The Mobile Web Initiative is important - information must be made seamlessly available on any device.
I basically wrote the code and the specs and documentation for how the client and server talked to each other.
Things can change so fast on the internet.
Universality has been the key enabler of innovation on the Web and will continue to be so in the future.
It was really hard explaining the Web before people just got used to it because they didn't even have words like click and jump and page.
One of the issues of social networking silos is that they have the data and I don't.
When something is such a creative medium as the web, the limits to it are our imagination.
I hope we will use the Net to cross barriers and connect cultures.
Web users ultimately want to get at data quickly and easily. They don't care as much about attractive sites and pretty design.
The concept of the Web is of universal readership.
It’s the whole cat and mouse game between the readers and writers that makes the web work.
You can’t propose that something be a universal space and at the same time keep control of it.
People keep asking me what I think of it now that it's done. Hence my protest: The Web is not done!
The internet explodes when somebody has the creativity to look at a piece of data that's put there for one reason and realise they can connect it with something else.
The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information.
The search button on the browser no longer provides an objective search, but a commercial one.
To be a hacker - when I use the term - is somebody who is creative and does wonderful things.
If different cultures connect with each other, they are less likely to want to shoot each other.