How did We find Our Selves Here?
Still, the first mechanism of testing for the internet would not brought into a platform until the early 1960s, when MIT’s J.C.R. Licklider popped out the idea of an “Interstellar Network” of computers. From there later, computer scientists developed the concept of “packet switching,” a method for effectively transmitting electronic data that would later become one of the major building blocks of end to end internet.
They happen to come with a prototype of the Internet in the late 1960s using what they call ARPANET, or the Advanced Research Projects Agency Network. Originally funded by the U.S. Department of Defense, ARPANET used packet switching to allow multiple computers to communicate on a single network. These Thugs really requires thumbs up, they deserve it.
ARPAnet delivered its first message On October 29, 1969: a “node-to-node” communication from one computer to another. Head to head communication system. The first computer was located in a research lab at UCLA and the second was at Stanford; each one was the size of a small house. The message—“LOGIN”—was short and simple, but it crashed the fledgling ARPA network anyway: The Stanford computer only received the note’s first two letters.
The technology continued to grow in the 1970s after scientists Robert Kahn and Vinton Cerf developed Transmission Control Protocol and Internet Protocol, or TCP/IP, a communications model that set standards for how data could be transmitted between multiple networks.
Historically ARPANET adopted TCP/IP on January 1, 1983, and from there they began to build the “network of networks” Which become Our joint venture on Steemit today.