March 2009: 20 years of the web
Twenty years ago this month, something happened at CERN that would change the world forever: Tim Berners-Lee handed a document to his supervisor Mike Sendall entitled "Information Management : a Proposal". "Vague, but exciting" is how Mike described it, and he gave Tim the nod to take his proposal forward. The following year, the World Wide Web was born. This week, it's a pleasure and an honour for us to welcome the Web's inventor back to CERN to mark this special anniversary at the place the Web was born.
The celebration
A celebration was held in the Globe on the afternoon of the 13th March to bring together those who created the web at CERN. The event included short presentations from Web veterans, a keynote speech from Tim Berners-Lee, a demonstration of the original browser on the NeXT computer, and a series of presentations from people that Tim believes are doing exciting things with the Web today.
- Press release: CERN celebrates 20th anniversary of World Wide Web
- Watch the video of the celebrations on the CERN Document Server (CDS) - includes download and alternate player options.
Where the web was born
More information on the beginnings of the web at CERN can be found in the following sites: