617 lines
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617 lines
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technology
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news
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6455139
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# Happy 40th birthday, the internet: 20 milestones in the net's development
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## Happy 40th birthday, the internet. The first message was sent across
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Arpanet exactly 40 years ago, on 29 October 1969. We look at a few of the
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milestones in its development.
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![The Difference Engine, built to Charles Babbage's specifications at London's
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Science Museum in 1991][1]
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Image 1 of 6
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The Difference Engine, built to Charles Babbage's specifications at London's
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Science Museum in 1991 Photo: WIKIMEDIA COMMONS - GENI
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![The Google Wave logo ][2]
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Image 1 of 6
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Google will launch an app store for Google Wave, its online, real-time
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collaboration tool Photo: GOOGLE
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![Doom: A brief history of the FPS][3]
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Image 1 of 6
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![Mosaic, the first popular browser][4]
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Image 1 of 6
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Mosaic, the first popular browser Photo: WIKIMEDIA COMMONS - NCSA
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![Gmail inbox][5]
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Image 1 of 6
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Gmail inbox
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![LOLcats - Mission Complete][6]
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Image 1 of 6
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LOLcats - Mission Complete Photo: ICANHASCHEEZBURGER.COM
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By Tom Chivers and Ian Douglas 7:30AM GMT 29 Oct 2009
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[Comments][7]
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The birthday is [one of many that could have been picked][8] - the name
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"internet" is only 35 years old, for instance, while the first email was sent
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45 years ago.
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But Arpanet, the defence computer network that grew accidentally into the all-
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encompassing, era-defining, economy-changing, amusing-pictures-of-cats-
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facilitating behemoth that is today's internet, seems as good a place to start
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as any.
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We know, incidentally, that we have overlooked something fairly major - the
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role of pornography in driving the internet's growth. That isn't out of
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prudery, it's just that we couldn't find a suitable "defining moment".
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That probably indicates that it's just been there, all the time, since the
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beginning. Well, maybe not on the Difference Engine.
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**1. The Difference Engine, 1822**
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Charles Babbage, a splendidly eccentric 19th-century mathematician and
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inventor, is generally credited with designing the first programmable
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computer.
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## Related Articles
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* [Happy sort-of birthday, the internet][9]
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23 Oct 2009
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* [Internet celebrates 40th birthday][8]
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02 Sep 2009
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* [Internet rules and laws: the top 10][10]
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23 Oct 2009
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* [50 tech advances kids will laugh at][11]
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21 Oct 2009
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* [The 20 best online Flash games][12]
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29 Oct 2009
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His Difference Engine was intended to carry out complicated equations
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mechanically, avoiding the need for error-prone human "computers". He proposed
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the design in 1822, but despite significant funding from the British
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Government, it was not completed until the London Science Museum made one to
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his specifications in 1991.
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His assistant, Lord Byron's daughter Ada Lovelace, has been hailed as the
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first programmer. A gifted mathematician, she wrote the algorithms that would
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have been processed by the engine had it ever been made, and may have seen
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uses for the computer that Babbage never did.
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**2. Vannevar Bush describes the Memex, 1945**
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In his essay As We May Think, the American engineer Vannevar Bush laid down
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some of the principles that underpin the modern internet. It suggested a large
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desk containing microfilm documents, which could be navigated through via
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keystrokes, not unlike modern hypertext.
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Bush thought of this as a library that mimicked the form of human thought -
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using keywords to follow a chain of thought from document to document, without
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reference to a central authority.
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It has been argued that he predicted Wikipedia - "Wholly new forms of
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encyclopedias will appear, ready-made with a mesh of associative trails
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running through them, ready to be dropped into the memex and there amplified."
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**3. The first email, 1965 **
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![][5]
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Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology seem to have been
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among the first to communicate via computer.
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Only users on the same mainframe could type messages to each other - messages
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between computers were not developed for some years.
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**4. The word 'hypertext' is coined, 1965**
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Ted Nelson first used the word "hyper-text", as seen in a [contemporary
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student newspaper report on a lecture he gave][13]. He envisaged a 'docuverse'
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in which all documents were linked to other documents and navigated via links.
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Nothing would ever be deleted and copyright problems would disappear as
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copying would be replaced by referrals. His attempt to build the docuverse,
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called Xanadu, was an earlier version of the work done by Tim Berners-Lee at
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Cern.
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**5. The On-Line System, 1968**
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Is this the moment computing started to take its modern form? Douglas
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Engelbart's demonstration of computer communication included the first mouse,
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the first multiple "windows" like today's operating systems, and the first
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practical use of hypertext.
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It also allowed users in several places to edit the same document - an early
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forerunner of the modern wiki system.
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As a bonus, viewers on a giant screen in Menlo Park, California, were able to
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see Engelbart's work on a computer at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) in
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San Francisco - the first video conference.
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**6. First message sent over Arpanet, 1969**
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This is the event, 40 years ago, that we are somewhat arbitrarily calling the
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Birth of the Internet.
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Arpanet, a linked network of computers created by the Advanced Research
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Projects Agency for the US Department of Defense, was one of the first
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networks to use "packet switching", a system that allowed several machines to
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communicate over a single circuit, instead of having a dedicated link between
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two computers.
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At 10:30pm on 29 October, this was demonstrated by sending a message from UCLA
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in Los Angeles to SRI in San Francisco. The message was meant to be "login",
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but a system crash after two letters meant that it was, in fact, "lo". The
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full five-letter message was successfully sent an hour or so later.
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**7. First email over Arpanet, 1971**
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There is some debate over this - it is suggested that in fact email was first
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sent within a few weeks of Arpanet's development in 1969. However, the first
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message is widely credited to Ray Tomlinson.
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Tomlinson's was also the first message to use an @ symbol to distinguish
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between the name of the user and the name of the machine.
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**8. The name Internet, 1974**
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By this time Arpanet was not the only packet-switching system - it was also
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being used by the (British) Post Office, as well as commercial outfits like
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Telenet, Datapac and Transpac.
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The first suggestion that they could all be brought together into a single,
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global network was made by Stanford University researchers Vinton Cerf, Yogen
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Dalal and Carl Sunshine, in a December 1974 paper, which coined the term
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"internet".
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It wasn't until 1978 that the system, known in the UK as the International
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Packet Switched Service, came into service.
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**9. World Wide Web, 1989**
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The web is, in fact, not the internet. This may come as a surprise to many
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people. While the internet is the hardware, the computers and the phone lines
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that link them, the web is the software.
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The web was developed by [Tim Berners-Lee][14], a British scientist working at
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the Cern laboratories in Geneva. It allows the network of documents, navigated
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via a browser, that we all know today.
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The hypertext that had been hinted at by Vannevar Bush, named by Ted Nelson
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and used primitively by Douglas Engelbart became, in the hands of Mr Berners-
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Lee (now Sir Tim), the familiar highlighted words that users can simply click
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on and navigate their way around the web with.
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**10. Mosaic, the first popular browser, 1993 **
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![][4]
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Before Chrome, before Opera, before Firefox and Safari, before even the widely
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loathed Internet Explorer 6, before - if you can believe it - the venerable
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Netscape, there was Mosaic.
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There had been earlier browsers - Berners-Lee's own WorldWideWeb, for
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instance, or Erwise, or ViolaWWW - but Mosaic is the one credited with
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bringing the internet into the public sphere.
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Mosaic 1.0 was released in April, with 2.0 following in December. However, its
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dominance was brief - the first open-source, free-to-use browser, Netscape
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Navigator, was released the following year, and it soon became the market
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leader.
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Netscape itself died after Microsoft started targeting the web, releasing
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Internet Explorer v1.0 in 1995. It remains the dominant web browser, with 65
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per cent of all usage, although that has dropped from a 2003 high of over 85
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per cent.
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**11. DOOM, 1993 **
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![][3]
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Not only [one of the greatest][15] and [scariest][16] games ever made, DOOM
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was arguably the internet's first killer app. id Software's bloody and
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brilliant (and hugely controversial) "first person shooter" was released via
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shareware over the internet - meaning that the first seven of the game's 28
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levels could be downloaded for free.
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It is estimated that those seven levels were installed on more than 10 million
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computers within two years. As well as being the first must-have game that
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could be downloaded from the internet, it was a fantastic advert for what
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networked gaming could be.
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It could be played by up to four people via a local area network or a modem,
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and introduced the term "deathmatch" into the language.
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**12. Electronic Telegraph, 1994**
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![][17]
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Without the slightest doubt, the single most important development in the
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history of the internet.
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Ahem.
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The Telegraph went online in November 1994, described as the [Electronic
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Telegraph][18]. At first it only carried the main stories from the day's
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paper, but as it has developed it has gone on to carry much more - including
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picture galleries, online video, and, of course, comprehensive lists about the
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history of the internet.
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**13. Amazon and eBay, 1995 and 1996**
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![][19]
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Nowadays, we buy things over the internet all the time, spending anything from
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a few quid on the weekly groceries to thousands on a new car or computer. But
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while it wasn't unheard of before the launch of [Amazon.com][20] in 1995, it
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was distinctly niche.
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Amazon changed all that. Originally a bookshop, it has expanded to sell
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computer games, videos, music, clothes, food, toys, furniture and more.
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[eBay][21], launched the following year, pioneered the peer-to-peer model of
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allowing web users to buy and sell from each other.
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Amazon in particular paved the way for the dotcom boom of the next few years;
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its business model did not expect to show a profit for the first four to five
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years, relying instead on investor backing. It was not until 2001 that the
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company made money, but now turns over more than $19 billion (£11.5 billion) a
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year, with profits of $645 million (£390 million).
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eBay's first sale, incidentally, was of a broken laser pointer, for $14.83.
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The buyer explained: "I'm a collector of broken laser pointers."
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**14. Wireless Application Protocol, 1997**
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The first, clunky, slow, borderline useless system for making the internet
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available on mobile phones.
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It might have taken half an hour to get cinema listings or football results
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via its creaking servers, but it paved the way for the iPhone and the Google
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Android. Now, with Wikipedia (item 17) available over our mobiles, we hardly
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need to actually know anything any more - we can just look it up.
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Unless we're on the Tube, of course. Then we're on our own.
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**15. Google launched, 1998 **
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![][22]
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There were search engines before [Google][23], which became necessary after
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the list of all available web servers became impossibly long: Gopher,
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Veronica, the World Wide Web Wanderer, WebCrawler, Magellan, Excite, Infoseek,
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Inktomi, Northern Light, AltaVista.
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But Google, as well as being groundbreaking in how it searched and how it
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ranked the results, was the first to enter the English language as a verb. In
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the same way as one hoovers, rather than vacuums, or uses a biro instead of a
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ballpoint pen, one tends to Google, rather than "run a web search".
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**16. DotCom bubble bursts, 2000**
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The exciting new possibilities of web businesses began what was called the
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"internet gold rush". From around 1998, investors fell over each other to
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throw money at any business with a .com at the end.
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Unfortunately, not all of those .com suffixes followed a Google, Amazon or
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eBay. Altogether too many followed a Boo or an eToys.
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The bubble reached its peak in March 2000, and promptly burst. $5 trillion was
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wiped off the value of technology firms in the following 18 months.
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**17. Wikipedia launched, 2001**
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![][24]
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According to [its Wikipedia page][25], "Wikipedia (WI-ki-PEE-dee-?) is a free,
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web-based, collaborative, multilingual encyclopedia project supported by the
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non-profit Wikimedia Foundation.
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"Its name is a portmanteau of the words wiki (a technology for creating
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collaborative websites, from the Hawaiian word wiki, meaning "quick") and
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encyclopedia. Wikipedia's 13 million articles (three million in the English
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Wikipedia) have been written collaboratively by volunteers around the world,
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and almost all of its articles can be edited by anyone with access to the
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site.
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"Launched in 2001 by Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger, it is currently the largest
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and most popular general reference work on the Internet."
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It has been accused of bias (the thinking behind its unintentionally hilarious
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counterpart "Conservapedia"), dismissed for being too weighted towards pop
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culture, and criticised for inaccuracy. It is famously vulnerable to
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vandalism.
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However, it was found by the journal Nature to "[come] close to Britannica in
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terms of the accuracy of its science entries", and has transformed the way we
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find things out. Don't know something? Look it up on Wikipedia. It might not
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be 100 per cent reliable, but it is at your fingertips.
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**18. LOLcats, 2005 **
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![][6]
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We could have picked any one of a thousand memes here - All Your Base Are
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Belong To Us, if we were feeling nostalgic, or [FAILblog.org][26] if we wanted
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to see people fall off things. But we've picked [LOLcats][27].
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The power of the internet to distract from work is breathtaking, whether via
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Twitter, Facebook, or other (the author, for what it's worth, frequently
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wastes time at [twitter.com/tomchivers][28]). For the last four years, one of
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its favourite sources for amusing round-robin emails is pictures of cats in
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strange situations, with misspelt captions in a san serif font. Naturally.
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**19. China's number of internet users overtakes Americans, 2008**
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In December last year, stats suggested that the number of people who had
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logged on to the internet that month had [risen above one billion][29] for the
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first time, according to Comscore, a company that tracks internet usage.
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Pretty amazing - and in fact, that number might be even greater, as the survey
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didn't include the under-15s or people using public computers. Estimates rise
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as high as 1.6 billion now.
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But equally significantly, the number of those users who were Chinese overtook
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the number who were American for the first time - 178 million to 163 million.
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The news that internet addresses could be [written in non-Latin alphabets][30]
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also points to a future where English is not the automatic lingua franca of
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the web.
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**20. Cloud computing goes mainstream, 2009 **
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![][2]
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The [future of the internet][31] and computing in general?
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The idea of dispersed storage of files has been around for a while - Hotmail
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could store your documents way back in 2000 - but true cloud computing, which
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takes the actual processing away from the grey box on your desk and does it in
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a formless 'cloud' of web connections, is pretty new.
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That said, a sort of mirror image of it has been going on for years. Seti@home
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and Folding@home both use the computing power of millions of home processors -
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in computers and game consoles, respectively - to power major computer
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systems; Seti in the search for extraterrestrial life, Folding in medical
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research.
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But this is the other way around - there will be no home computers. Instead,
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huge servers scattered around the web will carry out all the processing
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functions. Your computer will essentially be a screen, a mouse and a keyboard,
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plugged into the web. Software will not be bought, but paid for with your
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attention in the form of advertising.
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What happens after that, [we don't know][11].
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[X][32] Share & bookmark
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Delicious Facebook Google Messenger Reddit Twitter
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Digg Fark LinkedIn Google Buzz StumbleUpon Y! Buzz
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[What are these?][33]
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* Share: [Share][32] [ ][34] [ ][35]
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[Tweet][36]
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/news/6455139/Happy-40th-birthday-the-
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internet-20-milestones-in-the-nets-development.html
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Telegraph
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## [Technology News][37]
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* ### [News »][38]
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* ### [Technology »][39]
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* ### [Google »][40]
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* ### [Wikipedia »][41]
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* ### [Amazon »][42]
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In technology
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[![Disassembly: vintage gadgets are taken apart and photographed by Todd
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McLellan][43] ][44]
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### [Gadgets taken apart][44]
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[![Aerial photograph of Hyde Park taken by Jason Hawkes using a Nokia N8
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smartphone][45] ][46]
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### [Smartphone aerial photos][46]
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[![][47] ][48]
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### [More Twitpics from space][48]
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[![Computer Game Museum (Computerspielemuseum) opens in Berlin][49] ][50]
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### [Computer game museum][50]
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[![Sony has announced the successor to its popular PlayStation Portable (PSP)
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console, a device codenamed NGP (next generation portable)][51] ][52]
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### [NGP: the PlayStation Portable successor][52]
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[X][32] Share & bookmark
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Delicious Facebook Google Messenger Reddit Twitter
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Digg Fark LinkedIn Google Buzz StumbleUpon Y! Buzz
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[What are these?][33]
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Share:
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* [ ][32]
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* [ ][34]
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* [ ][35]
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* [Tweet][36]
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* Advertisement
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![][53]
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telegraphuk
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Please enable JavaScript to view the [comments powered by Disqus.][54] [blog
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comments powered by Disqus][55]
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[![Follow The Telegraph on social media][56]][57]
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Advertisement
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sponsored features
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Loading
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[EDITOR'S CHOICE »][58]
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### [Gil Scott-Heron: 'A voice for Shakespeare'][59]
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[![Gil Scott-Heron][60]][59]
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Composer, musician, poet and author whose writing provided a vivid commentary
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on the black American experience.
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### [Beekeeping diary: the new colonies arrive][61]
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### [Spectacular light show dazzles Sydney][62]
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### [WS Gilbert: a knight for our times][63]
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### [The Telegraph's Matt is Hay Festival star][64]
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Advertisement
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Classified Advertising
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* [IT Jobs][65]
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* [Cars][66]
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* [Culture][67]
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[Find your ideal job with Telegraph Jobs][68]
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var puffArray = eval('puffs_' + '8254837'); var guid = "669306"; var headline
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= "Solutions Architect, Taunton"; var description = "Taunton £37559 - £41379";
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var link = "http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/job/669306/permanent/taunton
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/solutions-architect-taunton-job-vacancy.aspx?FromRSSFeed=-1023&WT.ac=669306";
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var imageUrl = "http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/logos/AB/7D/ABA5A6EC-5D02-4BE4
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-86DE-13A2D2F11C7D_140_87-v2.jpg"; var adWeight = "3";
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puffArray.push({'id':guid, 'headline':headline, 'bodyText':description,
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'link':link, 'imageUrl':imageUrl, 'weight':adWeight}); var puffArray =
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eval('puffs_' + '8254837'); var guid = "660949"; var headline = "Business
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Manager - South East London"; var description = "Home based - cover the SE
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postcodes within London City On Application"; var link =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/job/660949/permanent/home-based-cover-the-se-
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postcodes-within-london-city/business-manager-south-east-london-job-
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vacancy.aspx?FromRSSFeed=-1023&WT.ac=660949"; var imageUrl =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/logos/C2/4E/C2BBA2DD-251E-47A1-AFDE-
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EE1AAF926A4E_140_87-v2.jpg"; var adWeight = "3"; puffArray.push({'id':guid,
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'headline':headline, 'bodyText':description, 'link':link, 'imageUrl':imageUrl,
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'weight':adWeight}); var puffArray = eval('puffs_' + '8254837'); var guid =
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"671931"; var headline = "Telecommunications Enterprise Manager TEM/505/50";
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var description = "South £110000"; var link =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/job/671931/permanent/south/telecommunications-
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enterprise-manager-tem-505-50-job-
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vacancy.aspx?FromRSSFeed=-1023&WT.ac=671931"; var imageUrl =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/logos/64/6E/643CA70F-
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BCF4-4C58-9A37-46A42236F76E_140_87-v2.jpg"; var adWeight = "1";
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puffArray.push({'id':guid, 'headline':headline, 'bodyText':description,
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'link':link, 'imageUrl':imageUrl, 'weight':adWeight}); var puffArray =
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eval('puffs_' + '8254837'); var guid = "666080"; var headline = "Digital
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Designer, Graphic Designer + Some Online Marketing"; var description =
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"Colchester, Essex £25000 - £30000"; var link =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/job/666080/permanent/colchester-essex/digital-
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designer-graphic-designer-some-online-marketing-job-
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vacancy.aspx?FromRSSFeed=-1023&WT.ac=666080"; var imageUrl =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/logos/6F/0E/6F2FB65C-3EC1-481F-
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9F40-5CA67946880E_140_87-v2.jpg"; var adWeight = "1";
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puffArray.push({'id':guid, 'headline':headline, 'bodyText':description,
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'link':link, 'imageUrl':imageUrl, 'weight':adWeight}); var puffArray =
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eval('puffs_' + '8254837'); var guid = "663894"; var headline = "User
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Experience Manager / Online User Experience Analyst - UX Guru!"; var
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description = "Central London / West End, London On Application"; var link =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/job/663894/permanent/central-london-west-end-
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london/user-experience-manager-online-user-experience-analyst-ux-guru~21-job-
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vacancy.aspx?FromRSSFeed=-1023&WT.ac=663894"; var imageUrl =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/logos/6F/0E/6F2FB65C-3EC1-481F-
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9F40-5CA67946880E_140_87-v2.jpg"; var adWeight = "1";
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puffArray.push({'id':guid, 'headline':headline, 'bodyText':description,
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'link':link, 'imageUrl':imageUrl, 'weight':adWeight}); var puffArray =
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eval('puffs_' + '8254837'); var guid = "661086"; var headline = "Area Business
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Manager - Medium Sales"; var description = "Home Based - East Coast On
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Application"; var link = "http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/job/661086/permanent
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/home-based-east-coast/area-business-manager-medium-sales-job-
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vacancy.aspx?FromRSSFeed=-1023&WT.ac=661086"; var imageUrl =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/logos/C2/4E/C2BBA2DD-251E-47A1-AFDE-
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EE1AAF926A4E_140_87-v2.jpg"; var adWeight = "3"; puffArray.push({'id':guid,
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'headline':headline, 'bodyText':description, 'link':link, 'imageUrl':imageUrl,
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'weight':adWeight}); var puffArray = eval('puffs_' + '8254837'); var guid =
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"670978"; var headline = "Account Director (PPC/Social Networking)"; var
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description = "London On Application"; var link =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/job/670978/permanent/london/account-director-ppc-
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social-networking-job-vacancy.aspx?FromRSSFeed=-1023&WT.ac=670978"; var
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imageUrl = "http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/_resx/images/TGJobs-
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logo_140x87-v2.gif"; var adWeight = "1"; puffArray.push({'id':guid,
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'headline':headline, 'bodyText':description, 'link':link, 'imageUrl':imageUrl,
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'weight':adWeight}); var puffArray = eval('puffs_' + '8254837'); var guid =
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"674239"; var headline = "Requirements Analysts"; var description = "Des
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Moines, Iowa On Application"; var link =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/job/674239/permanent/des-moines-iowa
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/requirements-analysts-job-vacancy.aspx?FromRSSFeed=-1023&WT.ac=674239"; var
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imageUrl = "http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/_resx/images/TGJobs-
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logo_140x87-v2.gif"; var adWeight = "1"; puffArray.push({'id':guid,
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'headline':headline, 'bodyText':description, 'link':link, 'imageUrl':imageUrl,
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'weight':adWeight}); var puffArray = eval('puffs_' + '8254837'); var guid =
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"674236"; var headline = "Software Engineer- C++"; var description = "Atlanta,
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Georgia On Application"; var link =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/job/674236/permanent/atlanta-georgia/software-
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engineer-c-job-vacancy.aspx?FromRSSFeed=-1023&WT.ac=674236"; var imageUrl =
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"http://jobs.telegraph.co.uk/_resx/images/TGJobs-logo_140x87-v2.gif"; var
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adWeight = "1"; puffArray.push({'id':guid, 'headline':headline,
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'bodyText':description, 'link':link, 'imageUrl':imageUrl, 'weight':adWeight});
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