Tim Berners-Lee
<person> The man who invented the World-Wide Web while working at the
Center for European Particle Research (CERN). Now Director of the World-Wide Web
Consortium.
Tim Berners-Lee graduated from the Queen's College at Oxford University,
England, 1976. Whilst there he built his first computer with a soldering iron,
TTL gates, an M6800 processor and an old television.
He then went on to work for Plessey Telecommunications, and D.G. Nash Ltd (where
he wrote software for intelligent printers and a multi-tasking operating
system), before joining CERN, where he designed a program called 'Enquire',
which was never published, but formed the conceptual basis for today's
World-Wide Web.
In 1984, he took up a fellowship at CERN, and in 1989, he wrote the first
World-Wide Web server, "httpd", and the first client, "WorldWideWeb" a hypertext
browser/editor which ran under NEXTSTEP. The program "WorldWideWeb" was first
made available within CERN in December, and on the Internet as a whole in the
summer of 1991.
In 1994, Tim joined the Laboratory for Computer Science (LCS) at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). In 1999, he became the first holder
of the 3Com Founders chair. He is also the author of "Weaving the Web", on the
past present and future of the Web.
In 2001, Tim was made a fellow of The Royal Society.
Tim is married to Nancy Carlson. They have two children, born 1991 and 1994.
http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/Longer.html.
(2001-06-17)
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