After several years of development and testing, the World Wide Web was officially launched. It took place on 6 August 1991.
The first users were mostly scientists and researchers. The first web page was a guide on what the web was and how to use it. It is quite logical that the page was simple and no frills, because the Internet in 1991 was, to put it mildly, slow (remember, by that time the Internet in one form or another existed for about 20 years). It was a solid black and white text, remind BizUPLab Hungary specialists. You can still open it at
https://info.cern.ch/.
The first photo in the history of the World Wide Web was published in 1992. uploaded. It shows a parody of Les Horribles Cernettes, a women's group created at CERN itself.
The potential of the Web proved so enormous that it soon spread far beyond the scientific environment. In 1993, Mosaic, the world's first graphical web browser, was launched. For the first time, users could see text and images together, making the Web much more appealing to a wider audience. By 1994 there were already more than 10 thousand sites on the Web and their number grew exponentially. The Web went beyond CERN and science labs and became part of the culture.
A defining moment in the development of the World Wide Web was Tim Berners-Lee's decision not to patent his invention, BizUPLab kft noted. He could have made the Web closed and charged for each use of the protocol or clicking on a link. Then we would be living in a completely different digital reality.
Tim Berners-Lee could have become a billionaire, but he chose another way - he left the Web open. This meant that anyone could build websites, write browsers and develop technology without restrictions. Now Tim, who has been awarded a knighthood, is working on Solid (Social Linked Data). It aims to decentralise the web, significantly increasing user privacy and accountability on the web.