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The history of Web pages on the 25th anniversary of the birth of the World Wide Web

05/11/2014
XPinyol

The first Web pages were published in California, United States. Now, commemorating the 25th anniversary of the birth of the World Wide Web, Stanford University has made the first pages accessible to view: Stanford Wayback.

The first example corresponds to the SLAC particle accelerator website in California, which was created in 1991.

Those in charge of working on that first website saved the files and that is why today they can show what the origins of the Web were like.

Tim Berners-Lee was at CERN, the European particle physics laboratory, when in 1989 he developed the idea of ​​the World Wide Web: a global network of hyperlinked, navigable documents containing multimedia content.

The publication coincides with the celebration of the 25th anniversary of the Internet. In the future, more web archives will be uploaded, in phases, to Stanford Wayback.

Other initiatives we know of:

1.- Spanish Web Archive from the National Library

2.- Padicat, the Web Archive of Catalonia

3.-Ondare net the Basque Digital Heritage Archive.

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