Sharing information used to be a digital nightmare. Learn how Tim Berners-Lee turned a vague proposal into the global network we use today.

The Web is for everyone, but it’s only for everyone if we fight to keep it that way. It’s a powerful reminder that technology isn't just something that happens to us—it’s something we shape with our choices.
Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско
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Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско

Lena: You know, Miles, I was trying to explain the difference between the Internet and the Web to my niece yesterday, and I realized I usually just use them as synonyms. But they aren’t the same thing at all, are they?
Miles: Not even close! Think of the Internet as the actual road system—the cables and hardware—while the Web is the collection of cars and signs we use to get around. And what’s wild is that before the Web, the Internet was this "digital Tower of Babel." If you were a scientist at CERN in the late 80s, you had to learn a different system for every single computer just to share a research paper.
Lena: That sounds like a nightmare for collaboration. It’s hard to imagine that over 5.5 billion people are connected today because one guy at a physics lab wanted to fix his filing system.
Miles: Exactly. Tim Berners-Lee just wanted to stop the information chaos. His boss even called his initial 1989 proposal "vague but exciting."
Lena: I love that. "Vague but exciting" basically changed the world. Let’s dive into how he turned that vague idea into the very first website.