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Summary Of: ARPAnet

The ARPAnet and nuclear attacks... the people who created the ARPAnet would eventually draw on all these different sources... The initial ARPAnet consisted of four IMPs... The first permanent ARPAnet link was established on... the ARPAnet was designed to transmit all 1822 messages reliably... and the ARPAnet became just one component of the fledgling Internet... When the ARPAnet migrated to the Internet protocols in 1983... of the ARPAnet traffic was email... but conference calls over the ARPAnet never worked well... After the ARPAnet had been up and running for several years... military portion of the ARPAnet was broken off as a separate network... IMPs and TIPs were phased out as the ARPAnet was shut down after the introduction of the... The ARPAnet and nuclear attacks... The ARPAnet and nuclear attacks... myth about the ARPAnet states that it was designed to be resistant to... that the false rumor started claiming that the ARPAnet was somehow related to building a network resistant to nuclear war... The ARPAnet was designed to survive network losses... The ARPAnet was not started to create a Command and Control System that would survive a nuclear... the ARPAnet came out of our frustration that there were only a limited number of large... fitting to end on the note that the ARPAnet program has had a strong and direct feedback into the support and strength of computer... takes part in the development of ARPAnet after the events depicted in the game... from ARPAnet to Internet and Beyond... discusses ARPAnet and Information Processing Techniques Office... Images of ARPAnet from 1964 onwards...

Encyclodia Page On: ARPAnet

These Are Links To Other Documents
| | ARPA | United States Department of Defense | packet switching | Internet | Packet switching | circuit switching | packets | post box | Lincoln Laboratory | Larry Roberts | J.C.R. Licklider | Bolt, Beranek and Newman | Intergalactic Computer Network | Internet | ARPA | United States Department of Defense | Ivan Sutherland | Bob Taylor | SDC | Q-32 | Santa Monica | Project Genie | University of California, Berkeley | Multics | MIT | Request For Quotation | RFQ | BBN | 7 April | 1969 | Interface Message Processors | routers | modems | leased lines | kbit | bit-serial | ruggedized | Honeywell | kB | direct memory access | | | UCLA | Leonard Kleinrock | Stanford Research Institute | Augmentation Research Center | Douglas Engelbart | NLS | hypertext | SDS 940 | UC Santa Barbara | Culler | IBM | 360/75 | OS/MVT | University of Utah | Ivan Sutherland | DEC | PDP-10 | TENEX | November 21 | 1969 | December 5 | 1969 | 1822 protocol | IP | TCP | Network Control Program | application software | communication protocols | OSI model | TCP/IP | 1971 | Ray Tomlinson | BBN | email | FTP | Network Voice Protocol | packet voice | U.S. | Hawaii | Norway | NORSAR | Defense Communications Agency | MILNET | Honeywell 316 | ASCII | Pluribus | multi-processor | NSFNet | Albert Gore | High Performance Computing and Communication Act of 1991 | Leonard Kleinrock | National Information Infrastructure | information superhighway | nuclear attack | Internet Society | Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater | Sigint | Doctor Who | Past Doctor Adventures | Blue Box | electronic music | Drexciya | NTT DoCoMo | X Files | ARPAnet | hacked | Lone Gunmen | Unusual Suspects | History of the Internet | Computer Networks: The Heralds of Resource Sharing | AMPRNet | Project Cybersyn | .arpa | New York Times | 2008 | 09-21 | UCLA | Internet Society | ISBN 0743468376 | Inventing the Internet | Peter H. Salus | Larry Roberts | Robert Kahn | Severo Ornstein | William Crowther | Vinton Cerf | Postel, Jonathan B. | Charles Babbage Institute | Computer Networks: The Heralds of Resource Sharing | Google Video | Categories | ARPANET | Internet history |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "ARPAnet".