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Share Your Memory: Win a Trip to the Birthplace of the Web CERN, Switzerland

Share Your Memory: Win a Trip to the Birthplace of the Web CERN, Switzerland

Martin Brinkmann

  • 10 de marzo de 2026
  • Actualizado: 11 de marzo de 2026, 13:24
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Share Your Memory: Win a Trip to the Birthplace of the Web CERN, Switzerland

Do you remember the mechanical screech of a 56k modem echoing through the house in the middle of the night? The thrill of hearing a voice announce, “You’ve got mail”? Or what about the very first time you laughed at a grainy low-res cat video on a brand new site called YouTube, or the sheer panic of frantically scouring Wikipedia for a last-minute school or work project?

Opera Web Rewind Access

The internet wasn’t always the hyper-fast information highway that it is today.  It used to be a much smaller and less polished space. In just 30 years, we’ve gone from dial up to gigabit speeds, from personal websites with animated buttons to world spanning forums, apps, and memes.

To celebrate this incredible evolution, from humble beginnings to the internet that we know and love today, the team at Opera decided to do something special: build a time machine to help us look back and share the memories. And Opera is offering you the chance to win a trip to CERN in Switzerland, the birthplace of the World Wide Web just by sharing your favorite early web memory. A Time Machine for the Web.

Web Rewind is an interactive website that lets you digitally rewind the years. You can go all the way back to 1995, the year the first Opera browser was launched, or any year since. Just hold down the spacebar to start your ride down memory lane and experience an emotional journey through some of the defining moments of the internet. 

Maybe you’ll end up in 2003, the year Myspace ruled and Facebook didn’t exist, or 2011, when Twitch took the gaming world by storm, changing how we experience video games together.

Web Rewind shows you examples of what Internet users experienced for the first time. From the first Internet-powered phones in 2002, to Vine with its six-second videos in 2013. The years roll by, and the screen transforms each time to resurrect the sights, sounds, and digital artifacts of the web’s most defining moments.

It’s a reminder that the history of the Internet isn’t just about the technology that made it possible. It’s about every one of us, no matter how young or old. Through Web Rewind, visitors can trace their own memories from the last 30 years and see how they fit into the World Wide Web’s history. Every pixel we created, shared or uploaded is a digital footprint that we have left behind, and Web Rewind brings them back to the surface.

Share Your Memory: Win a Trip to the Birthplace of the Web

Opera knows that a 30-year lookback wouldn’t be complete without the people who populated the Internet. Web Rewind is not just a presentation, it is designed as a living, collective archive. To mark this milestone anniversary, Opera is inviting users from all over the globe to submit their own web memories.

Maybe your memory is a life-changing connection made on an old message board, or building your very first website on Geocities, or joining a group of like-minded gamers to take down the very first boss in World of Warcraft. Your story belongs in this archive.

Opera Web Rewind Access

Win it, and Opera will cover your flights and hotel to Geneva for a trip between April and June 2026. You won’t just be reading about the birth of the internet; you’ll be standing at CERN, the exact spot where Sir Tim Berners-Lee revolutionized human connection. Just keep a close eye on your inbox around March 31.The internet has evolved from a scientific tool used by few into a shared journal of humanity, built click-by-click, by all of us. So, take a moment, head over to Web Rewind, and press the spacebar to go down memory lane and add YOUR story to the archive.

Martin Brinkmann

Martin Brinkmann es el fundador de Ghacks Technology News, autor de libros y periodista con más de 20 años de experiencia y una pasión por todo lo relacionado con la tecnología. Sus principales áreas de conocimiento son los sistemas operativos, aplicaciones y software, privacidad y seguridad, y servicios de Internet.

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