1839 – John William Draper took a daguerreotype of the moon, the first lunar photograph.
http://www.fotoart.gr/photography/history/historyphotos/onephotoonestory/thefirstphotoofthemoon.htm
1878 – Joseph Swan demonstrated the electric lamp to the Newcastle Chemical Society in northern England. His bulb would burn for about 40 hours. Edison’s later bulb would burn for closer to 150 hours.
http://books.google.com/books?id=6jgRWR1F7X8C&pg=PA49&lpg=PA49&dq=joseph+swan+1848&source=bl&ots=0KlFOPDQxv&sig=womCrG8fAAj-61N8N-PnxENyj-0&hl=en&ei=WlvYTr3mCIXYiALFwPWjCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CB8Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=joseph%20swan%201848&f=false
1926 – In a letter to Nature, physicist Gilbert Newton Lewis used the word photon to describe a carrier of radiant energy. It eventually was used to apply to Einstein’s light quantum as well.
http://www.aps.org/publications/apsnews/201212/physicshistory.cfm
1987 – Larry Wall released the Perl scripting language. It would go from being a SysAdmin’s helper to one of the Web’s dominant scripting languages, for good or ill, depending on the coder.
http://www.modernperlbooks.com/mt/2013/12/perl-is-26-today.html
1997 – HTML 4.0 was recommended and published by the World Wide Web Consortium, the W3C. It offered the strict, transitional and frameset variations, and deprecated many of Netscape’s visual tags in favor of CSS.
http://www.w3.org/Press/HTML4-REC
Read Tom’s science fiction and other fiction books at Merritt’s Books site.