In recent times, Web 3.0 has gripped the Internet world. Web 1.0 was the start of the Internet when there were only static pages. Web 2.0 became more interactive. Tim Berners-Lee and his colleagues began developing the World Wide Web in 1989 at the CERN (Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire) based in Geneva, Switzerland. They created a protocol, HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP), which standardised the communication between servers and clients.
Web 1.0: Read-only
In 1990, the internet was a group of connected computers and the Web was the first application that Tim Berners-Lee created. Web 1.0 was designed as a ‘hyperlinked information system’. A huge library of data was sourced together from computers across the network for the users to browse the content by clicking around linked text and images. Web 1.0 was created to be used by the companies and the content used to be static (read-only) where users didn’t have an option to give feedback, comment, or quotes. The Webmaster used to be the one responsible for updating users and managing the content of the Website…
The Next Generation of the Internet
