As was already said, history has been written, and the internet's roots are clearly understood. I think the 2000s will be known as the beginning of the internet shopping age though.
Not much has really changed internet-wise in the 2000s other than greater bandwidth to support all the crap that people tried and failed with in the dial up era.
Not much has really changed internet-wise in the 2000s other than greater bandwidth to support all the crap that people tried and failed with in the dial up era.
Only because of bandwidth.Youtube
Netflix
:\
History is already written. Read up on ARPANET and DARPANET. Late 70's or early 80's?
Only because of bandwidth.
Messaging systems more sophisticated than twitter were established in the 90s. Netflix and youtube had to wait for bandwidth. I don't really see anything innovative about Facebook other than maybe the extent of their data mining.
I graduated from college in 1971, and I remember this cool thing "email" while I was still in college. And CompuServe was already in existence then too. Pong started while I was in grad school. So I would say early 70's. It was a great time to play with computers. I was really geeky back then.History is already written. Read up on ARPANET and DARPANET. Late 70's or early 80's?
Note the topic of this thread. My point is that the release of Mosaic was the beginning of what most people think of as the internet. Of course there has been innovation in the past ten years but it has been evolutionary development, not revolution.So you're saying that none of those sites had any impact on how the Internet has developed over the past decade? More resources certainly does make more things possible on the Internet, but that doesn't mean that those ideas don't deserve merit on their own.
How about BitTorrent as a protocol? Wikileaks distributes their content via torrents, and Wikileaks certainly is doing things right now that will change the Internet forever.
I was using the Internet to chat with people, use a bulletin board, etc., in 1985. You seem to be off by quite a bit.
I wasn't even born at that time, but the Tandy 2000 I had with the modem still worked on many dial-up message boards in early 1997. I also had a huge phone bill.
Weren't MUDS around back then too?
