• January –
Jerry Yang and
David Filo create "Jerry's Guide to the
World Wide Web", a hierarchically organised website, while studying at
Stanford University; in April it is renamed
Yahoo! • March 14 •
Apple Computer, Inc. releases the
Power Macintosh, the first Macintosh computers to use the new
PowerPC microprocessors. • The
Linux kernel version 1.0.0 is released after over two years of development. • April 12 – Husband-and-wife law partners
Laurence Canter and Martha Siegel post the first massive commercial
spam on
Usenet in the United States. • July 5 –
Jeff Bezos launches
Amazon. • c. August –
Pizza Hut becomes the first restaurant to offer
online food ordering, in California. • October 1 – The
World Wide Web Consortium is founded by
Tim Berners-Lee, becoming the main international
standards organization for the
World Wide Web. • c. November –
Online service America Online purchases Booklink as a browser to offer its users a gateway to the
World Wide Web for the first time. This marks the beginning of easy accessibility of the Web to the average person in the U.S. In 1996, AOL replaces Booklink with a browser based on Internet Explorer, allegedly in exchange for inclusion of AOL in Windows. • December 3 –
Sony release the
PlayStation fifth generation home
video game console in
Japan. • December 15 –
Netscape launch the
Netscape Navigator web browser, for which it creates
HTTP Secure. •
Leonard Adleman describes the experimental use of
DNA as a computational system to solve a seven-node instance of the
Hamiltonian path problem, the first known instance of the successful use of DNA to compute an
algorithm. •
Penguin Books offer
Peter James' novel
Host on two
floppy disks as "the world's first electronic novel". ==Earth sciences==