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Internet History Program

Today seven billion of us live, work, and play online. Companies and governments are making decisions that will shape the flow of information for generations to come. Yet few know how we got here, or what we might learn from earlier systems. The Internet History Program tells those stories.

From MP3 to broken dreams of a “world brain,” the Internet History Program explores our connected world through events, publications, and a comprehensive series of physical and online exhibits. The program adds to the CHM’s leading collection of networking and mobile materials to carry those stories forward to new generations.

Launched in 2009, the program grew out of the original Web History Project (1996) and Center (2005).

Program Highlights

Exhibits

Connecting Networks and People in "Make Software: Change the World!"

CHM’s newest exhibition, Make Software: Change the World!, explores the history, impact, and technology behind seven game-changing applications: MP3, Photoshop, MRI, Car Crash Simulation, Wikipedia, Texting, and World of Warcraft. Before these applications transformed music, play, information, and communication, they found humble beginnings in early networking protocols and technical standards. The Internet History Program curated and advised on four of the seven stories, which offer rich resources and stories for understanding our connected world.

Wikipedia, Texting, MP3, and World of Warcraft

Collections

Google Founders Collection

The Google Founders Collection contains artifacts, documents, photographs and video from the first 10 years of Google’s development. The initial collection was assembled within Google by VP of Product Management Richard Holden under the leadership of Susan Wojcicki, now CEO of YouTube, who housed Google’s early-stage operation—led by cofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin—in her home in Menlo Park, CA. Marc Weber, curatorial director of CHM’s Internet History Program, worked as web historian and advisor on the project with Wojcicki and Google.

Google Founders Collection

Exhibits

Where To: A History of Autonomous Vehicles

Taking land, air, and sea by storm! CHM’s Internet History Program explores the decades-long challenge of bringing self-driving cars to the general public in the exhibit Where To? A History of Autonomous Vehicles. Self-driving cars have remained perpetually two decades away since the 1930s, while over the past century, autonomous and semi-autonomous vehicles have conquered the air, sea and roamed the edges of our solar system.

Where To? A History of Autonomous Vehicles

Exhibits

Major Galleries in Networking, Web, and Mobile Featured in "Revolution: The First 2000 Years of Computing History"

CHM’s permanent exhibition, Revolution: The First 2000 Years of Computing, chronicles the history of computing, from the abacus to the smartphone. Revolution’s extensive 19 galleries. Featured prominently are some of the first major galleries dedicated to networking, the web, and mobile computing. These comprehensive galleries and their online counterparts provide audiences with a deep dive into the technical and social history of our digital world, covering topics like the creation of the internet, the smartphone revolution, and the onset of online communities.

Networking, Web, and Mobile Computing

Blogs

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CHM Blog

Going Places: Surrogate Travel and Google Maps with Street View

Choose a spot on a map and you are there. Since 2007, Google Maps with Street View has transformed our ideas about going places, from faraway lands to a new restaurant.

CHM Blog

Where To Next?

Self-driving cars may prove the "killer app" that turns smart navigation into an industry. But the implications of such navigation are far broader, from an internet of moving things to rethinking nearly every way we transport objects and ourselves.

CHM Blog

Net @50: Did Engelbart's "Mother of All Demos" Launch the Connected World?

His goal was building systems to augment human intelligence. His group prototyped much of modern computing (and invented the mouse) along the way.

CHM Blog

The Other Internet, Part 1: Masai Mara

It’s no great surprise that George Sekut is comfortable with technology. He makes it clear that mobile phones are used by all but the oldest members of the village and are deeply changing daily life.

CHM Blog

Born in a Van: Happy 40th Birthday to the Internet!

The van was getting ready to demonstrate the first full transmission with what would become the internet standard we use today for nearly everything, from dating to rides to medical information.

CHM Blog

A Tale of Deleted Cities

"Deleted City," is an interactive art installation based on the surviving backups of GeoCities. It is an artistic answer to a question set to grow in importance, as more and more of daily life goes online: How do you present a digital ruin?

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From the Collection

SRI ARC/NIC Collection
Computer Communications: James L. Pelkey Collection
IMP (Interface Message Processor)
SRI Packet Radio Van

Oral Histories

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Collection

Vint Cerf

Widely known as a "Father of the Internet," Vint Cerf is the codesigner with Robert Kahn of TCP/IP protocols and basic architecture of the internet. During his tenure with DARPA, Cerf played a key role leading the development of internet and internet-related data packet and security technologies.

Collection

Elizabeth "Jake" Feinler

Elizabeth "Jake" Feinler was the director of SRI's Network Information Systems Center. This group operated the Network Information Center (NIC) for the ARPANET and the Defense Data Network (DDN), a project for which she was the principal investigator from 1973 until 1991.

Collection

Jeff Hawkins

After designing the first commercially successful tablet at GRiD systems, Jeff Hawkins founded Palm to create a simpler, hand-held version. After a 25-year detour designing portable computers, he returned to his original passion, neuroscience and machine intelligence.

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Events

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CHM Live

Information Security—Before and After Public Key Cryptography

Whitfield Diffie, a key figure in the discovery of public-key cryptography, traces the growth of information security.

CHM Live

Minitel: The Web before the Web

CHM Internet History Program's Marc Weber moderates a conversation with Julien Mailland and Kevin Driscoll, authors of Minitel: Welcome to the Internet.

CHM Live

In the Plex: How Google Thinks, Works, and Shapes Our Lives

Technology reporter Steven Levy takes viewers inside Google's headquarters in this conversation with NPR's Laura Sydell.

CHM Live

Visionary Robert W. Taylor in Conversation with NPR's Guy Raz

In this candid discussion with NPR's Guy Raz, internet pioneer Robert Taylor shares his life stories and discusses the process of fostering innovation and the evolution of radical technologies.

CHM Live

Solving Today's Great Problems? Lessons from Engelbart's Demo @50

CEO of The Hydrous Erika Woolsey, Nsquare.org Managing Director Erika Gregory, and Change.org cofounder Ben Rattray join futurist Paul Saffo to explore Engelbart's philosophy today.

CHM Live

Closing the Innovation Gap with Judy Estrin

Judy Estrin challenges national, academic, and business leaders to work together to make America competitive again in her book, Closing the Innovation Gap: Reigniting the Spark of Creativity in a Global Economy.

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Leadership

Marc Weber
Director and Curator, Internet History Program, CHM

Contact

To learn more or to get involved, please contact the Internet History Program.

Resources

Net History Resources
Internet History Timeline
Make Software: Change the World
Revolution: The First 2000 Years of Computing

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