indeed, tbl deserves much credit for html and the client/server model and implementation.
Or SGML, derived from IBM's GML as one product solution to various attempts by the Pentagon to specify a generalized markup language back in the 70's.
but hypertext, links, etc. were described by vanevar busch (sp?) in 1948. undoubtedly the sociopaths of the time excoriated him for it.
Ted Nelson is usually given a lot of credit for putting hypertext into a recognizeable computer framework around 1961, he coined the term. Vannevar Busch's article, which I've read, certainly saw the shadows on the walls of the cave though I'm not entirely certain he wasn't just taking a baby step forward from the 1930's era Hollerith card crime data bank the FBI had built to match MO's and fingerprints etc. You can see the FBI stuff in old B&W crimebuster movies where they'll cut to grainy file footage of thousands of punchcards being sorted noisily in those large sorters as the G-men mercilessly hunt down their man, and the answer punches out on the KSR-33 in the local office... -- -Barry Shein Software Tool & Die | bzs@world.std.com | http://www.world.com Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: 617-739-0202 | Login: 617-739-WRLD The World | Public Access Internet | Since 1989 *oo*