Ted Nelson coined the words hypertext and hypermedia in 1965 and worked with Andries van Dam on the development of the Hypertext Editing System in 1968 at Brown University.
With its prefix hyper- from the Greek for "beyond, over," hypertext is text on a computer that can take the user to other hypertext information through connections called hyperlinks. The first practical use of hypertext is credited to Douglas Engelbart's "oN-Line System" (NLS), developed at Stanford Research Center in the 1960s. (Engelbart is also co-inventor with Bill English of the computer mouse.)
Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts - Jean-Philippe Pastor
No comments:
Post a Comment