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World
Wide Web Consortium (www.w3.org)

Timothy
Berners-Lee is the most amazing person that was ever born
to this world. His vision is truly amazing and if you ever
have some spare time, read his book "Weaving The Web".
This man truly is a blessing when it comes to the internet
and the markup languages that were created.
Wouldn't it be
cool to jump into this mind and see how it really thinks,
it has to be incredible. Here is some history on Timothy Berners-Lee
and if you really want to understand the internet, its' markup
language and its' vision, then read this. I absolutely adore
this man! I think that his vision and his accomplishments
are amazing and from a chic's point of view, hmmm, I better
not go there, but just think of the slogan "things that
make you go hmmmmmm!"
Tim Berners-Lee,
the inventor of the World Wide Web and Director of the World
Wide Web Consortium (W3C) was dubbed a Knight Commander, Order
of the British Empire (KBE) by Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth
II during an Investiture in London on Friday, 16 July 2004.
The rank of Knight Commander is the second most senior rank
of the Order of the British Empire, one of the Orders of Chivalry.
Sir Timothy Berners-Lee,
KBE, a British citizen who lives in the United States, was
knighted in recognition for his "services to the global
development of the Internet" through his invention of
the World Wide Web, a system to organize, link, and browse
Internet pages.
He coined the name
"World Wide Web," wrote the first World Wide Web
server, "http," and the first client program (a
browser and editor), "WorldWideWeb," in October
1990. He wrote the first version of the document formatting
language with the capability for hypertext links, known as
HTML (HyperText Markup Language). His initial specifications
for URIs, HTTP, and HTML were refined and discussed in larger
circles as Web technology spread.
"The Web must
remain a universal medium, open to all and not biasing the
information it conveys. As the technology becomes ever more
powerful and available, using more kinds of devices, I hope
we learn how to use it as a medium for working together, and
resolving misunderstandings on every scale."
Sir Timothy's commitment
to universal access and open standards for the Web was a driving
force behind his founding of the World Wide Web Consortium
(W3C) in 1994 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT) Laboratory for Computer Science (LCS), together with
support from the late Michael Dertouzos, then LCS director.
Today, the W3C
is known as the international organization that establishes
technical standards for Web infrastructure and applications.
W3C is nearly 400 Member organizations worldwide with technical
teams at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Computer
Science Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (MIT CSAIL) in
the US, the European Research Consortium for Informatics and
Mathematics (ERCIM) in France, and Keio University in Japan.
The goal of W3C
and its Members is to lead the Web to its full potential by
developing standard technologies (specifications, guidelines,
software and tools) that will create a forum for information,
commerce, inspiration, independent thought and collective
understanding.
While working in
1980 as a consultant software engineer at CERN, the European
Particle Physics Laboratory in Geneva, Switzerland, Sir Timothy
wrote his own private program for storing information using
the kind of random associations the brain makes. The "Enquire"
program, which was never published, formed the conceptual
basis for his future development of the Web.
Subsequently he
proposed a global hypertext project at CERN in 1989, and by
December 1990, the program "WorldWideWeb" became
the first successful demonstration of Web clients and servers
working over the Internet. All of his code was made available
free on the Internet at large in the summer of 1991.
A London native,
Sir Timothy graduated with a degree in physics from Queen's
College at Oxford University, England in 1976. While there
he built his first computer with a soldering iron, TTL gates,
an M6800 processor and an old television. He has since been
awarded several honorary doctorates from universities around
the world, including his alma mater in 2001. At MIT, he is
the holder of the 3Com Founders Chair, and holds the position
of Senior Research Scientist at CSAIL.
Cited by Time magazine
as one of the 100 greatest minds of the twentieth century,
Sir Timothy is a Distinguished Fellow of the British Computer
Society, an Honorary Fellow of the Institution of Electrical
Engineers, and a member of the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences. He received a MacArthur Fellowship in 1998, was
named a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2001, and received
the Japan Prize in 2002.
In June 2004, Sir
Timothy received the inaugural Millennium Technology Prize
in Helsinki, Finland. The honor is bestowed by the Finnish
Technology Award Foundation as an international acknowledgement
for "an outstanding innovation that directly promotes
people's quality of life, is based on humane values, and encourages
sustainable economic development." In choosing Sir Timothy,
the Finnish prize committee acknowledged the importance of
his decision not to commercialize or patent the technologies
he developed.
Sir Timothy authored
the book "Weaving The Web" (HarperCollins, 1999)
which describes the Web's birth and evolution
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