Chm Blog Curatorial Insights , Internet History Program

Happy 25th Birthday to the Public Web!

By Marc Weber | August 05, 2016

Early web browsers

This month marks 25 years since the Web’s public announcement in several online forums and the release of the WWW code library, libWWW. The library was a kind of “roll your own” tool kit that gave volunteer programmers the pieces they needed to write their own Web browsers and servers. Their efforts—over half a dozen browsers within 18 months—saved the poorly-funded Web project and kicked off the Web development community.

LibWWW was written by main Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee and his technical assistant Jean-François Groff. The browsers it enabled included the Viola browser by Pei Wei, the Midas browser by Tony Johnson, and, later, the famous Mosaic browser by Marc Andreessen and Eric Bina at NCSA. Mosaic was the basis for Netscape Navigator, Internet Explorer, and Firefox.

Other important Web anniversaries are the first Web proposal (March 1989) and the first browser, server, and Web site (December 1990).

To mark 25 years of the public Web, we are releasing, for the first time, this oral history with Jean-François Groff.

For more about the history of the World Wide Web, please see this video from our permanent Revolution exhibition online:

Further Reading

Internet History Program

CHM’s Internet History Program preserves materials on the history of computer communication including the Web, the Internet, mobile connectivity, and the ideas that led up to them. Launched in 2009 by Curatorial Director Marc Weber, this is one of the first programs of its kind at a major historical institution. The scope includes both technical history and impact on society. You can help the program identify materials world wide in need of preservation including software, screenshots, and oral histories.

About The Author

Marc is the curatorial director of CHM’s Internet History Program and developed the Web, Networking, and Mobile galleries of the Museum's permanent exhibit. He pioneered Web history as a topic starting in 1995, with crucial help from the Web's main inventor Sir Tim Berners Lee and other pioneers. He co-founded two of the first organizations in the field. He presents and consults to companies, journalists, filmmakers, patent firms, and museums on the history of the online world.

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