First Website (1992)

124 points - yesterday at 11:02 PM

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dirk94018 yesterday at 11:59 PM
I remember that. A few weeks later ran a script to count all the websites on the Internet.. 324 at that time.
avaer yesterday at 11:38 PM
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

WD-42 today at 2:20 AM
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.

Nition today at 12:41 AM
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.

Adachi91 today at 2:05 AM
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
vivzkestrel today at 3:13 AM
how did we go from this to nextjs?
mjcohen today at 2:12 AM
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 today at 12:47 AM
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

ChrisArchitect today at 2:42 AM
Related:

CERN rebuilt the original browser from 1989 (2019)

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

ChrisArchitect today at 2:34 AM
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

fsckboy today at 12:26 AM
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.

whatsupdog today at 12:05 AM
Banned in UAE (at least on DU)
deleted today at 2:37 AM
deleted today at 2:35 AM
bruceyao1984 today at 1:47 AM
[dead]