World Wide Web Conference 1
1994 World Wide Web Conference
WWW1 |
WWW1 logo |
Dates held |
May 25–271994-05-251994-05-27 |
City |
Geneva, Switzerland |
Host |
CERN |
Program Chair(s) |
Oscar Nierstrasz[1] |
Conference Chair(s) |
Bertrand Ibrahim[1] |
Website |
http://www.cern.ch/www94/ |
|
Tim Berners-Lee drew what he called the "metro": a diagram of the relationships between the existing systems (FTP, SMTP, HTTP, ...) in the form of a stylised map resembling that of the London Underground. That made me think that we needed to deal with a lot more hard computer science than our small team of four or five could intellectually handle. Therefore I began to toy with the idea of an international conference on WWW technologies. Tim was not convinced, but I went ahead.
The first World Wide Web Conference (abbr. WWW1) which was organized by Robert Cailliau[3][4] was held at Geneva, Switzerland from May 25 to May 27 in 1994 and was hosted by CERN.[5] After Cailliau lobbied inside CERN and at conferences like the Hypertext conference 1991 (in San Antonio) and 1993 (in Seattle) he came back from the conference 1993 he announced a new conferenced called World Wide Web Conference 1.[6] He was actually 23 hours faster than the NCSA announced Mosaic and the Web.[6] The conference had 380 participants,[7] and was hailed as the Woodstock of the Web,[8] because 800 persons applied to the conference.[9]
Content
Dave Raggett showed his testbed web browser Arena and gave a summary of his first HTML+ Internet Draft.[10] He also submitted a paper for VRML.[7]
The Biological Sciences Division of the University of Chicago presented a web browser and HTML editor called Phoenix built upon tkWWW version 0.9.[11][12] The web editor was created because existing tools couldn't serve the needs of the university. The editor extended the functionality of tkWWW and later in May 1995 the development stopped because enough existing tools.[11][13]
Best of the Web Awards
The Best of the Web Awards were given out on May 26 following the "Best of WWW" contest set up by Brandon Plewe. The awards were selected via a two-month open nomination, and a two-week open voting period. A total of 5225 were cast with the winners averaging 100 votes.[14][15]
Best of the Web '94 Recipients
Best Overall Site
- Winner
- National Center for Supercomputing Applications, U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
- Honorable Mentions
- World-Wide Web Home, European Center for Particle Physics (CERN)
- CMU Computer Science Dept., Carnegie-Mellon U.
- Global Network Navigator, O'Reilly and Associates
- Other Nominees
- SunSITE, U. North Carolina
- United States Geological Survey
Best Campus-Wide Information Service
- Winner
- Globewide Network Academy
- Honorable Mentions
- Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute - RPINFO
- St. Olaf College
- University of Kansas - KUFacts
- University of Texas - Austin
- Other Nominees
- Honolulu Community College
- State University of New York at Buffalo
- University of Maryland - Baltimore County
- Wake Forest University - Deacons Online
Best Commercial Service
- Winner
- Honorable Mention
- Hewlett-Packard
- Novell, Inc.
- Sun Microsystems, Inc.
- Other Nominees
- Arctic Adventours, Inc.
- Digital Equipment Corp.
- The Mathworks Inc
- Nine Lives Consignment Clothing Store
- QMS
- Quadralay
- Santa Cruz Operation
Best Educational Service
- Winner
- Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming Using C++
- Honorable Mention
- ArtServe - Australian National University
- Expo - Frans van Hoesel (housed at UNC SunSITE)
- Museum of Paleontology - University of California at Berkeley
- Views of the Solar System - C.J. Hamilton, Los Alamos National Laboratory
- Other Nominees
- Early Scientific Instruments - Naples Institute of Physics
- Geographic Information Systems - U.S. Geological Survey
- Geometry Applications Gallery - U. Minnesota Geometry Center
- The Journey North - U. Michigan School of Education
- A Tourist Expedition to Antarctica - L. Liming, U. Michigan
Best Entertainment Service
- Winner
- Sports Information Service, Eric Richard, MIT
- Honorable Mention
- Movie Database (Original in UK, or Mirror in US) - Rob Hartill, U. Wales-Cardiff
- Doctor Fun - Dave Farley, U. Chicago
- MTV - Adam Curry, MTV Networks
- Other Nominees
- The Global Network Navigator - O'Reilly and Associates
- Music Database - Andy Burnett, U.S. Army CERL
- TNS Technology Demonstrations - MIT Telemedia, Networks, and Systems Group
- Wired Magazine
Best Professional Service
- Winner
- OncoLink, U. Pennsylvania
- Honorable Mention
- BioInformatics Server - Johns Hopkins U.
- Explorer - U. Kansas UNITE Group
- Unified CS Technical Report Index - Marc VanHeyningen, Indiana U.
- Climate Data Catalog - Columbia U.
- Other Nominees
- Genome Data Base
- HEASARC Browse - NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
- SWISS-PROT Protein Sequence Database - Geneva U. Hospital
- Physics E-Print Archives - Paul Ginsparg, Los Alamos National Laboratory
- Virtual Hospital - U. Iowa
Best Navigational Aid
- Winner
- WorldWideWebWorm, Oliver McBryan, U. Colorado CS
- Honorable Mention
- Internet Meta-Index - Oscar Nierstrasz, U. Geneva Informatics
- Project DA-CLOD - Sam Sengupta, Washington U.-St. Louis
- Galaxy - EINet
- Other Nominees
- AliWeb - Martijn Koster, Nexor
- JumpStation - Jonathan Fletcher, Stirling U.
- W3 Catalog - Oscar Nierstrasz, U. Geneva Informatics
- Joel's Hierarchical Subject Index - Joel Jones, U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
- Mother-of-all-BBS' - Oliver McBryan, U. Colorado CS
- The Virtual Tourist - Brandon Plewe, SUNY/Buffalo
Most Important Service Concept
- Winner
- What's New on the WWW, Marc Andreessen, NCSA, June 1993
- Honorable Mention
- Web Magazines: The Global Network Navigator - O'Reilly and Associates
- Distance Learning: The Globewide Network Academy
- Virtual Museums: Honolulu C.C. Dinosaur Exhibit - Kevin Hughes
- Other Nominees
- Interactive Graphics: Honolulu C.C. Campus Map - Kevin Hughes
- Web Space for Rent: Internex Information Services
- Online Encyclopedia: The Interpedia
- File converters, Text Databases: Usenet FAQ Archives - Tom Fine, Ohio State U.
- Customized Server Software: Map Server - Steve Putz, Xerox PARC
Best Document Design
- Winner
- Travels With Samantha, Phillip Greenspun, MIT
- Honorable Mention
- Other Nominees
- Ada 9X Reference Manual - Magnus Kempe, Swiss Federal Inst. Tech.- Lausanne
- GNN NetNews - O'Reilly and Associates
- HTML Style Guide - Tim Berners-Lee, CERN
- Manual of Federal Geographic Data Products - William G. Miller, U.S. Geological Survey
- Perl Manual - Robert Stockton, Carnegie-Mellon U.
- U.S. Constitution - Legal Information Institute, Cornell U.
Best Use of Interaction
- Winner
- Xerox Map Server, Steve Putz, Xerox PARC
- Honorable Mention
- DA-CLOD - Sam Sengupta, Washington U.-St. Louis
- Geometry Applications Gallery - U. Minnesota Geometry Center
- Weather Map requestor - Charles Henrich, Michigan State U.
- Other Nominees
- 16 Puzzle - Andrew Wilson, U. Cardiff-Wales
- Swiss 2D-Page - Geneva U. Hospital ExPASy
- SkyView Gateway - NASA Goddard Space Flight Center HEASARC
- You Are Here Server - Brandon Plewe, SUNY/Buffalo
Best Use of Multiple Media
- Winner
- Le Louvre, Nicolas Pioch, Telecom Paris
- Honorable Mention
- ArtServe - Australian National University
- Coherent Structure in Turbulent Fluid Flow - Nat. Ctr for Atmospheric Research
- Expo - Frans van Hoesel
- TNS Technology Demos - MIT Telemedia Networks and Systems Group
- Other Nominees
- Een Kwestie van Kiezen (A Matter of Choice) - U. Wageningen, Netherlands
- Museum of Paleontology - U. California - Berkeley
- Recording Studio - Adam Curry, MTV
- Texas History Exhibits - U. Texas-Austin Library
- Usenet Image Gallery - Stéphane Bortzmeyer, CNAM, France
- XMorphia - Roy Williams, CalTech
Most Technical Merit
- Winner
- Map Server, Steve Putz, Xerox PARC
- Honorable Mention
- Dutch Teletext Gateway - Arjan de Vet, Eindhoven University
- Gallery of Interactive On-Line Geometry - UMN Geometry Center
- Interactive Genetic Art - Scott Reilly and Michael Witbrock, Carnegie-Mellon U.
- Other Nominees
- Mother-of-all-BBS' - Oliver McBryan, U. Colorado CS
- Monthly Temperature Anomalies - NOAA National Climatic Data Center
- Temperature Display - Oliver McBryan, U. Colorado CS
- GRN UseNet Article Decoder - George Phillips, U. British Columbia
- Say... - Axel Belinfante, U. Twente, Netherlands
- SkyView - NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
World Wide Web Hall of Fame Inductees
The following people were inducted into the World Wide Web of Fame for their contributions and influence.[16] The inductees received a Chromachron watch, engraved with the WWW logo.[14]
- Tim Berners-Lee, CERN
- Marc Andreessen, Netscape Communications Co., formerly at NCSA
- Eric Bina, Netscape Communications Co., formerly at NCSA
- Kevin Hughes, Honolulu C.C., now at Enterprise Information Technologies
- Rob Hartill, Los Alamos National Lab, formerly at U. Wales College at Cardiff
- Lou Montulli, Netscape Communications Co., formerly at U. Kansas
References
External links