Tim Berners-Lee is a British computer scientist. He invented the world wide web (www), a system used to organize and access information over the internet via hyperlink documents. He also developed the uniform resource identifier (URL), hypertext markup language (HTML) and hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP). He is the founder and director of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), an open international organization dedicated in developing standards for the world wide web to ensure its long-term growth. Tim is also a director of the Web Science Research Initiative and the World Wide Web Foundation. He is a senior researcher and holder of the 3Com Founders Chair at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) and head of the Decentralized Information Group (DIG). He is also a professor at the Electronics and Computer Science Department at the University of Southampton in United Kingdom.[1] [2] [3]

Country: United Kingdom
Email: timbl[at]w3.org
Website:

   [www.w3.org www.w3.org]

Twitter:    @timberners_lee

Personal Information

Tim Berners Lee was born June 8, 1955 in Southwest London, England. His parents Conway Berners-Lee and Mary Lee Woods were both mathematicians and part of the team who built the Machester Mark 1, one of the earliest commercial computers.He currently resides in Lexington, Massachusetts with his wife Nancy and their two children-Alice and Ben.[4]

Education

Tim went to Wandsworth's Emanuel School. He received his degree in physics from the Queen's College at Oxford University.

Career History

Berners-Lee started his career as a programmer after his graduation in 1976 at Plessey Controls Limited, a major telecommunications equipment manufacturer in Poole, Dorset UK. After two years, he joined D.G. Nash Limited wherein he wrote a typesetting software and a multitasking operating system for intelligent printers. In 1980, he served as a consultant software engineer at the Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucleaire (CERN), which is now called the European Particle Physics Laboratory for six months and during that he also wrote Enquire-his first hypertext system which was named after an old book he found at his parents house entiled, "Enquire Within upon Everything." [5]

References