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Internet Turns 35 Today

shadowspar writes "The CBC is reporting that the Internet turned 35 today. The story talks about the less-than-prophetic beginnings of the net: 'In order to log in to the two-computer network, which was then called ARPANET, programmers at UCLA were to type in 'log', and Stanford would reply 'in'. The UCLA programmers only got as far as 'lo' before the Stanford machine crashed.'"

8 of 244 comments (clear)

  1. 1968 by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 4, Informative

    1968 was an important year in world history, no doubt about it. In 1998, there was a wave of documentaries, books and essays about that year. The authors focused on yippies trashing democratic convention in Chicago, Warsaw Pact invading Czechoslovakia, student uprising in Paris, Mexico massacre, flower-power, maoism, Vietnam war, Beatles recording white album or Che Guevara in Bolivia.

    Almost nobody noticed that 1968 was also the year when Noyce an Moore founded Intel, Douglas Engelbart demoed for the fist time GUI, mouse and word processing, UCLA and Stanford started to build their networking connection. Even today, scholars seem not to notice the relevance of these facts.

  2. Re:a graph of internet growth? by aacool · · Score: 4, Informative
    THe growth of the Internet is http://www.icdri.org/technology/indexbp.htm#d1 here

    Other useful charts are at http://navigators.com/stats.html

    A map of global internet connectivity is http://navigators.com/globe16b.gifhere

    The real question is - where does the Internet go from here?

  3. A great book on this topic by patjenk · · Score: 2, Informative

    Katie Hafner wrote a great book entitled "Where Wizards Stay Up Late" thats all about the creation of the arpanet. It is more focused on the work that was going on in Boston and I believe MIT at the time than the specific stanford happenings but has a ton of information on both. This is a very interesting read. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0684 832674/qid=1099089921/sr=8-1/ref=pd_csp_1/102-7568 317-3623330?v=glance&s=books&n=507846

  4. Re:Man by Flashbck · · Score: 2, Informative

    Considering this monumentous occasion. I suggest everyone head on over to ebaumsworld and check out the 70's/80's video about "Internet" and how great it is!

  5. CBC news report on "Internet" by xdc · · Score: 2, Informative

    That was interesting. At one point in the video, I saw a 1992 copyright flash across a screen, so this video must date from circa 1992.

  6. Re:Didn't this already happen? by blue+trane · · Score: 2, Informative

    According to the article linked from that story, "computer scientists at UCLA linked two bulky computers using a 15-foot gray cable, testing a new way to exchange data over networks" and "Stephen Crocker and Vinton Cerf were among the graduate students who joined UCLA professor Len Kleinrock in an engineering lab on September 2, 1969, as bits of meaningless test data flowed silently between the two computers."

    The CBC article linked from the present story:
    "After the hardware was put in place, researchers at UCLA attempted on Oct. 29, 1969, to log in to a computer at the Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park, Calif."

    So, the first "birthday" was meaningless bits of test data between two computers in the same room, this "birthday" is the first connection (and attempt at a meaningful natural language exchange) between computers in geographically separate locations.

  7. Re:Didn't this already happen? by isny · · Score: 2, Informative

    Well, according to this article, the internet just turned 20 last year.
    Here's one that said it turned 35 last month.
    Here's yet another one at a reputable site that has it as 20 years ago, but this was Dec 31, 2002.
    Any reason to celebrate, I guess.

  8. Re:21 by Alric · · Score: 3, Informative

    I know you're joking, and I do appreciate the humor of Gore's choice of words.

    However, it should be noted that Gore's words in a CNN interview, as quoted by Wired News, were as
    follows:
    "During my service in the United States Congress, I took the
    initiative in creating the Internet."

    Gore's meaning was fairly obvious: that he was one of the critical political supporters of the Internet. This is absolutely true. Without his support in the Congress, the Internet would have matured less quickly.

    He never claimed to have "invented" anything. His efforts did help "create" the Internet though. And it is an accomplishment to be lauded...not mocked.

    I wish people would stop misrepresenting this fact.