History
The first web designer was Tim Berners-Lee, who
invented the World Wide
Web and put the first web site online in August 1991. Lee was the first to
combine Internet
communication (which had been carrying email and the Usenet for decades) with hypertext (which had also
been around for decades, but limited to browsing information stored on a single
computer, such as interactive CD-ROM
design. 
At first, web design utilized a simple markup language, called
HTML, that included some formatting options and the ability to link pages
together using hyperlinks. It was this feature that distinguished the Web from
other communication media and Web design from other design disciplines. The
unique characteristics of the World Wide Web and the
unique behaviour it encouraged in users made Web design would unlike any other
form of design before.
As the Web and Web design progressed, the markup language
used to make it, known as HTML,
became more complex and flexible. Things like tables, which could be used to
display tabular information, were soon subverted for use as invisible layout
devices. With the advent of Cascading Style
Sheets (CSS), table based layout is increasingly regarded as outdated.
Database integration technologies such as server-side scripting
(see CGI, PHP, ASP.NET, ASP, JSP, and ColdFusion) and design
standards like CSS further changed and enhanced the way the Web was made. The introduction of Macromedia Flash into
an already interactivity-ready
scene has further changed the face of the Web, giving new power to designers
and media creators, and offering new interactivity features to users. Flash is
much more restrictive than the open HTML format, though,
requiring a proprietary
plugin to be seen, and it does not integrate with most web browser UI features
like the "Back" button.
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