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This document was an attempt to persuade CERN management that a global hypertext system was in CERN's interests. Note that the only name I had for it at this time was "Mesh" -- I decided on "World Wide Web" when writing the code in 1990.
While it's always said that the document was written in the somewhat vague March 1989, March 13th is the day that CERN decided to celebrate the event, so we'll take that as a mandate. Here are the events of the day (all CET). CERN had webcast the events as well.
Due to time differences, however, this has all come and gone for those of us in North America!
While the Internet and the World Wide Web are often used interchangeably, they are not the same thing. You could think of the Internet as being the United States to the World Wide Web's California.
In reality, the Internet is the infrastructure, the software and hardware network which actually began as ARPANET, while the WWW is a service, a collection of interconnected documents and other resources, linked by hyperlinks and URLs.
To those of us browsing around the WWW: who cares, right? It is difficult to imagine the world without the WWW, and to be honest, most of our children would view a world without the WWW as we would have viewed the world without TV in the early 80's.
Browse on!