The Internet is invented in 1925

This story shows how would be our history in the 20th century and beyond if computers and the Internet were introduced decades before it's introduction in OTL.

Early inventions
In the late 1910s, after the end of World War I, the first personal computers were introduced in people's lives. They were developed by British scientists and were recognized as an efficient way to organize text in folders and files, and print them. At the time, they were very expansive sex, and were used only by rich people, therefore not very popular at first. But the curiosity about the new machine was so great that the price fell in the first half of the 1920s. The actual big revolution occurred in 1925 when an Austrian engineer named Franz Breuer created the first communication network through computers that initially worked only in Vienna. The new invention was called 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 now; they could send instant messages and text in less than a second, and voice in about 3 seconds, since the computers included microphones. There were also created sites of many types: digital newspapers, discussion forums, encyclopedias, company sites and many others. Wien Super-Netzwerk soon spread throughout Austria, connecting all 10 million Austrians and changing its name to Große Österreich Netzwerk (Great Austrian Network). All countries of the world wished to have similar technology, then German Austria regained its economy quickly, and in 1931 it was already the richest country in the world. During these times, Austria had the beautiful scenery of the streets of the nineteenth century, but with modernity, Internet and more educated and connected people. The major world powers at the time, 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. The big international network was established in 1933 and was inaugurated with a great party in Vienna. It received the name Weltweites Netzwerk (International Network). After that event, long-distance communication through letters was quite unusual in the world, since communication was almost always done by e-mail. The most commonly font used was Arial, but the handwriting-styled fonts were also widely used, especially in e-mails (remembering that emails were called "digital mails"). It is also notable that the monitors were mostly black and white. Digital watches have also become common throughout the 1930s. Radios remained common, although its use had decreased somewhat. It was also common for cartoon celebrities of the time (like Mickey Mouse and Felix the Cat) to use internet and computer.

World War II
Since 1933, the biased policies of the Third German Reich became very suspicious, and consequently, many authors have written books about the possible threat that Germany would do to humanity. Believing in these books, many Europeans immigrated to other countries much earlier. The allies also are better prepared because of the digital inclusion. The disclosure of Nazism on the Internet was also very common in the '30s and '40s. At the end of World War II in 1945, the death toll was around 30 million (not 72 million as iN OTL). Also, after the fall of Nazi Germany, Vienna was in ruins and the economy of Austria fell back. From there, Internet no longer had a "cradle". In 1945, it was considered a world heritage and then it continued to expand worldwide.

Post-war
During the Cold War, the dispute between the United States and the Soviet Union, the Internet played a very important role: capitalist and socialist propaganda were made ​​over the Internet. In the early 1950s, full-color monitors came out. Also, it was later introduced as television.

1950s
In 1956, computers and the Internet were already present in virtually all people in the world. Computer games have also become very common in the 1950s, with the early color monitors. The voice transport has become as fast as the text one, and with higher quality. As the Internet's popularity grew, the TV also grew and became more and more technologically advanced. New rhythms such as Rock 'n' Roll and derivatives never arose because people spend most time on the internet. Popular and formal artists, plays Classical Music and Jazz, characteristic rhythms of earlier decades. A young person likes the same kind of music that an older person, other than the common world we know. Public protests emerged more easily due to publicity over the Internet.

1960s
The 1960s were a decade of revolt against the Internet. Initially, in 1962, the use of computers and the Internet in schools was approved. However, in 1963, series of public demonstrations of hundreds of people occurred in various places in the world. They supported the idea that the use of computers and the Internet were damaging people's health and lefting them socially unable. They wished the ban and criminalization of the Internet. In an attempt of answering the riots, the governments have created campaigns encouraging people to worry about other things besides computer and television. In 1960, the number of people who accessed regularly the Internet was 47%. It dropped to 39% in 1966 due to the campaigns. In the late 1960s, letters had an important return. In 1969, the arrival of the first American astronauts to the moon was assisted by the Internet and television communities. With the audience of over 1 billion people, it was considered the most watched event in history. It made the percentage of internet users increase a bit and later estabilize.

1970s
Due to the success of the Internet, the Soviet Union could expand socialism and Russian language propaganda to more countries in the world. In 1972, nations like Haiti, Dominican Republic and Jamaica were socialist countries along with Cuba. Southern African countries like Mozambique, Angola, Botswana, Swaziland and Zambia also had great Russian socialist influence. The second half of the 1970s was an era of job opportunities to junior artists and performers. Many people showed their artistic talent on the Internet, and managed contracts in capitalist countries. The fight against the Internet continued. Many Islamic countries such as Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia banned all forms Internet at this time. But some countries like Netherlands encouraged their citizens to use it, because they considered it very important. In 1979, all political parties which were against the Internet were attacked by civil demonstrations and even led to civil conflicts.

1980s and 1990s
From the early 1980s, online disclosures against violence and war were very common, due to the tension between the United States and the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union was the only nation with its own Internet system, which was called Великий массовой цифровой системы связи в Союз Советских Социалистических Республик (The Great Mass Digital Communication Systems of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics), or simply Sovinet, Soviet Internet. After Perestroika in 1985, the Soviet Internet droped as an independent system and then joined the global Internet. The number of protests against war and socialism in the late 1980s was immense. Until 1996, most socialist and dictatorial regimes were overthrown; the Soviet Union stood for a little longer than in the OTL, having been dissolved only in 1996. Then a new era of peace, democracy and capitalism rised in that year.

Unlike in the OTL, most neutral countries during the Cold War became part of the first world, due to the fastest disclosure of ideologies by capitalist countries. Almost the entire American continent (except the socialist part of the Caribbean) was considered First World before 1980. From 1996, there were numerous predictions that the millennium bug, Y2K, was about to come. People became scared before 2000, but it was not mainly for religious reasons like in OTL, but because of the great confusion that Y2K, the millennium bug, would cause in digital systems in the entire world.

2000s and beyond
Y2K the millennium bug actually happened on January 1, 2000. Millions of people had negative balances in their bank accounts. Specialists initially believed that the bug would be completely fixed only by around 2057, but it happened in early 2011 with very hard work.