Is the British Sun mocked in 1991 the possibility that the Internet will change our lives? According to documentation published - yes. At least until reading the small print
? "World Wide What," asked dismissive headline in the May 20 issue of the 1991 British tabloid The Sun, over sub-title mocking "Network computers will change the lives of billions (yes, of course)." Htooitrsfira shared you wrote and laughed at the San fool and his historical nearsightedness. The joke is on them: Top fabricated.
The article in question dealt B"gik computers "Tim Berners - Lee, 35, the invention, the World Wide Web (network pages and sites running on the Internet, we erroneously refer to as the" Internet "), allowing computer users to view documents and photos that are shared with B"siibrsfais "(quotes in original). "The system is using the Internet, so far from only academics but could eventually include everyone", it said. Anonymous scientist is quoted as saying "It could be huge. Idea that strangers from around the world share ideas immediately excites the mind," and another anonymous scientist who doubts it: "They said Sinclair C5 computer change the world. Now you need to make an effort to give one free." At the end of the news, reference is L"hidt the 'E' Mail "on page eight.
He faked obvious clue where the reporter, "Dot Com". More clues: latest design each of the magazine cover before 21 years, and the fact that the network server first indeed activated in 1990, but Berners - Lee publicly declared the World Wade Web discussion group alt.hypertext until early August 1991, two months after the publication date of the article apparent.
the article 1991 |
"The Twitters believed amused to our network"
Running tumbler "Is Twitter's wrong?" Fabricated gate told that Sun itself formed part of a project Hold Ye Front Page, which displays the history of the world as it would look if the Sun was covering it (for example, devoted gate big bang "- the full explosive story - pp. 4-32").
San laughed at the gullible users, and published this morning (Israel time) wrote on entitled "Htooitristim amused believed to our network." The article, signed by Dot Com, says a client fabricated cover page from the book "Great Strides", published in 2006, also appeared in Hold Ye Front Page. "Despite the obvious clues, including the fact that the story was written by journalist fiction Dot Com, legions of squealing thought he was the real Sun," it said. "They enjoyed Mltnf us the enormous potential we considered the head of the network. Others finally realized that they had made fools of themselves."
Know that saying with stone and glass house? Earlier this week, The Sun published a report that Bruce Willis is planning to sue Apple after he discovered that he could not leave his family purchased songs Bayetionz. Wife of Willis, Emma Hemming - Willis, denied the story of her Twitter.
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