List of websites founded before 1995
The following is a partial list of websites founded before 1995. Of the thousands of websites founded prior to 1995, those appearing here are noteworthy for one or more of the following reasons:
- They have existed continuously through the present (albeit in some cases with different names)
- They made formative contributions to the history of the world wide web
- They helped shaped certain modern Web content, such as webcomics and weblogs
1991
- Gopher Search Engine
- One of the Internet's earliest search engines.
- CERN
- The link is a snapshot of the CERN site, the first website, as of November 1992. The Web was publicly announced (via a posting to alt.hypertext) on August 6, 1991.
- World Wide Web Virtual Library
- Originally Tim Berners-Lee's web catalog at CERN.
- Digital Picture Archive on the 17th Floor
- First operating from Delft University of Technology as an anonymous FTP site, then a gopher server and finally a WWW server, this collection of miscellaneous digital images was one of the first image repositories. By 1994 it had to be throttled back because the traffic was overwhelming the networks at Delft.
- Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
- Paul Kunz from SLAC visited Tim Berners-Lee at CERN in September 1991. He was impressed by the WWW project and brought a copy of the software back to Stanford. SLAC launched the first web server in North America on December 12, 1991.[1]
1992
- National Center for Supercomputing Applications
- The National Center for Supercomputing Applications site was an early home to the NCSA Mosaic web browser, as well as documentation on the web and a "What's New?" list which many people used as an early web directory.
- Fermilab
- Second web server in North America, following in the trend of high-energy physics laboratories.
- SunSITE
- Early, comprehensive archiving project. Project as a whole started in 1992 and was quick to move to the web.
1993
- By the end of 1993, there were 623 websites, according to a study by MIT Researcher Matthew Gray. [2]
- deoxy.org
- A conceptual offering of philosophic technoshamanism, the site known as The Deoxyribonucleic Hyperdimension is the last word on evolutionary ideas and knowledge.
- Doctor Fun
- One of the first webcomics, noted by the NCSA as "a major breakthrough for the Web".
- The LANL preprint archive
- Web access to thousands of papers in physics, mathematics, computer science, and biology; developed out of earlier gopher, ftp, and e-mail archives at Los Alamos. Now housed at lanl.arxiv.org
- Global Network Navigator
- Example of an early web directory, and one of the Web's first commercial sites. Created by O'Reilly Media.
- Heaven's Gate
- A spin off of Heaven's Gate BBS, a pet memorial website.
- The Internet Movie Database
- Founded in 1989 by participants in the Usenet newsgroup rec.arts.movies, the IMDB was rolled out on the web in late 1993, hosted by the computer science department of Cardiff University in Wales.
- Internet Underground Music Archive
- Created by students at the University of California, Santa Cruz to help promote unsigned musical artists. Music was shared using the MP2 format, presaging the later extreme popularity of MP3 sharing and Online music stores.
- SITO
- After a start as an anonymous ftp-based art gallery and collaborative collective, the OTIS project (later SITO) moves to the web thanks to SunSITE's hosting.
- The Tech
- The MIT campus newspaper, The Tech, claims to be the first newspaper to deliver content over the Web, beginning in May 1993.[3]
- MTV
- The music television network's domain was registered in 1993 by VJ Adam Curry, who personally ran a small unofficial site.
- PARC Map Server
- Arguably the earliest precursor of MapQuest and Google Maps. PARC Researcher Steve Putz tied an existing map viewing program to the web. Now defunct.[4]
- Principia Cybernetica
- Probably the first complex, collaborative knowledge system, sporting a hierarchical structure, index, map, annotations, search, plenty of hyperlinks, etc. Designed by Francis Heylighen, Cliff Joslyn and Valentin Turchin to develop a cybernetic philosophy.
- ExPASy
- The first life sciences web site. Still active
- Trojan room coffee pot
- The first webcam.
- Trincoll Journal
- a multimedia magazine published by students at Trinity College in Hartford Connecticut.
1994
- By mid-1994 there were 2738 websites, according to Gray's statistics; by the end of the year, more than 10,000.
- Art.Net
- "Art on the Net", created by Lile Elam in June 1994 to showcase the artwork of San Francisco Bay Area artists as well as other international artists. It offered free linkage and hosts extensive links to other artists' sites.
- Art Crimes
- The first graffiti art site began to archive photos from around the world, creating an important academic resource as well as a thriving online community.
- The Amazing FishCam
- A webcam pointed at a fishtank located at Netscape headquarters. According to a contemporaneous article by The Economist, "In its audacious uselessness—and that of thousands of ego trips like it—lie the seeds of the Internet revolution."
- Bianca's Smut Shack
- An early web-based chatroom and online community known for raucous free speech and deviant behavior.
- Birmingham City Council
- early local government site, initially hosted by the University of Birmingham at http://assist.cs.bham.ac.uk:8080/, latterly at http://www.birmingham.gov.uk[5]
- Darwin Awards
- Honoring those who improve the species ... by accidentally removing themselves from it.
- Einet Galaxy
- Claims to be the first searchable web catalog; originally created at the Einet division of the MCC Research Consortium at the University of Texas, Austin. It passed through several commercial owners and is now run by Logika Corporation.
- First Virtual
- First "cyber-bank".
- FogCam!
- World's oldest still operating webcam. Located at San Francisco State University.
- HotWired
- Website of Wired magazine with its own unique and innovative online content. Home of the first banner ads, for Zima and AT&T.[6][7]
- Justin Hall's Links from the Underground
- One of the earliest examples of personal weblogging.
- Lawinfo
- Early legal website, provides public access to pre-qualified, pre-screened attorneys, and to free legal resources.[8]
- Lycos
- Early search engine, originally a university research project by Dr. Michael Mauldin.
- Museum of Bad Art
- Website of a museum "dedicated to the tongue-in-cheek display of poorly conceived or executed examples of Outsider Art in the form of paintings or sculpture."
- The Nine Planets
- "A Multimedia Tour of the Solar System", created by Bill Arnett. One of the first extensively multimedia sites.
- Nando.net
- One of the first newspaper sites, the online presence of the Raleigh, North Carolina News & Observer.
- Pizza Hut
- The pizza delivery restaurant allows people in Santa Cruz, California to order pizza over the Web.[9]
- Powells.com
- The website of Powell's Books,[10] which was originally at http://www.powells.portland.or.us/[11] and started with two employees; the company's first online order was placed by an Apple employee.[12] It pre-dated Amazon.com, which started as an online bookstore.
- Sex.com
- Subject of a twelve-year legal battle that established parameters of domain ownership.
- Sighting.com
- SIGHTINGS began in 1994 as the website home for Jeff Rense's award winning UFO & Paranormal radio program of the same name.
- The Simpsons Archive
- The very first fan site for The Simpsons television show.
- SpinnWebe
- Early humor site, called "a window on the weird" by The New Yorker.
- The WWW Useless Pages
- Perhaps the first site which showcased bad or eccentric websites rather than 'cool' ones.
- Whitehouse.gov
- The official website of the White House.
- World-Wide Web Worm
- Another early web crawler, opened in October 1994.
- Yahoo!
- Originally started as "Jerry's Guide to the World Wide Web"; later Yahoo without the exclamation mark.
- THE VOMITUS MAXIMUS MUSEUM
- vomitus.com was established 12/12/1994 to showcase the early artwork of Robert Steven Connett
References