The idea of markup languages was apparently first publicly presented by the engineer William W. Tunnicliffe (1922-1996) from Washington, D.C. In September of 1967, during a meeting at the Canadian Government Printing Office, Tunnicliffe gave a presentation on the separation of information content of documents from their format.
Die Werbetrommel für ein schnelleres Internet rührte Microsoft schon vor Tagen, jetzt liegen erstmals handfeste Informationen dazu vor. In einem Entwurf für die zurzeit tagende IETF-Arbeitsgruppe zu HTTP 2.0 führt das Unternehmen seine Ideen genauer aus.
S. Dumais, E. Cutrell, J. Cadiz, G. Jancke, R. Sarin, and D. Robbins. Proc. of the 26th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Researchand development in informaion retrieval, page 72 - 79. Torontoand Canada, ACM Press New Yorkand NYand USA, (2003)
R. Baeza-Yates, and C. Castillo. Soft Computing Systems - Design, Management and, page 565--572. IOS Press Amsterdam, Berlin, Oxford, Tokyo, Washington, (2002)
J. Ding, L. Gravano, and N. Shivakumar. Proceedings of the 26th Int. Conf. on Very Large Databases, VLDB 2000, page 545--556. Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc., (2000)
B. Pinkerton. Proceedings of the 2nd International World Wide Web, volume 18(6) of Online & CDROM review: the international journal of, Medford, NJ, USA, Learned Information, (1994)