ARPAnet

From The Ultimate Programming Reference

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==History==
==History==
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In the late 1960s, the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) sponsered a confrence at which several dozen ARPA-funded graaduate students were brought together at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign to meet and share ideas. During this conference, ARPA rolled out the blueprints fir networking the main computer systems of about a dozen ARPA-funded universities and research institutions. They were to be connected with communications lines operating at a then-stunning 56kbps (56,000 bits per second), this at a time when most people (of the few who could be) were connecting over telephone lines to computers at a rate of 110 bits per second. Shortly after this conference, ARPA proceeded to implement what quickly became the ARPAnet, the grandparent of today's Internet.  
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In the late 1960s, the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) sponsered a confrence at which several dozen ARPA-funded graaduate students were brought together at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign to meet and share ideas. During this conference, ARPA rolled out the blueprints fir networking the main computer systems of about a dozen ARPA-funded universities and research institutions. They were to be connected with communications lines operating at a then-stunning 56kbps (56,000 bits per second), this at a time when most people (of the few who could be) were connecting over telephone lines to computers at a rate of 110 bits per second. Shortly after this conference, ARPA proceeded to implement what quickly became the [[ARPAnet]], the grandparent of today's [[Internet]].  
==See Also==
==See Also==
*[[Internet]]
*[[Internet]]

Current revision as of 09:49, 26 March 2006

[edit] History

In the late 1960s, the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) sponsered a confrence at which several dozen ARPA-funded graaduate students were brought together at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign to meet and share ideas. During this conference, ARPA rolled out the blueprints fir networking the main computer systems of about a dozen ARPA-funded universities and research institutions. They were to be connected with communications lines operating at a then-stunning 56kbps (56,000 bits per second), this at a time when most people (of the few who could be) were connecting over telephone lines to computers at a rate of 110 bits per second. Shortly after this conference, ARPA proceeded to implement what quickly became the ARPAnet, the grandparent of today's Internet.

[edit] See Also

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