Tell me more ×
Facebook - Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for facebook developers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
Facebook and Stack Exchange are now working together to support the Facebook developer community. Facebook engineers participate here along with the best Facebook developers in the world. If you have a technical question about Facebook, this is the best place to ask.

I vaguely remember that in the early days of the browser, one notion of what hypertext could be used for was a "zoom in" detail for academic essays: if you wanted a brief overview, you'd take the outermost level, and if you wanted to delve, you would click something and more sentences would appear.

I know this sounds trivial and now, but in the mid-1990s it was thought-provoking. Has anyone seen any web fossils like this lying around, ideally still live on the web somewhere?

share|improve this question
1  
This isn't really programming related. – Ben Alpert Feb 28 '09 at 7:48

1 Answer

Jakob Nielsen's 1995 book Multimedia and Hypertext: The Internet and Beyond has a history of desktop and internet hypertext. Maybe what you're talking about is not web browsers but Gopher?

Gopher is another approach to hypertext over the Internet but it uses a less interesting menu-based interaction style. Gopher users basically see a list of available topics, and after selecting one of them, they get a new menu of whatever their selection pointed to. Eventually, a Gopher user will reach a leaf node that actually contains some information.

Or, from looking at some of the other pictures in the book, maybe you're talking about Hyper-G. The relevant page of the book appears from Google Books starting here with pictures on the next 4 pages.

share|improve this answer
Gopher didn't do inline text replacement, I'm not sure about Hyper-G, but Guide was based on it. A Web example? Before JavaScript the Web was really too slow to make it practical, but I don't recall any with JavaScript either. Sorry. – reinierpost Feb 28 '09 at 21:13

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.