Social Software Timeline
hide1962
Douglas Engelbart writes Augmenting Human Intellect paper
J.C.R. Licklider & W. Clark, MIT: On-Line Man Computer Communication
1971
Ray Tomlinson invents email program
1973
Doug Brown writes the Talkomatic group chat program for the PLATO system.
David Woolley writes PLATO Notes, an online forum/message board system. It later inspires adaptations to many other platforms, including the "notesfiles" program that became part of Usenet in the late 1970's, and Ray Ozzie's Lotus Notes in the 1980's.
1975
Steve Walker creates the first ARPANET mailing list, MsgGroup.
Robert Parnes writes the computer conferencing system CONFER for the Michigan Terminal System. Jan Wolter's Partial History of Computer Conferencing in Ann Arbor traces its path to The Well's Picospan (see 1985 below)
1978
Roy Trubshaw writes the very first Multi-User Dungeon (MUD)
- wrong. MUDs were already up and running on PLATO several years earlier.
- sorry, this is right, and widely documented.
- http://www.ludd.luth.se/mud/aber/mud-history.html and elsewhere
- http://www.livinginternet.com/d/di_major.htm
- the reference to Plato is probably to 'Avatar', a Dungeons and Dragons style game, one of several that inhabited the Plato system - however the development of Avatar appears to have come after the development of MUD1 - http://www.youhaventlived.com/qblog/2006/QBlog010206A.html
- It may also refer to _Oubliette, _released November 18, 1977 on PLATO - however this is not a MUD proper but rather belongs to the set of precursors, including Adventure (1972) and Mazewar (1973). See more here http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2005/11/news_miscellany.html There is a huge difference between games that run on one system, as the Adventure and Plato games do, and games that run on multiple systems, as the MUDs do.
- Here's another timeline - http://www.raphkoster.com/gaming/mudtimeline.shtml
- -- Stephen
1979
Tom Truscott and Jim Ellis create USENET newsgroups _(further reading: Brad Templeton, I remember USENET, and the USENET 20 Year Timeline)_
1984
Birth of the Fido network of Bulletin Board Systems (BBSes)
1985
Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link (WELL) community gets started
1988
August - Jarkko Oikarinen creates Internet Relay Chat (IRC) (Timeline)
1989
Peter Deutsch at McGill University creates "archie", an index of global file archive (FTP) sites
1990
Chip Morningstar: Lessons from Lucasfilm's Habitat
1991
Tim Berners-Lee posts World-Wide Web: Executive Summary to USENET group alt.hypertext
Mark McCahill at University of Minnesota releases "gopher", first simple menu-driven client to Internet resources
1992
January - WWW founder Tim Berners-Lee creates his What's New? page, arguably the first weblog.
1993
Howard Rheingold: The Virtual Community
March - Marc Andreessen announces the Mosaic web browser
1994
January - "Christ is coming" - first spam on USENET
April - Jim Clark and Marc Andreessen found Mosaic Communications (which will be renamed to Netscape in November)
1995
March -
- Yahoo! is incorporated
- Ward Cunningham's wiki launches (the first wiki)
December - AltaVista Web search engine launches
1996
January - 100,000 WWW servers
1997
April - 1,000,000 WWW servers
September - Rob Malda's Slashdot, the first weblog to enable reader comments (to check), goes online
December - Jorn Barger coins the term "Weblog"
1998
June - DMOZ, the open directory project, is founded by Rich Skrenta and Bob Truel under the name GnuHoo
September - Google is incorporated
October - NewHoo (nee Gnuhoo) acquired by Netscape, and renamed directory.mozilla.org DMOZ for short.
1999
Peter Merholz coins the term "blog"
March - Brad Fitzpatrick's LiveJournal goes live (Timeline)
June - Rob Malda sells Slashdot to Andover.net
June - Netscape Search becomes first major portal to incorporate Google into its Search results
July -
- RSS 0.91 specification
- Pitas launches
August - Pyra Labs' Blogger launches
November - Userland's Manila launches
December - Rusty Foster creates kuro5hin, a weblog where users vote for what goes to the front page (Timeline)
Shawn Fanning creates Napster
Match.com acquired by Ticketmaster-CitySearch
2000
August - RSS 1.0 specification
October - James Hong founds HotOrNot.com with zero capital
2001
January - Larry Sanger and Jimbo Wales create Wikipedia (Timeline)
July - Cameron Marlow's Blogdex Kenali dan Kunjungi Objek Wisata di Pandeglang launches
September - Movable Type initial beta release
October - Adrian Scott's Ryze social networking service launches
2002
January - Userland releases the Radio Userland blogging software
February -
- "10,000,000th WWW server goes live
- 10,000,000th post on Blogger
March - Spoke Software founders Jim McDermott, Ben Smith, Paul Reddy and Chris Tolles incubate initial prototype at USVP
April - Jonathan Abrams' Friendster launches
December - Socialtext is founded
2003
January - Wikipedia hits 100,000 articles
February - Blogger acquired by Google
March - hundreds of people show up at Dean Meetup in New York City
April -
- Many-to-Many launches
- LiveJournal hits 1 million accounts
- Social Software Alliance forms
June - Flash mobs begin in Manhattan
July -
- Deanspace launches
- Friendster passes 1 million accounts
August - First Flash Mob in Britain(London)
September - Sharman Networks releases Skype
October - First Flash Mob in Bombay
2004
January - LiveJournal hits 2 million accounts
April -
- Skype hits 10 million downloads
- The YASNS lists 209 different social networking systems.
References
- Living Internet
- Net.History
- Timeline of the History of Information by G. Nunberg - provides a bit of perspective on things!
Related Reading
First published instance of the term "virtual community" was in 1987 Whole Earth Review article, "Virtual Communities" -- the book was six years later.
Blogger Cah Bagoes oes tsetnoc
contributed by on Aug 27 7:39am
I'd forgotten how much "text only" computing history there is. Scary, web design I actually used The Michigan Terminal System. Everyone called it MTS and it was a trivia question answer to know what MTS stood for. I think the only major competing three letter acronym of the day,online marketing Business Blog at least in Canada, was Manitoba Telephone System Kenali dan Kunjungi Objek Wisata di Pandeglang.
MTS was used for academic computing by Simon Fraser University (SFU) and the University of BC (UBC). I worked at SFU in the early 80's. I don't remember ever using CONFER but a programmer at UBC (Alan Ballard, I think) wrote a program called Forum that took off like wild fire. I hope I'm not wireless internet providers mis-remembering but I believe he wrote it over a weekend. The user interface completely blew away any bulletin board software of the day.
contributed by on Jul 11 4:03am
Nice
contributed by on Jul 22 11:27pm
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