Saturday, September 05, 2009

History of the Internet

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Internet#PrecursorsNetworks_that_led_to_the_Internet,
History_of_the_Internet#Merging_the_networks_and_creating_the_Internetthe_Internet_goes_global

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By Christopher Null

{Forty years ago today, the first two computers on the ARPAnet -- the military-run precursor to the Internet we know today -- were connected to each each other, creating the first link in what would arguably become the most important technological advance in history.
It would be several months before enough computers were added to the network to make it useful and for messages to start flowing among them, but September 2, 1969, is generally considered one of the defining dates in the Internet's protracted birth.
Within a year, the network would expand from a few west coast colleges to the eastern seaboard, and by the mid-'70s the network had gone international, with satellite links to Europe and dozens of computers connected to the new grid. (See the photo above for what things looked like in 1977.) And with email (1971) and file transfer (1973) features added to the system, it actually became useful for getting actual work and communications done.
By 1983, the ARPAnet shifted to a new architecture for data transmission, the one which is still in use today. By 1988, everything made another huge change, as commercial interests were allowed to piggyback on what had formerly been a government- and education-only network. Called "Internet Commercial" for a short time before becoming just "The Internet," I vividly remember my COBOL professor back in the day just gushing over what possibilities would be opened up when that happened, and he was right. Once the World Wide Web got started, along with the Mosaic web browser, the net as you and I know it really got kicking.
But the wild world of Yahoo!, YouTube, Google, and ICanHasCheezburger all started with that humble connection 40 years ago, a wire hooking two computers in different locations together and scientists figuring out a way to make them do something useful together instead of on their own, as had long been the usual way things were done.
Happy birthday, Internet!}
http://ca.tech.yahoo.com/blogs/the_working_guy/rss/article/3865

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung_Galaxy,
http://www.galaxybroadband.ca/?gclid=CIiZpuCx4bICFRBgMgodfVEAyA

http://thedigitallabyrinth.blogspot.ca/2013/01/from-telegraph-to-internet.html