English Arabic Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) French German Hindi Italian Japanese Spanish
Sirius XM Satellite Radio Inc.

AppDownload

  • Pandora tunes up music sharing via Facebook

    (Credit: Screenshot by Lance Whitney/CNET) Pandora listeners can now easily share their favorite tunes with their Facebook friends. The Pandora Web site and the iPhone and Android apps now let you automatically publish your music listening activity to your Facebook Timeline. On the Web site, si ...

  • Truecaller Opens Paid API To Select Developers To Monetise Its Global Phone Directory

    Truecaller, the Sweden-based creater of a crowdsourced phone directory app and online white pages service, has opened its API to a select group of “handpicked” developers. Truecaller said its directory now contains some 600 million phone numbers, either contributed by individuals or harvest ...

  • Microsoft's Xbox One.

    Xbox Live Gold membership good for both Xbox One and 360

    Microsoft's Xbox One. (Credit: James Martin/CNET) Xbox 360 owners who have a Live Gold membership will be able to use it on the Xbox One as well. Phil Harrison, a corporate VP with Microsoft, confirmed to video game blog site Polygon that the same Gold membership will apply to both systems. Xb ...

  • Clearwire board approves Sprint's revised bid

    Just a day after Sprint upped its bid to acquire Clearwire, the latter's board has said that it's the right deal for the company. In a statement released on Wednesday, Clearwire's board announced that it has approved the new deal with Sprint. The board has also asked shareholders to vote in favor ...

  • artkive2

    Artkive Turns Your Kids' Artwork (And More) Into Printed Books

    Artkive, an app designed to eliminate the overwhelming guilt you get tossing your children’s brilliant artwork into the garbage, now has another purpose, too: you can order printed out books of their creations. Instead of just hiding the child’s crumpled up drawings and precious finger-pain ...

  • Xbox One

    Xbox One preorders point to Nov. 30 arrival

    The logo says just Xbox, but this is the new Xbox One. (Credit: James Martin/CNET) Gamers desperate to splash out on Microsoft's blocky new Xbox One console needn't wait until Christmas, as U.K. retailers have already started taking preorders for the upcoming gaming gadget. Green-hued tech reta ...

  • Xbox One

    Xbox One preorders point to Nov. 30 arrival

    The logo says just Xbox, but this is the new Xbox One. (Credit: James Martin/CNET) Gamers desperate to splash out on Microsoft's blocky new Xbox One console needn't wait until Christmas, as U.K. retailers have already started taking preorders for the upcoming gaming gadget. Green-hued tech reta ...

  • Microsoft's Xbox One

    Xbox Live Gold membership good for both Xbox One and 360

    Microsoft's Xbox One. (Credit: James Martin/CNET) Xbox 360 owners who have a Live Gold membership will be able to use it on the Xbox One as well. Phil Harrison, a corporate vice president with Microsoft, confirmed to video-game blog Polygon that the same Gold membership will apply to both syste ...

  • Home
    Home This is where you can find all the blog posts throughout the site.
  • Archives
    Archives Contains a list of blog posts that were created previously.
  • Login
    Login Login form

Berners-Lee, Web take bow at Olympics

Posted by on in Personal Tech
  • Font size: Larger Smaller
  • Hits: 67

Sir Tim looks on as his tweet lights up the stadium.

(Credit: Screenshot by Edward Moyer/CNET)

Forget about the ripped-and-rugged sprinters and shot-putters, bring on the gold-medal geeks.

The opening ceremony of this summer's London Olympics obliged that sentiment, as Web inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee got the star treatment during the extravaganza.

A hip-hoppy dance routine featuring legions of fist-pumping club-types gave way as a stage-set suburban house rose from the ground to reveal a lone keyboard jockey surfing away in solitude.

None other than Berners-Lee it was, and with a flick of his wrist, he lit up the stadium with a grandly flashing tweet: "This is for everyone."

And so, more and more, it is. In the two decades or so since its inception, the WWW has grown from a nerdy curiosity into a tool well nigh as widespread as the telephone or TV. Twitter itself reported today that 9.66 million tweets concerning the Olympics opening ceremony were sent out as the spectacle unfolded -- that's more than the number of tweets sent out about the 2008 Beijing Olympics during the entire run of that tournament. Clearly, the Web is nothing these days if not mainstream (though it bears noting that a digital divide does still exist, even in a country as well off as the U.S.).

Berners-Lee's tweet itself generated almost 10,000 retweets, Twitter said in its blog post. Here, courtesy of Berners-Lee himself, and the Web, is a clip of Sir Tim's big Olympic moment:

 

Last modified on

Comments