Information about History Of The Internet
| History of computing |
|---|
| Hardware before 1960 |
| Hardware 1960s to present |
| Hardware in Soviet Bloc countries |
| Operating systems |
| Software engineering |
| Programming languages |
| Artificial intelligence |
| Graphical user interface |
| Internet |
| World Wide Web |
| Computer and video games |
Timeline of computing
|
In the 1950s and early 1960s, prior to the widespread inter-networking that led to the Internet, most communication networks were limited by their nature to only allow communications between the stations on the network. Some networks had gateways or bridges between them, but these bridges were often limited or built specifically for a single use. One prevalent computer networking method was based on the central mainframe method, simply allowing its terminals to be connected via long leased lines. This method was used in the 1950s by Project RAND to support researchers such as Herbert Simon, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, when collaborating across the continent with researchers in Santa Monica, California, on automated theorem proving and artificial intelligence.
Three terminals and an ARPA
Advanced Research Projects Agency was renamed to Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in 1972. A fundamental pioneer in the call for a global network, J.C.R. Licklider, articulated the idea in his January 1960 paper, Man-Computer Symbiosis.- "A network of such [computers], connected to one another by wide-band communication lines" which provided "the functions of present-day libraries together with anticipated advances in information storage and retrieval and [other] symbiotic functions. "—J.C.R. Licklider[1]
In October 1962, Licklider was appointed head of the United States Department of Defense's DARPA information processing office, and formed an informal group within DARPA to further computer research. As part of the information processing office's role, three network terminals had been installed: one for System Development Corporation in Santa Monica, one for Project Genie at the University of California, Berkeley and one for the Multics project SHOPPING at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Licklider's need for inter-networking would be made evident by the problems this caused.
- "For each of these three terminals, I had three different sets of user commands. So if I was talking online with someone at S.D.C. and I wanted to talk to someone I knew at Berkeley or M.I.T. about this, I had to get up from the S.D.C. terminal, go over and log into the other terminal and get in touch with them.
- I said,it's obvious what to do (But I don't want to do it): If you have these three terminals, there ought to be one terminal that goes anywhere you want to go where you have interactive computing. That idea is the ARPAnet." -Robert W. Taylor, co-writer with Licklider of "The Computer as a Communications Device", in an interview with the New York Times[2]
Packet Switching
Networks that led to the Internet
X.25 and public access
The British Post Office, Western Union International and Tymnet collaborated to create the first international packet switched network, referred to as the International Packet Switched Service (IPSS), in 1978. This network grew from Europe and the US to cover Canada, Hong Kong and Australia by 1981. By the 1990s it provided a worldwide networking infrastructure.[4]
Unlike ARPAnet, X.25 was also commonly available for business use. Telenet offered its Telemail electronic mail service, but this was oriented to enterprise use rather than the general email of ARPANET.
The first dial-in public networks used asynchronous TTY terminal protocols to reach a concentrator operated by the public network. Some public networks, such as CompuServe used X.25 to multiplex the terminal sessions into their packet-switched backbones, while others, such as Tymnet, used proprietary protocols. In 1979, CompuServe became the first service to offer electronic mail capabilities and technical support to personal computer users. The company broke new ground again in 1980 as the first to offer real-time chat with its CB Simulator. There were also the America Online (AOL) and Prodigy dial in networks and many bulletin board system (BBS) networks such as FidoNet. FidoNet in particular was popular amongst hobbyist computer users, many of them hackers and amateur radio operators.
UUCP
Merging the networks and creating the Internet
TCP/IP

Map of the TCP/IP test network in January 1982
At this time, the earliest known use of the term Internet was by Vinton Cerf, who wrote:
| Specification of Internet Transmission Control Program. |
With the role of the network reduced to the bare minimum, it became possible to join almost any networks together, no matter what their characteristics were, thereby solving Kahn's initial problem. DARPA agreed to fund development of prototype software, and after several years of work, the first somewhat crude demonstration of a gateway between the Packet Radio network in the SF Bay area and the ARPANET was conducted. By November 1977 a three network demonstration was conducted including the ARPANET, the Packet Radio Network and the Atlantic Packet Satellite network—all sponsored by DARPA. Stemming from the first specifications of TCP in 1974, TCP/IP emerged in mid-late 1978 in nearly final form. By 1981, the associated standards were published as RFCs 791, 792 and 793 and adopted for use. DARPA sponsored or encouraged the development of TCP/IP implementations for many operating systems and then scheduled a migration of all hosts on all of its packet networks to TCP/IP. On 1 January 1983, TCP/IP protocols became the only approved protocol on the ARPANET, replacing the earlier NCP protocol.[7]
ARPANET to Several Federal Wide Area Networks: MILNET, NSI, and NSFNet
The networks based around the ARPANET were government funded and therefore restricted to noncommercial uses such as research; unrelated commercial use was strictly forbidden. This initially restricted connections to military sites and universities. During the 1980s, the connections expanded to more educational institutions, and even to a growing number of companies such as Digital Equipment Corporation and Hewlett-Packard, which were participating in research projects or providing services to those who were.
Several other branches of the U.S. government, the National Aeronautics and Space Agency (NASA), the National Science Foundation (NSF), and the Department of Energy (DOE) became heavily involved in internet research and started development of a successor to ARPANET. In the mid 1980s all three of these branches developed the first Wide Area Networks based on TCP/IP. NASA developed the NASA Science Network, NSF developed CSNET and DOE evolved the Energy Sciences Network or ESNet.
More explicitly, NASA developed a TCP/IP based Wide Area Network, NASA Science Network (NSN), in the mid 1980s connecting space scientists to data and information stored anywhere in the world. In 1989, the DECnet-based Space Physics Analysis Network (SPAN) and the TCP/IP-based NASA Science Network (NSN) were brought together at NASA Ames Research Center creating the first multiprotocol wide area network called the NASA Science Internet, or NSI. NSI was established to provide a total integrated communications infrastructure to the NASA scientific community for the advancement of earth, space and life sciences. As a high-speed, multiprotocol, international network, NSI provided connectivity to over 20,000 scientists across all seven continents.
In 1984 NSF developed CSNET exclusively based on TCP/IP. CSNET connected with ARPANET using TCP/IP, and ran TCP/IP over X.25, but it also supported departments without sophisticated network connections, using automated dial-up mail exchange. This grew into the NSFNet backbone, established in 1986, and intended to connect and provide access to a number of supercomputing centers established by the NSF.[8]
The transition toward an Internet
The term "Internet" was adopted in the first RFC published on the TCP protocol (RFC 675: Internet Transmission Control Protocol, December 1974). It was around the time when ARPANET was interlinked with NSFNet, that the term Internet came into more general use,[9] with "an internet" meaning any network using TCP/IP. "The Internet" came to mean a global and large network using TCP/IP. Previously "internet" and "internetwork" had been used interchangeably, and "internet protocol" had been used to refer to other networking systems such as Xerox Network Services.[10]As interest in wide spread networking grew and new applications for it arrived, the Internet's technologies spread throughout the rest of the world. TCP/IP's network-agnostic approach meant that it was easy to use any existing network infrastructure, such as the IPSS X.25 network, to carry Internet traffic. In 1984, University College London replaced its transatlantic satellite links with TCP/IP over IPSS.
Many sites unable to link directly to the Internet started to create simple gateways to allow transfer of e-mail, at that time the most important application. Sites which only had intermittent connections used UUCP or FidoNet and relied on the gateways between these networks and the Internet. Some gateway services went beyond simple e-mail peering, such as allowing access to FTP sites via UUCP or e-mail.
TCP/IP becomes worldwide
The first ARPANET connection outside the US was established to NORSAR in Norway in 1973, just ahead of the connection to Great Britain. These links were all converted to TCP/IP in 1982, at the same time as the rest of the Arpanet.CERN, the European internet, the link to the Pacific and beyond
Between 1984 and 1988 CERN began installation and operation of TCP/IP to interconnect its major internal computer systems, workstations, PC's and an accelerator control system. CERN continued to operate a limited self-developed system CERNET internally and several incompatible (typically proprietary) network protocols externally. There was considerable resistance in Europe towards more widespread use of TCP/IP and the CERN TCP/IP intranets remained isolated from the rest of the Internet until 1989.In 1988 Daniel Karrenberg, from CWI in Amsterdam, visited Ben Segal, CERN's TCP/IP Coordinator, looking for advice about the transition of the European side of the UUCP Usenet network (much of which ran over X.25 links) over to TCP/IP. In 1987, Ben Segal had met with Len Bosack from the then still small company Cisco about purchasing some TCP/IP routers for CERN, and was able to give Karrenberg advice and forward him on to Cisco for the appropriate hardware. This expanded the European portion of the Internet across the existing UUCP networks, and in 1989 CERN opened its first external TCP/IP connections.[11] This coincided with the creation of Réseaux IP Européens (RIPE), initially a group of IP network administrators who met regularly to carry out co-ordination work together. Later, in 1992, RIPE was formally registered as a cooperative in Amsterdam.
At the same time as the rise of internetworking in Europe, adhoc networking to ARPA and in-between Australian universities formed, based on various technologies such as X.25 and UUCPNet. These were limited in their connection to the global networks, due to the cost of making individual international UUCP dial-up or X.25 connections. In 1989, Australian universities joined the push towards using IP protocols to unify their networking infrastructures. AARNet was formed in 1989 by the Australian Vice-Chancellors' Committee and provided a dedicated IP based network for Australia.
The Internet began to penetrate Asia in the late 1980s. Japan, which had built the UUCP-based network JUNET in 1984, connected to NSFNet in 1989. It hosted the annual meeting of the Internet Society, INET'92, in Kobe. Singapore developed TECHNET in 1990, and Thailand gained a global Internet connection between Chulalongkorn University and UUNET in 1992.[12]
A digital divide
Africa
At the beginning of the 1990s, African countries relied upon X.25 IPSS and 2400 baud modem UUCP links for international and internetwork computer communications. In 1996 a USAID funded project, the Leland initiative, started work on developing full Internet connectivity for the continent. Guinea, Mozambique, Madagascar and Rwanda gained satellite earth stations in 1997, followed by Côte d'Ivoire and Benin in 1998.Africa is building an Internet infrastructure. AfriNIC, headquartered in Mauritius, manages IP address allocation for the continent. As do the other Internet regions, there is an operational forum, the Internet Community of Operational Networking Specialists.[13]
There are a wide range of programs both to provide high-performance transmission plant, and the western and southern coasts have undersea optical cable. High-speed cables join North Africa and the Horn of Africa to intercontinental cable systems. Undersea cable development is slower for East Africa; the original joint effort between New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) and the East Africa Submarine System (Eassy) has broken off and may become two efforts.[14]
Asia and Oceania
The Asia Pacific Network Information Centre (APNIC), headquartered in Mauritius, manages IP address allocation for the continent. APNIC sponsors an operational forum, the Asia-Pacific Regional Internet Conference on Operational Technologies (APRICOT).[15]In 1991, the People's Republic of China saw its first TCP/IP college network, Tsinghua University's TUNET. The PRC went on to make its first global Internet connection in 1995, between the Beijing Electro-Spectrometer Collaboration and Stanford University's Linear Accelerator Center. However, China went on to implement its own digital divide by implementing a country-wide content filter.[16]
Latin America
As with the other regions, the Latin American and Caribbean Internet Addresses Registry (LACNIC) manages the IP address space and other resources for its area. LACNIC, headquartered in Uruguay, operates DNS root, reverse DNS, and other key services.Opening the network to commerce
The interest in commercial use of the Internet became a hotly debated topic. Although commercial use was forbidden, the exact definition of commercial use could be unclear and subjective. UUCPNet and the X.25 IPSS had no such restrictions, which would eventually see the official barring of UUCPNet use of ARPANET and NSFNet connections. Some UUCP links still remained connecting to these networks however, as administrators cast a blind eye to their operation.This caused controversy amongst university users, who were outraged at the idea of noneducational use of their networks. Eventually, it was the commercial Internet service providers who brought prices low enough that junior colleges and other schools could afford to participate in the new arenas of education and research.
By 1990, ARPANET had been overtaken and replaced by newer networking technologies and the project came to a close. In 1994, the NSFNet, now renamed ANSNET (Advanced Networks and Services) and allowing non-profit corporations access, lost its standing as the backbone of the Internet. Both government institutions and competing commercial providers created their own backbones and interconnections. Regional network access points (NAPs) became the primary interconnections between the many networks and the final commercial restrictions ended.
The IETF and a standard for standards
The liberal Request for Comments (RFC) publication procedure engendered confusion about the Internet standardization process, and led to more formalization of official accepted standards. The IETF started in January of 1985 as a quarterly meeting of U.S. government funded researchers. Representatives from non-government vendors were invited starting with the fourth IETF meeting in October of that year.
Acceptance of an RFC by the RFC Editor for publication does not automatically make the RFC into a standard. It may be recognized as such by the IETF only after experimentation, use, and acceptance have proved it to be worthy of that designation. Official standards are numbered with a prefix "STD" and a number, similar to the RFC naming style. However, even after becoming a standard, most are still commonly referred to by their RFC number.
In 1992, the Internet Society, a professional membership society, was formed and the IETF was transferred to operation under it as an independent international standards body.
NIC, InterNIC, IANA and ICANN
As the early ARPANET grew, hosts were referred to by names, and a HOSTS.TXT file would be distributed from SRI International to each host on the network. As the network grew, this became cumbersome. A technical solution came in the form of the Domain Name System, created by Paul Mockapetris. The Defense Data Network—Network Information Center (DDN-NIC) at SRI handled all registration services, including the top-level domains (TLDs) of .mil, .gov, .edu, .org, .net, .com and .us, root nameserver administration and Internet number assignments under a United States Department of Defense contract.[17] In 1991, the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) awarded the administration and maintenance of DDN-NIC (managed by SRI up until this point) to Government Systems, Inc., who subcontracted it to the small private-sector Network Solutions, Inc.[18] [19]
Since at this point in history most of the growth on the Internet was coming from non-military sources, it was decided that the Department of Defense would no longer fund registration services outside of the .mil TLD. In 1993 the U.S. National Science Foundation, after a competitive bidding process in 1992, created the InterNIC to manage the allocations of addresses and management of the address databases, and awarded the contract to three organizations. Registration Services would be provided by Network Solutions; Directory and Database Services would be provided by AT&T; and Information Services would be provided by General Atomics.[20]
In 1998 both IANA and InterNIC were reorganized under the control of ICANN, a California non-profit corporation contracted by the US Department of Commerce to manage a number of Internet-related tasks. The role of operating the DNS system was privatized and opened up to competition, while the central management of name allocations would be awarded on a contract tender basis.
Use and culture
Email and Usenet—The growth of the text forum
The ARPANET computer network made a large contribution to the evolution of e-mail. There is one report[22] indicating experimental inter-system e-mail transfers on it shortly after ARPANET's creation. In 1971 Ray Tomlinson created what was to become the standard Internet e-mail address format, using the @ sign to separate user names from host names.[23]
A number of protocols were developed to deliver e-mail among groups of time-sharing computers over alternative transmission systems, such as UUCP and IBM's VNET e-mail system. E-mail could be passed this way between a number of networks, including ARPANET, BITNET and NSFNet, as well as to hosts connected directly to other sites via UUCP.
In addition, UUCP allowed the publication of text files that could be read by many others. The News software developed by Steve Daniel and Tom Truscott in 1979 was used to distribute news and bulletin board-like messages. This quickly grew into discussion groups, known as newsgroups, on a wide range of topics. On ARPANET and NSFNet similar discussion groups would form via mailing lists, discussing both technical issues and more culturally focused topics (such as science fiction, discussed on the sflovers mailing list).
A world library—From gopher to the WWW
One of the most promising user interface paradigms during this period was hypertext. The technology had been inspired by Vannevar Bush's "Memex"[24] and developed through Ted Nelson's research on Project Xanadu and Douglas Engelbart's research on NLS.[25] Many small self-contained hypertext systems had been created before, such as Apple Computer's HyperCard.
In 1991, Tim Berners-Lee was the first to develop a network-based implementation of the hypertext concept. This was after Berners-Lee had repeatedly proposed his idea to the hypertext and Internet communities at various conferences to no avail—no one would implement it for him. Working at CERN, Berners-Lee wanted a way to share information about their research. By releasing his implementation to public use, he ensured the technology would become widespread.[26] Subsequently, Gopher became the first commonly-used hypertext interface to the Internet. While Gopher menu items were examples of hypertext, they were not commonly perceived in that way. One early popular web browser, modeled after HyperCard, was ViolaWWW.
Scholars generally agree, however, that the turning point for the World Wide Web began with the introduction[27] of the Mosaic web browser[28] in 1993, a graphical browser developed by a team at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (NCSA-UIUC), led by Marc Andreessen. Funding for Mosaic came from the High-Performance Computing and Communications Initiative, a funding program initiated by then-Senator Al Gore's High Performance Computing and Communication Act of 1991 also known as the Gore Bill .[29] Indeed, Mosaic's graphical interface soon became more popular than Gopher, which at the time was primarily text-based, and the WWW became the preferred interface for accessing the Internet. (Gore's reference to his role in "creating the Internet", however, was ridiculed in his Presidential election campaign: see full article Al Gore contributions to the internet and technology).
Mosaic was eventually superseded in 1994 by Andreessen's Netscape Navigator, which replaced Mosaic as the world's most popular browser. Competition from Internet Explorer and a variety of other browsers has almost completely displaced it. Another important event held on January 11,1994, was The Superhighway Summit at UCLA's Royce Hall. This was the "first public conference bringing together all of the major industry, government and academic leaders in the field [and] also began the national dialogue about the Information Superhighway and its implications."[30]
Finding what you need—The search engine
As the Web grew, search engines and Web directories were created to track pages on the Web and allow people to find things. The first full-text Web search engine was WebCrawler in 1994. Before WebCrawler, only Web page titles were searched. Another early search engine, Lycos, was created in 1993 as a university project, and was the first to achieve commercial success. During the late 1990s, both Web directories and Web search engines were popular—Yahoo! (founded 1995) and Altavista (founded 1995) were the respective industry leaders.
By August 2001, the directory model had begun to give way to search engines, tracking the rise of Google (founded 1998), which had developed new approaches to relevancy ranking. Directory features, while still commonly available, became after-thoughts to search engines.
Database size, which had been a significant marketing feature through the early 2000s, was similarly displaced by emphasis on relevancy ranking, the methods by which search engines attempt to sort the best results first. Relevancy ranking first became a major issue circa 1996, when it became apparent that it was impractical to review full lists of results. Consequently, algorithms for relevancy ranking have continuously improved. Google's PageRank method for ordering the results has received the most press, but all major search engines continually refine their ranking methodologies with a view toward improving the ordering of results. As of 2006, search engine rankings are more important than ever, so much so that an industry has developed ("search engine optimizers", or "SEO") to help web-developers improve their search ranking, and an entire body of case law has developed around matters that affect search engine rankings, such as use of trademarks in metatags. The sale of search rankings by some search engines has also created controversy among librarians and consumer advocates.
The dot-com bubble
The dot-com bubble burst on March 10, 2000, when the technology heavy NASDAQ Composite index peaked at 5048.62 (intra-day peak 5132.52), more than double its value just a year before. By 2001, the bubble's deflation was running full speed. A majority of the dot-coms had ceased trading, after having burnt through their venture capital, often without ever making a gross profit.
Worldwide Online Population Forecast
In its "Worldwide Online Population Forecast, 2006 to 2011," JupiterResearch anticipates that a 38 percent increase in the number of people with online access will mean that, by 2011, 22 percent of the Earth's population will surf the Internet regularly.JupiterResearch says the worldwide online population will increase at a compound annual growth rate of 6.6 percent during the next five years, far outpacing the 1.1 percent compound annual growth rate for the planet's population as a whole. The report says 1.1 billion people currently enjoy regular access to the Web.
North America will remain on top in terms of the number of people with online access. According to JupiterResearch, online penetration rates on the continent will increase from the current 70 percent of the overall North American population to 76 percent by 2011. However, Internet adoption has "matured," and its adoption pace has slowed, in more developed countries including the United States, Canada, Japan and much of Western Europe, notes the report.
As the online population of the United States and Canada grows by about only 3 percent, explosive adoption rates in China and India will take place, says JupiterResearch. The report says China should reach an online penetration rate of 17 percent by 2011 and India should hit 7 percent during the same time frame. This growth is directly related to infrastructure development and increased consumer purchasing power, notes JupiterResearch.
By 2011, Asians will make up about 42 percent of the world's population with regular Internet access, 5 percent more than today, says the study.
Penetration levels similar to North America's are found in Scandinavia and bigger Western European nations such as the United Kingdom and Germany, but JupiterResearch says that a number of Central European countries "are relative Internet laggards."
Brazil "with its soaring economy," is predicted by JupiterResearch to experience a 9 percent compound annual growth rate, the fastest in Latin America, but China and India are likely to do the most to boost the world's online penetration in the near future.
For the study, JupiterResearch defined "online users" as people who regularly access the Internet by "dedicated Internet access" devices. Those devices do not include cell phones.[31]
Footnotes
1. ^ J. C. R. Licklider (1960). "Man-Computer Symbiosis".
2. ^ An Internet Pioneer Ponders the Next Revolution. An Internet Pioneer Ponders the Next Revolution. Retrieved on November 25, 2005.
3. ^ About Rand. Paul Baran and the Origins of the Internet. Retrieved on January 14, 2006.
4. ^ Events in British Telecomms History. Events in British TelecommsHistory. Retrieved on November 25, 2005.
5. ^ Barry M. Leiner, Vinton G. Cerf, David D. Clark, Robert E. Kahn, Leonard Kleinrock, Daniel C. Lynch, Jon Postel, Larry G. Roberts, Stephen Wolff (2003). "A Brief History of Internet".
6. ^ "The Yale Book of Quotations" (2006) Yale University Press edited by Fred R. Shapiro
7. ^ Jon Postel, NCP/TCP Transition Plan, RFC 801
8. ^ David Roessner, Barry Bozeman, Irwin Feller, Christopher Hill, Nils Newman (1997). "The Role of NSF's Support of Engineering in Enabling Technological Innovation".
9. ^ Tanenbaum, Andrew S. (1996). Computer Networks. Prentice Hall. 0-13-394248-1.
10. ^ Mike Muuss (5th January 1983). "[news://anews. Aucbvax.5690 TCP-IP Digest, Vol 1 #10]". [news://fa.tcp-ip fa.tcp-ip]. (Google Groups).
11. ^ Ben Segal (1995). "A Short History of Internet Protocols at CERN".
12. ^ Internet History in Asia. 16th APAN Meetings/Advanced Network Conference in Busan. Retrieved on December 25, 2005.
13. ^ ICONS webpage
14. ^ Nepad, Eassy partnership ends in divorce,(South African) Financial Times FMTech, 2007
15. ^ APRICOT webpage
16. ^ A brief history of the Internet in China. China celebrates 10 years of being connected to the Internet. Retrieved on December 25, 2005.
17. ^ DDN NIC. IAB Recommended Policy on Distributing Internet Identifier Assignment. Retrieved on December 26, 2005.
18. ^ GSI-Network Solutions. TRANSITION OF NIC SERVICES. Retrieved on December 26, 2005.
19. ^ Thomas v. NSI, Civ. No. 97-2412 (TFH), Sec. I.A. (DCDC April 6, 1998)
20. ^ NIS Manager Award Announced. NSF NETWORK INFORMATION SERVICES AWARDS. Retrieved on December 25, 2005.
21. ^ The Risks Digest. Great moments in e-mail history. Retrieved on April 27, 2006.
22. ^ The History of Electronic Mail. The History of Electronic Mail. Retrieved on December 23, 2005.
23. ^ The First Network Email. The First Network Email. Retrieved on December 23, 2005.
24. ^ Vannevar Bush (1945). "As We May Think".
25. ^ Douglas Engelbart (1962). "Augmenting Human Intellect: A Conceptual Framework".
26. ^ The Early World Wide Web at SLAC. The Early World Wide Web at SLAC: Documentation of the Early Web at SLAC. Retrieved on November 25, 2005.
27. ^ [2]
28. ^ [3]
29. ^ [4]
30. ^ [5]
31. ^ Brazil, Russia, India and China to Lead Internet Growth Through 2011
2. ^ An Internet Pioneer Ponders the Next Revolution. An Internet Pioneer Ponders the Next Revolution. Retrieved on November 25, 2005.
3. ^ About Rand. Paul Baran and the Origins of the Internet. Retrieved on January 14, 2006.
4. ^ Events in British Telecomms History. Events in British TelecommsHistory. Retrieved on November 25, 2005.
5. ^ Barry M. Leiner, Vinton G. Cerf, David D. Clark, Robert E. Kahn, Leonard Kleinrock, Daniel C. Lynch, Jon Postel, Larry G. Roberts, Stephen Wolff (2003). "A Brief History of Internet".
6. ^ "The Yale Book of Quotations" (2006) Yale University Press edited by Fred R. Shapiro
7. ^ Jon Postel, NCP/TCP Transition Plan, RFC 801
8. ^ David Roessner, Barry Bozeman, Irwin Feller, Christopher Hill, Nils Newman (1997). "The Role of NSF's Support of Engineering in Enabling Technological Innovation".
9. ^ Tanenbaum, Andrew S. (1996). Computer Networks. Prentice Hall. 0-13-394248-1.
10. ^ Mike Muuss (5th January 1983). "[news://anews. Aucbvax.5690 TCP-IP Digest, Vol 1 #10]". [news://fa.tcp-ip fa.tcp-ip]. (Google Groups).
11. ^ Ben Segal (1995). "A Short History of Internet Protocols at CERN".
12. ^ Internet History in Asia. 16th APAN Meetings/Advanced Network Conference in Busan. Retrieved on December 25, 2005.
13. ^ ICONS webpage
14. ^ Nepad, Eassy partnership ends in divorce,(South African) Financial Times FMTech, 2007
15. ^ APRICOT webpage
16. ^ A brief history of the Internet in China. China celebrates 10 years of being connected to the Internet. Retrieved on December 25, 2005.
17. ^ DDN NIC. IAB Recommended Policy on Distributing Internet Identifier Assignment. Retrieved on December 26, 2005.
18. ^ GSI-Network Solutions. TRANSITION OF NIC SERVICES. Retrieved on December 26, 2005.
19. ^ Thomas v. NSI, Civ. No. 97-2412 (TFH), Sec. I.A. (DCDC April 6, 1998)
20. ^ NIS Manager Award Announced. NSF NETWORK INFORMATION SERVICES AWARDS. Retrieved on December 25, 2005.
21. ^ The Risks Digest. Great moments in e-mail history. Retrieved on April 27, 2006.
22. ^ The History of Electronic Mail. The History of Electronic Mail. Retrieved on December 23, 2005.
23. ^ The First Network Email. The First Network Email. Retrieved on December 23, 2005.
24. ^ Vannevar Bush (1945). "As We May Think".
25. ^ Douglas Engelbart (1962). "Augmenting Human Intellect: A Conceptual Framework".
26. ^ The Early World Wide Web at SLAC. The Early World Wide Web at SLAC: Documentation of the Early Web at SLAC. Retrieved on November 25, 2005.
27. ^ [2]
28. ^ [3]
29. ^ [4]
30. ^ [5]
31. ^ Brazil, Russia, India and China to Lead Internet Growth Through 2011
References
- Campbell-Kelly, Martin; Aspray, William. . New York: BasicBooks, 1996.
- Graham, Ian S. . New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1995.
- Krol, Ed. Hitchhiker's Guide to the Internet, 1987.
- Krol, Ed. Whole Internet User's Guide and Catalog. O'Reilly & Associates, 1992.
- Scientific American Special Issue on Communications, Computers, and Networks, September, 1991
- Ellen Rony and Peter Rony, The Domain Name Handbook: High Stakes and Strategies in Cyberspace (R&D Books 1998) Out of Print
External links
- The History Of The Internet. The History Of The Internet. Retrieved on January 30, 2007.
- Thomas Greene, Larry Landweber, George Strawn (2003). "A Brief History of NSF and the Internet".
- Internet History: People. Internet History People. Retrieved on July 3, 2006.
- Internet History Timeline. Internet History Timeline. Retrieved on November 25, 2005.
- Internet History. Internet History. Retrieved on November 25, 2005.
- Hobbes' Internet Timeline v8.1. Retrieved on November 25, 2005.
- The Internet Explained Comprehensive history of the Internet with future summary
- The History of the Internet at About.com
- "Overhearing the Internet" —by Robert Wright, The New Republic, 1993
- "LivingInternet.com --The Living Internet" -- web site devoted to multidimensional look at Internet history and technology
- Cybertelecom :: Internet History Focusing on government, legal, and policy history of the Internet
history of computing is longer than the history of computing hardware and modern computing technology and includes the history of methods intended for pen and paper or for chalk and slate, with or without the aid of tables.
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Computing hardware has been an important component of the process of calculation and computer data storage since it became useful for numerical values to be processed and shared.
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history of computing hardware in former Soviet Bloc is somewhat different from that of Western countries. Since Communist party propaganda maintained that western construction was next to useless, and the West had strict export restrictions on this technology, everything had to be
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history of computer operating systems recapitulates to a degree, the recent history of computing.
Operating systems (OS) provide a set of functions needed and used by most application-programs on a computer, and the necessary linkages for the control and sychronization of
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Operating systems (OS) provide a set of functions needed and used by most application-programs on a computer, and the necessary linkages for the control and sychronization of
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Cost and Budget Overruns: The OS/360 operating system was a classic example. This decade-long project from the 1960s and 1970s eventually produced one of the most complex software systems ever created. OS/360 was one of the first large (1000 programmer) software projects.
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programming languages. For a detailed timeline of events, see the timeline of programming languages.
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Prehistory
The first programming languages predate the modern computer. From the first, the languages were codes...... Click the link for more information.
Limited computer power: There was not enough memory or processing speed to accomplish anything truly useful. For example, Ross Quillian's successful work on natural language was demonstrated with a vocabulary of only twenty
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The graphical user interface, or "GUI" (IPA: /ˈɡuːiː/), is a computer interface that uses graphic icons and controls in addition to text.
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World Wide Web ("WWW" or simply the "Web") is a global information medium which users can read and write via computers connected to the Internet. The term is often mistakenly used as a synonym for the Internet itself, but the Web is a service that operates over the
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Video games were introduced as a commercial entertainment medium in 1971, becoming the basis for an important entertainment industry in the late 1970s/early 1980s in the United States, Japan, and Europe.
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timeline of events in the history of computing. For a narrative explaining the overall developments, see the related History of computing.
Computing timelines: 2400 BC-1949, 1950-1979, 1980-1989, 1990-present
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Computing timelines: 2400 BC-1949, 1950-1979, 1980-1989, 1990-present
Resources
- Stephen White:
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In telecommunications, the term gateway has the following meanings:
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- In a communications network, a network node equipped for interfacing with another network that uses different protocols.
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A network bridge connects multiple network segments at the data link layer (layer 2) of the OSI model. Bridges are similar to repeaters or network hubs, devices that connect network segments at the physical layer, however a bridge works by using bridging where traffic from one
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Mainframes (often colloquially referred to as Big Iron) are computers used mainly by large organizations for critical applications, typically bulk data processing such as census, industry and consumer statistics, ERP, and financial transaction processing.
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A leased line is a symmetric telecommunications line connecting two locations. It is sometimes known as a 'Private Circuit' or 'Data Line' in the UK. Unlike traditional PSTN lines it does not have a telephone number, each side of the line being permanently connected to the other.
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Rand may refer to a number of places, people, organizations, and acronyms.
Places named Rand include:
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Places named Rand include:
- Rand, New South Wales, a small town in Australia
- Rand, Lincolnshire, a small village in Lincolnshire, England
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Herbert Simon
Born May 15 1916
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Died January 9 2001 (aged 86)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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Born May 15 1916
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Died January 9 2001 (aged 86)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Flag
Seal
Nickname: City of Bridges, Steel City, City of Champions, The 'Burgh, Iron City, Steel Town, The College City, Roboburgh
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Flag
Seal
Nickname: City of Bridges, Steel City, City of Champions, The 'Burgh, Iron City, Steel Town, The College City, Roboburgh
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Santa Monica, California
Downtown Santa Monica as seen from the Santa Monica Pier
Nickname: SaMo, The Peoples Republic of Santa Monica
Location of Santa Monica in Los Angeles County, California
Coordinates:
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Downtown Santa Monica as seen from the Santa Monica Pier
Nickname: SaMo, The Peoples Republic of Santa Monica
Location of Santa Monica in Los Angeles County, California
Coordinates:
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Automated theorem proving (ATP) or automated deduction, currently the most well-developed subfield of automated reasoning (AR), is the proving of mathematical theorems by a computer program.
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artificial intelligence (or AI) is "the study and design of intelligent agents" where an intelligent agent is a system that perceives its environment and takes actions which maximizes its chances of success.
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Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
Agency overview
Formed 1958
Employees 240
Annual Budget $3.2 billion
Agency Executive Anthony J. Tether, Director
Website
www.darpa.
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Agency overview
Formed 1958
Employees 240
Annual Budget $3.2 billion
Agency Executive Anthony J. Tether, Director
Website
www.darpa.
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Joseph Carl Robnett Licklider (March 11, 1915 – June 26, 1990), known simply as J.C.R. or "Lick" was an American computer scientist, considered one of the most important figures in computer science and general computing history.
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Intelligence amplification (IA) (also referred to as cognitive augmentation and machine augmented intelligence) refers to the effective use of information technology in augmenting human intelligence.
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- Department of Defense redirects here. For the defense departments in governments of other countries, see defence ministry.
United States
Department of Defense
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Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
Agency overview
Formed 1958
Employees 240
Annual Budget $3.2 billion
Agency Executive Anthony J. Tether, Director
Website
www.darpa.
..... Click the link for more information.
Agency overview
Formed 1958
Employees 240
Annual Budget $3.2 billion
Agency Executive Anthony J. Tether, Director
Website
www.darpa.
..... Click the link for more information.
System Development Corporation (SDC), based in Santa Monica, California, was arguably the world's first computer software company.
SDC started in 1955 as the systems engineering group for the SAGE air defense ground system at the RAND Corporation.
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SDC started in 1955 as the systems engineering group for the SAGE air defense ground system at the RAND Corporation.
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Santa Monica, California
Downtown Santa Monica as seen from the Santa Monica Pier
Nickname: SaMo, The Peoples Republic of Santa Monica
Location of Santa Monica in Los Angeles County, California
Coordinates:
..... Click the link for more information.
Downtown Santa Monica as seen from the Santa Monica Pier
Nickname: SaMo, The Peoples Republic of Santa Monica
Location of Santa Monica in Los Angeles County, California
Coordinates:
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Project Genie was a computer research project started in 1964 at the University of California, Berkeley by J.C.R. Licklider, the head of DARPA at that time. The project was a smaller counterpart to MIT's Project MAC.
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University of California, Berkeley is a public research university located in Berkeley, California, United States. Commonly referred to as UC Berkeley, Berkeley and Cal
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