The Origin of Internet and Its Evolution
The Origin of Internet and Its Evolution
Lawrence Roberts
- was recruited by
Licklider to head a project
which implemented a network.
Roberts had worked with the
U.S. Air Force on a packet
switching system as opposed
to a circuit switching system.
Packet switching
- a mode of
data transmission in
which a message is
broken into a number
of parts which are
sent independently,
over whatever route
is optimum for each
packet, and
reassembled at the
destination.
Circuit switching
- is a switching
technique that
establishes a
dedicated path
between sender and
receiver. Once the
connection is
established, the
dedicated path will
remain to exist until
the connection is
terminated.
On October 29, 1969, Licklider and
Roberts interconnected the first two nodes
between University of California, Los
Angeles (UCLA) and Stanford Research
Institute (SRI) International at Menlo Park,
California. This was the beginning of the
Advanced Research Projects Agency
Network (ARPANET) which was one of the
key networks which our Internet today was
based off of. Soon after the first
international packet-switched network
service was created between U.S. and U.K.
Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn
- developed the first description of
Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) in 1973.
“Internet”
- the term was first used in 1974 to
describe a single global Transmission Control
Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) network
detailed in the first full specification of TCP
written by Cerf and his colleagues.
January 1, 1983
- the first TCP/IP-wide area network
was created when all hosts on the ARPANET
were switched over from the older protocols
to TCP/IP.
In 1984, the National Science
Foundation (NSF) commissioned the
construction of a 1.5 megabit/second
network which became known as NSFNET.
WWW Logo
ViolaWWW
- is the early popular web browser.
“Internet”
- by 1996, usage of this word had
become commonplace, and consequently,
had its use as a reference to the World Wide
Web.
Today’s Internet
Aside from the complex physical
connections that make up its infrastructure,
the Internet is facilitated by bi- or multi-lateral
commercial contracts and technical
specifications or protocols that describe how
to exchange data over the network. Indeed,
the Internet has severely matured since its
birth many years ago. Today almost 1.5 billion
people use the Internet. That’s almost a
quarter of the entire world (a lot of people).
Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
Numbers (ICANN)
- is the authority that coordinates the
assignment of unique identifiers on the Internet,
including:
domain names
Internet Protocol (IP) addresses
protocol port and parameter numbers