News & Information for Technology Purchasers
NewsFactor Network Sites:   NewsFactor.com Security CRM Business Sci-Tech Newsletters XML/RSS Feed  
   
Home Enterprise I.T. Hardware Software Communications More Topics...
Business Briefing
Average Rating:
Rate this article:  
Happy Birthday! Today Happy Birthday! Today's Internet Is 40 Years Old
By Barry Levine
October 29, 2009 10:37AM

    Bookmark and Share
The Internet is now 40 years old, with the first long-distance message sent to launch ARPANET on Oct. 29, 1969. That first ARPANET message traveled 400 miles from UCLA to the Stanford Research Institute. ARPANET was started to save the Defense Department money and the initial reactions to the founding of the Internet were negative.
 



The technology platform that makes possible your reading this sentence is having a birthday Thursday. On October 29, 1969, the Internet was born.

On that date, engineers at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) sent a message to their counterparts at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) in San Francisco, a distance of about 400 miles. In a modern-era equivalent of the legendary first telephone message -- "Watson, come here" -- an engineer named Charley Kline at UCLA tried to log in remotely.

"L," "O," ...

According to news reports, he first typed in the letter "L" and then, by phone, asked an engineer at SRI if the letter had arrived. When that was confirmed, it was on to completing the word "log." The arrival of the "O" was also verified by phone, but the system Relevant Products/Services crashed on "G."

The problem was debugged, and now, four decades later, the world has changed.

Brad Shimmin, an analyst with industry research firm Current Analysis, said he likens the birth of the Internet to the invention of roads. "Roads," he pointed out, "were a key reason for the dominance of the Roman Empire" and the U.S. has been profoundly shaped by its interstate highway system.

The Internet or something like it was as inevitable as roads, Shimmin said. "The desire to communicate" is primal, he noted, and communicating through computing devices grows out of that. It might have grown up in ways other than the IP-based, cobbled-together system of the Internet, he said, but it would have happened.

That original research project, funded by the U.S. Department of Defense's Advanced Research Projects Agency, was propelled by duplicate funding requests from various academic and research institutions. ARPA wanted the institutions to share their research.

At First, Negative Reactions

M.I.T.'s Dr. Larry Roberts, who created the basic technical specs of what was then called ARPANET, recalled recently that initial reactions to the early Internet were quite negative. Institutions, he told the BBC, wanted to keep control of their bulky computers, but soon found out that they could get more computing power Relevant Products/Services at lower overall cost if they worked together.

The ARPANET engineers, he said, knew the project "would change the face of research and development and business."

Before ARPANET, computers could be networked in dedicated sessions, but the costs and time to do so made it impractical and inefficient. By using packet switching, which the 1969 launch demonstrated, costs and ease of connection could be dramatically improved. Packet switching allows data Relevant Products/Services to be broken up into smaller chunks for transmission using a network Relevant Products/Services of computers, and then reassembled at the destination.

Even though Oct. 29 is the generally accepted birthday for the Internet, that is subject to some dispute. While it was the date a message was sent from a lab in one city to a lab in another, some people consider Sept. 2 as the birthday. On Sept. 2, 1969, a message was also sent from one computer to another -- a distance of 15 feet inside the UCLA lab.
 

Tell Us What You Think
Your Comment:



Advertisement


 Business Briefing
1.   Super Bowl Ads Go for Laughs, Heart
2.   Veteran SAP CEO Abruptly Resigns
3.   A Telecom Italia-Telefonica Merger?
4.   U.S. Investigating Prius Brake Issues
5.   Ex-Yahoo Exec Lands at Chegg.com


advertisement
EPIC Objects To Google-NSA TiesEPIC Objects To Google-NSA Ties
Cyberattack meant to rattle Google?
Average Rating:
Torrent Traps Used To Harvest LoginsTorrent Traps Used To Harvest Logins
Web sites sold with backdoor access.
Average Rating:
Stealth Cookies Track ConsumersStealth Cookies Track Consumers
May be used to offer 'dynamic' pricing.
Average Rating:
Product Information and Resources for Technology You Can Use To Boost Your Business

Enterprise Hardware Spotlight
Nvidia Auto-Switches Notebook GPU To Save Battery Life
Nvidia has taken the wraps off a notebook technology that chooses the best graphics processor for any given application and automatically routes the workload to Nvidia or Intel processors.
 
Microsoft Says Battery Woes Not Caused By Windows 7
Battery problems on Windows 7 machines are not caused by the operating system. That's the position of Stephen Sinofsky, head of the Windows division, in a long posting on the Windows engineering blog.
 
IBM's New POWER7 Servers Save Energy with Big Loads
IBM has unveiled high-capacity servers that are the first to be based on its new, multi-core POWER7 chip. It said the new line is designed "to manage the most demanding emerging applications."
 

Enterprise Technology Spotlight
Intel Launches Quad-Core Itanium 9300 Series Processor
After two unexpected delays, Intel has launched the Itanium 9300 series, a 64-bit, quad-core processor code-named Tukwila that is expected to double the performance of its predecessor.
 
Google May Add Facebook, Twitter Links to Gmail
Google will reportedly roll more social-networking features into Gmail, the fastest-growing e-mail service. The new features could save users the trouble of switching to Facebook or Twitter.
 
IBM's New POWER7 Servers Save Energy with Big Loads
IBM has unveiled high-capacity servers that are the first to be based on its new, multi-core POWER7 chip. It said the new line is designed "to manage the most demanding emerging applications."
 

Navigation
NewsFactor Network
Home/Top News | Enterprise I.T. | Hardware | Software | Communications | Network Security | Wireless Tech | Linux/Open Source
Apple/Macintosh | Microsoft/Windows | World Wide Web | Data Storage | E-Commerce | Personal Tech | Tech Trends | Press Releases
NewsFactor Network Enterprise I.T. Sites
NewsFactor Technology News | Enterprise Security Today | CRM Daily

NewsFactor Business and Innovation Sites
Sci-Tech Today | NewsFactor Business Report

NewsFactor Services
FreeNewsFeed | Free Newsletters | Free Whitepapers | XML/RSS Feed

About NewsFactor Network | How To Contact Us | Article Reprints | Careers @ NewsFactor | Services for PR Pros | Top Tech Wire | How To Advertise

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
© Copyright 2000-2010 NewsFactor Network. All rights reserved. Article rating technology by Blogowogo.