Berners-Lee


Asteroid 13926, Berners-Lee, was discovered on December 2, 1986 by Edward Bowell at the Lowell Observatory's Anderson Mesa Station near Flagstaff, Arizona. It has a period of 4 years, 36 days.

It was named for British computer scientist Tim Berners-Lee (born 1955), the creator of the World Wide Web (Internet content as opposed to infrastructure).

Tim Berners-Lee


Raymond Andrews (now Raymond Scott) has linked asteroid Berners-Lee astrologically to that which has to do with the Internet.

Jeff Bezos, president of Amazon.com, has Berners-Lee trine Pandora and quincunx Nessus and Dioretsa.

Bill Gates has Berners-Lee in the fourth house, conjunct Ixion, sextile North Node, square Ceres and the Ascendant, trine the South Node, quincunx Elatus and Nessus, parallel Neptune and Chaos, and contraparallel the Moon and Pandora.

Virginia senator George Allen, whose political career was severely damaged by a racist remark captured and broadcast online, has Berners-Lee semisquare Chiron.

Howard Dean, who was instrumental in introducing the Democratic Party to online campaigning and fundraising, has Berners-Lee in the sixth house, conjunct Mars, square Chaos, trine Hidalgo, and contraparallel the Moon.

Louise Woodward, whose legal troubles after a baby she was caring for in suburban Boston died under her care were covered extensively online in the early days of the Internet's public era, has Berners-Lee in the third house, sextile Ceres, square Vesta and Varuna, parallel Sun, and contraparallel Pallas.

Philippine computer vandal Onel de Guzman, who created and released the disruptive "I Love You" malware, has Berners-Lee sextile Damocles and South Node, square Dioretsa, trine North Node, and parallel Chariklo.

The glyph for Berners-Lee is mine.



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