The document discusses the history of ideas and technologies for global information networks, beginning with Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage's conceptualization of computer algorithms in the 1800s. It describes early visions of globally accessible information from H.G. Wells, Paul Otlet, and Vannevar Bush. Key figures who developed early hypertext systems include Ted Nelson, Andries Van Dam, Wendy Hall, and Tim Berners-Lee, whose WorldWideWeb project in 1989 provided the foundation for today's World Wide Web. The document argues that the modern web fails to realize the full potential of hypertext as envisioned by pioneers like Nelson.
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