Marconi Prize recipient

For inventing the World Wide Web as an internet-based hypermedia initiative for global information sharing.

Sir Tim Berners-Lee, 2002

Presented by: Dr. Francesco Paresce, Chairman of the Board, Marconi International Fellowship Foundation.

A graduate of Oxford University, England, Tim Berners-Lee now holds the 3Com Founders chair at the Laboratory for Computer Science ( LCS) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He directs the World Wide Web Consortium, an open forum of companies and organizations with the mission to lead the Web to its full potential. With a background of system design in real-time communications and text processing software development, in 1989 he invented the World Wide Web, an internet-based hypermedia initiative for global information sharing. while working at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, which is the world’s largest particle physics laboratory. He wrote the first web client (browser-editor) and server in 1990. Before coming to CERN, Tim worked with Image Computer Systems, of Ferndown, Dorset, England and before that a principal engineer with Plessey Telecommunications, in Poole, England.