Google, the Internet giant, celebrated the 30th birthday of the Internet.
Google has launched Google Doodles to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the World Wide Web, according to a US IT spokesman.
Google's world-wide Web celebration was old-fashioned. Google made the first page of its website with animations reminiscent of block graphics that were seen in the era of early Web sites.
The World Wide Web was first developed by Tim Berners-Lee, who worked at the Swiss Institute of European Particle Physics (CERN) 30 years ago. At the time, a proposal to open up a new era of IT that Berners-Lee submitted to his boss became the cornerstone.
This proposal is the foundation for the current World Wide Web, effectively managing and sharing a lot of data from the Institute. This included basic web concepts such as HTML, URL, and HTTP.
It took a few more years before Berners Lee's idea was commercialized. Burns Lee's vision is rooted in everyday life with the release of the Netscape Web browser, which Marc Andrei Sen, who was at the graduate school of Illinois in 1994 and co-founded with Jim Clark.
The beginning was simple, but the fruit was sweet. The Internet has been playing a role as an information highway that dominates the lives of the world in the next 30 years. Today there are nearly two billion Web sites worldwide.
Jeff Jaffe, CEO of the World Wide Web Consortium, commemorated the 30th anniversary of the World Wide Web, saying, "There has been little or no innovation that really changed everything." "Web is the most influential innovation in our time."