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Web pioneers share £1m for winning engineering ‘Nobel’

Five web pioneers, including Tim Berners-Lee and Vint Cerf, won the inaugural Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering today

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“THE geeks are winning!” So said Vinton Cerf as he and four others who helped create the internet and the web shared the UK’s inaugural – billed as the new “Nobel prize for technology”.

“People have won Nobels for the physics of the laser, for instance, but people who did the engineering development of it have had no major award available to them until now,” says Robert Kahn, one of the winners. The £1 million prize is awarded for an “outstanding advance in engineering that creates significant benefit to humanity”.

Kahn, his US Department of Defense colleague Cerf and Louis Pouzin were honoured for developing key tools to transmit data on the internet, Tim Berners-Lee for creating the web itself, and Marc Andreessen for the first browser, NCSA Mosaic.

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