There is an opinion that if one were to suggest one single occurrence which led to the creation of the Internet, it would be the Soviet Union’s launch of Sputnik (Satellite) in 1957



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12.The Internet and WWW history


The Internet and WWW history



There is an opinion that if one were to suggest one single occurrence which led to the creation of the Internet, it would be the Soviet Union’s launch of Sputnik (Satellite) in 1957. This seminal incident in space exploration caused then American President Dwight David Eisenhower to appoint MIT President James Killian as his assistant for science and to create a new department within the Department of Defense named the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA). ARPA became the answer to the rising American Cold war paranoia about military inferiority, fueled not least by the Sputnik success. The agency was designed to perform long term high risk /high pay off research and development, and in this context put great emphasis on the development of the fledgling computer technology. It was noted by ARPA that too many resources had been allocated by public and private research in order to produce short- term advances in computer hardware and software. The Agency realized that machines needed greater capability to interact with each other to gather relevant information, solve problems, anticipate data requirements, communicate effectively across distances, present information visually and do all this automatically. Enormous work had to be done. To begin with, ARPA founded Information Processing Techniques Offices (IPTO) and a psychologist Licklider was appointed as the first director. The researches in IPTO became beneficial to different users because Licklider’s main mission was not only to design military tools but rather to realize his personal vision of “Man- Computer Symbiosis”. The next discoveries became stages of such a worldwide enterprise as the Internet. One of this stages was the project initiated by IPTO. It concerned the development of computer process known as time-sharing: MIT scientists advanced the idea to utilize the increasing power of few computers available to the research community and make possible for several people to use the same computer simultaneously. Time-sharing implementing furthered the interactive computing –Licklider’s and his associates’ dream. So was established the new trend in computer development that would later became the Internet. As a further step towards improvement of the networking was the proposal to connect all computers in the research community via dial-up telephones. At the same time, a number of computing specialists were carrying out the possibility of using so-called packed-switching process 28 in order to guarantee the security of military command and control systems against any possible danger. The principle of packet-switching relied on a computer network in which all the computers had equal status and data forwarding capabilities. If a user then wanted a set of data transmitted from one computer to another, regardless of the distance, the transmitting computer would break up the data in small packets measuring only a few bytes. These packets contained information as to their point of origin, their destination on the network, as well as the information which would enable the computer on the receiving end to reassemble the data set as soon as all packets had arrived. The fledging network required a wide range of serious studies. But the most important work was the implementing of communications setting termed as protocol which was nothing but a code of rules for interconnecting various computers. It would enable the diverse number of computer hardware and operating systems to communicate. Protocols became a kind of lingua franca among the connected computers. In 1969 the first network computers, or IMP (Interface Message Processor) were ready. As related by the networking pioneer and then graduate student Vincent Cerf, the hardware was an immediate success: when they turned the IMP on, it just started running. Thus ARPA succeeded in creating the first effective long-distance computer network which was named ARPANET.
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