A long-awaited talk

Back in 2019 I had the amazing experience of going to CERN and being part of a team building an emulator of the first ever browser.

Remy was on the team too. He did the heavy lifting of actually making the thing work—quite an achievement in just five days!

Coming into this, I thought it was hugely ambitious to try to not only recreate the experience of using the first ever web browser (called WorldWideWeb, later Nexus), but to also try to document the historical context of the time. Now that it’s all done, I’m somewhat astounded that we managed to achieve both.

Remy and I were both keen to talk about the work, which is why we did a joint talk at Fronteers in Amsterdam that year. We’re both quite sceptical of talks given by duos; people think it means it’ll be half the work, when actually it’s twice the work. In the end we come up with a structure for the talk that we both liked:

Now, we could’ve just done everything chronologically, but that would mean I’d do the first half of the talk and Remy would do the second half. That didn’t appeal. And it sounded kind of boring. So then we come up with the idea of interweaving the two timelines.

That worked remarkably well.

You can watch the video of that talk in Amsterdam. You can also read the transcript.

After putting so much work into the talk, we were keen to give it again somewhere. We had the chance to do that in Nottingham in early March 2020. (cue ominous foreboding)

The folks from local Brighton meetup Async had also asked if we wanted to give the talk. We were booked in for May 2020. (ominous foreboding intensifies)

We all know what happened next. The Situation. Lockdown. No conferences. No meetups.

But technically the talk wasn’t cancelled. It was just postponed. And postponed. And postponed. Before you know it, five years have passed.

Part of the problem was that Async is usually on the first Thursday of the month and that’s when I host an Irish music session in Hove. I can’t miss that!

But finally the stars aligned and last week Remy and I finally did the Async talk. You can watch a video of it.

I really enjoyed giving the talk and the discussion that followed. There was a good buzz.

It also made me appreciate the work that we put into stucturing the talk. We’ve only given it a few times but with a five year gap between presentations, I can confidentally say that’s it’s a timeless topic.

Have you published a response to this? :

Responses

Ben Seven

@adactio I swear there’s a joke about how asynchronous requests work in here somewhere!

# Posted by Ben Seven on Tuesday, January 14th, 2025 at 8:22pm

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# Shared by George MacRorie on Tuesday, January 14th, 2025 at 5:13pm

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Previously on this day

6 years ago I wrote Writing for hiring

Robot-free recruiting.

9 years ago I wrote Separated at death

Farewell, doppelgänger.

11 years ago I wrote Chüne

Churn on, Chüne in, chrop out.

15 years ago I wrote Making Workshops for the Web

Behind the scenes of the latest Clearleft site.

16 years ago I wrote Authors On Tour — Live!

For your huffduffing pleasure.

17 years ago I wrote Ten songs titles that could be Twitter updates

The kind of list that’s too geeky for McSweeney’s.

18 years ago I wrote The Best Songs I Acquired in 2006 Ever

Following Richard’s lead.

20 years ago I wrote DHTML is dead. Long live DOM Scripting.

Just in case I haven’t completely hammered the point home lately, I have a feeling that 2005 is going to see a big surge in the use of the Document Object Model with JavaScript.

22 years ago I wrote I've seen fire and I've seen rain

…but mostly rain.

23 years ago I wrote Which Kevin Smith character are you?

Excellent! I am Silent Bob, apparently:

23 years ago I wrote Biz Stone: Wrong Font

Take a look at this picture of a storefront, it’s a great example of how not to choose a font.