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Home > Online & Multimedia
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12:00 AM  Jun. 10, 2008
New Media Timeline (1998)
By David Shedden (More articles by this author)
Library Director, Poynter Institute

More in this series

Previous: 1997 / Next: 1999
View all of the years in the New Media Timeline 

             SERVICES & TECH

  • Feb.10, 1998 -- XML (Extensible Markup Language) is recommended by the W3C (World Wide Web Consortium) as a general-purpose markup language.   

  • April 1998 -- It is announced that $500 million in industry support has been pledged for the development of the next-generation Internet, called Internet 2.

  • April 1998 -- A study in the journal Science reports that even the best search engines index no more than 34% of the 320 million available webpages. NEC Research Institute scientists report that search engines index the following percentages of the Web.
  • May 1998 -- The U.S. Justice Department sues Microsoft, accusing it of monopolistic practices against competitors.

  • May 20, 1998 -- The Bluetooth Special Interest Group is announced. Bluetooth is an industrial specification for wireless personal area networks. "Bluetooth provides a way to exchange information between wireless devices such as personal digital assistants (PDAs), mobile phones, laptops, computers, printers, digital cameras via a secure, low-cost, globally available short-range radio frequency band."

  • June 1998 -- The Windows 98 operating system is released by Microsoft.

  • June 1998 -- A report from CommerceNet and Nielsen Media Research announces that the number of Internet users over the age of 16 in the U.S. and Canada has reached 79 million.

  • "Will Net appliances edge out PCs?" PC World / CNN, June 22, 1998.

  • "The joys of curling up with a good digital reading device."
    Steve Silberman, Wired, July 1998.

  • "A History of List Servers."
    John Buckman, 1998.

  • Aug. 1998 -- Apple computer begins selling its new iMac (Internet Mac) computer.

  • Sept. 1998 --The Google company opens its office in Menlo Park, California. Google.com was still in beta.

  • When We Were Young: In the Golden Age of ASCII, Kids could be King."
    Wired, Sept. 1998.

  • The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is founded. ICANN is responsible for the global coordination of the Internet's system of unique identifiers.

  • Oct. 1998 -- The Alexa company, which has been preserving Web pages since 1996, donates two terabytes of historical Web content to the Library of Congress. The donation is in the form of an interactive digital sculpture that includes text, images, and audio files from the Web.

  • Fifty percent of U.S. homes have personal computers. In 1995 the number was just 27 percent. The change was driven by strong sales of lower priced computers. (Source:
    Dataquest market research)

  • Nov. 24, 1998 -- America Online announces that it will acquire Netscape Communications Corporation in a stock deal valued at $4.2 billion. AOL will also enter into a strategic alliance with Sun Microsystems.

  • "Connecting with Intranets."
    Presstime, Dec. 1998.

            THE MEDIA

                      Awards
 Statistics
  • Nov. 1998 -- A Jupiter Communications survey reports that more than 80% of U.S. online consumers trust online news as much as they trust newspapers, broadcast television, and cable news outlets.

  • Dec. 1998 -- The Pew Center reports that the number of people who get news online at least weekly continues to grow, starting from 4% in 1995 to between 15% to 26% in 1998. Statistics fluctuate related to what is happening in the news. There are approximately 74 million Internet users in the United States.

  • The America Online dial-up service has 15,000,000 subscribers.
    (Source: AOL)

  • There are approximately 1280 television stations with sites on the Internet or dial-up services.
    (Source: Editor & Publisher)

  • There are approximately 3250 newspapers with sites on the Internet or dial-up services.
    (Source: Editor & Publisher)

Additional Resources
 


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