Reprinted from TidBITS by permission; reuse governed by Creative Commons license BY-NC-ND 3.0. TidBITS has offered years of thoughtful commentary on Apple and Internet topics. For free email subscriptions and access to the entire TidBITS archive, visit http://www.tidbits.com/ Internet Artifacts Virtual Museum Documents 30 Years of the Internet Adam Engst Neal Agarwal is back with a new entry for his collection of [1]entertaining (and sometimes [2]educational) tiny websites. [3]Internet Artifacts is a virtual museum of artifacts'largely screenshots, though some are interactive'from early Internet history. Speaking as someone who's been using the Internet since the mid-1980s, many of these artifacts were familiar, but others either predate me or came around once the Internet had grown too large for anyone to track. Among much else, you'll find the first home pages for Apple, Google, and Wikipedia. The exhibit starts in 1977 with a map of ARPANET and ends in 2007 with a video of Steve Jobs announcing the iPhone. What's your favorite artifact? [4]Read original article References Visible links 1. https://neal.fun/password-game/ 2. https://neal.fun/space-elevator/ 3. https://neal.fun/internet-artifacts/ 4. https://neal.fun/internet-artifacts/ Hidden links: 5. https://tidbits.com/wp/../uploads/2023/10/Internet-Artifacts-Apple-homepage-scaled.jpg .