The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The Fifth Estate Research Project
This site last updated April 14, 1996

Internet 101


[Plymptoon]

Click on the above graphic to see an excellent example of a commercial web page at http://found.cs.nyu.edu/plympton/ The graphic has been reproduced from Bill Plympton's web-site only for academic discussion, evaluation, research and complies with the copyright law of the United States as defined and stipulated under Title 17 U. S. Code.



The Concept of Hypertext

What is hypertext?

Ted H. Nelson

Ted H. Nelson, (left) is the inventor of many common ideas related to hypertext, including the words "hypertext" and "hypermedia." Nelson defined hypertext as "a body of written or pictorial material interconnected in [such] a complex way that it could not be conveniently represented on paper." The principle of hypertext is to associate information through "links" into a coherent organization. Nelson has been designing computer text systems on his own since 1960, and may thus be considered one of the inventors of word processing. Nelson book Literary Machines 91.1 reports on the Xanadu Hypertext System, a scheme for instantaneous publishing and archiving with broad implications designed for "children, researcher and heads of state."


Linking computers: The Internet



World Wide Web


  • CERN

    The birthplace of the Web:

  • Tim Berners-Lee, creator of the World Wide Web

    Tim Berners-Lee

    http://www.decus.org/decus/people/berners-lee.html

  • Tim Berners-Lee's vita: http://www.infobahn.com.tw/web/berners.html

    The development of the World Wide Web was begun in 1989 by Tim Berners-Lee and his colleagues at CERN, an international scientific organization based in Geneva, Switzerland. They created a protocol, HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP), which standardized communication between servers and clients. Their text-based Web browser was made available for general release in January 1992.


    Back: Frank Yellin, Chuck McManis, Chris Warth, Herb Jellinek, Tim Lindholm, Arthur van Hoff, Michele Huff, Jonathan Payne. Center: Richard Tuck, Patrick Chan, Erik Gilbert, Eugene Kuerner, Mark Scott Johnson. Front: Lisa Friendly, Sami Shaio, Bob Weisblatt, James Gosling, Kim Polese, Kathy Walrath. Not Shown: Elizabeth Del Ben, Jim Graham, Ian Halifax, Mark Opperman, Steve Zellers, Headley Williamson, Carla Schroer, Tom Ball, Pavani Diwanji, David Connelly, Mary Campione.


  • Web TV

    See the Principal Figures in the Development of the Internet and the World Wide Web for a complete list of all the pioneers.



    The buttons provide link for downloading video clips from Visualization Study of the NSFNET by Donna Cox and Robert Patterson (NCSA).


    QT Movie: Visualization Study of the NSFNET
    by Cox, Donna; Patterson, Robert; NCSA


    MPEG Movie Visualization Study of the NSFNET
    by Cox, Donna; Patterson, Robert; NCSA



    This web page is maintained by and for students of Electronic Information Sources, as well as for any other interested person. If you have questions or comments, please email to:Deb Aikat

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    QT Movie: Visualization Study of the NSFNET
    by Cox, Donna; Patterson, Robert; NCSA


    MPEG Movie Visualization Study of the NSFNET
    by Cox, Donna; Patterson, Robert; NCSA



    This web page is maintained by and for students of Electronic Information Sources, as well as for any other interested person. If you have questions or comments, please email to:Deb Aikat