1.1 A (Very) Brief History of the Internet

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DNS on Windows 2000, 2nd Edition
By Matt Larson, Cricket Liu
Table of Contents
Chapter 1.  Background


In the late 1960s, the U.S. Department of Defense's Advanced Research Projects Agency, ARPA (later DARPA), began funding an experimental wide area computer network that connected important research organizations in the U.S., called the ARPANET . The original goal of the ARPANET was to allow government contractors to share expensive or scarce computing resources. From the beginning, however, users of the ARPANET also used the network for collaboration. This collaboration ranged from sharing files and software and exchanging electronic mailnow commonplaceto joint development and research using shared remote computers.

The TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) protocol suite was developed in the early 1980s and quickly became the standard host-networking protocol on the ARPANET. The inclusion of the protocol suite in the University of California at Berkeley's popular BSD Unix operating system was instrumental in democratizing internetworking. BSD Unix was virtually free to universities. This meant that internetworkingand ARPANET connectivitywere suddenly available cheaply to many more organizations than were previously attached to the ARPANET. Many of the computers being connected to the ARPANET were being connected to local area networks (LANs), too, and very shortly the other computers on the LANs were communicating via the ARPANET as well.

The network grew from a handful of hosts to tens of thousands of hosts . The original ARPANET became the backbone of a confederation of local and regional networks based on TCP/IP, called the Internet .

In 1988, however, DARPA decided the experiment was over. The Department of Defense began dismantling the ARPANET. Another network, funded by the National Science Foundation and called the NSFNET , replaced the ARPANET as the backbone of the Internet.

Even more recently, in the spring of 1995, the Internet made a transition from using the publicly -funded NSFNET as a backbone to using multiple commercial backbones, run by long-distance carriers such as MCI and Sprint, and long-time commercial internetworking players such as PSINet and UUNET.

Today, the Internet connects millions of hosts around the world. In fact, a significant proportion of the non-PC computers in the world are connected to the Internet. Some of the new commercial backbones can carry a volume of several gigabits per second, tens of thousands of times the bandwidth of the original ARPANET. Tens of millions of people use the network for communication and collaboration daily.


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DNS on Windows 2000
DNS on Windows 2000
ISBN: 0596002300
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2001
Pages: 154

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