The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Here’s all you need to know about the internet...

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got in on the act with Internet Explorer in 1995.

Online banking started in the US in 1995. The Nationwide Building Society was the first to try it here in May 1997, with the Royal Bank of Scotland following a month later. Now millions of us hardly ever enter a branch and there are over 10 million internet log-ins every day.

Amazon, now our online shopping go- to site, was launched in 1995, initially to sell books. It has expanded to stock just about everything and last month launched a full online supermarke­t service.

eBay launched in 1996 to allow us to sell to one another. The first sale was – a broken – $ 15 laser pointer. Celebritie­s’ hair, toast and a military jet are just a few of the things sold since.

The system for making the internet available on mobile phones – Wireless Applicatio­n Protocol – was invented in 1997. Initially it was useless and slow but last year smartphone­s overtook laptops as the most popular way of getting online.

1998 saw the launch of Google. WebCrawler, Excite and InfoSeek were some of the search engines before Google, but it soon become THE way to find informatio­n and has since entered the English language as a verb. There are now more than a trillion Google searches a year.

Wikipedia was created 15 years ago, allowing members of the public to add their own encyclopae­dia entries. There are now 38 million articles in almost 300 languages – which must be right as it’s on Wikipedia.

Facebook launched in 2004 and within eight years it had over one billion active users. Although it seems to have always been there, the “like” button didn’t appear for five years, allowing us to give the allimporta­nt thumbs up.

Tweeting about what you’re up to in 140 snappy characters became possible 10 years ago this month. Within a few years Twitter had become one of the 10 most- visited websites in the world. It now has over 300 million monthly active users – not all on about Brexit or England’s Euro 2016 woes.

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