Internet History Podcast

A History of the Internet Era from Netscape to the iPad

https://art19.com/shows/internet-history-podcast

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 58m. Bisher sind 215 Folge(n) erschienen. Dies ist ein wöchentlich erscheinender Podcast.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 8 days 17 hours 41 minutes

subscribe
share






15. (Ch 4.1) The Early Search Engines And Yahoo


As the early web grows, the explosion of content and websites creates chaos. Early search engines are among the most popular sites on the early web, as users try to find their way around the new medium. Sites like Excite, Lycos, Alta Vista and others try to take an algorithm and data-based route to organizing the chaos, but the site that leaps to the front of the pack, Yahoo!, goes in the other direction, creating a hand-sorted directory...


share








 May 9, 2014  33m
 
 

14. (Misc 1) The Forgotten Online Pioneer, Bill von Meister


What If I Told You… … there was a crazy entrepreneur who was the true founder of what would become America Online? He was the guy who hired Steve Case back before AOL was AOL...


share








 April 25, 2014  48m
 
 

13. Co-Designer of the First Banner Ad, Co-Founder of Razorfish, Craig Kanarick


Craig Kanarick was one of the people responsible for the first ever banner ad, which appeared on Oct. 27, 1994 on Hotwired.com. As mentioned in the podcast, there’s no “first” ad, as several were launched in a rotation at the same time. But as mentioned on the podcast, a lot of people like to think of the first ad as this one, for AT&T, which you can see here: And for more information about the “You Will” AT&T campaign, read about it here, or dig this...


share








 April 17, 2014  58m
 
 

12. (Ch 3.2) The Rise of AOL


America Online survives the inevitable run-in with Microsoft, only to come out the other side stronger. The company has to endure major PR fiascos and network capacity issues, but eventually sees itself firmly established as one of the major players of the dot com era. Bibliography: http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/3.09/aol.html?pg=6&topic= http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/4.12/ffaol.html?pg=3&topic=&topic_set= http://www.businessweek...


share








 April 11, 2014  39m
 
 

11. (Ch 3.1) CompuServe, Prodigy, AOL and the Early Online Services


www.InternetHistoryPodcast.com @brianmcc @nethistorypod Summary: We take a step back to look at the early online services: CompuServe, Delphi, GEine, the WELL and especially, early AOL. Why? Well, because online services very much served as “training wheels” for the Internet. Online services were NOT the Internet, exactly; at least not at first. But they very much helped get people used to living life in an online environment...


share








 April 3, 2014  29m
 
 

10. Rob McCool, Founding Engineer, Mosaic and Netscape


www.InternetHistoryPodcast.com @nethistorypod @brianmcc Summary: Rob McCool is another of the core group of original Mosaic programmers who went on to found Netscape. Unlike a lot of the others we have spoken to, he worked more on the server side of the equation for both projects. Rob was also the original author of the NCSA HTTPd web server, later known as the Apache HTTP Server, so we can think of him as the Godfather of Apache...


share








 April 2, 2014  36m
 
 

9. Jon Mittelhauser, Founding Engineer, Mosaic and Netscape


Jon Mittelhauser is another of the core group of original Mosaic programmers who went on to found Netscape. Jon worked on the Windows versions of both Mosiac and Navigator eventually became the project manager for the Netscape Navigator project on the whole...


share








 March 27, 2014  54m
 
 

8. Aleks Totic, of Mosaic and Netscape


Aleks Totic was one of the original Mosaic engineers at the NCSA, responsible for the Mac version of Mosiac. They don’t call him “Mac Daddy” for nothing. He was then one of the 6 original programmers recruited by Marc Andreessen and Jim Clark to form Netscape. Aleks gives us some excellent behind the scenes anecdotes about both projects, and what it was like to head out to California to work on some crazy startup before doing something like that was “cool...


share








 March 16, 2014  47m
 
 

7. (Ch 2.2) Bill Gates "Gets" The Internet


Summary: Microsoft was on top of the world at the dawn of the Internet Era… but like Jack Dawson in Titanic? Microsoft would pivot, and pivot hard, once it realized that the Internet was The Next Big Thing. This episode outlines how younger Microsoft employees agitated for a greater focus on the Internet, and how Bill Gates “got” the Internet religion. Microsoft’s embrace of the Internet is truly one of the greatest acts of agility in corporate history...


share








 March 13, 2014  40m
 
 

6. Mosaic and Internet Explorer Engineer, Chris Wilson


Summary: Chris Wilson has been working on browser technology for the better part of two decades. A member of the original Mosaic team, he went on to work first at Spry (producing Internet in a Box) and then later at Microsoft, where he was a major developer of Internet Explorer for almost 15 years...


share








 March 10, 2014  1h2m