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Simon Beardow - Deputy Director, British Council, Vietnam

Saturday, 12 January 2013

'Arping On About History

Well yes, I know that the title of this post is a terrible pun, but the fact is that the history of the Internet has been documented in a piecemeal fashion - until now.

It was in 1969 that the Pentagon produced ARPAnet, the precursor to the Internet as we know it. Dani Polak,Joep Drummen and Joeri Bakkers, from the Dutch ad agency advertising TBWA\NEBOKO, have put in a lot of effort into producingThe Big Internet Museum. The site faithfully records the Internet's milestones and unlike many museums these days,entrance is free!

The online museum documents and displays the Web’s most interesting artefacts, for today's and future generations. It houses seven specialised wings and each features a different subject.

As well as these traditional 'wings', The Big Internet Museum has other parallels with a conventional museum. Third parties can display their works in a specially assigned temporary exhibition wing. There are plans for the digital production agency, MediaMonks, to fill the temporary exhibition space with an exhibit about the history of Flash.



Got something you thing is worthy of their collection? You can submit it to the museum and, if democratically accepted by public vote, help the museum's collection grow. Visitors are invited to adopt the mantle of digital curator.
The site's creators say: "We seek to educate and inspire visitors from all over the world with an ever-growing collection about the Internet and the World Wide Web. Not only for this current generation, but also for generations to come. Remember the sound of a 56K dial-up modem? Your children probably don't. In fact, chances are they don’t have a clue what a loading bar is."

There are some of us who are old enough to remember the interminable wait for a dial-up modem to connect. Thankfully these experiences have now been consigned to history.

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