Only 17 Years Ago

It boggles the mind a little when you think about how young the Web truly is and how much the world has changed due to one innovation:

Almost precisely 17 years ago, a young British researcher from Cern, the European organisation for nuclear research, gave a presentation in Texas on a technology that was to change society dramatically. That same month, the Cern newsletter announced it to the world: it was called the World Wide Web.

It’s hard to imagine life today without it.

Click through to read the rest of the article, which is an interesting look at the “open web” versus command and control structures. Here’s a sample:

The web succeeded too quickly to be controlled. It conquered skepticism by existing. But imagine that we had had a chance squarely to consider its likely benefits and dangers. In place of what we have today I think we would have invented a tamer, more controlled web and a different underlying network on which it operates. We would restrict openness of access, decrease anonymity and limit the number of actions that a network participant could perform.

The benefits would be undeniable: it would cut down on spam, viruses and illicit peer-to-peer file sharing. But at the same time, it would undercut the iconoclastic technological, cultural and political potential that the web offers, the ability of a new technology, a new service to build on open networks and open protocols, without needing approval from regulators or entrenched market players, or even the owners of the web pages to which you link.

Friday Random 10: Blowing Off The Dust Edition

Blogging has been scarce around here lately. I’ve been busy, but it’s not just that — I’ve lost the habit of remembering to blog. I do have a shiny new iPod Nano that I’ve just loaded with a batch of music, so in honor of that, I might as well dig out an old meme: the Friday Random 10.

Superman — Five for Fighting
Time of Your Song — Matisyahu
Silent Legacy — Melissa Etheridge
Following — The Bangles
In Your Eyes (Live) — Peter Gabriel
Born To Run — Bruce Springsteen
Find A Way To My Heart — Phil Collins
Starry Eyed Surprise — Paul Oakenfold
Tikvah — Subliminal & the Shadow
No Woman No Cry (Live) — Bob Marley & The Wailers

The rules are simple: Randomize your iTunes and write down the first 10 songs in the playlist. Feel free to add your own 10 in the comments. 🙂

Liftoff

A little earlier today, in the Adobe MAX Day 2 keynote, was the formal launch of Adobe Groups, the project that’s been eating my life these past 4 months or so.

I’m exhausted and thrilled and really proud of what the team and the user group community has in Groups. More than 400 groups and 2000 members are on the site as I write this, and the number of registered profiles is increasing every time I look.

There’s a lot more that the site needs and I’m sure it will be keeping me very busy in the weeks and months to come, but it’s also good to take the time to stop and admire how far we’ve come just to get to this point.

Viva Groups!