Imagine you're standing at the gates of the great Library of Alexandria — a place that gathered all the knowledge of the ancient world. The internet is the modern version of this library, but its history is as fascinating as the history of Egypt itself. Let's explore it together!
It all started in 1969, when the US Department of Defense created the ARPANET network. It was the first computer network connecting four universities. Think of it as the first trade route between four cities of ancient Egypt — small, but revolutionary!
ARPANET enabled data transmission between distant computers. The first message sent through the network was "LO" — it was supposed to be "LOGIN," but the system crashed after two characters. Despite this, it was a huge step forward.
In 1983, the TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol) protocol was introduced. It was like the invention of hieroglyphs — a universal language that allowed different networks to communicate with each other.
TCP/IP defines how data is divided into packets, addressed, and transmitted between computers. Thanks to it, the internet became a truly global network, connecting computers around the world.
1<!-- Internet milestones -->
2<h2>Internet Timeline</h2>
3<ol>
4 <li><strong>1969</strong> — ARPANET: the first computer network</li>
5 <li><strong>1971</strong> — First email sent by Ray Tomlinson</li>
6 <li><strong>1983</strong> — TCP/IP: universal communication protocol</li>
7 <li><strong>1991</strong> — WWW: World Wide Web by Tim Berners-Lee</li>
8 <li><strong>1993</strong> — Mosaic: the first graphical browser</li>
9</ol>In 1991, Tim Berners-Lee created the World Wide Web — a system of web pages connected by hyperlinks. It was a moment comparable to the invention of papyrus — suddenly knowledge became available to everyone!
Berners-Lee created three fundamental technologies:
1<h2>Three Pillars of the WWW</h2>
2<table border="1" cellpadding="8">
3 <tr>
4 <th>Technology</th>
5 <th>Function</th>
6 <th>Egyptian Analogy</th>
7 </tr>
8 <tr>
9 <td>HTML</td>
10 <td>Page structure</td>
11 <td>Hieroglyphs — writing method</td>
12 </tr>
13 <tr>
14 <td>URL</td>
15 <td>Resource addresses</td>
16 <td>Map of temples</td>
17 </tr>
18 <tr>
19 <td>HTTP</td>
20 <td>Communication protocol</td>
21 <td>Pharaoh's messengers</td>
22 </tr>
23</table>Before Mosaic, the internet was text-based — like reading stone tablets. In 1993, the Mosaic browser added the ability to display images alongside text. It was like the transition from plain inscriptions to colorful frescoes in pharaohs' tombs!
Mosaic was a breakthrough because it made the internet visual and accessible to ordinary people. Soon after, more browsers appeared: Netscape Navigator (1994), Internet Explorer (1995), and many others.
Around 2004, the internet underwent another revolution — Web 2.0. Users stopped being just passive readers and started creating content:
It was as if every Egyptian could add their own hieroglyphs to the temple walls — the democratization of knowledge!
The modern internet is an incredibly vast network connecting billions of devices:
The internet has come a long way from four connected computers in 1969 to a global network connecting over 5 billion users. It's as if from a small settlement on the Nile, the entire ancient Egypt grew — with pyramids, temples, and trade routes stretching across the entire known world!