The world wide web went public 25 years ago today

It has changed the lives of millions of people around the world - and today marks 25 years since the first world wide web page was published publicly.

The world wide web went public  25 years ago today

It has changed the lives of millions of people around the world - and today marks 25 years since the first world wide web page was published publicly.

It was British computer scientist Tim Berners-Lee who gave birth to the idea while working at a Swiss physics laboratory in 1989.

The first server was launched publicly, two years later, on August 6, 1991.

Berners-Lee originally developed the web to meet the demand for information-sharing between physicists in universities and institutes around the world.

Other information retrieval systems which used the internet - such as WAIS and Gopher - were available at the time, but the web's simplicity, along with the fact that the technology was made royalty-free in 1993, led to its rapid adoption and development.

By late 1993, there were more than 500 known web servers, and the world wide web accounted for 1% of internet traffic.

Two decades later, there were an estimated 630 million websites online.

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