Reincarnation of first ever web page aims to show how far we've come

Reincarnation of first ever web page aims to show how far we've come
Just looking at the first ever web page

Cern is taking a break from its busy schedule of trying to find the God particle to recreate the internet's first ever webpage.

The plan is to restore the page and thus the original hardware and software used to build it and the web.

It's basically the internet equivalent of a living museum, complete with overzealous reenactment actors and Roman money.

Early days

So what's the point? Cern's web manager Dan Noyes explains that it's to help people understand how quickly and majorly the web has changed already in it's short life, and remind people of the values that Cern pumped into the web when it was first developed - specifically universal access and freedom of information.

"I want my children to be able to understand the significance of this point in time: the web is already so ubiquitous - so, well, normal - that one risks failing to see how fundamentally it has changed," he told the BBC.

"We are in a unique moment where we can still switch on the first web server and experience it. We want to document and preserve that."

Anyone who thought the first web technologies would be laughable by today's standards needs to step off. The graphical capabilities were strong for the time, Cern's James Gillies says.

"You could edit into it straightaway," he explained. "It was an amazing thing. It was a very sophisticated thing."

As long as there's no Comic Sans to speak of, we'll be happy.

From BBC

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