50 fascinating facts about the internet

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December 4, 2020
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50 fascinating facts about the internet

The public internet is almost 30 years old, and what we use today would be almost unrecognizable to the people who built the networks that came before. 麻豆原创 has compiled a list of 50 fascinating facts about internet technology, culture, history, and more, using everything from and to the .

Beginning with ARPANET in 1969, computer scientists realized they could use cables to link individual computers into networks. From there, they continued to build out bigger and better features until the World Wide Web stretched around the world and allowed users to add images and even sounds to rudimentary websites.

As more and more people used the public internet, computer scientists continued to make huge leaps forward in technology, innovations that, in 2020, we can't imagine living without. From the invention of the MP3 came filesharing and eventually streaming music. From inventions like relational databases and sorting algorithms came more powerful and accurate search engines, changing the way people interacted with a rapidly growing number of websites.

We think a lot today about social networking, but qualities of social networks were pioneered by technologies like Really Simple Syndication鈥擱SS鈥攖hat let search engines get an easy heads-up that websites had new content. And specialized code like HTML, CSS, and PHP turned the plain, static internet into a dynamic, multimedia experience that's .

Where will the internet be in another 30 years? If history has taught us anything, it's that we have no idea what talented computer scientists and theorists around the world can dream up next. In fact, one of the key lessons from lists like this is how important it is to document what happens online鈥攚ebsites constantly disappear, companies go bankrupt, and different brands merge their online identities. Sites like the Internet Archive, founded in 1996 and with a catalog of tens of billions of website "captures" since then, help to secure internet knowledge for future generations.

Click through to find out more about the history of the internet.

The company that invented the modem was a successor of Alexander Graham Bell

In 1958, Bell Labs . The company was the descendent of telephone inventor Alexander Graham Bell, and the modem capitalized on phone lines as a great way to 鈥渂eep鈥 information back and forth鈥攍ike the telltale dial-up modem sound many of us could probably still hum today.

 

Networking was first developed in 1961

For computers to exchange information, there has to be a set of rules to make sure the pieces don鈥檛 mix, crash, or get lost. Computer scientist Leonard Kleinrock beginning in 1961. This is just what it sounds like: Computers bundle information into small containers called packets, which are securely passed back and forth through network cables that obey shared 鈥渞ules of the road,鈥 so to speak.

ASCII, invented in 1963, allowed characters to have uniformity across any computer

In 1963, computer scientists developed the American Standard Code for Information Interchange, or , a way to share characters like letters and numbers so as to ensure they鈥檙e uniform across any computer or display that uses them. This is a big change from typewriting, for example, where what results is just a flat piece of paper that can鈥檛 be repurposed without retyping.

Two faraway computers were linked for the first time in 1965

In 1965, computer scientists for the first time鈥攁 key milestone the same way it was for telephone and radio many decades before. Today, everything we send between computers still travels over physical infrastructure or, in some cases, an airborne medium like satellite internet.

The first network of four computers were linked in 1969

Today, most of the world is interlinked with a massive cabling infrastructure that includes gigantic cables beneath all the world's oceans. In 1969, computer scientists made proto-internet history when they . This sounds so simple, but it requires complex thinking: How do you decide which computer passes information in which direction, and how do you make sure everything arrives both quickly and safely?

ARPANET paved the way for the internet in 1969

The Advanced Research Projects Agency, ARPA (and today known as descendent forms DARPA or ARPA-E), of any kind in 1969. ARPANET became a vital forerunner to what became the internet and wasn鈥檛 decommissioned until 1990.

 

The first list of registered domains, created in 1972, looked like IP addresses

In 1972, computer scientists made . At the time, these were strings of numbers that look like IP addresses鈥攐ur domains are 鈥減lain language鈥 shields for these numbers.

The ethernet cables used today for the internet were invented in 1973 for telecom networks

Today, we all use a lot of wireless products, but businesses still primarily rely on wired internet. The ethernet cables we still use and used for telecom networks before the development of ethernet internet. Like a railroad or a highway built in pieces, if everyone agrees on one set of guidelines, they can build a uniform network that works well for all users.

The sender of the first email doesn't remember what he wrote

Computer scientist Ray Tomlinson , and it鈥檚 reported that he doesn鈥檛 remember what his first message said. At the time, it would have been strictly plain text with no formatting.

The term 'internet' was used for the first time in 1974

In 1974, to describe a growing network of linked computers around the world. The term contrasts with intranet, for example, meaning an internal rather than external network.

 

The first spam email was sent in 1978 by a computer seller

Buzzfeed reports was sent in 1978 over ARPANET by a man named Gary Thuerk, a computer seller. That was just a few years after email was invented in the first place.

The first online games were text-based

In 1980, users built the first examples of shared online game spaces. These were text-based games called that covered a variety of genres. Active MUDs still exist in 2020.

 

The first LAN party was created in 1981

In 1981, computer users , or LANs. These were made possible by the first generation of ethernet products made for both business and home computers, letting users plug in and link up.

 

The Internet Archive was founded in 1982

In 1996, Brewster Kahle , which remains a vital place for programmers, historians, and public interest advocates. The Internet Archive allowed 麻豆原创 to pinpoint when Jeeves disappeared from AskJeeves.com鈥攌eep reading to find out when that was. 

 

The Science Network was created in 1985 to help researchers share info

In 1985, the National Science Foundation to make it easier for researchers to share information. The resulting network, NSFnet, stayed online until 1995.

The first dot-com website was for a computer manufacturer

Computer manufacturer Symbolics , Symbolics.com, in 1985. The company is gone and the domain has changed hands, but it has been active since 1985, making it the oldest exigent dot-com domain in the world.

The inventor of the GIF meant for it to be pronounced 'jiff'

Compuserve engineer Steve Wilke in 1987. In many image-processing programs, for a decade or more after that, the format was even called 鈥淐ompuserve GIF.鈥 Wilke made news when he insisted he meant for the pronunciation to be 鈥渏iff.鈥

The World Wide Web was coined by Tim Berners-Lee in 1989

1989 was a big year for internet inventor Tim Berners-Lee, who World Wide Web while working at CERN in Switzerland. A year later, he invented HTML, the markup language that turns plain text into鈥攁t the time鈥攕eparate paragraphs and even lists.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation was founded by privacy advocates

In 1990, privacy advocates . This organization works to limit intrusion of tech giants into our lives, which has been an uphill battle for 30 years now.

The public didn't have access to the internet until 1991

Versions of the internet existed for over a decade before public users outside of university programs in 1991. Most ISPs at the time sprung up in college towns, because that's where existing networks and technology hubs were.

Invented in 1991, Archie was the first version of a search engine

The first version of something like a search engine and named Archie, short for archive. Should it be pronounced "ar-key" or "ar-chee"? As with GIF, you must choose for yourself. Search engines are powered by unfathomably huge databases and a series of clever algorithms that shorten the trip from A to Z.

The term 'surfing' the internet was coined by blogger Net Mom in 1992

An early proto-blogger named Jean Armour Polly, using the handle 鈥,鈥 was the first to say users were 鈥渟urfing鈥 the World Wide Web in 1992. That was just a year after public availability of the internet, which caused a tidal wave, so to speak, of new terminology.

AOL used half of all CD-ROM discs in the 1990s

During their peak in the mid-to-late 1990s, America Online (AOL) was in the world for their free software mailings. These usually came with offers of a certain number of free hours. The caveat was that many users didn鈥檛 have a local telephone number to dial, meaning they paid long-distance rates.

 

Mosaic is the ancestor of Netscape Navigator

Mosaic, the first graphic web browser and the ancestor of Netscape Navigator, . For the first time, public internet users could add small files that would load into the layout of the page using HTML tags.

 

The MP3 changed music in 1995

Engineer Karlheinz Brandenburg in 1995. Like the pixels of a digital camera, digital audio involves turning the smooth curves of real sounds into chunked, compressed sounds that make up reasonably sized files. MP3s were revolutionary for having a tiny size that retained listenable audio quality, as well as letting users tune just how much they wanted to .

Jennicam was online 24/7 in 1996

In 1996, Jennifer Ringley in a very primitive form of streaming video, where a still image refreshed on a set interval of seconds. Jennicam gained huge popularity by 1996 standards, and Ringley eventually monetized it for viewers who wanted to see...well, her more private moments.

The Ask Jeeves butler was inspired by a P.G. Wodehouse character

Ask Jeeves was an iconic early search engine started in 1996 on which a P.G. Wodehouse-inspired butler character named Jeeves helped you find websites. Its creators rebranded to Ask.com and began phasing out the Jeeves character, who in early 2006.

Google was name after googol鈥攁 large number

In 1998, Google was founded as in progress, named for the large number called a googol. Before Google, search engines were much patchier and often more like lists of recommended sites. Google鈥檚 technology used feedback, such as which results users really clicked on鈥攅ven if those didn鈥檛 have the most appearances of search terms鈥攖o continue to improve its search results.

Napster began as a peer-to-peer file-sharing service

In 1999, as a peer-to-peer file-sharing service. Users could put shareable files into dedicated folders, allowing other users to search their offerings and choose what to download.

Artists quickly began suing Napster after its 1999 launch

Filesharing service Napster launched in 1999 and was quickly sued by a handful of artists, the . After several months of newsworthy court procedures, they succeeded in having the Napster service taken down. Napster tried to pivot and rebrand, but their popularity never got close to those 1999 numbers again.

Today's social media feeds have RSS technology to thank

Today, we鈥檙e used to curated feeds on Facebook or Twitter, or even personalized content on news sites. This is all made possible because a team including tech luminary Aaron Swartz 鈥擱eally Simple Syndication鈥攊n 2000. That RSS technology lets search spiders identify any new stuff on a website extremely quickly and easily.

Heather Armstrong was fired for blogging in 2001

Dooce is still the online home of writer Heather Armstrong, who started the site in 2001 as an outlet for her personal thoughts, including those regarding her coworkers. She was , but she leveraged that event into a career of which momentum has only started to wane in recent years.

OKCupid dates back to 2003

Free internet dating behemoth OKCupid and quickly spread to even the rural corners of the United States. Today, almost all the dating sites and apps you can think of are owned by the same company: .

Sir Tim Berners-Lee was knighted in 2003

Internet inventor Tim Berners-Lee was knighted in 2003. Other knighted computer scientists include Quicksort inventor Tony Hoare and microprogramming inventor Maurice Vincent Wilkes.

The Mozilla Foundation is a Netscape spinoff

We remember 2004 as the year of Facebook, but it's also the year the Mozilla Foundation . The Foundation began the year before as a spinoff from the defunct Netscape company.

Mark Zuckerberg was the 4th user to join Facebook

In Facebook profiles, each user is assigned a name based on when they joined. Mark Zuckerberg鈥檚 . The website was also originally called The Facebook.

The first YouTube video was uploaded in 2005

YouTube co-founder Jawed Karim in 2005. In the video, Karim walks around the San Diego Zoo.

Tila Tequila had 1.5 million MySpace friends in 2005

Reality TV celebrity Tila Tequila was explosively popular on the young internet, reaching a peak of in 2005. Her social fame forecasted the kind of influencer culture that didn鈥檛 take off until years after her star began to dim.

Twitter was originally called Twttr

Twitter founder Jack Dorsey also sent the first tweet . It鈥檚 hard to imagine in the politically fraught, 280-character Twitter climate of 2020, but the site鈥攐riginally called Twttr鈥攚as a microblogging service full of people sharing just a few words in a more diary-like style. Everything else, from active links to multimedia, came later.

The first Bitcoin transaction happened in 2009

In 2009, users with cryptocurrency Bitcoin. Bitcoin combined the idea of a shadow economy with a then-new cryptography style called blockchain, with prices peaking at astronomical highs in the early 2010s.

Geocities had 7 million sites by time it shut down in 2009

Iconic early website host Geocities offered free small websites to users around the world. The service across thousands of 鈥渘eighborhoods鈥 by the time it shut down in 2009.

Up to 20% of Google searches were brand new in 2012

In 2012, Google engineers said in any given day were brand new. Assembling long strings of words formerly helped searchers find exactly what they want, but in 2019, Google to begin discarding parts of user strings from their searches without their permission.

2.5 million people had a paid subscription to AOL in 2013

In 2013, more than 2.5 million people . Statistically, these customers are and still rely on vanishing dial-up services.

The 2016 'Baby Shark Dance' video holds the record for most YouTube views

The 2016 YouTube video for 鈥淏aby Shark Dance鈥 at , passing other multibillion club juggernauts like 鈥淕angnam Style.鈥 Slate鈥檚 podcast Decoder Ring that 鈥淏aby Shark鈥 isn鈥檛 even a new song, but rather a children鈥檚 version of a song that dates back decades and has been performed by different artists.

 

100% of emerging adults in the US are online

Pew Research reports that use the internet. For adults overall, the number falls to a still astonishingly high 90%.

The 'Space Jam' movie website is still live

Buzzfeed reports that  is still alive and well, making it a time machine to 1996 web design.

The internet is more than 11,500 days old

Buzzfeed reports that HowOldIsTheInter.net on how many days we鈥檝e all been online. In 2020, the internet's age is in the . 

The first webpage is still online

Buzzfeed reports that , a describing what the 鈥渋nternet project鈥 was trying to do, is still online after 29 years. CERN is where World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee put the global network online.

Internet Explorer turned 25 in 2020

Microsoft to go out with its brand new Windows 95 operating system, and the iconic animated lowercase 鈥渆鈥 icon followed internet users for the next 20 years until the release of Microsoft Edge in 2015.

Google searches are timed

One of Google's trademarks from the very beginning is a display that shows how long your search took. For this piece, 麻豆原创 searched "How fast is a Google search?" and got an answer in 0.6 seconds. Buzzfeed reports that .

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