It was 20 years ago today that Tim Berners-Lee (left) of CERN built the world’s first website. Here’s how Berners-Lee described the project at the time of its launch:
The WWW project merges the techniques of information retrieval and hypertext to make an easy but powerful global information system.
The project started with the philosophy that much academic information should be freely available to anyone. It aims to allow information sharing within internationally dispersed teams, and the dissemination of information by support groups.
The web grew rapidly and transformed cultures around it. And it’s just getting started. Imagine what the web — or whatever grows out of it — will be like twenty years from now. One possibility is a concept called the Semantic Web:
The Semantic Web will see metadata, designed to be read by machines rather than humans, become a more important part of the online experience. Tim Berners-Lee coined this term, describing it as “A web of data that can be processed directly and indirectly by machines,” – a ‘giant global graph’ of linked data which will allow apps to automatically create new meaning from all the information out there.
The future is going to be awesome.
Link -via Gizmodo | Photo by Flickr user campuspartymexico used under Creative Commons license
The following is a reprint from Uncle
John's Bathroom Reader Plunges Into the Universe. A while ago, we
posted "10
Things That Science Fiction Got Wrong" but believe it or not,
there are many things that sci-fi got right as well. From communication
satellites to robotic pets, here are a few of the things that science
fiction nailed before they happened.
Science fiction is supposed to predict future events - and to be entirely
honest, some of us are getting impatient waiting for our own rocket cars
to the Moon, which we understood we'd have by now. Be that as it may,
here are some things dreamed up by science fiction writers that are part
of our real world.
1. Moon Visits Lots
of science fiction writers had this one covered, but the question is:
Who got closest to the real thing first?
The best candidate is good ol' Jules
Verne2. Robots (and Robot Pets!) "Robot"
comes from the Czech word robota, which means "drudgery";
robotnik is a word for "serf." Since today's robots
are typically found in industrial setting doing mindlessly repetitive
work, this is a strangely appropriate term.
The word "robot" was popularized in Karel Capek's 1920 play
R.U.R. Robot
pets, like the Sony Aibo robot dog, have also been a staple of science
fiction. The most famous example of this is probably Do
Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?3. Cloning and Genetic Engineering Humans
haven't been cloned yet (as far as we know), but sheep, cats, cow, and
rabbits have. And humans have used genetic engineering and gene therapy
to improve their bodies. In June 2002, for example, it was announced that
genetically modified cells helped to create functioning immune systems
in two "bubble boys" who were born without immune systems of
their own.
The most famous work of science fiction with cloning and genetic engineering
is also one of the earliest: 1932's Brave New World4. The Internet Okay,
now, who wants to be blamed for this one? There are so many culprits.
Author William Gibson is credited with coining the term "cyberspace"
in his 1981 short story "Burning Chrome," and kick-started the
whole media fascination with computers and the Internet and all that geekiness
with his seminal 1984 novel Neuromancer5. The World Wide Web ...
which, despite the propaganda of the 1990s, is not the whole Internet,
just a subsection of it - was created in 1991 by Tim Berners-Lee and hit
the big time with the creation of the Mosaic Web browser in 1993.
The dynamic of the Net had been described before then. In 1990's Earth6. Webcams?Imagined (sort of) by every single science fiction author who ever wrote about a picture phone. There are too many of those to bother counting.7. Waterbeds Yes,
waterbeds. Robert Heinlein used them in 1961's Stranger
in a Strange Land8. Communications SatellitesScience fiction master Arthur C. Clarke is famous for having thought of these in 1945.9. Space Tourists When
millionaire Dennis Tito put down his $20 million and hitched a ride into
space with the Russians, he became the first tourist in space.
The idea of punting rich folks beyond the stratosphere is not new; in
1962's A
Fall of Moondust10. Miniaturized Surgery Doctors
these days use miniaturized tools to perform surgery that's less invasive
and more precise than traditional surgery, a practice suggested by Isaac
Asimov in his 1966 novel, Fantastic
Voyage |
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The article above is reprinted with permission
from Uncle
John's Bathroom Reader Plunges Into the Universe.
Since 1988, the Bathroom Reader Institute had published a series of popular
books containing irresistible bits of trivia and obscure
yet fascinating facts.
If you like Neatorama, you'll love the Bathroom
Reader Institute's books - go ahead and check 'em out!
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