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History of Technology Videos 160 videos

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History of Technology 6: The Development of the Web 10 Views


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Description:

What does ARPANET stand for? Easy. Aunts Require Pickles And Nutella Every Tuesday. Don't believe us? Check out this video.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

Shmoop! Information and communication. The Arpanet started small, but so what,

00:08

so did Chipotle. Well even though the ARPANET only connected four computers by

00:12

the end of 1969. It kept growing all through the 70s. It joined with the

00:16

University of Hawaii's, Aloha net in 1971. Which presumably existed so that the

00:22

residents of Hawaii could brag about living in paradise. Oh and to share [two men on beach]

00:27

data and stuff to. Around 1973 the ARPANET also linked up with Norway's Royal

00:32

Radar Establishment, as well as London's University College. Still it was little hard

00:38

to make one worldwide internet, because some of these packet switched networks [two cartoon computers talking to each other]

00:42

didn't know how to talk to each other. They tried therapy but nothing worked.

00:47

Well that is until a guy named Vinton Cerf came along near the end of the

00:51

1970s with a solution. Cerf invented what he called Transmission Control Protocol,

00:58

or TCP. What was so great about it? It allowed all these little networks, all

01:03

over the world, to have a real conversation. Later on, Cerf added an

01:07

extra protocol, which he somewhat unimaginatively called, Internet [man writing on chalkboard]

01:12

Protocol, or IP. So we, these days, call that TCP/IP. Well basically it's the thing

01:19

that breaks the ice and lets computers all over the world to have a meaningful

01:23

relationship. Well there would be no worldwide internet if it weren't for

01:27

Cerfs protocol. But even with Cerfs innovation, it took a few more years for

01:31

the internet to get to the general public. All through the eighties

01:34

scientists and researchers used to send data to each other. But most people [two men on old computers]

01:38

didn't even know what the internet was. But then in 1991, a Swiss fella, called

01:42

Tim Berners-Lee came up with the idea of the World Wide Web.

01:47

Well Berners-Lee figured out how to transform the Internet, from just being a

01:51

way to send files from one computer to another.

01:53

He made it such, that it was a web of info. See clever naming there. [man standing on internet web]

01:57

That anybody with internet access could use it. So lets have a round of

02:01

applause for Berners-Lee, for bringing us home and coming up with a modern

02:05

internet. And of course since then the Internet has still been a lot of

02:08

changing. A big one came in 1992, when some folks at the University of Illinois,

02:12

created a browser called Mosaic, which eventually became Netscape. Well it was

02:17

pretty awesome because it was the first web browser to let people see pictures

02:21

and words on the same page. Yep that wasn't always a thing. So we [man scrolling on a computer]

02:25

have no idea what we used to do for fun before it hit the scene. Runny,

02:30

shuffleboard, well we honestly don't remember.

02:32

Well Mosaic also let people, navigate the web, by using clickable links and

02:36

scroll bars, yep those also weren't always a thing. Also in 1992, Congress

02:41

open up the web for commercial use and the online races began. Tons of companies

02:46

jumped on it in a flash. Well pretty soon everybody had their own web site and for [man standing by computer]

02:50

the first time some companies set up businesses, that for the most part

02:54

existed only online. Well as the .com boom did it booming, social networks like,

03:00

Facebook, took off later and the world really hasn't been the same since.

03:03

And so yeah, think about YouTube, Facebook, Amazon, Twitter, Shmoop, these are all very

03:08

new folks. It's important to know how we got here and it's also important to know

03:12

that so not so long ago, Google wasn't a verb. [dictionary with Google under magnifying glass]

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