I've been on the Net since 1987. But it was Netscape's introduction of url friendly names within browser software rather than typing in server IP's that made the web user friendly and popular in 1995.
Neither Netscape nor Al Gore invented the wwweb.
Same with Hubbert. His contribution allowed the avg person to visualize Peak Oil via his bell curve presentation. But prior to his charting, geologists and agencies were already making regular estimates of URR and/or reserves. The avg URR in 1956 sans Hubbert was
652-Gb and providers included the org's we know today as
API, IHS, USGS & OGJ. There were a cornucopia of
one shot wonders in the public domain as well.
By applying R/P or resource/P ratios, the concept of a finite volume of recoverable all liquids and thus a limited production profile was well understood but mostly only by those in the sector. Very few had attempted to reconcile annual production with known URR estimates of that time to come up with
Peak Rates or Peak Dates.
By 1998,
IEA and many others were projecting Peak Oil Dates on a regular basis.
EIA was a rather late piler-on to the Peak Oil game with its first mass exposure effort in Y2k.