First Website (1992)

(info.cern.ch)

223 points | by shrikaranhanda 11 hours ago

32 comments

  • timonoko 29 minutes ago
    This was in Gopher first, where you had click a link to view a picture. Then I heard about Mosaic where you can have pictures and text on the same page. Some problems emerged, until I learned you use <p> to separate chapters: https://timonoko.github.io/alaska/index.htm
  • dirk94018 10 hours ago
    I remember that. A few weeks later ran a script to count all the websites on the Internet.. 324 at that time.
    • LeoPanthera 9 hours ago
      Was your script the very first web crawler or did you just have a list?
      • reconnecting 8 hours ago
        I'm also curious because I remember that the first time I used the Internet (not internet, as it is nowadays), I had to buy a paper book with categorized links to websites.

        Connecting... Waiting... It was slow, both because of dial-up kbit/s and ping to websites, and every page felt like you were literally sending a request to another part of the planet. It felt like that was actually happening, and it was very different from what we experience now.

        But most importantly, there were zero funds/VC in that Internet. Only very niche websites, zero online services, even email was difficult to obtain and felt like a real privilege. Only the fact of being connected made everyone feel not a stranger.

        I kind of miss that Internet, but I'm grateful that once I was part of it.

        • us-merul 7 hours ago
          There’s a page “Robert’s comments on Tim’s MIT trip” that says:

          “I hope this does not offend Brewster, but I hope, probably in vain, that the commercialists will stay out of the Web world. Selling information is like selling air and water to me, though of course you need to pay the people who provide the information. Your comment already points out some of the bad side-effects of selling per access, or worse, tariffs per type of information or per item! Like: today's newspaper is 10CHF because there is this item in it which everyone wants to know about.”

          Interesting too that an article on the front page the other day was about microtransactions for news.

      • dirk94018 4 hours ago
        Crawler. Heh.. never thought of it that way.
    • LowLevelKernel 10 hours ago
      Wow. Which year was it?
      • alain94040 8 hours ago
        In 1993, you could refresh the home page of Netscape (Mosaic) every day and it would mention new sites that had been added. That became unmanageable quickly, which is when two dudes from Stanford started a directory.
        • Daub 1 hour ago
          I belive that an early beowser, possibly Mosaic, had an edit button. Think of that and the fundamental change of internet philosophy it implies!
          • hdgvhicv 1 hour ago
            The original idea behind a protocol which did updates as much as reads was later realised as Wikipedia and similar sites.
          • retired 1 hour ago
            Hence GET / POST / PUT. The WWW was designed to edit documents directly.
        • hackingonempty 7 hours ago
          • jsrcout 5 hours ago
            I've been trying to track down "What's New" for a long long time. If memory serves, there was a daily email titled "What's New on the World Wide Web" - very possibly the source for this monthly summary.

            It was a fascinating way to experience the early WWW's exponential growth. It started out small, but once it began to grow, you could see it expanding faster and faster practically in real time.

            At first it only took seconds to give the daily list a good once over. Over time it started taking minutes, then 20 minutes or half an hour (if things weren't too busy at work), and eventually it morphed into almost another full time job. There was just no way to keep up. Around that time they stopped sending it out.

            From a historical point of view, these daily emails and monthly summaries would be a terrific resource for those interested in the early Web. It's hard to believe now that there was once a time when you could literally check out every new Web site as they came online.

            • iberator 1 hour ago
              If you remove commercial and edu and gov sites it's still doable today to track NEW unique websites today. There are less and less personal webpages due the instagram and fb etc
  • telesilla 19 minutes ago
    I love that there is no attribution. Says a lot about the concept of collaboration and know sharing in those early days.
  • retired 57 minutes ago
    It’s impressive how quickly the WWW became mainstream, given how few people had internet access back then. Bitcoin is now 16 years old but compared to the WWW in 2008 is hardly used on a daily basis.
    • shimonabi 28 minutes ago
      It's not that WWW was quick, it's that Bitcoin is useless.
      • cap11235 7 minutes ago
        False, it was much more annoying to buy drugs online pre-crypto.
  • avaer 10 hours ago
    The line mode [1] made me pause. Not because you can do anything too useful (most of the cool links are dead, or telnet) but because it seems like a really cool place to explore, learn, and hack.

    No ads, no random tits, nobody trying to convert you to their politics, trying to scam you, or telling you to kill yourself. Just people sharing interesting things.

    Really makes me excited for the internet until I close the tab.

    [1] http://line-mode.cern.ch/www/hypertext/WWW/TheProject.html

    • bogzz 10 hours ago
      It just blew my mind! I suppose I shouldn't be surprised at all, JS was written for manipulating the DOM but I was NOT expecting a cool terminal style with a typing/Matrix-style transition animation from some of the first webpages ever.

      My brain even ascribed a CRT distortion effect to it, even though that's not actually happening.

      edit: okay, no, I am an idiot. Those pages were made in 2013:

      https://line-mode.cern.ch/

  • Adachi91 8 hours ago
    A little later, but I have a key chain from a dealership that has their website advertised on it, they didn't have a domain name so it's advertised as http://123.123.123.123/web.htm
    • amatecha 5 hours ago
      Yeah, I made a website as part of a class at BCIT in 1995 and we just had a raw IP so I was showing people my awesome website on http://142.232.162.27 (actual IP) every chance I got.. for all like, 2-3 some-odd people I knew who had computers and had internet access. Luckily I quickly thereafter got a Geocities site which was just a little easier to remember/share lol
  • TedDallas 3 hours ago
    Ugh, memories. I'm so old my first web browser was Mosaic and I think I saw this. I used a provider called Texas MetroNet that served up dial-up PPP connections for $45 a month on a speedy 28.8K baud modem. Days of wonder, I tell ya.

    New days of wonder seem to be ahead, though. That said, there's about 100X more angst involved these days.

  • busfahrer 3 hours ago
    I've come across this before, one thing I haven't realized is that in addition to an emulator of the line browser, they're also offering an emulation of the original NeXT browser WorldWideWeb:

    https://worldwideweb.cern.ch/

    https://worldwideweb.cern.ch/browser/

  • Nition 9 hours ago
    When this was first created, how did people usually navigate back to the previous page? I notice there are no "previous" or "home" links here. Was there a "back" button/key, or would you have to edit the URL directly?

    Edit: Answered my own question I think. If you choose the option to browse "using the line-mode browser simulator", you can literally type in "Back" to go back.

    • al_borland 9 hours ago
      This site has a way to experience as it once was. I’m on mobile now, but from what I remember when I tried it, each link opened up a new document window. So the idea of going back wasn’t relevant. You’d simply close the window.

      https://worldwideweb.cern.ch/

      • Nition 9 hours ago
        Yeah, I just wrote an edit to my comment actually after I noticed that. It in fact has an explicit Back command you can run; one of the few commands it supports.
    • gerdesj 9 hours ago
      We used telnet. There were no graphics per se. Before www the "interactive" internet was gopher and wais and co.

      Navigation was moving a cursor around to highlight points of interest, some of which would be links to further stuff or controls to do something like go back or forwards.

      Install lynx or links2 (ie text mode browsers) and you'll get the idea.

      The vaguely graphic efforts with browsable content that you might recognise before www were the likes of Compuserve. That got you a sort of forum style interface.

      It's quite hard to explain just how fast things have moved over the last 40 odd years (I'm 1970 to date - 55). I should also point out that my granddad saw rather a lot of change from 1901 to 1989. To be honest the last 15 odd years are even madder than the previous 25 and that's just my own personal recollection.

    • aldto 5 hours ago
      It looks like you can also shorten "Back" to "b".

      So far, I like this line-mode browser simulator much more than what is commonly available for the command line (lynx or links2). Does any one know of a modern implementation of it? (Where links are numbered instead of the user having to navigate around the document).

      • d0mine 4 hours ago
        There are browser extensions such as Vimium C that provide keyboard-based navigation.
  • rapnie 2 hours ago
    On university campus when our student dorms got internet wired, we first got Gopher, and I remember - because it was hard to follow all these technology developments - that the web was like 'suddenly' there, and we started surfing. Everyone making the switch. Early pages were often copies of their Gopher equivalents.
  • bblb 5 hours ago
    Xanadu

    Ted Nelson's dream since early `60s: all the world literature in one publicly accessible global online system (analogy: you can today get a telephone link from anywhere to anywhere, so why not from any text to any other?). Every reference to a text will lead to royalties being paid automatically to the author. Autodesk, (the makers of AutoCAD) will produce a product "real soon now". Includes the use of full versioning (claimed to be horrifyingly complex), "hot links" (called transclusions) and zippered texts (eg. parallel texts like for translations or annotations.)

  • WD-42 7 hours ago
    Has anyone been able to recover the original source code? The README here: https://info.cern.ch/hypertext/README.html mentions a src/ directory under the same location but it 404's to me.

    Would love to see the source for the original httpd.

    • 0x00cl 7 hours ago
      Maybe here you'll find what you are looking for: https://www.w3.org/Daemon/

      Though you can browse and download the latest version 3.0A (1996), there is a directory where they have older versions, but its a bunch of files mixed up with different versions. https://www.w3.org/Daemon/old/

      • WD-42 6 hours ago
        Nice! HTDaemon.good, HTDaemon.old.c, some classic version control practices going on here.
  • usrbinbash 51 minutes ago
    The sad part is, how infinitely more functional these simple, static HTML documents are, compared to much of the shit that floods the "modern" web.

    Ofc these pages cannot replace SPAs. That's not the point. The point is: Much of the web isn't SPAs. And much of what is SPAs shouldn't be SPAs. Much of the web is displaying static, or semi-static information. Hell, much of the web is still text.

    But somehow, the world accepted that displaying 4KB of text somehow has to require transmitting 32MiB of data, much of it arbitrary code that has no earthly business eating my CPU cycles, as the new normal. Somehow everyone accepts that text-only informational pages need to abuse the scroll-event, or display giant hero-banners. Somehow, having a chatbot-popup on a restaurants menu-page is a must (because ofc I wanna talk to some fuckin LLM wrapper about the fries they sell!!!), but a goddamn page denoting the places address and telephone number is nowhere to be found.

    https://idlewords.com/talks/website_obesity.htm

    This talk was given over a decade ago, and its takeaways are as relevant today as thy were back then, and in fact maybe even more so.

    • demetris 22 minutes ago
      Some of the stuff we have been adding since then is GOOD though.

      Some examples:

      We now have to accommodate all types of user agents, and we do that very well.

      We now have complex navigation menus that cannot be accessible without JavaScript, and we do that very well.

      Our image elements can now have lots of attributes that add a bit of weight but improve the experience a lot.

      Etc.

      Also, things are improving/self-correcting. I saw a listing the other day for senior dev with really good knowledge of the vanilla stuff. The company wants to cut down on the use of their FE framework of choice.

      I cannot remember seeing listings like that in 2020 or 2021.

    • moring 40 minutes ago
      > Somehow everyone accepts

      Everyone did accept that because when you needed information from a page that pulls that shit, you don't have a choice, and when you did have a choice, all the others did it too.

      Nowadays people just ask ChatGPT for the information they need so they don't have to visit those awful sites anymore.

  • lukeiodev 3 hours ago
    Sometimes I really miss the pure, text-first web. No popups, no cookie banners, just raw information.
    • hdgvhicv 1 hour ago
      No monetisation. Thats what makes everything shit.

      You didn’t have cookie banners because you didn’t have cookies, because there is no need for most websites to have cookies.

  • ballooney 3 minutes ago
    Everyone in silicon valley would do well to remember why the web was built (by other people, elsewhere).
  • ghssds 1 hour ago
    I really like how different and the same the html tags are.
  • mjcohen 8 hours ago
    In the mid 70's, I was a graduate CS student at USC's Information Sciences Institute. I remember my feeling of awe when I used Arpanet (or was it Darpanet) to log into London and do stuff there. Wow!
  • tempestn 9 hours ago
    This is great. I particularly enjoyed this entry in the FAQ about how to find web pages: https://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/FAQ/KeepingTrack.html

    > When (s)he has found an overview page which (s)he feels ought to refer to the new data, (s)he can ask the author of that document (who ought to have signed it with a link to his or her mail address) to put in a link.

    > By the way, it would be easy in principle for a third party to run over these trees and make indexes of what they find. Its just that noone has done it as far as I know

  • vaylian 1 hour ago
    I appreciate the HTTPS support
  • gingersnap 1 hour ago
    Still faster than most websites
  • piokoch 57 minutes ago
    Ah, fond memories... First website in Poland was the homepage of the Faculty of Physics of the Warsaw University (been there at that time). It was 1993 I think, although wayback machine stores a newer snapshot (1998), but it looks the same as original page: https://web.archive.org/web/19980120060239/https://www.fuw.e...
  • vivzkestrel 7 hours ago
    how did we go from this to nextjs?
    • bblb 5 hours ago
      Money. Ruins everything. And also enables. So it's a win/lose situation.
      • flipped 1 hour ago
        More than money, it's the curse of going mainstream.
  • t1234s 6 hours ago
    Not bad PageSpeed scores for the first site:

    Performance: 100 Accessibility: 86 Best Practices: 92 SEO: 90

  • whatsupdog 10 hours ago
    Banned in UAE (at least on DU)
    • gerdesj 9 hours ago
      That's rather sad, its just a museum exhibit about the www, so prohibition might look like a pathetic attempt at revisionism.

      What is DU?

  • fsckboy 9 hours ago
    declaring a website to be "first" introduces a definitional problem.

    to put it in terms of a simple example, you need several HTML pages before one of them can link to another, but so far that's just hypertext. then you need pages spread out across plural sites to be able to create a web.

    • gerdesj 9 hours ago
      I found it via gopher and wais - I can't remember which one did what, it was a fair few years ago.

      I telnetted from my PC to a VAX, then to a X.25 PAD, then onto a Janet system, then to somewhere in the US and then to CERN. Eventually I'd get a menu with a link to the www. I'd then navigate the www with different keystrokes.

      www was/is free form links to stuff instead of hierarchical menus. It was an evolution not a revolution and there is no need to invoke "chicken or egg".

      • fsckboy 7 hours ago
        so you're saying that gopher was the web. i've heard it said before. if you are scared to discuss a chicken and egg problem, you are exactly who should hear it.
  • ChrisArchitect 7 hours ago
    Related:

    CERN rebuilt the original browser from 1989 (2019)

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47095429

  • ChrisArchitect 7 hours ago
    A (1992) copy.

    Website about this project: https://first-website.web.cern.ch/

    Some previous discussions:

    6 months ago https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45125239

    2024 https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40177906

  • wangzhongwang 6 hours ago
    [dead]
  • bruceyao1984 8 hours ago
    [dead]
  • winston_smith_ 6 hours ago
    [dead]