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Mythos

Web 1.0 refers to the earliest stage of the 📝World Wide Web, generally covering the period from the early 1990s to the early 2000s. It is characterized by static websites that primarily delivered information rather than enabling user interaction. In this phase, most web pages were built with basic 📝HyperText Markup Language (HTML) and offered limited design or multimedia features. Content was largely text-based, often organized as simple directories or collections of hyperlinks. Websites functioned much like digital brochures, providing one-way communication from publisher to reader. Search engines of the era, such as 📝Yahoo! Directory and early versions of AltaVista, played a central role in navigation, though they lacked the advanced algorithms of later systems. Web 1.0 is often described as the “read-only” web because users could consume information but had minimal opportunities to contribute or engage. This stage laid the technical and cultural groundwork for the interactive features of 📝Web 2.0, which introduced 📝Social Networking, blogging, and participatory platforms.

Contexts

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