Nowadays, there are practically no places in the inhabited part of the planet where there is no way to connect to the Internet. There is great confidence that there will be a way everywhere, even the worst and the poorest. Perhaps, in this case, the Internet will be slow and low-quality, but it will be.
We are talking about the fact that almost our entire globe is entangled with communication lines, and where there is no possibility to lay a cable, satellites soon come to the rescue. Life does not stand still, it develops. And here it is modern and entertaining.
Of course, an oak is not felled with one stroke, and humanity did not immediately have the Internet. The history of the formation of the World Wide Web began more than half a century ago. This story about the birth of the Internet is rather multifaceted and interesting. Arising through the decades, we can recall how the formation of infrastructure took place, how some technologies were replaced by others, and the complex world of telecommunications gradually became the way humanity knows it at the moment. After all, now almost every one of us cannot imagine life without access to the Internet, without a phone, without games and everything like that.
The twentieth century, from the point of view of information, can probably be defined as an era when people learned to successfully and without any problems broadcast data from one source to millions of remote devices. By the way, earlier radio and television stations acted as such a source, and the recipients were absolutely everyone who had access to a simple radio or television.
At the same time, along with this, telephone lines were actively developing. Surprisingly, by the middle of the 20th century, almost anyone could easily call anywhere in his or her hometown or even the whole country, if he or she wanted. And companies, in turn, could organize telephone conferences for several subscribers at the same time without problems and unsolvable difficulties.
Nevertheless, over time, people began to realize these methods did not justify all the hopes placed on them. Indeed, the listed methods of communication had very serious drawbacks. For example, in the case of television and radio broadcasting, ordinary people did not have the opportunity to simply filter and modify the content they listened to and received. In other words, communication with the media and all possible sources was carried out only unilaterally.
Thus, the idea of a fundamentally new way of communication between people, which would allow sending and receiving instant messages, searching and distributing information without restrictions and independently determining how to receive it, was already in the air.
Now we already have a large set of all kinds of social networks that are inexorably changing and developing from day to day. Moreover, all social networks have their own specific and unique style, their own purposes and principles.
Humanity easily identifies these social networks by looking at their logos. For example, the world-famous logo Facebook. By the way, this is actually one of the most successful projects of our time. Or, for example, a catchy, unusual and especially memorable logo Gmail, which is the letter M, consisting of blue, red, yellow and green colors.
These and many other social networks are incredibly tightly integrated into our lives and occupy almost the main place there. After all, today humanity works, communicates with friends and relatives who live quite far from them. And all this thanks to social networks for every taste.