The Internet Turns 40, For a Second Time
sean_nestor writes with this excerpt from The Register: "Some date the dawn of the net to September 12, 1969, when a team of engineers at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) connected the first two machines on the first node of ARPAnet, the US Department of Defense-funded network that eventually morphed into the modern interwebs. But others — including Professor Leonard Kleinrock, who led that engineering team — peg the birthday to October 29, when the first message was sent between the remote nodes. 'That's the day,' Kleinrock tells The Reg, 'the internet uttered its first words.' ...A 50kbps AT&T pipe connected the UCLA and SRI nodes, and the first message sent was the word 'log' — or at least that was the idea. UCLA would send the 'log' and SRI would respond with 'in.' But after UCLA typed the 'l' and the 'o,' the 'g' caused a memory overflow on the SRI IMP. ... 'So the first message was "Lo," as in "Lo and Behold,"' Kleinrock says. 'We couldn't have asked for a better message — and we didn't plan it.'"
I.e. my guess is with a memory overflow after two characters, the network stack wasn't exactly the fastest thing around.
Hulk SMASH Celiac Disease
...that the very first even to occur on the Internet was a **buffer overflow**? Talk about a zero-day exploit.
My god, that's more apropos than they could possibly have realized. Things haven't changed since then either.
Some date the dawn of the net to September 12, 1969, when a team of engineers at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) connected the first two machines on the first node of ARPAnet... others peg the birthday to October 29, when the first message was sent between the remote nodes.
That's not such a difficult metaphor to construct. The net was *conceived* when the two nodes came together, just as you and I were *conceived* when two nodes, um, er, yeah. And just like then, nobody knew what the result of coupling of the first Internet nodes would be, if anything.
It was *born* when someone slapped it on the bottom and it did something seen by the people gathered around. You probably went "WAAAA!". The Internet went "LO". Of course "G" caused a fault, because the next letter was supposed to be "L".
So I think it would be fair to say that the world would want to celebrate the "birthday" of the Internet today, October 29, just as the world (or your corner of it) celebrate your birthday on the day you made your emergence into the world.
Celebrating the day the Internet was *conceived*... well, that seems a bit weird.
Stressed? Me? Of course not. Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.
ha
Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
Great, I can just imagine all the corny jokes Slashdotters are goin[NO CARRIER]
lo[NO CARRIER]
Ha! Now you'll never know if I was laughing out loud or just correcting you!
"I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)
Well, I don't get to change my age based on when I uttered my first words, why should the internet?
I prefer rogues to imbeciles because they sometimes take a rest.
When was the first IP packet sent? Shouldn't that be the birthday of the Internet?
EvilCON - Made Famous by
Simple. This was not the first time two hosts were connected together via a serial line. If you only cared about that, you'd have to go back a lot farther. Heck, the first modem dates back to 1962. What made the Internet possible was not the notion of having computers that could talk to other computers. The key change that made the Internet possible was the notion of all the computers speaking a single language and having routers that knew how to pass messages on to other routers, eventually to another computer. That was not realized until the first packet was sent on a packet-switched network, which in its most primitive form, occurred on October 29, 1969.
Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.
ATDT5601750
(dialtone)..... dee-doo-bee-boop-da-ba-dee-bee.... skeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee skrooooooo....
CONNECT 1200
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Welcome to Slash Dot BBS!
login: commodor
pass: $$$$
command (H for help): E
Welcome to Email. Command (H for help): N
TO: Mobile /end
SUBJ: Huh?
BODY: Hello. Your last message did not come through. All I received was "lo". Was that LOL? Or "lo here come the sheep"? hahahahahahahahahahahahaha. L8r.
command (H for help): S
Message sent. Command (H for help): +++
ATH
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*#$!@^(!%!$(&
NO CARRIER
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
"Maybe because you aren't a network of computers."
What an odd assumption.