My history on the Internet

by billso on Thursday, 5 June 2008

Van­ity Fair has pub­lished a long oral his­tory of the Inter­net enti­tled How the Web was Won, and based on inter­views with a vari­ety of notable folks. Here’s links to the sin­gle page ver­sions of the arti­cle and a photo port­fo­lio. If I had been inter­viewed for the arti­cle, my response would have looked a lot like this:

My first direct con­nec­tion to the Inter­net was through my fac­ulty office com­puter at Mar­quette Uni­ver­sity in 1993. I was a vis­it­ing assis­tant pro­fes­sor on a one-year con­tract, teach­ing busi­ness ethics and man­age­ment courses.

The main Inter­net ser­vice that I remem­ber using at Mar­quette was Gopher, a text-based sys­tem that used menus instead of hyper­links. In some ways, it resem­bled Com­puServe, which I had used since 1981. Com­puServe was a well-organized walled gar­den that had a nice vari­ety of con­tent, while Gopher was a rag-tag dis­trib­uted net­work of uni­ver­sity com­put­ers and a few com­mer­cial servers.

I became famil­iar with BITNET while I was at the Uni­ver­sity of Geor­gia. Both sys­tems offered por­tals to Inter­net ser­vices. The first items I ever pur­chased through e-commerce were a Shriek­back CD on Com­puServe in 1987, and a Dead Run­ners Soci­ety t-shirt from a list­serv in 1990.

In early 1994, the uni­ver­sity installed a demo work­sta­tion that ran Mosaic. That was the first time i accessed the World Wide Web on a graph­i­cal browser. Later that year, I built my first web page, and I’ve had a pres­ence on the web ever since.

Related pages on billso.com

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