The World Wide Web was born on this day in 1989. It was on March 12, 1989, that Tim Berners-Lee, working for Europe's physics lab CERN, proposed a decentralised system of information management. That marked the birth of the World Wide Web - today abbreviated as simply 'the web'- that billions around the world use to access the Internet. Today, as people around the world celebrate the 30th anniversary of the World Wide Web, they also remember it in its early years. In fact, Google's special doodle for World Wide Web's birthday was also a reminder of what things were like in the beginning.
From Netscape to Ask Jeeves to Limewire, there was a lot on the web from the '90s and early 2000s that we have forgotten. So take a trip down the memory lane with these tweets, as netizens reminisce about the early days of the World Wide Web:
One user even shared a pic of his first modem
The World Wide Web, designed by Tim Berners-Lee, was initially dubbed by his supervisor as "vague but exciting". On Monday, to mark its 30th anniversary, Mr Berners-Lee said that the World Wide Web must emerge from "adolescence".
"If we give up on building a better Web now, then the Web will not have failed us. We will have failed the Web," he wrote.
"It's our journey from digital adolescence to a more mature, responsible and inclusive future".
Do you remember your first time using the World Wide Web? Let us know in the comments section below.
Mobile Internet Suspended For 24 Hours In Haryana's Nuh Ahead Of Hindu Group March Centre To Play Key Role In Shaping 6G Networks Worldwide: Telecom Secretary "Railways And Waterways": How Social Media Reacted To Mumbai Rains Centre Rules Out Special Status For Bihar, Lalu Yadav's Party Takes A Swipe Elon Musk Reacts After Vivek Ramaswamy's Biden Prediction Goes Viral "Cops Can't Force...": Supreme Court Pauses Kanwar Yatra Food Stalls Order Nutrition Tips: 10 Foods Combinations That Boost Their Nutrient Absorption 2 Boys, Listening To Songs On Earphones On Railway Track, Run Over By Train Earth's Water Depleting Fast, Says Study, Explains Why It's Dangerous Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.