Internet
The Internet, or simply the Net, is the publicly accessible
worldwide system of interconnected computer networks that
transmit data by packet switching using a standardized Internet
Protocol (IP). It is made up of thousands of smaller commercial,
academic, domestic, and government networks. It carries various
information and services, such as electronic mail, online chat,
and the interlinked Web pages and other documents of the World
Wide Web.
Contrary to some common usage, the Internet and the World Wide
Web are not synonymous: the Internet is a collection of
interconnected computer networks, linked by copper wires,
fiber-optic cables, etc.; the Web is a collection of
interconnected documents, linked by hyperlinks and URLs, and is
accessible using the Internet.
Aside from the complex physical connections that make up its
infrastructure, the Internet is held together by bi- or
multi-lateral commercial contracts (for example peering
agreements) and by technical specifications or protocols that
describe how to exchange data over the network. Indeed, the
Internet is essentially defined by its interconnections and
routing policies.
As of January 2006, over 1 billion people use the Internet
according to Internet World Stats.
The Internet is also having a profound impact on work, leisure,
knowledge and worldviews.
Creation of the Internet
The USSR's launch of Sputnik spurred the U.S. to create the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in February
1958 to regain a technological lead. DARPA created the
Information Processing Technology Office to further the research
of the Semi Automatic Ground Environment program, which had
networked country-wide radar systems together for the first
time. J. C. R. Licklider was selected to head the IPTO, and saw
universal networking as a potential unifying human revolution.
Licklider recruited Lawrence Roberts to head a project to
implement a network, and Roberts based the technology on the
work of Paul Baran who had written an exhaustive study for the
U.S. Air Force that recommended packet switching to make a
network highly robust and survivable. After much work, the first
node went live at UCLA on October 29, 1969 on what would be
called the ARPANET, the "eve" network of today's Internet. In
December of 1970, Charles A. Petrik contacted the U.S. Navy and
suggested that a special communications network, that the
Department of Defense had built for use in the possiblitity of a
nuclear attack, could also be used during peace time. Petrik
convinced the military to connect the computers of the U.S.
National Laboratories for scientific research purposes, and to
allow these labs to get data to other labs faster, and safer.
The vast majority of today's Internet uses version four of the
IP protocol (i.e. IPv4), and although IPv6 is standardised, it
exists only as "islands" of connectivity, and there are many
ISPs who don't have any IPv6 connectivity at all. [1]
The first TCP/IP wide area network was operational by January 1,
1983 (this is technically the birth of the Internet), when the
United States' National Science Foundation (NSF) constructed a
university network backbone that would later become the NSFNet.
It was then followed by the opening of the network to commercial
interests in 1995. Important separate networks that offered
gateways into, then later merged into the Internet include
Usenet, Bitnet and the various commercial and educational X.25
networks such as Compuserve and JANET. The ability of TCP/IP to
work over these pre-existing communication networks allowed for
a great ease of growth. Use of Internet as a phrase to describe
a single global TCP/IP network originated around this time.
The network gained a public face in the 1990s. In August 1991
CERN in Switzerland publicized the new World Wide Web project,
two years after Tim Berners-Lee had begun creating HTML, HTTP
and the first few web pages at CERN in Switzerland. In 1993 the
National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign released the Mosaic
web browser version 1.0, and by late 1994 there was growing
public interest in the previously academic/technical Internet.
By 1996 the word "Internet" was common public currency, but it
referred almost entirely to the World Wide Web.
Meanwhile, over the course of the decade, the Internet
successfully accommodated the majority of previously existing
public computer networks (although some networks such as FidoNet
have remained separate). This growth is often attributed to the
lack of central administration, which allows organic growth of
the network, as well as the non-proprietary open nature of the
Internet protocols, which encourages vendor interoperability and
prevents any one company from exerting too much control over the
network.
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