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Who Really Invented the Internet?
The Wall Street Journal ^ | July 23, 2012 | L. GORDON CROVITZ

Posted on 07/23/2012 7:06:51 AM PDT by Pharmboy

Contrary to legend, it wasn't the federal government, and the Internet had nothing to do with maintaining communications during a war.

A telling moment in the presidential race came recently when Barack Obama said: "If you've got a business, you didn't build that. Somebody else made that happen." He justified elevating bureaucrats over entrepreneurs by referring to bridges and roads, adding: "The Internet didn't get invented on its own. Government research created the Internet so that all companies could make money off the Internet."

It's an urban legend that the government launched the Internet. The myth is that the Pentagon created the Internet to keep its communications lines up even in a nuclear strike. The truth is a more interesting story about how innovation happens—and about how hard it is to build successful technology companies even once the government gets out of the way.

For many technologists, the idea of the Internet traces to Vannevar Bush, the presidential science adviser during World War II who oversaw the development of radar and the Manhattan Project....

...by the 1960s technologists were trying to connect separate physical communications networks into one global network—a "world-wide web." The federal government was involved, modestly, via the Pentagon's Advanced Research Projects Agency Network. Its goal was not maintaining communications during a nuclear attack, and it didn't build the Internet. Robert Taylor, who ran the ARPA program in the 1960s, sent an email to fellow technologists in 2004 setting the record straight: "The creation of the Arpanet was not motivated by considerations of war. The Arpanet was not an Internet. An Internet is a connection between two or more computer networks."

If the government didn't invent the Internet, who did?

(Excerpt) Read more at professional.wsj.com ...


TOPICS: Breaking News; Business/Economy; Extended News; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: arpanet; braking; darpa; internet; invention; miltech; technology; ucla; usmilitary; xerox
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To: TomGuy

I remember the transition from BBS and the internet being like an exclusive club and the invasion of the bohunk WebTvers.
Would have been mid-to late 90’s.
I remember because I was one...:)


121 posted on 07/23/2012 11:29:03 AM PDT by Leep (Enemy of the Statist)
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To: Pharmboy

btt


122 posted on 07/23/2012 11:30:15 AM PDT by KSCITYBOY
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To: Las Vegas Ron

BM


123 posted on 07/23/2012 11:35:12 AM PDT by Las Vegas Ron (Medicine is the keystone in the arch of socialism)
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To: Usagi_yo; Pharmboy
Vint Cerf did not invent TCP/IP, He can be credited with NCP, and he still owes me $20 bucks.

Is this incorrect ?
In 1973 Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn wrote the specifications for
Transmission Control Protocol (TCP), an internetworking protocol
for sharing resources using packet-switching among the nodes.

124 posted on 07/23/2012 11:37:59 AM PDT by Uri’el-2012 (Psalm 119:174 I long for Your salvation, YHvH, Your law is my delight.)
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To: KSCITYBOY
Used NCP in the 70’s while at Honeywell. Worked at DEC in the late 80’s when they had the largest private network. It was nothing to chat with folks in Australia, New Zealand, UK, etc.

I think the real jump start was the Work of Tim Berniers-Lee. I always wondered if he had a MAC, because they had search capabilities on MAC’s, but it was limited to one machine. I see that contribution of his to link searches across networks as the big jump in the internet.

125 posted on 07/23/2012 11:39:38 AM PDT by sleepwalker (Palin 2012)
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To: Bobalu
Remember the notorious 'Dial Your Match' BBS systems? Fun, fun for *everyone* lol

126 posted on 07/23/2012 11:41:36 AM PDT by mkjessup (Romney is to conservatism what Helen Thomas is to a high fashion model walkway.)
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To: UriÂ’el-2012
In 1973 Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn wrote the specifications for Transmission Control Protocol (TCP), an internetworking protocol for sharing resources using packet-switching among the nodes.

From:

Packet switching


127 posted on 07/23/2012 11:41:36 AM PDT by Uri’el-2012 (Psalm 119:174 I long for Your salvation, YHvH, Your law is my delight.)
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To: subterfuge

Too bad the article doesn’t answer the question of exactly who invented the world wide interweb ethernet thingy.

That would be the genius and original thinker, Albert in a can Gore.


128 posted on 07/23/2012 11:43:43 AM PDT by Louis Foxwell (Better the devil we can destroy than the Judas we must tolerate.)
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To: Mr. K

Seems we’re both big Tesla fans! Wish he were here today! Just imagine what he would have come up with!


129 posted on 07/23/2012 11:46:27 AM PDT by Dr. Bogus Pachysandra ( Ya can't pick up a turd by the clean end!)
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To: rdcbn

Haha...my wife said exactly the same thing yesterday, calling “Silicon Valley” “Silicone Valley” and I corrected her in exactly the same way!


130 posted on 07/23/2012 11:48:47 AM PDT by rlmorel ("The safest road to Hell is the gradual one." Screwtape (C.S. Lewis))
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To: samtheman

The missed opportunities of Xerox PARC is staggering.

Its like:

“Watson, come here. I need you”
“Yes, Dr. Bell?”
“Go sell these two instruments”


131 posted on 07/23/2012 11:50:45 AM PDT by eddie willers
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To: Pharmboy

When Gore said he invented the internet, I think it was a Marxist code for the Community Organized Network of thugs on the net.


132 posted on 07/23/2012 11:53:37 AM PDT by JudgemAll (Democrats Fed. job-security Whorocracy & hate:hypocrites must be gay like us or be tested/crucified)
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To: Pharmboy

I’m sorry, but this article is inaccurate and substantially denigrates the role that Robert Taylor’s championship of ARPAnet and the funding he provided to build the equipment and the network used to try out the idea of packet switching, a la ARAPnet.

There are several fine books on the history of the Internet that accurately depict what really happened.

Given the right circumstances, small amounts of government funding for advanced technologies can be beneficial, and ARPA/DARPA has been one of the most successful of all the funding agencies. Like the Bell Labs of yore, visionary leaders unfettered by bureaucracy and politics would place bets on small groups of INDIVIDUAL geniuses and their ideas and then get the hell out of the way and let those geniuses do their thing in a conducive environment. At Bell Labs we got the transistor, satellite communications, information theory, the MASER, the LASER, cellular telephony and fiber optics, just to name a few of the peace-time revolutions fostered there with that model.

And ARPA/DARPA was instrumental in fostering the foundation technologies of the Internet using similar methods. That simply cannot be taken away from them and Robert Taylor.

However, what does NOT work is crony capitalism, a la our Communist-in-Chief Barrack Obama (which was never meant to accomplish anything but kickback taxpayer bucks to campaign fund bundlers anyway) or legions of ignorant bureaucrats shoveling taxpayer money by the truck-load to politically favored “researchers” pursuing politically favored theories (e.g., anthropogenic global warming, Darwinism, etc.)

I was present in academia during the post-ARAPnet to current Internet transition, and in fact, played a part in that transition, including performing the system engineering and obtaining grant funding for a short-lived transitional Internet technology post-ARPAnet that was used to boot-strap NSFnet.

I would also add that one of the absolute great and unsung heroes of the Internet saga is a fellow by the name of Stephen Wolff at the National Science foundation, who DISMANTLED and DEFUNDED NSFnet following its wild success in interconnecting the major university and civilian research centers around the nation. Most in academia thought Stephen was crazy, but I immediately understood his goal, namely to vastly expand to the whole world the reach of the Internet from just the elite few who were funded exclusively by the taxpayer, by having the government fund only PRIVATE enterprise to replace the academic NSFnet services which had heretofore been directly funded and operated by government entities.

Steven recognized that continuing with the NSFnet as a government-operated Internet stifled its expansion to the great unwashed masses outside of academia, and he recognized the enormous potential of this technology for the whole world, and he understood the massively building demand to expand NSFnet services.

Steven also recognized that private enterprise was the best way to expand the Internet, that competition for profit amongst private enterprise would vastly outstrip any feeble government Internet expansion efforts, as well as driving costs down due to competition, none of which was possible with a government Internet monopoly.

Steven’s visionary plan was to defund the direct operation of the NSFnet by government entities by defunding those entities and instead parceling out the same funds to the academic end-user-academic-institutions who would replace their previous NSFnet Internet connection by bidding for services from one or more private entities who would build NEW privately-operated Internets with the seed money from those bids. Once built for academia, the private networks could then expand to eventually encompass the whole world.

As we all know, Steven’s brilliant visionary plan worked, even though almost no one knows that there was in fact such a plan or that it was Steven’s!

Don’t get me wrong, NSFnet and its government funding was a VITAL step towards the world wide Internet. It was the testbed for the original commercial Internet equipment makers and the original communications links providers. It was in fact what allowed Cisco and many others to start up in the first place. But. And that’s a big but. Without Steven Wolff and his visionary plan to convert the successes of the government-operated NSFnet into a private-enterprise proposition, the Internet would have remained nothing more than a slightly glorified version of France’s defunct government-operated Minitel network.

Should the NSFnet have transpired today under the Obammunistic reign of terror, there would have been no Steven Wolff at the NSF as Obama has stocked all Federal agencies from top to bottom with those who must past his litmus test of fascist socialism.

Prior to Obama and his predecessor ilk, giants did indeed use to stride the earth: intellectual giants of individual genius, perseverance and accomplishment. Today our ground is trod merely by envious socialists who coast along on the past genius and work of others, and who spend no energy except to obstruct, denigrate and steal the accomplishments of those from the past, present, and future.

Think about it. What was the last transformational technology post-WWII that has occurred after:

1. The invention of the transistor,

2. Invention of the technologies for geosynchronous satellite communication,

3. Invention of the cellular telephone system,

4. Invention of the PC,

5. Invention of the Internet,

6. Invention of the solid-state laser,

7. Invention of fiber optics,

8. Invention of the integrated circuit,

9. Invention of the microprocessor?

Nothing like those transformative technologies have been invented during the last 20 years. Why is that?


133 posted on 07/23/2012 11:57:30 AM PDT by catnipman (Cat Nipman: Vote Republican in 2012 and only be called racist one more time!)
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To: kinsman redeemer; Jim Robinson

Indeed...you are correct. Jim Robinson was the first one logged in.


134 posted on 07/23/2012 12:02:40 PM PDT by Pharmboy (Democrats lie because they must.)
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To: catnipman
Thank you for your well-informed post; most appreciated.

And, in the last 20 years, the transformative innovation is in decoding the complete human genome (but we have not seen the benefits of this quite yet).

135 posted on 07/23/2012 12:09:26 PM PDT by Pharmboy (Democrats lie because they must.)
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To: central_va
For good or evil, porn has driven web innovation like nothing else has. In the early days, mid 90’s, we would log into to porn sites just to see how they were pushing the technology envelope.

Wally? Is that you?

136 posted on 07/23/2012 12:11:48 PM PDT by Wise Hectare
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To: Pharmboy

...and AOHell almost killed it off again.


137 posted on 07/23/2012 12:14:47 PM PDT by Moltke ("I am Dr. Sonderborg," he said, "and I don't want any nonsense.")
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To: catnipman
Think about it. What was the last transformational technology post-WWII that has occurred after:

1. The invention of the transistor,

2. Invention of the technologies for geosynchronous satellite communication,

3. Invention of the cellular telephone system,

4. Invention of the PC,

5. Invention of the Internet,

6. Invention of the solid-state laser,

7. Invention of fiber optics,

8. Invention of the integrated circuit,

9. Invention of the microprocessor?

Nothing like those transformative technologies have been invented during the last 20 years. Why is that?

PCR - Polymerase Chain Reaction which is the basis for all of modern molecular biology, invented by some surfer dude out of Santa Cruz named Kary Mullis in '83, not inside your 20 year window, but think of all that flowed from the fruit of that tree since.

Oh, and Bob Taylor was an ass, world class.

I, for one, welcome our new Cybernetic Overlords /.

138 posted on 07/23/2012 12:15:05 PM PDT by Mycroft Holmes (<= Mash name for HTML Xampp PHP C JavaScript primer. Programming for everyone.)
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To: Pharmboy

The internet would be worthless unless it was made accessible to masses. The private companies including compuserve, netscape and AOL made the internet useable.

If Government were in charge we would be using dial-up and DOS like screens.


139 posted on 07/23/2012 12:16:47 PM PDT by Raycpa
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To: sleepwalker
I always wondered if he had a MAC Mac, because they had search capabilities on MAC Mac’s, but it was limited to one machine

I'm guessing Tim Berniers-Lee modeled on Unix with SED, GREP & AWK.

With BSD Sockets one could search an entire network.


140 posted on 07/23/2012 12:23:01 PM PDT by Uri’el-2012 (Psalm 119:174 I long for Your salvation, YHvH, Your law is my delight.)
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