Tim Berners-Lee
0 sources
Tim Berners-Lee
Summary
Tim Berners-Lee is a human[1]. His place of birth was London[2]. He worked as a computer scientist[3], physicist[4], programmer[5], university teacher[6], and web developer[7]. He ranks in the top 0.42% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5,025 views/month, #4,206 of 1,000,298).[8]
Key Facts
- Tim Berners-Lee was born in London[2].
- Tim Berners-Lee's father was Conway Berners-Lee[9].
- Tim Berners-Lee's mother was Mary Lee Woods[10].
- Tim Berners-Lee held citizenship in United Kingdom[11].
- English was Tim Berners-Lee's native language[12].
- Tim Berners-Lee worked as a computer scientist[3].
- Tim Berners-Lee worked as a physicist[4].
- Tim Berners-Lee's professions included programmer[5].
- Tim Berners-Lee's professions included university teacher[6].
- Tim Berners-Lee worked as a web developer[7].
- Tim Berners-Lee's professions included engineer[13].
- Tim Berners-Lee's field of work was information technology[14].
- Tim Berners-Lee's field of work was computer science[15].
- Among Tim Berners-Lee's employers was World Wide Web Consortium[16].
- Among Tim Berners-Lee's employers was School of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton[17].
- Tim Berners-Lee was employed by Massachusetts Institute of Technology[18].
- Tim Berners-Lee was employed by Open Data Institute[19].
- Tim Berners-Lee received the Prix Ars Electronica[20].
- Tim Berners-Lee received the W. Wallace McDowell Award[21].
- Tim Berners-Lee received the Eduard-Rhein Technology Award[22].
- Tim Berners-Lee received the MacArthur Fellows Program[23].
- Tim Berners-Lee received the Japan Prize[24].
- Tim Berners-Lee received the Millennium Technology Prize[25].
- Tim Berners-Lee's religion is recorded as Unitarian Universalism[26].
- Tim Berners-Lee's image is recorded as LS3 4919 (cropped).jpg[27].
Body
Origins and Family
Tim Berners-Lee's place of birth was London[2]. His father was Conway Berners-Lee[9]. His mother was Mary Lee Woods[10]. English was his native language[12].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include computer scientist[3], physicist[4], programmer[5], university teacher[6], web developer[7], and engineer[13]. Fields of work include information technology[14], a branch of science[28] and computer science[15], an academic discipline[29]. Employers include World Wide Web Consortium[16], a standards organization[30], in United States[31], founded in 1994[32], headquartered in Cambridge[33]; School of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton[17], a faculty[34], in United Kingdom[35], founded in 1946[36]; Massachusetts Institute of Technology[18], a university[37], in United States[38], founded in 1861[39], headquartered in Cambridge[40]; and Open Data Institute[19], a nonprofit organization[41], in United Kingdom[42], founded in 2012[43], headquartered in London[44].
Recognition
Awards received include Prix Ars Electronica[20], a cultural prize[45], in Austria[46], founded in 1987[47]; W. Wallace McDowell Award[21], an award[48], founded in 1966[49]; Eduard-Rhein Technology Award[22]; MacArthur Fellows Program[23], a science award[50], in United States[51], founded in 1981[52]; Japan Prize[24], a science award[53], in Japan[54], founded in 1985[55]; and Millennium Technology Prize[25], a science award[56], in Finland[57], founded in 2004[58].
Personal Life
Tim Berners-Lee's religion is recorded as Unitarian Universalism[26].
Why It Matters
Tim Berners-Lee ranks in the top 0.42% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5,025 views/month, #4,206 of 1,000,298).[8] He has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[59] He is known by 26 alternative names across languages and contexts.[60]
He has been cited as an influence by James Hendler[61], an artificial intelligence researcher[62], b. 1957[63], of United States[64], awarded the ACM Fellow[65], specialised in artificial intelligence[66].
He is credited with the discovery of World Wide Web[67], an information system[68]; web browser[69], a software category[70]; HTML[71], a markup language[72], in United Kingdom[73], founded in 1989[74]; Semantic Web[75], an information system[76]; and WorldWideWeb[77], a free software[78]. Works attributed to him include Weaving the Web[79], a literary work[80], written by him[81]; L'architettura del nuovo web. Dall'inventore della rete il progetto di una comunicazione democratica, interattiva e intercreativa[82], a document[83], written by him[84]; and Design Issues for the World Wide Web[85].
FAQs
Where was Tim Berners-Lee born?
Tim Berners-Lee's place of birth was London[2].
Who were Tim Berners-Lee's parents?
Tim Berners-Lee's father was Conway Berners-Lee[9]. Tim Berners-Lee's mother was Mary Lee Woods[10].
What did Tim Berners-Lee do for work?
Tim Berners-Lee worked as computer scientist[3], physicist[4], programmer[5], university teacher[6], and web developer[7].
What awards did Tim Berners-Lee receive?
Honors received include Prix Ars Electronica[20], W. Wallace McDowell Award[21], Eduard-Rhein Technology Award[22], and MacArthur Fellows Program[23].
Who did Tim Berners-Lee influence?
Tim Berners-Lee has been cited as an influence by James Hendler[61].
What did Tim Berners-Lee discover?
Tim Berners-Lee is credited as discoverer of World Wide Web[67], web browser[69], HTML[71], and Semantic Web[75].