WEB 1.0


WEB 1.0, known as the first phase of the World Wide Web, emerged in the early 1990s, marked by the prevalence of static web pages and limited interactivity. In 1991, Tim Berners-Lee introduced the World Wide Web, laying the foundation for what was to come. In 1993, the release of the Mosaic web browser made accessing web content more user-friendly. Major service providers like America Online (AOL) offered email services and limited web browsing, while GeoCities allowed users to create basic personal web pages. However, these early websites were predominantly text-based and lacked the dynamic content, social interaction, and multimedia elements that would define subsequent internet eras.

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