Sunday, January 13, 2013

Who invented surfing the Internet?

Parting Thoughts
Before we surfed the net, folks mined it, navigated it, explored it, used it, or cruised it.  So who really came up with Surfing the Internet? 

I suppose I can take some credit for popularing it, because it's clear that "Surfing the Internet" really began to take over as the term of choice after I released my article to the Internet in December, 1992 for free FTP download. Immediately we had downloads from all over the world—500 in the first 12 hours, as I recall--which was a big deal in those early days.

My article was short enough to be translated into many languages, and it was meant to show people the fun and utility of using the Internet. Over the years I have kept many pieces of correspondence from people who found that early document useful, and took the time to write and thank me. I am happy that my article played a part in Internet history.

Who coined or originated the term or phrase "Surfing the Internet"?

First Use in a Published Article (1992)
To the best of my knowledge I am credited with the first published use of the phrase. This is due to an article titled "Surfing the Internet," published in the June 1992 monthly magazine, Wilson Library Bulletin. (Wilson Library Bulletin, v66 n10 p38-42, Jun 1992 or ERIC document EJ447456) I think of this as version 1.0. WLB has now ceased publication, but it was a popular monthly professional magazine for librarians, and was published by the H.W. Wilson company. Read about about how I came up with the title.

Subsequently I updated and expanded the article and released the electronic file for FTP download December 3, 1992 as version 2.0 (closely followed by 2.01 and Dec. 15's version 2.0.2). It quickly spread around the world after that. We put up a version 2.0.3 update in May, 1993.

Other Early Use in Printed Publications (1993-1995)
Because I am a librarian, I did extensive searches for early uses of the terms "Internet" and "surfing (or surf or surfer)" in print media. In 2001 I searched DIALOG@CARL newspaper archives, many of which go back into the early 80s. Here's what I've found.
My Wilson Library Bulletin article was first, June 1992.    
Then there's a gap of a year. 
The San Francisco Chronicle first used it on June 1, 1993    
This article also states that worldwide, "The number of people hooked to the Internet has grown exponentially -- from about 2,000 in 1981 to about 15 million today."    
USA Today, Aug. 17, 1993    
InfoWorld Sept. 20, 1993    
PC Week Nov. 15, 1993    
Boston Globe, Nov. 23, 1993 "Internet surfer"    
Halifax Daily News, Dec. 1, 1993    
New York Times, Dec. 8, 1993 "to surf the Internet"    
Washington Post, Dec. 18, 1993 "to surf the Internet"    
Seattle Times, Dec. 21, 1993    
Washington Post, Jan. 16, 1994    
Computerworld, Feb. 14, 1994    
Times of London, April 24, 1994 "net-surfing"    
San Jose Mercury News, April 29, 1994 "surfed the Internet"    
St. Petersburg Times, May 1, 1994    
San Jose Mercury News, May 22, 1994    
Charlotte Observer, June 30, 1994    
Internet World July-August 1994    
Atlanta Constitution, July 24, 1994    
San Francisco Examiner, July 24, 1994    
St Louis Post-Dispatch, Aug. 17, 1994 "Internet surfer"    
Network World Aug. 29, 1994    
Roanoke Times, Oct. 8, 1994    
Business Times (Asia- Pacific), Oct. 10, 1994    
Newsday and New York Newsday, Oct. 19, 1994    
Philadelphia Inquirer, Oct. 21, 1994    
Richmond Times-Dispatch Nov. 6, 1994    
Christian Science Monitor, Nov. 7, 1994    
Madison Capital Times, Nov. 15, 1994    
Los Angeles Times, Dec. 18, 1994    
Byte, Jan. 1995    
The Wall Street Journal, Jan. 17, 1995    
Detroit Free Press, Feb. 4, 1995    
Miami Herald, Feb. 5, 1995

What is surfing the internet?

Early USENET Surfing
Although my article was independently conceived and written in the early months of 1992, and submitted in mid-March, others were thinking along the same metaphorical lines. A handful of earlier uses have turned up in Usenet archives, recently made available by the search engine Google. <http://groups.google.com />

Mark McCahill, father of the Internet Gopher protocol, can be credited with first known Usenet usage of the exact phrase, "surfing the internet." [Ed. Note: For the record, I didn't have Usenet access at the time I wrote my article back in 1992, so I never knew of Mark's use of it until 12-12-01, when I read about Google's new expanded Usenet archive.]    
Mark's post:    
" 24 Feb 1992 by "Mark P. McCahill"    
Newsgroups: alt.gopherView:    
.... There is a lot to be said for...surfing the internet with gopher from anywhere that you can find a phone jack....."

On Dec. 12, 2001 I informed Mark of his "first post" rights. He said,    
"I can tell you why I used the phrase. One of my favorite sports is windsurfing, so 'surfing' is never far from my mind... that and extending the 'channel surfing' metaphor to the internet because we thought that browsing was an important way of finding information. If you have ever seen my garage (I think there are 8 or 10 sailboards there) or my office (1 board) know why I would say something about surfing the internet."

A few days earlier than McCahill's original post, on February 18, 1992, Charles Bailey posted to bit.listserv.pacs-l and wrote about the "virtual library." He said, "Doing it right seems to imply building a library-wide network of microcomputer workstations that is linked to external networks (e.g., the campus LAN and Internet). It also implies providing local servers (e.g., networked CD-ROM databases, OPAC, and locally mounted citation, full-text, and multimedia databases) and 'seamless' connectivity to remote servers (e.g., remote OPACs, CARL UnCover2, and OCLC FirstSearch). Creating an easy-to-use interface to these diverse heterogeneous resources will not be a trivial task. Even if we don't try to fully support users as they 'surf' the networks, end-user support costs will increase as the library provides access to a growing number of information servers."

There's also use of the term "going net-surfing" which turns up in a June 6, 1991 comp.admin.policy post by Brendan Kehoe.    
"...Here's a question: how do other people deal with users that they *think*    
are doing no-nos around the net? One of our users had the habit of    
occasionally going net-surfing and doing the hit-and-run type of    
attempts (trying 'guest' usually)..."

In January 1992, Kehoe released Zen and the Art of the Internet<http://www.cs.indiana.edu/docproject/zen/zen-1.0_toc.html>, arguably the first Internet guide aimed at non-techie end users. It does not talk about "surfing the net" at all. Kehoe used the words "explore" and "search" and "use" when referring to what one did on the Internet of that era.

I have not found earlier usage of surfing (surf*) and the Internet (*net) on the Usenet archive at Google, but it's possible that there are some in there that have so far escaped my extensive searches.