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The Internet began as a Cold War project to create a communications
network that was immune to a nuclear attack. In the 1969, the U.S.
government created ARPANET, connecting four western universities and
allowing researchers to use the mainframes of any of the networked
institutions. New connections were soon added to the network, bringing
the number of "nodes" up to 23 in 1971, 111 in 1977, and up to almost 4
million in 1994. As the size of the network grew so did its
capabilities: In its first 25 years, the Internet added features such
as file transfer, email, Usenet news, and eventually HTML. Now, new
developments come to the Net one right after the other. It is this
explosive growth in recent years that has captured the imagination of
computer users the world over.
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"It should be spelled as three separate words, so that its acronym is
three separate "W"s. There are
no hyphens. Yes, I know that it has in some places been spelled with a
hyphen but the official way
is without. Yes, I know that "worldwide" is a word in the dictionary,
but World Wide Web is three
words."
Tim Berners-Lee, on the spelling of his creation
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