Champagne
Alcoholic Beverage
|
The Internet: 40 Years of Breathtaking Innovation...ones. This is a further indication of the transition to a wider audience. 1992: Students at NCSA in Champagne-Urbana modify Berners-Lee s hypertext proposal. In a few weeks MOSAIC is born within the campus. Jim Clark sees MOSAIC and... In this article: Tim Berners-Lee, World Wide Web, UCLA, Mosaic, U.S., All rights reserved, Champagne, Domain Name System, and Network Control Protocol |
-
Breaking News, Analysis, Opinions, Multimedia and Blogs - TIME | February 13, 2009
Queen Elizabeth's New Web Page
...Monarchy. No bottles of champagne were broken over laptops, but the man many credit with founding the internet, Tim Berners Lee, was present at the launch, which is not bad considering it's mostly a glorified Facebook page. Why does Her...
In this article: Dachshunds, Prince William, YouTube, Facebook, Tim Berners Lee, and Queen Elizabeth II
-
www.w3.org
People who have contributed to the World Wide Web project
WARNING: For Archival/Historical Interest -- The ... National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), Urbana Champagne, IL, USA. ... Tim Berners-Lee ...
-
www.evri.com
Tim Berners-Lee, Inventor and Technologist - News - Evri
Follow Tim Berners-Lee at Evri.com, your source for real time news, quotes, tweets, trends, ... Champagne Alcoholic Beverage. HTML Technology Concept ...
-
www.youtube.com
YouTube - Tim Berners-Lee na Cparty 2009
Alexandre Matias, editor assistente do Link, e Juliana Rocha, repórter do Link, comentam a palestra de Tim Berners-Lee. ... 4:51. Champagne Skin Care. 274,949 ...
-
internetnews.com
Web Founder Tim Berners-Lee Warns on Privacy - InternetNews.com
... Web's 20th anniversary celebration, Berners-Lee raises concerns of government ... sales are up slightly for March, but it's too soon to pop the champagne corks. ...
-
www.theregister.co.uk
Berners-Lee hired as gov internet adviser • The Register
Sir Tim Berners-Lee will lead a panel of experts to advise the ... Letters Tim Berners Lee: The readers speak (31 March ... pops champagne on (second) ...
-
www.newstin.com
Anger rises at those tangling in the web
... web conference in Madrid yesterday, Tim Berners-Lee added his voice to those ... Newly published market report: Snapshots France Champagne 2009. pr-inside.com ...
-
blogs.ft.com
FT.com | Tech Blog | Tim Berners-Lee and personal data
Well, the brilliant mind of Sir Tim Berners-Lee, no less, was engaged on just ... revenue dot-coms handed out free bottles of champagne at their launch parties. ...
-
www.computerhistory.org
Computer History Museum - Exhibits - Internet History - 1990's
Countries connecting in 1990 include Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Chile, ... students at NCSA in Champagne-Urbana modify Tim Berners-Lee's hypertext proposal. ...
Trends
Loading...
More on Champagne
Description from Wikipedia:
Champagne is a sparkling wine produced by inducing the in-bottle secondary fermentation of the wine to effect carbonation. It is produced exclusively within the Champagne region of France, from which it takes its name. Through international treaty, national law or quality-control/consumer protection related local regulations, most countries limit the use of the term to only those wines that come from the Champagne appellation. In Europe, this principle is enshrined in the European Union by Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) status. Other countries, such as the United States, have recognized the exclusive nature of this name, yet maintain a legal structure that allows longtime domestic producers of sparkling wine to continue to use the term "Champagne" under specific circumstances.. The majority of US produced sparkling wines do not use the term "Champagne" on their labels and some states, such as Oregon, ban producers in their states from using the term.
Champagne first gained world renown because of its association with the anointment of French kings. Royalty from throughout Europe spread the message of the unique sparkling wine from Champagne and its association with luxury and power. The leading manufacturers devoted considerable energy to creating a history and identity for their wine, associating it and themselves with nobility and royalty. Through advertising and packaging they sought to associate champagne with high luxury, festivities and rites of passage. Their efforts coincided with an emerging middle class that was looking for ways to spend its money on symbols of upward mobility.
Explore everything named Champagne...