Walt Howe, webmaster and librarian, tells an "anecdotal history of the people and communities that brought about the Internet and the Web," and answers the frequently asked question: Did Al Gore invent the Internet?
This one-page Internet history is also in time line format. It's spiced up with illustrations, and published by Six Revisions (a blog for web developers).
Sean McManus, a British technology author, gives us a one-page time line of the Internet's development that takes us from 1969 to 2010.
Although this infographic doesn't convey the detailed information available at the other sites, its visually appealing format makes the data easy to understand.
This illustrated time line from the Computer History Museum (of Mountain View, CA) starts in 1962, and continues until 1992.
Surfnetkids.com offers up five websites that examine the history of the internet.
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Computer book author Allen Wyatt runs a network of helpful sites focusing on Microsoft Word and Excel.
Jake Ludington is a multimedia expert, and answers questions about digital video and podcasting, as well as computer productivity tools, Macs, iPhones, and social media such as blogging and Facebook.
Leo Notenboom is a retired Microsoft software engineer who has been answering tech questions online since 2003. Although Leo does cover a variety of Apple topics, and many questions are applicable to all platforms, he fields a lot of Microsoft questions.
Dave Taylor covers a lot of territory, answering questions about iPhones, Facebook, Unix, Limewire, HTML, blogs, CSS, building websites, Mac OS, and even "D) None of the Above."