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Computers, Web

Double Slash in Web Addresses Are Superfluous, Says Internet Architect


As the old saying goes, hindsight is 20-20. That's the only explanation Sir Tim Berners-Lee offers for a mistake he made while designing the Internet. During an interview at a technology symposium in Washington Thursday, Berners-Lee said if he could go back and change one thing, he would leave out the "//" that appears at the beginning of a Web address. According to Beet.TV, the slashes are unnecessary, as long as there's an "http:" at the beginning of the URL. "Really, if you think about it, you don't need the double slash," Berners-Lee said. "Think of the amount of print that'd be saved if I just removed the double slash."

The man often credited with creating the Internet (no, not Al Gore) explained the mistake this way: "It seemed like a good idea at the time." Seeing as we've used that excuse, ourselves, innumerable instances, and it's never once worked, we've no other choice but to confirm that Berners-Lee is, in fact, a genius. [From: Beet.TV]

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Computers, Celebrities, Visionaries

Internet's Inventor Discusses How He Got Scammed Online

Inventor of the Internet Taken in by Online Scammers
Have you ever been taken-in by a scam or a fraudster online? Don't feel too bad about it, since apparently even Tim Berners-Lee, the man often credited as the inventor of the Internet, has fallen victim to online fraud.

Sir Berners-Lee purchased a Christmas present online, but when the gift never arrived he realized he had been conned. He called the toll free number on the site, only to hear a recorded message informing him that the number he dialed was not in use, which shows that even MIT professors are guilty of failing to perform due diligence from time to time.

The Internet pioneer has since used this anecdote to encourage strict enforcement of laws to protect netizens and online shoppers. He says that some new laws are needed, but first we should be focusing on enforcement of those already on the books.

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Computers

Happy 20th Birthday, Interwebz!

Al Gore may not agree, but this week marks the anniversary of the birth of the Web. 20 years ago, on March 13, 1989, Tim Berners-Lee, a researcher for the European Organization for Nuclear Research lab outside of Geneva, Switzerland, proposed an idea to counter data-loss at CERN due to personnel turnover and incompatible computers. In the proposal, Berners-Lee described the predicament by stating, "When two years is a typical length of stay, information is constantly being lost... The technical details of past projects are sometimes lost forever, or only recovered after a detective investigation in an emergency. Often, the information has been recorded, it just cannot be found."

To combat the information dilemma, Berners-Lee drafted his manifesto "Information Management: A Proposal." In his script, Berners-Lee suggested that we "should work toward a universal linked information system," and that "the aim would be to allow a place to be found for any information or reference which one felt was important, and a way of finding it afterward." Using remarkable foresight, Berners-Lee's proposal would take a few years to take shape, as pioneers such as Jim Clark and Marc Andreessen of Netscape paved the way for casual surfing.

So even though Al Gore may have said "I took the initiative in creating the Internet," give Berners-Lee his due credit this weekend as you search for random videos of people doing ridiculous things. Oh, how proud he must be of how far his baby has come. [From: Cnet News]

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