| Wayne State University College of Lifelong Learning Interdisciplinary Studies Program Fall, 2000 http://www.cll.wayne.edu/isp/drbowen/inetf00 |
Instructor: David R. Bowen 2311 A/AB Wayne State University Detroit, MI 48202 |
Daytime tel: (313) 577-1498 Evening tel: (248) 549-8518 FAX: (313) 577-8585 Email: d.r.bowen@wayne.edu |
Instructor's
home page (David R. Bowen) at http://www.cll.wayne.edu/isp/drbowen |
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| eCommerce: Using the Web to Find and Service
Customers AGS 3360 Section 986 Call Number 92073 or ISP 5500 Section 982 Call Number 92136 |
Computers, the Internet, and Society AGS 3340 Section 981 Call Number 96761 or ISP 5990 Section 982 Call Number 99915 |
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Last updated: 10/18/00
Link back to course Welcome
A Brief History of the
Internet
David Bowen, ISP
Early Stages
The Internet started in the late 1960s and early 1970s. At this time, the first Local Area
Networks (LANs) were being developed. These were networks connecting people in the same
office, building, or cluster of buildings ("campus"). Using LANs, several people
could share files on a large central hard drive, share printers, and share other expensive
computer equipment. Several companies started developing and marketing their own LAN
technologies, with different strengths and weaknesses. Unfortunately, each company's
technology was incompatible with the others. Many new companies started, to connect the
different types. At the same time, Wide Area Networks (WANs) were being developed to
connect, for example, one company's offices in different cities. There were different
brands, again incompatible. A third element was that the US Department of Defense (DoD)
decided that computer communications would be important in the future, especially if the
US were attacked with nuclear weapons, and that computer communications needed to be
impervious to large-scale disruptions. The US government, including the DoD, was finding
it increasingly difficult to deal with the incompatibilities of the different LANs.
In response to all of these conerns, the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA - later on, Defense was added at the start of its title, so it became DARPA) within DoD, started carrying out and funding research on networks. Besides theoretical discussions, there was heavy emphasis on building real examples. An Internetwork concept arose, of a network that would connect all of the LANs. Researchers and Suppliers were required soon to make all of their results public, using the new technology. The new network was called ARPANET. In 1983, the Internet, as it was called by then, absorbed ARPANET.
Since the developers were also required to be users, deficiencies and problems were identified and corrected. The TCP/IP protocol was developed, piece by piece. The Domain Name System was added on. Applications were developed. During the late 1980s, the National Science Foundation (NSF), which at the time funded most non-military mathematics and science research, established five supercomputer centers at large universities around the nation, and used the Internet to connect researchers from all over the country, in what was known as NSFNET. In 1987, Michigan's Merit Network was awarded the contract to manage and upgrade these networks.
The Internet is simply a pipeline for information. Without software to insert and extract information, it would not be useful. Protocols have also been inportant in defining what functions Internet applications carry out, and how they do it. In this way, for example, there can be many different examples of Internet email clients and Internet email servers, but since the protocol defining how they interact is public, they can all work together. Some of the important applications, each with its own protocol, have been:
Several informal volunteer groups are primarily responsible for developing and publishing the specifications that define the Internet. These are:
Many people feel that the following characteristics contributed importantly to the success of the Internet:
Two new features being developed are: