on 'Employment Counselling' and you'll find it.

We could use this post a resource for ideas on changing the language of our business - several people asked afterwards how they could help with this - I think its one word and one form, brochure, manual at a time

And also use this post to assemble artists resources.

I provide images and notes with this proviso. Seeing and reading is not the same as attending and experiencing. A little like reading the menu, not eating the meal. So with a requisite pinch of salt.........

For an PDF file of the presentation 'That Shiny Red Bicycle - longing, desire and reward in work' click Shiny and Red.pdf

For an rtf file of notes to accompany the images click shinyrednotes.rtf

The url for the 'I like boxes' awfulness on You Tube is this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVMi-8KKSpI

Julie Fowlis and her Gaelic version of Blackbird and much more is available here:

http://www.myspace.com/juliefowlis

There might also be an htm version of the presentation coming to open in any browser with notes but bl**dy Microsoft is failing to let you save it in anything but a version so called optimized for so called Internet so called Explorer.....

Check back at the weekend for a document with brief notes on each topic, should the htm version not materialize..........

Thanks again

Stephen

PS Excellent new social activism site is http://www.idealist.org/

scjh