The Internet is invented in 1925

This story shows how the story would be the 20th century and beyond if the computers and the Internet were introduced decades before the common history.

Early inventions
In the late 1910s, after the end of World War I, the first personal computers started to be introduced in people's lives. Personal computers were developed by British scientists and they were an efficient way to organize text in folders and files, and print them. At the time, were very expensive, and were used only by rich people, and therefore were not very popular. But the curiosity about the new machine was so great that the price fell in the first half of the 1920s. But the big revolution occurred in 1925 when an Austrian engineer named Franz Breuer created the first communication network through computers and initially worked only in Vienna, at that time still economically weak due to the recent war. The new invention was called the Wien Super-Netzwerke (Vienna Super Network).

The Great Expansion
The capital of German Austria became the most technologically advanced city in the world, even more than London or New York. The Viennese people could communicate more quickly known. In matters of seconds they could send instant messages, text, in less than a second, and voice, in about 3 seconds, since the computers included microphones. Were also created sites for news, discussion forums, encyclopedias, company sites and many others. Wien Super-Netzwerk soon spread throughout Austria, connecting all the 10 million Austrians and changing its name to Große Österreich Netzwerk Great Austrian Network. All countries of the world wished to have similar technology, German and Austria regained its economy rapidly, and in 1931 was already the richest country in the world. It was characteristic of Austria the beautiful scenery of the streets of the nineteenth century, but this time there was internet and people were more educated and more connected. The major world powers, including Austria, United Kingdom, United States, France, Italy, Norway, Brazil and Australia, have adopted similar systems in their respective regions. But each country had its own network system. The great union of World networks emerged some years later.