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Network Designer: Tim Berners Lee's Summary (New Horizon College English Extensive Reading Course 3)
"The British changed the world" —— Tim John Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web

Get up in the morning, make a cup of coffee, sit in front of the computer and open the browser to watch the news-this is the daily life of many people. When we are intoxicated with the free jumping between links, have we ever wondered: Who came up with this ingenious way of information release? While we quickly put this "boring" problem behind us, this respectable inventor continues to work hard for the future of WWW. However, he is not alone, but leads the whole W3C.

Photo: Bernerslee.jpg.

He is Tim John Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web.

Tim 1955 is at the European Institute for Particle Physics in London, England. When he was studying at Queen's College, Oxford University, he saved a computer with an M6800 processor and an old TV. 1976 After graduation, he was employed by plessy Telecom Co., Ltd. and D.G Nash Co., Ltd., where Tim wrote a multitasking operating system.

CERN (European Particle Physics Laboratory, European Institute of Quantum Physics) is located in Geneva, Switzerland. There, out of work needs, Tim wrote a tool that has never been released-inquire-we have never seen it. It is the prototype of the World Wide Web. However, after that, Tim went to John Poole's Image Computer System Co., Ltd. to develop real-time control firmware. 1984 when Tim got a scholarship and returned to CERN to study the real-time system, he gradually found that the internal communication mechanism of CERN had the disadvantages of information leakage. The first public document about the concept of WWW that we can find today is a proposal written by Tim to CERN in March 1989: information management: a proposal. In this document, Tim put forward the idea of using hypertext to build a linked information system. Similarly, we can also see the "browser" from the document.

Image:Firstguibrowser.jpg

Figure 2 The earliest browser

At this time, Tim has begun to develop the first real Web server-NeXTStep system based on Enquire-and any form of expression should be mesh, not tree, except domain name system.

Computer scientists have an unshirkable responsibility in both technology and morality.

Maybe we can benefit a lot from these arguments, or simply think that they are nonsense. In any case, Tim Berners-Li Faming created the World Wide Web and continues to contribute to it. That's enough.