Tim Berners-Lee awarded the British Order of Merit 151
MarsBar writes "The BBC is reporting that Sir Tim Berners-Lee has been awarded The Order of Merit, a royal award granted directly by the Queen. Previous recipients have included Florence Nightingale, Sir Winston Churchill, Bertrand Russell, Graham Greene, Sir Edward Elgar, Mother Teresa and Margaret Thatcher."
discussed it with my kids (Score:5, Funny)
Re:discussed it with my kids (Score:4, Funny)
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Then again, it might not even be goatse, but I'm still too-damn scared to click.
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Do you suppose that a goatse.cx reference getting modded 5, Troll would qualify as a sign of the apocalypse?
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It's safe. It's the really cute and funny kitty cat picture that occasionally shows up on goatse-looking URLs.
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If he had patented his idea we'd be in a world of trouble or it would have been stolen and patented by Microsoft.
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And on those days when you just can't get some odd software you are working on to actually work as intended, you can turn to another hand-picked image like this one also [imageshack.us], to give y
Re:Margaret Thatcher!!!!!!! FFS ... :-( (Score:5, Informative)
I kid you not.
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Re:Margaret Thatcher!!!!!!! FFS ... :-( (Score:4, Informative)
Twit.
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No, she merely had the nation pay for it in jobs. (Score:2)
Well, mind that Ronald "PATCO" Reagan did some heavy lifting [wikipedia.org] to help on that one.
Yes, she only broke the destructive unions that were impoverishing Britain
No, she simply gave businesses the green light to sell out on their country, with hollow results. Same poverty, just swept under the rug, and with foreign knockoffs of tons of UK vehicles.
The only thing that she did was to make the UK serve as a reminder of
Re:No, she merely had the nation pay for it in job (Score:2)
Re:No, she merely had the nation pay for it in job (Score:5, Informative)
Why don't you move to France? You could discuss the merits of protectionism with the locals in the dole queue.
The unions were out of control, even the last labour government had tried to reign them in - only to be humiliated. Brutal, yes it was. But it only needed to be quite so brutal because the idiots of the previous decades protected massive nationalised companies from real competition. Thats what killed British industry, decades of protectionism that left us with manufacturing industries that hadn't a hope of competing globally. Thatcher just convinced the corpse to lie down, and IMO this was her greatest acomplishment.
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Hang on, you have that as the complete opposite of history - Thatcher was pushing for co-existance and talking Reagan out of war. What we got was Thatcher, Reagan and Gorby sitting down at the same table on multiple occasions and a peaceful solution that looks prety good to me from here a few decades on. The hard line imagined here wou
Re:Margaret Thatcher!!!!!!! FFS ... :-( (Score:4, Informative)
Well, the following is from Wikipedia, so you can take it with a grain of salt if you like:
On 19 January 1976, she made a speech in Kensington Town Hall in which she made a scathing attack on the Soviet Union. The most famous part of her speech ran: "The Russians are bent on world dominance, and they are rapidly acquiring the means to become the most powerful imperial nation the world has seen. The men in the Soviet Politburo do not have to worry about the ebb and flow of public opinion. They put guns before butter, while we put just about everything before guns."
Also from Wikipedia:
n the Cold War, Mrs. Thatcher supported United States President Ronald Reagan's policies of deterrence against the Soviets. This contrasted with the policy of détente which the West had pursued during the 1970s, and caused friction with allies who still adhered to the idea of détente. US forces were permitted by Mrs. Thatcher to station nuclear cruise missiles at British bases, arousing mass protests by the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.
However, I will agree with you that when Gorby came to power, she famously said "He is a man we can do business with". But perhaps she sensed that Gorby was a man who could be talked into the sort of reforms that were needed to break up the Soviet bloc. I'm not on intimate speaking terms with the lady, so I'll never know for sure.
At any rate, I never suggested she wanted to go to war with the Soviets, just that she wanted to put up a strong front againt them, while practically every other country in Europre was begging to make some deal with the Soviets that would have kept the entire Warsaw pact intact.
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Most debate is centred around whether this outweighs the things it took to achieve it: increased police powers, reduced personal freedoms, CCTV culture, greed culture, privatisation of swathes of industry and transport infrastructure. The iron lady certainly took her toll on cultural britain.
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The trade unions needed sorted out, but she did it by destroying the working class and throwing away, and literally flooding, the best natural fuel resource we had - coal. Britain's coal is pretty much the best there is, and now all the pumps in the mines have been turned off, they're flooded and we can never get them back. We are now paying for that badly in terms of where our energy is going to come from in the next few years. Tha
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Good for him... (Score:5, Insightful)
His simple invention, and his polite, modest manner should make him the IT icon of our time. I wonder, though, how many people could even tell you what he's done or recognise him by his picture?
Good for him. He deserves all the recognition that he can get.
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My point was that what Gutenberg did to the printed word (made it faster, easier and thus more accessible to all), Berners-Lee did to the online word (put together a system that made it simple to use and thus acheived the same feat).
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Stef also invented and ran the first mailing list and Brian is also responsible for the firewall, Alta Vista and the laserwriter among many others.
Re:Good for him... (Score:5, Informative)
What Sir Tim and his team did is:
- Created HTML, which was arguably much simpler than SGML (yes it also allowed some mediocre "designers" to also design pages, but ultimately it lead to greater adoption)
- Created the HTTP protocol, which by far and large was the greatest "enabler" of the technology, ie allow anonymous access to the information held in a ordered and secure manner.
- Still actively in charge of W3C, and creating new standards, largely without breaking old ones.
- Helped begat XML.
- Did not try and patent it.
So his contributions are large, and he is still actively participating. More importantly, he didnt try to patent it, but freed it.
Agh, bollocks! (Score:2)
Or even ftp using a browser.
the http:/// [http] is not casual. it simply wasn't clear back then that you would not need to specify the protocol used in the future.
The idea of linking documents in a computer network was revolutionary and in spite of all the flash and youtubes and what have you, that simple idea is the core of the Internet as we use it today.
THe disparate bits and pieces to create it where all around the place but it took the ingenuity of Sir Tim to put all those bits
and expressing the links (Score:1)
Continuing in the same vein, not only did HTML/HTTP/URLs link nodes across a network together, it also made the links apparent. There were all kinds of hypertext systems in the 1980s (Hypercard and Notes blew my mind, and OWL and Folio had great insights too) and there was SGML, but when Sir Tim came up with
<a href="some protocol:a host/path/to/resource?some action">the link text<a>
he changed everything. It's easy enough that several million people have Learned It In 21 Days and
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Oh BS. Far more significant to the internet was email. If it hadn't been for that it would have been a complete non starter outside very specialised areas. As for TBL being the most significant person alive , I think you need to re-adjust your set. The Web isn't even close to being a daily relevance for the majority of the worlds population and even in the west a large proportion of the population couldn'
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MIME at the heart of HTTP? (Score:2)
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They oughhta make him an URL.
(Yeah, it's an old joke. But it's still funny.)
Re:Good for him... (Score:5, Insightful)
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This Marble Monument Is Erected by the State) He was found by the Bureau of Statistics to be
One against whom there was no official complaint,
And all the reports on his conduct agree
That, in the modern sense of an old-fashioned word, he was a saint,
For in everything he did he served the Greater Community.
Except for the War till the day he retired
He worked in a factory and never got fired,
But satisfied his employers, Fudge Motors Inc.
Yet he wasn
Re:Good for him... (Score:5, Insightful)
Being unknown to the filthy masses is the mark of the true Engineer.
Sales and Marketing types are popular, Engineers get shit done.
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That puts him in very high regard and he should be. That said, I knew nothing about him until reading the article. Some people want fame and glory, others just want to do what
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As it happens the first time I met Tim in 1992 it was a couple of weeks after visiting the Gutenberg museum.
Gutenberg didn't invent movable type either, but he was the first person to put all the different pieces together to create a system.
Margaret Thatcher (Score:1)
Couldn't they just name an airport after her, instead of sullying the award?
NOT the "web-inventor" (Score:2)
Although widely believed to be such a person, Tim can only be called "the inventor of WWW", if we really need to identify a name with each concept — he didn't think of anything, not immediately obvious to anyone skilled in the art [wikipedia.org]. Even then, we should be crediting the inventors of Hypertext [wikipedia.org], which existed long before Tim's work — if we can identify them, that is. The hypertext system, which Tim built at CERN [wikipedia.org], did not ev
Ok so? (Score:1)
I can see him going down is history as a great role is starting the WWW
Meanwhile in other news... (Score:5, Funny)
What no Diana? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What no Diana? (Score:4, Funny)
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Aha
Of course, the other bit was the whole point in my post - if it could be said to be a point...pointless, more like.
And don't forget T S Eliot (Score:5, Informative)
The point being, that Berners-Lee is actually in much better company than the list given in the introduction might have suggested, and this award extends beyond the British gene pool to Americans like Eliot and Anglo-Americans like Churchill.
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I find it very amusing that you suggest that Churchill is somehow "beyond the British gene pool".
Yes, Churchill had an american mother (of english descent), but he was born and raised in England (at Blenheim Palace no less) and his father, Lord Randolph Churchill, was
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previous recipients.... (Score:5, Funny)
Damn, talk about the odd one out!
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Re:previous recipients.... (Score:4, Funny)
Such great people (Score:2, Interesting)
will lightning strike twice? (Score:2)
We all should know by now (Score:5, Informative)
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okay, you just posted exactly the same thing I did and get modded up and I get modded down? I guarantee a british guy modded my post.
Hardly. To quote from your post [slashdot.org]:
"The inventor of the world wide web has been awarded the Order of Merit"
I can't believe someone would be ignorant/arrogant enough to actually name one person as the inventor of the internet
The GP was correcting your apparent ignorance on the subject. Neither Tim B-L nor the article summary ever claimed he invented the internet, only the World Wide Web.
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Re:Apparently even /. has shifted right. (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Apparently even /. has shifted right. (Score:4, Informative)
Thatcher came to power in 1979, not 1975. Bear that in mind next time you call someone an ignorant fool.
As another poster has commented, those figures don't take into account inflation, which reached 18% at one point. Also, between 1978 and 1983, manufacturing output dropped 30%.
I'm sure that felt great for the 3.6 million who were unemployed in the early 80s (more than three times the number unemployed under the previous Labour government).
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Have you read Labours '97 manifesto? ... a national minimum wage, improving universal free-at-the-point-of-service healthcare, windfall taxes on big business, increased European integration.
These are Conservative policies?
The major Tory policy stolen was that indirect taxes get noticed a lot less than direct taxes, so you can pretend to be tax cutting when you aren't -- which is exactly what John Major did.
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Correct. Now, when did Labour get into power, allegedly by espousing Conservative policies? Was it by any chance two elections ago, in 1997?
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Well, NHS investment is massively higher. You can dispute the results, but not the expenditure.
... I could list h
Parliaments for Wales and Scotland? Not a Tory policy. Done
Reduction in child poverty? Not a Tory priority, and not a Tory manifesto promise. Done.
Reduced class sizes for KS 1 and 2? Done (see http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nscl.asp?ID=6065 [statistics.gov.uk])
Free education for all under fives? Done
Do you want me to go on
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That doesn't make them Tories.
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Ummm - you later say yourself that she actually came to power in 1979 however the years you note were key to building growth in the UK. Not much to do with politics as you may suggest though;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sullom_Voe [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brent_crude [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brent_oilfield [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1979_energy_crisis [wikipedia.org]
you may wish to review what percentage of UK GDP North Sea Oil represented d
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By selling off the state owned utilities, that WE had paid for through taxes for generations, with the resulting loss of public accountability.
Now our water distribution network is owned by the international conglomerates, as is our power and others. Hardly any of our engineering companies are british owned, and even then, they are usually owned by finance houses (instead of professional engineers) so they are under the threat of downsizing/asset stripping/resale at the slight
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People with money will only invest if they can hold on to their money and multiply it. But is that good for the common folk? in the end, all money will be in the hands of the elite (as if it wasn't, but anyway).
You can try seeing it this way: Earth is a closed system, so the value of its res
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First of 1/3 of the country is not in poverty. Half the world can't fill a glass with clean water - THATS poverty.
Look, the point of a capitalistic society is that predominantly you are responsible for your own well being within the laws that make society work. Part of that includes those that can't help themselves but not paying for those that wont help themselves. Socialism only works for a period of time until those creating the wealth
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Well, we're all born in the UK, and we're all inherently superior to y'all USians.....
If nothing else, we're superior in understanding words. It's obvious that some people are superior to others by accident of birth - compare an athelete with someone who is born disabled. You probably didn't mean that. When you can tell me what you meant, I'll tell you wh
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1. our businesses don't have to spend so much money on bribes
2 our politicians aren't owned by oil companies and
3 they are able to represent the people who elected them and aren't afraid to pass inconvenient laws.
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