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Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts

March 1, 2012

“We’re starting to do some things differently”

Mountain Lion

“We’re starting to do some things differently,” Phil Schiller said to me.

We were sitting in a comfortable hotel suite in Manhattan just over a week ago. I’d been summoned a few days earlier by Apple PR with the offer of a private “product briefing”. I had no idea heading into the meeting what it was about. I had no idea how it would be conducted. This was new territory for me, and I think, for Apple.

John_currin

I knew it wasn’t about the iPad 3 — that would get a full-force press event in California. Perhaps new retina display MacBooks, I thought. But that was just a wild guess, and it was wrong. It was about Mac OS X — or, as Apple now calls it almost everywhere, OS X. The meeting was structured and conducted very much like an Apple product announcement event. But instead of an auditorium with a stage and theater seating, it was simply with a couch, a chair, an iMac, and an Apple TV hooked up to a Sony HDTV. And instead of a room full of writers, journalists, and analysts, it was just me, Schiller, and two others from Apple — Brian Croll from product marketing and Bill Evans from PR. (From the outside, at least in my own experience, Apple’s product marketing and PR people are so well-coordinated that it’s hard to discern the difference between the two.)

Handshakes, a few pleasantries, good hot coffee, and then, well, then I got an Apple press event for one. Keynote slides that would have looked perfect had they been projected on stage at Moscone West or the Yerba Buena Center, but instead were shown on a big iMac on a coffee table in front of us. A presentation that started with the day’s focus (“We wanted you here today to talk about OS X”) and a review of the Mac’s success over the past few years (5.2 million Macs sold last quarter; 23 (soon to be 24) consecutive quarters of sales growth exceeding the overall PC industry; tremendous uptake among Mac users of the Mac App Store and the rapid adoption of Lion).

And then the reveal: Mac OS X — sorry, OS X — is going on an iOS-esque one-major-update-per-year development schedule. This year’s update is scheduled for release in the summer, and is ready now for a developer preview release. Its name is Mountain Lion.1

There are many new features, I’m told, but today they’re going to focus on telling me about ten of them. This is just like an Apple event, I keep thinking. Just like with Lion, Mountain Lion is evolving in the direction of the iPad. But, just as with Lion last year, it’s about sharing ideas and concepts with iOS, not sharing the exact same interaction design or code. The words “Windows” and “Microsoft” are never mentioned, but the insinuation is clear: Apple sees a fundamental difference between software for the keyboard-and-mouse-pointer Mac and that for the touchscreen iPad. Mountain Lion is not a step towards a single OS that powers both the Mac and iPad, but rather another in a series of steps toward defining a set of shared concepts, styles, and principles between two fundamentally distinct OSes.

Major new features

  • iCloud, with an iOS-style easy signup process upon first turning on a new Mac or first logging into a new user account. Mountain Lion wants you to have an iCloud account.

  • iCloud document storage, and the biggest change to Open and Save dialog boxes in the 28-year history of the Mac. Mac App Store apps effectively have two modes for opening/saving documents: iCloud or the traditional local hierarchical file system. The traditional way is mostly unchanged from Lion (and, really, from all previous versions of Mac OS X). The iCloud way is visually distinctive: it looks like the iPad springboard — linen background, iOS-style one-level-only drag-one-on-top-of-another-to-create-one “folders”. It’s not a replacement of traditional Mac file management and organization. It’s a radically simplified alternative.

  • Apps have been renamed for cross-OS consistency. iChat is now Messages; iCal is now Calendar; Address Book is now Contacts. Missing apps have been added: Reminders and Notes look like Mac versions of their iOS counterparts. Now that these apps exist for the Mac, to-dos have been removed from Calendar and notes have been removed from Mail, leaving Calendar to simply handle calendaring and Mail to handle email.

The recurring theme: Apple is fighting against cruft — inconsistencies and oddities that have accumulated over the years, which made sense at one point but no longer — like managing to-dos in iCal (because CalDAV was being used to sync them to a server) or notes in Mail (because IMAP was the syncing back-end). The changes and additions in Mountain Lion are in a consistent vein: making things simpler and more obvious, closer to how things should be rather than simply how they always have been.

Schiller has no notes. He is every bit as articulate, precise, and rehearsed as he is for major on-stage events. He knows the slide deck stone cold. It strikes me that I have spoken in front of a thousand people but I’ve never been as well-prepared for a presentation as Schiller is for this one-on-one meeting. (Note to self: I should be that rehearsed.)

This is an awful lot of effort and attention in order to brief what I’m guessing is a list of a dozen or two writers and journalists. It’s Phil Schiller, spending an entire week on the East Coast, repeating this presentation over and over to a series of audiences of one. There was no less effort put into the preparation of this presentation than there would have been if it had been the WWDC keynote address.

What do I think so far, Schiller asks. It all seems rather obvious now that I’ve seen it — and I mean obvious in a good way. I remain convinced that iCloud is exactly what Steve Jobs said it was: the cornerstone of everything Apple does for the next decade. So of course it makes sense to bring iCloud to the Mac in a big way. Simplified document storage, iMessage, Notification Center2, synced Notes and Reminders — all of these things are part of iCloud. It’s all a step toward making your Mac just another device managed in your iCloud account. Look at your iPad and think about the features it has that would work well, for a lot of people, if they were on the Mac. That’s Mountain Lion — and probably a good way to predict the future of the continuing parallel evolution of iOS and OS X.3

But this, I say, waving around at the room, this feels a little odd. I’m getting the presentation from an Apple announcement event without the event. I’ve already been told that I’ll be going home with an early developer preview release of Mountain Lion. I’ve never been at a meeting like this, and I’ve never heard of Apple seeding writers with an as-yet-unannounced major update to an operating system. Apple is not exactly known for sharing details of as-yet-unannounced products, even if only just one week in advance. Why not hold an event to announce Mountain Lion — or make the announcement on apple.com before talking to us?

That’s when Schiller tells me they’re doing some things differently now.

I wonder immediately about that “now”. I don’t press, because I find the question that immediately sprang to mind uncomfortable. And some things remain unchanged: Apple executives explain what they want to explain, and they explain nothing more.

My gut feeling though, is this. Apple didn’t want to hold an event to announce Mountain Lion because those press events are precious. They just used one for the iBooks/education thing, and they’re almost certainly on the cusp of holding a major one for the iPad. They don’t want to wait to release the Mountain Lion preview because they want to give Mac developers months of time to adopt new APIs and to help Apple shake out bugs. So: an announcement without an event. But they don’t want Mountain Lion to go unheralded. They are keenly aware that many observers suspect or at least worry that the Mac is on the wane, relegated to the sideline in favor of the new and sensationally popular iPad.

Thus, these private briefings. Not merely to explain what Mountain Lion is — that could just as easily be done with a website or PDF feature guide — but to convey that the Mac and OS X remain both important and the subject of the company’s attention. The move to a roughly annual release cycle, to me, suggests that Apple is attempting to prove itself a walk-and-chew-gum-at-the-same-time company. Remember this, five years ago?

iPhone has already passed several of its required certification tests and is on schedule to ship in late June as planned. We can’t wait until customers get their hands (and fingers) on it and experience what a revolutionary and magical product it is. However, iPhone contains the most sophisticated software ever shipped on a mobile device, and finishing it on time has not come without a price — we had to borrow some key software engineering and QA resources from our Mac OS X team, and as a result we will not be able to release Leopard at our Worldwide Developers Conference in early June as planned. While Leopard’s features will be complete by then, we cannot deliver the quality release that we and our customers expect from us. We now plan to show our developers a near final version of Leopard at the conference, give them a beta copy to take home so they can do their final testing, and ship Leopard in October. We think it will be well worth the wait. Life often presents tradeoffs, and in this case we’re sure we’ve made the right ones.

Putting both iOS and OS X on an annual release schedule is a sign that Apple is confident it no longer needs to make such tradeoffs in engineering resources. There’s an aspect of Apple’s “now” — changes it needs to make, ways the company needs to adapt — that simply relate to just how damn big, and how successful, the company has become. They are in uncharted territory, success-wise. They are cognizant that they’re no longer the upstart, and are changing accordingly.

It seems important to Apple that the Mac not be perceived as an afterthought compared to the iPad, and, perhaps more importantly, that Apple not be perceived as itself considering or treating the Mac as an afterthought.


I’ve been using Mountain Lion for a week, preinstalled on a MacBook Air loaned to me by Apple. I have little to report: it’s good, and I look forward to installing the developer preview on my own personal Air. It’s a preview, incomplete and with bugs, but it feels at least as solid as Lion did a year ago in its developer previews.

I’m interested to see how developer support for Mac App Store-only features plays out. Two big ones: iCloud document storage and Notification Center. Both of these are slated only for third-party apps from the Mac App Store. Many developers, though, have been maintaining non-Mac App Store versions of their apps. If this continues, such apps are going to lose feature parity between the App Store and non-App Store versions. Apple is not taking the Mac in iOS’s “all apps must come through the App Store” direction, but they’re certainly encouraging developers to go Mac App Store-only with iCloud features that are only available to Mac App Store apps (and, thus, which have gone through the App Store approval process).

My favorite Mountain Lion feature, though, is one that hardly even has a visible interface. Apple is calling it “Gatekeeper”. It’s a system whereby developers can sign up for free-of-charge Apple developer IDs which they can then use to cryptographically sign their applications. If an app is found to be malware, Apple can revoke that developer’s certificate, rendering the app (along with any others from the same developer) inert on any Mac where it’s been installed. In effect, it offers all the security benefits of the App Store, except for the process of approving apps by Apple. Users have three choices which type of apps can run on Mountain Lion:

  • Only those from the App Store
  • Only those from the App Store or which are signed by a developer ID
  • Any app, whether signed or unsigned

The default for this setting is, I say, exactly right: the one in the middle, disallowing only unsigned apps. This default setting benefits users by increasing practical security, and also benefits developers, preserving the freedom to ship whatever software they want for the Mac, with no approval process.

Call me nuts, but that’s one feature I hope will someday go in the other direction — from OS X to iOS.


  1. As soon as Schiller told me the name, I silently cursed myself for not having predicted it. Apple is a company of patterns. iPhone 3G, followed by a same-form-factor-but-faster 3GS; iPhone 4 followed by a same-form-factor-but-faster 4S. Leopard followed by Snow Leopard; so, of course: Lion followed by Mountain Lion. 

  2. On the Mac, Notification Center alerts are decidedly inspired by those of Growl, a longstanding open source project that is now sold for $2 in the Mac App Store. I hereby predict “Apple ripped off Growl” as the mini-scandal of the day. 

  3. There is a feature from the iPhone that I would love to see ported to the Mac, but which is not present in Mountain Lion: Siri. There’s either a strategic reason to keep Siri iPhone 4S-exclusive, or it’s a card Apple is holding to play at a later date. 

Mountain Lion Thursday, 16 February 2012 “We’re starting to do some things differently,” Phil Schiller said to me. We were sitting in a comfortable hotel suite in Manhattan just over a week ago. I’d been summoned a few days earlier by Apple PR with the offer of a private “product briefing”. I had no ...»See Ya

April 14, 2011

Google Tablet Concept

This page contains visual explorations of how a Chrome OS tablet UI might look in hardware. Some possibilites they explore include: 
  • Keyboard interaction with the screen: anchored, split, attached to focus.
  • Launchers as an overlay, providing touch or search as means to access web sites.
  • Contextual actions triggered via dwell.
  • Zooming UI for multiple tabs
  • Tabs presented along the side of the screen (see Side tabs)
  • Creating multiple browsers on screen using a launcher

UI Concepts
tablet_concept.mp4 Watch on Posterous

Video Concepts
Please see attached video at the bottom of this page.

February 26, 2011

Serge Gainsbourg Science-fiction Marie Mathématique 1er et 2e

Serge Gainsbourg chante Marie Mathématique

1er épisode héroïne

science-fiction

1965

Dim Dam Dom

Serge Gainsbourg

Sandie Shaw

http://photo.ina.fr/volumelr/ina_volume20101011/44286392_27368972/m_167623560_0.jpg

1er épisode de la bande dessinée de Jean Claude FOREST sur des poèmes d'André RUELLAN et une musique de Serge GAINSBOURG.Serge Gainsbourg chante off "Marie Mathématique".

(20298 KB)
Watch on posterous

Imaginée et dessinée par Jean-Claude Forrest, Marie Mathématique s'est animée le temps d'une mini-série diffusée dans l'émission Dim Dam Dom au milieu des années 60. Mis en musique et chantés par Serge Gainsbourg, les textes d'André Ruellan narraient alors les aventures sidérales de la petite sœur de Barbarella à qui la jeune France Gall prêta son rire. Découvrez les pérégrinations de Marie Math' l'aventureuse, première héroïne TV de science fiction.

http://photo.ina.fr/volumelr/ina_volume20101011/44286392_26678735/m_167625197_0.jpgMarie mathématique :

em épisode

Dim Dam Dom
25/11/1965

(19389 KB)
Watch on posterous

2ème épisode de la bande dessinée de Jean Claude FOREST : Marie Math et les bestioles.

http://photo.ina.fr/volumelr/ina_volume20101011/44286392_26678735/m_167625192_0.jpg
retrouver ce média sur ina.fr

Serge Gainsbourg sings science-fiction Marie Mathématique 1er et 2éme theme (Dim Dam Dom 1965)
Gainsbourg, Serge
Galard, Daisy de
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January 23, 2011

Alligator Agression Films via l'incroyable site nouveau Francais 'Agressions Animales'

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http://www.animalattack.info/wordpress/wp-content/gallery/jaquettes/incroyablealligatorcov.jpg

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http://blog.animalattack.info/images/80i2.jpg Alligator http://blog.animalattack.info/images/80i3.jpg

incroyablealligatorcov

(L'Incroyable alligator)

animalattack

http://blog.animalattack.info/images/aftermidnight03.jpghttp://blog.animalattack.info/images/alerte_a_paris07.jpg

1980

Aka : L'Incroyable alligator
Genre : Comment entretenir ses égouts…

USA, 1980, 89 min
De Lewis Teague
Avec Robert Forster, Robin Riker, Michael V. Gazzo, Dean Jagger, Sydney Lassick, etc.

http://blog.animalattack.info/images/argento/2cat.jpghttp://blog.animalattack.info/images/argento/icat.jpg


Lâchement abandonné dans des toilettes alors qu'il n'était encore qu'un bébé reptile, se nourrissant ensuite dans les égouts de restes d'animaux de laboratoire dopés aux hormones de croissances et autre trucs louches, notre alligator va devenir énorme et commencer à croquer les divers humains passant dans le coin, mais cela ne lui suffisant pas il va finir par monter à la surface…

alligator09

Si bon nombre de scénaristes et de producteurs, influencés par le succès en salles de Les Dents de la mer, y allaient chacun de sa relecture plus ou moins inventive, les requins tueurs demeuraient alors les stars incontestées des productions d'agressions animales. Pourtant, au milieu de tous ces squales, d'autres espèces allaient petit à petit tenter de s'imposer, comme des piranhas agressifs, un orque revanchard, un grizzly mangeur d'hommes et bien d'autres. Pourtant, nul trace ici de crocodiles.

Enfin, il y eut bien Le Crocodile de la mort de Tobe Hooper ou Le Dieu alligator de Sergio Martino, mais ces titres ne sont pas à proprement parler des films aux récits entièrement basés sur les animaux tueurs. Il faudra attendre les années 80 pour que les crocodiliens sortent de leurs tanières et envahissent nos écrans.
Au milieu de productions de qualité inégale comme Crocodile, Les Dents de la mort, l'improbable Crocodile Fury, l'excessif et amusant Killer Crocodile et bien d'autres, un film allait réellement se démarquer du lot : Alligator.

Réalisé par Lewis Teague, également à l'origine d'œuvres comme Cujo ou encore Cat's Eye, Alligator est à ce jour l'un des ersatz les plus réussis de Les Dents de la mer, tout comme le Piranha de Joe Dante, dont finalement il se rapproche le plus. En effet, tout comme son homologue, Lewis Teague aborde le sujet de manière amusante, se jouant des clichés du genre, sans oublier non plus qu'il tourne ici un film d'horreur. Malgré son budget assez limité, Alligator est une série b qui se trouve être aussi divertissante que généreuse.

alligator08


Bien entendu, il ne faut pas s'attendre ici à de grosses surprises en ce qui concerne le déroulement du film, dont le scénario à été écrit par John Sayles, déjà à l'origine de ceux de Hurlements, Piranha et son remake, Le Clan de la caverne des ours, etc., qui a pourtant su apporter quelques idées intéressantes à l'ensemble. Le fait de transposer l'histoire dans un cadre urbain par exemple, un choix qui va avoir un impact essentiel sur l'ambiance générale du film. La bestiole mangeuse d'hommes, ici un alligator, trouvera en effet bien plus de victimes à croquer dans une ville que dans une maison abandonnée isolée en pleine campagne… une manière aussi pour le réalisateur de rendre hommage à certaines productions et leurs énormes monstres ou bestioles gigantesques (Godzilla, Gorgo, La Chose surgit des ténèbres & co) qui font irruption dans un environnement citadin et détruisent tout sur leur passage.

Si le thème de la revanche de la nature sur l'homme est évidemment bien présent ici, comme dans la plupart des films de ce genre distillant ouvertement un message à caractère écologique, la nature intervient cette fois-ci non pas dans son environnement proche, mais bel et bien au milieu d'une ville, par le biais d'un animal apporté puis abandonné par l'homme.
La première partie du film, qui se déroule dans les égouts de la ville, est vraiment très réussie. L'ambiance sombre, glauque et humide, permet au réalisateur de mettre tranquillement en place son récit qui débute comme une enquête policière. Les fonctionnaires pataugent d'ailleurs un peu pour déterminer ce qui peut bien causer ces morts violentes apparues soudainement. Par contre une fois l'ennemi identifié, plus de raison d'entretenir le suspens, l'alligator géant peut s'afficher sous toutes ses coutures. Ce dernier va donc décider d'aller faire sa star en plein centre ville, abandonnant derrière lui les égouts puants. Pour un moment du moins. À partir de là, l'ensemble s'oriente nettement plus vers des affrontements très typés film d'action, dans lesquelles les forces de l'ordre et le monstre aux dents tranchantes s'en donnent à cœur joie.

alligator05


Les effets spéciaux, sans être exceptionnels, s'avèrent tout de même très efficaces. Ces derniers mixent prises de vues réelles, miniatures et un énorme alligator mécanique, avec lequel l'équipe en charge des trucages va connaître quelques problèmes. Ce qui n'empêche pas le réalisateur de nous montrer l'alligator dès qu'il peut se le permettre, et nous offre des scènes d'agressions rythmées et plutôt sanglantes. Et là encore, Lewis Teague n'hésite pas à ne pas trop se prendre au sérieux, comme nous le prouve l'excellente séquence durant laquelle l'alligator fait irruption durant une fête de mariage, ou encore celle du gamin dans la piscine, vicieuse à souhait. Lewis Teague nous offre au travers d'Alligator une très bonne série B, qui réunit tous les ingrédients clés d'un bon film d'agression animale et les intègre parfaitement à un environnement urbain assez dépaysant. Les quelques touches d'humour présentes tout au long de l'histoire font souvent mouche, et permettent de ne pas trop se focaliser sur le déroulement plutôt classique du récit. À cela s'ajoute un casting plutôt correct, composé d'un Robert Forster (Vigilante, Avalanche, Jackie Brown, Psycho…) en grande forme et de la très belle Robin Riker. Une réussite sympathique et divertissante en tout cas, qui n'a pas à rougir face aux mastodontes du genre.

 

http://blog.animalattack.info/images/80.jpg 

Alligator ( L'Incroyable alligator ) animalattack 1980 Aka : L'Incroyable alligator Genre : Comment entretenir ses égouts… USA, 1980, 89 min De Lewis Teague Avec Robert Forster , Robin Riker , Michael V. Gazzo , Dean Jagger , Sydney Lassick , etc. Lâchement abandonné dans des toilettes alors qu'il n ...... Read MORE » on Dogmeat

January 17, 2011

Van Der Graff + Ben Franklin Kite

Van Der Graff + Ben Franklin Kite

Van Der Graff + Ben Franklin Kite

Van Der Graff

Download now or watch on posterous
VDG_works.mov (1618 KB)

Ben Franklin Kite

Download now or watch on posterous
kite.mov (415 KB)

Read MORE » on DogmeatVan Der Graff + Ben Franklin Kite Van Der Graff + Ben Franklin Kite Van Der Graff Ben Franklin Kite Click image to play video ...

January 15, 2011

Declaration of the Rights of Netizens

Declaration of the Rights of Netizens

♥

 

W3C


http://memex.org/Licklider_portrait.JPG
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DO NOT UNDERESTIMATE THE POWER OF THE NET and NETIZENS

In recognition that the net represents a revolution in human
communications that was built by a cooperative non-commercial
process, the following Declaration of the Rights of the Netizen
is presented for Netizen comment.

As Netizens are those who take responsibility and care for the

Net, the following are proposed to be their rights:

 

o Universal access at no or low cost

o Freedom of Electronic Expression to promote the exchange of knowledge without fear of reprisal

o Uncensored Expression

o Access to Broad Distribution

o Universal and Equal access to knowledge and information

o Consideration of one's ideas on their merits

o No limitation to access to read, to post and to otherwise contribute

o Equal quality of connection

o Equal time of connection

o No Official Spokesperson

o Uphold the public grassroots purpose and participation

o Volunteer Contribution - no personal profit from the

contribution freely given by others

o Protection of the public purpose from those who would use it for their private and money making purposes

 

  1. Declaration of the Rights of Netizens
    1. DO NOT UNDERESTIMATE THE POWER OF THE NET and NETIZENS
    2. As Netizens are those who take responsibility and care for the
    3. Net, the following are proposed to be their rights:
      1. o Universal access at no or low cost
      2. o Freedom of Electronic Expression to promote the exchange of knowledge without fear of reprisal
      3. o Uncensored Expression
      4. o Access to Broad Distribution
      5. o Universal and Equal access to knowledge and information
      6. o Consideration of one's ideas on their merits
      7. o No limitation to access to read, to post and to otherwise contribute
      8. o Equal quality of connection
      9. o Equal time of connection
      10. o No Official Spokesperson
      11. o Uphold the public grassroots purpose and participation
      12. o Volunteer Contribution - no personal profit from the
      13. contribution freely given by others
      14. o Protection of the public purpose from those who would use it for their private and money making purposes
      15. The Net is not a Service, it is a Right. It is only valuable
      16. when it is collective and universal. Volunteer effort protects
      17. the intellectual and technological common-wealth that is being created.
  2. The Matrix: J.C.R. Licklider(1915-1990)
      1. J.C.R. Licklider may well be one of the most influential people in the history
    1. A Little History of the World Wide Web
    2. 1945 to 1995
  3. How It All Started
    1. Tim Berners-Lee
    2. W3C Tenth Anniversary
    3. 1 Dec 2004
    4. How It All Started
    5. W3C Team

 

The Net is not a Service, it is a Right. It is only valuable

when it is collective and universal. Volunteer effort protects

the intellectual and technological common-wealth that is being created.

Inspiration from: RFC 3 (1969), Thomas Paine, Declaration of
Independence (1776), Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the
Citizen (1789), NSF Acceptable Use Policy, Jean Jacques Rousseau,
and the current cry for democracy worldwide.

The Matrix: J.C.R. Licklider(1915-1990)

J.C.R. Licklider may well be one of the most influential people in the history of computer science. As Director of the Information Processing Techniques Office (IPTO), a division of the Pentagon's Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), Licklider from 1963-64 put in place the funding priorities which would lead to the Internet, and the invention of the "mouse," "windows" and "hypertext." Together these elements comprise the foundation of our networked society, and it owes much of its existence to the man who held the purse-strings, and also created a management culture where graduate students were left to run a multi-million dollar research project.


===============================



A Little History of the World Wide Web

1945 to 1995

1945

Vannevar Bush writes an article in Atlantic Monthly about a photo-electrical-mechanical device called a Memex, for memory extension, which could make and follow links between documents on microfiche

1960s

Doug Engelbart prototypes an "oNLine System" (NLS) which does hypertext browsing editing, email, and so on. He invents the mouse for this purpose. See the Bootstrap Institute library. Ted Nelson coins the word Hypertext in A File Structure for the Complex, the Changing, and the Indeterminate. 20th National Conference, New York, Association for Computing Machinery, 1965. See also: Literary Machines. Note: There used to be a link here to "Hypertext and Hypermedia: A Selected Bibliography" by Terence Harpold, but the site hosting the resource did not maintain the link. Andy van Dam and others build the Hypertext Editing System and FRESS in 1967.

1980

While consulting for CERN June-December of 1980, Tim Berners-Lee writes a notebook program, "Enquire-Within-Upon-Everything", which allows links to be made between arbitrary nodes. Each node had a title, a type, and a list of bidirectional typed links. "ENQUIRE" ran on Norsk Data machines under SINTRAN-III. See: Enquire user manual as scanned images or as HTML page(alt).


1989

March"Information Management: A Proposal" written by Tim BL and circulated for comments at CERN (TBL). Paper "HyperText and CERN" produced as background (text or WriteNow format).


1990

MaySame proposal recirculatedSeptemberMike Sendall, Tim's boss, Oks the purchase of a NeXT cube, and allows Tim to go ahead and write a global hypertext system.OctoberTim starts work on a hypertext GUI browser+editor using the NeXTStep development environment. He makes up "WorldWideWeb" as a name for the program. (See the first browser screenshot) "World Wide Web" as a name for the project (over Information Mesh, Mine of Information, and Information Mine).Project original proposal reformulated with encouragement from CN and ECP divisional management. Robert Cailliau (ECP) joins and is co-author of new version.NovemberInitial WorldWideWeb program development continues on the NeXT (TBL) . This was a "what you see is what you get" (wysiwyg) browser/editor with direct inline creation of links. The first web server was nxoc01.cern.ch, later called info.cern.ch, and the first web page http://nxoc01.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/TheProject.htmlleast recently modified web page we know of, last changed Tue, 13 Nov 1990 15:17:00 GMT (though the URI changed.)NovemberTechnical Student Nicola PellowPollermann (CN) helps get interface to CERNVM "FIND" index running. TBL gives a colloquium on hypertext in general.ChristmasLine mode browser and WorldWideWeb Unfortunately CERN no longer supports the historical site. Note from this era too, the (CN) joins and starts work on the line-mode browser. Bernd


1991

Februaryworkplan for the purposes of ECP division.26 February 1991Presentation of the project to the ECP/PT group.MarchLine mode browser (www) released to limited audience on "priam" vax, rs6000, sun4.MayWorkplan produced for CN/AS group17 MayPresentation to "C5" Committee. General release of WWW on central CERN machines.12 JuneCERN Computer Seminar on WWW.AugustFiles available on the net by FTP, posted on alt.hypertext (6, 16, 19th Aug), comp.sys.next (20th), comp.text.sgml and comp.mail.multi-media (22nd). Jean-Francois Groff joins the project.OctoberVMS/HELP and WAIS gateways installed. Mailing lists www-interest (now www-announce) and www-talk@info.cern.ch (see archive)Hypertext'91 in San Antonio, Texas (US). W3 browser installed on VM/CMS. CERN computer newsletter announces W3 to the HEP world. Dec 12: Paul Kunz installs first Web server outside of Europe, at SLAC.


1992

15 JanuaryLine mode browser release 1.1 available by anonymous FTP (see news). Presentation to AIHEP'92 at La Londe (FR).12 FebruaryLine mode v 1.2 annouced on alt.hypertext, comp.infosystems, comp.mail.multi-media, cern.sting, comp.archives.admin, and mailing lists.April29th April: Release of Finnish "Erwise" GUI client for X mentioned in review by TimBL.MayPei Wei's "Viola" GUI browser for X test version dated May 15. (See review by TimBL) At CERN, Presentation and demo at JENC3, Innsbruck (AT). Technical Student Carl Barker (ECP) joins the project.JunePresentation and demo at HEPVM (Lyon). People at FNAL (Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (US)), NIKHEF (Nationaal Instituut voor Kern- en Hoge Energie Fysika, (NL)), DESY (Deutsches Elektronen Synchrotron, Hamburg, (DE)) join with WWW servers.JulyDistribution of WWW through CernLib, including Viola. WWW library code ported to DECnet. Report to the Advisory Board on Computing.AugustIntroduction of CVS for code management at CERN.SeptemberPlenary session demonstration to the HEP community at CHEP'92 in Annecy (FR).NovemberJump back in time to a snapshot of the WWW Project Page as of 3 Nov 1992 and the WWW project web of the time, including the list of all 26 resoanably reliable servers, NCSA's having just been added, but no sign of Mosaic.


1993

JanuaryBy now, Midas (Tony Johnson, SLAC), Erwise (HUT), and Viola (Pei Wei, O'Reilly Associates) browsers are available for X; CERN Mac browser (ECP) released as alpha. Around 50 known HTTP servers.FebruaryNCSA release first alpha version of Marc Andreessen's "Mosaic for X". Computing seminar at CERN. The University of Minnesota announced that they would begin to charge licensing fees for Gopher's use, which caused many volunteers and employees to stop using it and switch to WWW.MarchWWW (Port 80 HTTP) traffic measures 0.1% of NSF backbone traffic. WWW presented at Online Publishing 93, Pittsburgh. The Acceptable Use Policy prohibiting commercial use of the Internet re-interpreted., so that it becomes becomes allowed.AprilApril 30: Date on the declaration by CERN's directors that WWW technology would be freely usable by anyone, with no fees being payable to CERN. A milestone document.JulyAri Luotonen (ECP) joins the project at CERN. He implements access authorisation, proceeds to re-write the CERN httpd server.July 28-30O'Reilly hosts first WWW Wizards Workshop in Cambridge Mass (US).SeptemberWWW (Port 80 http) traffic measures 1% of NSF backbone traffic. NCSA releases working versions of Mosaic browser for all common platforms: X, PC/Windows and Macintosh. September 6-10: On a bus at a seminar Information at Newcastle University, MIT's Prof. David Gifford suggests Tim BL contact Michael Dertouzos of MIT/LCS as a possible consortium host site.OctoberOver 200 known HTTP servers. The European Commission, the Fraunhofer Gesellschaft and CERN start the first Web-based project of the European Union (DG XIII): WISE, using the Web for dissemination of technological information to Europe's less favoured regions.DecemberWWW receives IMA award. John Markov writes a page and a half on WWW and Mosaic in "The New York Times" (US) business section. "The Guardian" (UK) publishes a page on WWW, "The Economist" (UK) analyses the Internet and WWW. Robert Cailliau gets go-ahead from CERN management to organise the First International WWW Conference at CERN.


1994

JanuaryO'Reilly, Spry, etc announce "Internet in a box" product to bring the Web into homes.MarchMarc Andreessen and colleagues leave NCSA to form "Mosaic Communications Corp" (later Netscape).May 25-27First International WWW Conference, CERN, Geneva. Heavily oversubscribed (800 apply, 400 allowed in): the "Woodstock of the Web". VRML is conceived here. TBL's closing keynote hints at upcoming organization. (Some of Tim's slides on Semantic Web)JuneM. Bangemann report on European Commission Information Superhighway plan. Over 1500 registered servers. Load on the first Web server (info.cern.ch) 1000 times what it has been 3 years earlier. Over June '91 to June 94, steadJulyMIT/CERN agreement to start W3 Organisation is announced by Bangemann in Boston. Press release. AP wire. Reports in Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe etc.AugustFounding of the IW3C2: the International WWW Conference Committee, in Boston, by NCSA and CERN.SeptemberThe European Commission and CERN propose the WebCore project for development of the Web core technology in Europe.1 OctoberWorld Wide Web Consortium founded.OctoberSecond International WWW Conference: "Mosaic and the Web", Chicago. Also heavily oversubscribed: 2000 apply, 1300 allowed in.14 DecemberFirst W3 ConsortiumMeeting at M.I.T. in Cambridge (USA).15 DecemberFirst meeting with European Industry and the European Consortium branch, at the European Commission, Brussels.16 DecemberCERN Council approves unanimously the construction of the LHC (Large Hadron Collider) accelerator, CERN's next machine and competitor to the US' already defunct SSC (Superconducting Supercollider). Stringent budget conditions are however imposed. CERN thus decides not to continue WWW development, and in concertation with the European Commission and INRIA (the Institut National pour la Recherche en Informatique et Automatique, FR) transfers the WebCore project to INRIA.


1995

Februarythe Web is the main reason for the theme of the G7 meeting hosted by the European Commission in the European Parliament buildings in Brussels (BE).MarchCERN holds a two-day seminar for the European Media (press, radio, TV), attended by 250 reporters, to show WWW. It is demonstrated on 60 machines, with 30 pupils from the local International High School helping the reporters "surf the Web".AprilThird International WWW Conference: "Tools and Applications", hosted by the Fraunhofer Gesellschaft, in Darmstadt (DE)JuneFounding of the Web Society in Graz (AT), by the Technical University of Graz (home of Hyper-G), CERN, the University of Minnesota (home of Gopher) and INRIA.

How It All Started

Tim Berners-Lee

W3C Tenth Anniversary

1 Dec 2004

How It All Started

Tim Berners-Lee photo

Tim Berners-Lee Director, World Wide Web Consortium

1974: Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn publish "A Protocol for Packet Network Interconnection", which specified in detail the design of a Transmission Control Protocol (TCP).

Vint Cerf

End 1990: Development begins for first browser (called "WorldWideWeb"), editor, server, and line-mode browser. Culminates in first Web client-server communication over Internet in December 1990.

Screenshot from first browser

Dec: Hypertext '91 Conference in San Antonio, Texas (USA). TBL paper on Web only accepted as poster session.

TimBL's poster at Hypertext 91

Jun: TimBL visits Xerox, hosted by Larry Masinter.

Larry Masinter
TimBL visits MIT/LCS hosted by Karen Sollins.

Karen Sollins

Mar: NCSA releases first alpha version of Mosaic for X Windows.

Marc Andreesson
Chris Wilson

W3C publishes first W3C Recommendation for HTML - HTML 3.2.
Dave Raggett

W3C Team

W3C Team photo, November 2001, Courmettes, France

W3C Team
Photo courtesy of Karl Dubost.

 

 

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