Unlike the Internet itself, which is the "pipes" and "wires," the Web was the "library" that sat on top of it. In 1993, made the technology free for everyone, sparking the explosion of websites, blogs, and social media we use today.
For decades, the Internet remained a tool for scientists and the military. It was powerful but hard to use—mostly green text on black screens. Everything changed in 1989 at in Switzerland. Inventing the Internet
By the early 1970s, more "islands" were joining the network, but they were still using different languages. Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn became the "architects" who fixed this. They developed (Transmission Control Protocol and Internet Protocol), a universal set of rules that allowed different networks to communicate seamlessly. This "network of networks" is what we now officially call the Internet . The Web is Born Unlike the Internet itself, which is the "pipes"