The World Wide Web: HTTP
In the 1980s the Internet was used by researchers, academics and university students to login to remote hosts, to transfer files from local hosts to remote hosts and vice versa, to receive and send news, and to receive and send electronic mail. Although these applications were (and continue to be) extremely useful, the Internet was essentially unknown outside the academic and research communities. Then in early 1990s the Internet's killer application arrived on the scene -- the World Wide Web. The Web is the Internet application that caught the general public's eye. It is dramatically changing how people interact inside and outside their work environments. It has spawned thousands
of start up companies. It has elevated the Internet from just one of many data networks (including online networks such as Prodigy, America On Line and Compuserve, national data networks such as Minitel/Transpac in France, and private X.25 and frame relay networks) to essentially the one and only data network. History is sprinkled with the arrival of electronic communication technologies that have had major societal impacts. The first such technology was the telephone, invented in the 1870s. The telephone allowed two persons to orally communicate in real-time without being in the same physical location. It had a major impact on society -- both good and bad. The next electronic communication technology was broadcast radio/television, which arrived in the 1920s and 1930s. Broadcast radio/television allowed people to receive vast quantities of audio and video information. It also had a major impact on society -- both good and bad. The third major communication technology that has changed the way people live and work is the Web. Perhaps what appeals the most to users about the Web is that it is on demand. Users receive what they want, when they want it. This is unlike broadcast radio and television, which force users to "tune in" when the content provider makes the content available. In addition to being on demand, the Web has many other wonderful features that people love and cherish. It is enormously easy for any individual to make any available available over the Web; everyone can become a publisher at extremely low cost. Hyperlinks and search engines help us navigate through an ocean of Web sites. Graphics and animated graphics stimulate our senses. Forms, Java applets, Active X components, as well as many other devices enable us to interact with pages and sites. And more and more, the Web provides a menu interface to vast quantities of audio and video material stored in the Internet, audio and video that can be accessed on demand.
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