Inventors of Internet
So now that you know about the Internet’s history, it’s time to explore the people involved. Now, think of the internet as a mega-project and these projects can’t be done by one or two people, rather it was much of a collaboration of many programmers, engineers and scientists.
Although the modern internet was based on the communication model developed by Kahn and Vinton for ARPANET, it’s important to note that the World Wide Web is a separate concept. The World Wide Web, which is generally referred to as the web, is a system of interlinked hypertext documents that can be accessed with the help of the internet. While the web relies on the internet to function, it is not synonymous with the internet itself.
History.com explains that the Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET), which was established with funding from the U.S. Department of Defense in the late 1960s, gave rise to the “first workable prototype of the Internet.” With ARPANET, multiple computers were able to communicate with one another on a single network.
Though Success yet a fail
On October 29, 1969, ARPANET achieved a significant milestone when it sent its first message from one computer located at the University of California Los Angeles to another at Stanford. However, due to the limited capacity of the network at the time, the message only contained the first two letters of the intended word, “LOGIN,” and caused the network to crash. It is worth noting that each computer at the time was the size of a small house.
FAQs
- What was the first-ever website?
info.cern.ch - Who published the first-ever website?
Tim Berners-Lee