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Weaving the Web: The Original Design and Ultimate Destiny of the World Wide Web
A Favourite of 1, Read by 2, Owned by 3, Reviewed by 0, | Quotes 2
Amazon Description:
If you can read this review (and voice your opinion about his book on Amazon.com), you have Tim Berners-Lee to thank. When you've read his no-nonsense account of how he invented the World Wide Web, you'll want to thank him again, for the sheer coolness of his ideas. One day in 1980, Berners-Lee, an Oxford-trained computer consultant, got a random thought: "Suppose all the information stored on computers everywhere were linked?" So he created a system to give every "page" on a computer a standard address (now called a URL, or Universal Resource Locator), accessible via the HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP), formatted with the HyperText Markup Language (HTML), and visible with the first browser, which did the trick of linking us all up.

He may be the most self-effacing genius of the computer age, and his egalitarian mind is evident in the names he rejected for his invention: "I thought of Mine of Information, or MOI, but moi in French means 'me,' and that was too egocentric.... The Information Mine (TIM) was even more egocentric!" Also, a mine is a passive repository; the Web is something that grows inexorably from everyone's contributions. Berners-Lee fully credits the colorful characters who helped him get the bobsled of progress going--one colleague times his haircuts to match the solstices--but he's stubbornly independent-minded. His quest is to make the Web "a place where the whim of a human being and the reasoning of a machine coexist in an ideal, powerful mixture."

Hard-core tech types may wish Berners-Lee had gone into deeper detail about the road ahead: the "boon and threat" of XML, free vs. commercial software, VRML 3-D imaging, and such. But he wants everyone in on the debate, so he wrote a brisk book that virtually anyone can understand. --Tim Appelo



Added on: Friday, July 07 2006
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Recent Quotes:
Tim Berners-Lee : Gaia Child
Mon Jul 31 08:49:49 UTC 2006
Source: Weaving the Web: The Original Design and Ultimate Destiny of the World Wide Web, Page: 1
Contributed by: ~C4Chaos.
Tim Berners-Lee said

When I first began tinkering with a software program that eventually gave rise to the idea of the World Wide Web, I named it Enquire, short for Enquire Within upon Everything, a musty old book of Victorian advice I noticed as a child in my parent's house outside London. With its title suggestive of magic, the book served as a portal to a world of information, everything from how to remove clothing stains to tips on investing money. Not a perfect analogy for the Web, but a primitive starting point.

Tim Berners-Lee : Gaia Child
Mon Jul 31 08:47:44 UTC 2006
Source: Weaving the Web: The Original Design and Ultimate Destiny of the World Wide Web, Page: 5
Contributed by: ~C4Chaos.
Tim Berners-Lee said

Computers might not find the solutions to our problems, but they would be able to do the bulk of the legwork required, assist our human minds in intuitively finding ways through the maze.



This book club has 5 members
~C4Chaos : (hyper)linker
(hyper)linker
David : BodhiGeek
BodhiGeek
JP : Quantum Alchemist
JP
Quantum Alchemist
Morgaine : Integration Artist
Integration Artist
Priyanca Shyam : All-natural capitalist
All-natural capitalist


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