In the early '90s, I watched the TV show Newton's Apple regularly on PBS. Ordinarily, there was a brief interlude in the middle of the show where an address to write to was shown on screen. In 1993 or 1994, however, they began to announce that in addition to conventional mail, "Now, you can send us e-mail at the University of Minnesota." As such, this was the first time I had heard of e-mail and, as such, an aspect of the Internet.
The world wide web I heard about several months later through a combination of hearsay and miscellaneous media, although it's harder for me to pin down the exact moment.
I first accessed the Internet (or specificially, the web) in 1995 at the library of a local college, on one of several 486-based computers with Windows 3.11 and Netscape Navigator 1.0. I also remember the first website I visited, which was Yahoo!. Their logo was very different back then.
The rest, you could say, is history.
The world wide web I heard about several months later through a combination of hearsay and miscellaneous media, although it's harder for me to pin down the exact moment.
I first accessed the Internet (or specificially, the web) in 1995 at the library of a local college, on one of several 486-based computers with Windows 3.11 and Netscape Navigator 1.0. I also remember the first website I visited, which was Yahoo!. Their logo was very different back then.
The rest, you could say, is history.