World Wide Web

The World Wide Web, invented at CERN in 1989 by Tim Berners-Lee, is a system of interlinked hypertext documents that are accessed via the internet. With a web browser, one can view web pages that may contain text, images, videos, and other multimedia and navigate between them via hyperlinks.

30 results

First Web browser revived during hackathon

As part of CERN’s celebrations of the 30th anniversary of the Web, an international team is at CERN to recreate the WorldWideWeb browser

News
Computing
26 February, 2019
Computing
News
26 February, 2019

Get ready for Web@30

On 12 March, CERN will celebrate the 30th anniversary of the World Wide Web. The programme is now available

News
At CERN
13 February, 2019
At CERN
News
13 February, 2019

Save the date: the Web@30 on 12 March 2019

The Web@30 event is happening at CERN and you can join it from anywhere in the world

News
Computing
09 January, 2019
Computing
News
09 January, 2019

Licensing the Web

Tim SmithFrançois Flückiger

Computing

Key milestones reached for the new campus-wide Wi-Fi service

State-of-the-art Wi-Fi coverage is now available in key buildings including – finally – a simple “visitor” Wi-Fi service

News
Computing
09 October, 2017

CERN besieged at Royaume du Web

CERN attended the Royaume du Web event at Palexpo, a festival that gathered 10 500 YouTube enthusiasts

News
Computing
22 May, 2017
Computing
News
22 May, 2017

Help us build a better CERN website

Take a short survey to help us to improve CERN’s home website

News
Computing
28 March, 2017
Computing
News
28 March, 2017

Internaut Day and the World Wide Web

With people celebrating “Internaut day” on 23 August to mark the World Wide Web’s creation, CERN explores its history

News
Computing
23 August, 2016
Computing
News
23 August, 2016

CERN's Ben Segal joins Internet Hall of Fame

At a ceremony today in Hong Kong, the Internet Society has recognized Ben Segal for his contributions to the development of the internet

News
Computing
08 April, 2014