From ancient forums to chaotic 2000s web design, this site preserves decades of internet history for you to explore.
Rachita Taneja has come out with a book of her comics recently, Touching Grass, which is a compilation of comic strips ...
The Internet completely changed the way people communicate, learn, and share information with one another. Originally, the Internet consisted of a small network of researchers, but it eventually grew ...
David Farber, a former University of Delaware professor known as the "grandfather of the internet," died at nearly 92. Farber's work at UD in the late 1970s and 1980s was foundational to creating the ...
Russia’s Bureau 1440 space company launched 16 broadband Internet satellites, marking an early operational step in a low-Earth orbit network that Russian officials have cast as a domestic version of ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. Chuck Norris’ death at 86 will be met with tributes that span ...
David J. Farber, a former professor of computer science at the University of Delaware nicknamed the “grandfather of the internet,” died on Feb. 7 in Tokyo. He was 91. “He was a pioneering architect of ...
Technology often follows the same pattern: a complex invention exists for years before it becomes useful to everyday people. The early internet worked the same way. Complex systems like TCP/IP stayed ...
A researcher, professor and federal policy adviser, he guided students who went on to do groundbreaking work in connecting the world online. By Peter Wayner David J. Farber, a gregarious professor of ...
Paul Vixie, an early internet innovator, takes us on a trip down memory lane, to a time when the dot-com boom led to a rapid expansion of internet infrastructure similar to what we're seeing today ...
Millennials and older folks have been reminiscing about the early internet days, before social media and ads took over everything. Specifically, one Redditor asked them to recall 1991 to 2009—the time ...