World Wide Web (WWW), byname
The Web, the leading
information retrieval service of the
Internet (
q.v.;
the worldwide computer network). The Web gives users access to a vast
array of documents that are connected to each other by means of
hypertext or
hypermedia links—
i.e., hyperlinks,
electronic connections that link related pieces of information in order
to allow a user easy access to them. Hypertext allows the user to
select a word from text and and thereby access other documents that
contain additional information pertaining to that word; hypermedia
documents feature links to images, sounds, animations, and movies. The
Web operates within the Internet’s basic
client-server format;
servers
are computer programs that store and transmit documents to other
computers on the network when asked to, while clients are programs that
request documents from a server as the user asks for them. Browser
software allows users to view the retrieved documents.
A hypertext document with its corresponding text and hyperlinks is written in
HyperText Markup Language (HTML) and is assigned an online address called a
Uniform Resource Locator (URL).
The development of the World Wide Web was begun in 1989 by
Tim Berners-Lee and his colleagues at
CERN, an international scientific organization based in Geneva, Switz. They created a
protocol,
HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP), which standardized
communication between servers and clients. Their text-based
Web browser was made available for general release in January 1992.
The World Wide
Web gained rapid acceptance with the creation of a Web browser called
Mosaic, which was developed in the United States by
Marc Andreessen and others at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the
University of Illinois
and was released in September 1993. Mosaic allowed people using the Web
to use the same sort of “point-and-click” graphical manipulations that
had been available in personal computers for some years. In April 1994
Andreessen cofounded
Netscape Communications Corporation, whose
Netscape Navigator
became the dominant Web browser soon after its release in December
1994. By the mid-1990s the World Wide Web had millions of active users.
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