The Internet turns 40

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The Internet turns 40 and Yahoo have some milestones..

Key milestones in the development and growth of the Internet:

1969: On Sept. 2, two computers at University of California, Los Angeles, exchange meaningless data in first test of Arpanet, an experimental military network. The first connection between two sites — UCLA and the Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park, Calif. — takes place on Oct. 29, though the network crashes after the first two letters of the word "logon." UC Santa Barbara and University of Utah later join.

1970: Arpanet gets first East Coast node, at Bolt, Beranek and Newman in Cambridge, Mass.

1972: Ray Tomlinson brings e-mail to the network, choosing "at" symbol as way to specify e-mail addresses belonging to other systems.

1973: Arpanet gets first international nodes, in England and Norway.

1974: Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn develop communications technique called TCP, allowing multiple networks to understand one another, creating a true Internet. Concept later splits into TCP/IP before formal adoption on Jan. 1, 1983.

1983: Domain name system is proposed. Creation of suffixes such as ".com," ".gov" and ".edu" comes a year later.

1988: One of the first Internet worms, Morris, cripples thousands of computers.

1989: Quantum Computer Services, now AOL, introduces America Online service for Macintosh and Apple II computers, beginning an expansion that would connect nearly 27 million Americans online by 2002.

1990: Tim Berners-Lee creates the World Wide Web while developing ways to control computers remotely at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research.

1993: Marc Andreessen and colleagues at University of Illinois create Mosaic, the first Web browser to combine graphics and text on a single page, opening the Web to the world with software that is easy to use.

1994: Andreessen and others on the Mosaic team form a company to develop the first commercial Web browser, Netscape, piquing the interest of Microsoft Corp. and other developers who would tap the Web's commerce potential. Two immigration lawyers introduce the world to spam, advertising their green card lottery services.

1995: Amazon.com Inc. opens its virtual doors.

1996: Passage of U.S. law curbing pornography online. Although key provisions are later struck down as unconstitutional, one that remains protects online services from liability for their users' conduct, allowing information — and misinformation — to thrive.

1998: Google Inc. forms out of a project that began in Stanford dorm rooms. U.S. government delegates oversight of domain name policies to Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or ICANN. Justice Department and 20 states sue Microsoft, accusing the maker of the ubiquitous Windows operating system of abusing its market power to thwart competition from Netscape and others.

1999: Napster popularizes music file-sharing and spawns successors that have permanently changed the recording industry. World Internet population surpasses 250 million.

2000: The dot-com boom of the 1990s becomes a bust as technology companies slide. Amazon.com, eBay and other sites are crippled in one of the first widespread uses of the denial-of-service attack, which floods a site with so much bogus traffic that legitimate users cannot visit.

2002: World Internet population surpasses 500 million.

2004: Mark Zuckerberg starts Facebook as a sophomore at Harvard University.

2005: Launch of YouTube video-sharing site.

2006: World Internet population surpasses 1 billion.

2007: Apple Inc. releases iPhone, introducing millions more to wireless Internet access.

2008: World Internet population surpasses 1.5 billion. China's Internet population reaches 250 million, surpassing the United States as the world's largest. Netscape's developers pull the plug on the pioneer browser, though an offshoot, Firefox, remains strong. Major airlines intensify deployment of Internet service on flights.

2009: The Seattle Post-Intelligencer becomes the first major daily newspaper to move entirely online. Google announces development of a free computer operating system designed for a user experience that primarily takes place on the Web.

Some unbelievable stats for online users!

http://tech.yahoo.com/news/ap/20090830/ap_on_hi_te/us_tec_internet_at40_timeline
 
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Happy birthday Internet!

Quite amazed how it has come along... I have fond memories of the late 90s, early 00s where the dotcom boom really kicked off. Online games, communities forming etc.

Good times.

PS: I'm surprised Youtube is only a couple of years old! Thought it had been around earlier than that :o
 
happy birthday internet :) lol hard to think i've been on broadband for the last 7 years aswell, cant even think how i coped with dial-up all those years ago
 
Youtube only 4 years old, jesus, i was in my last year of school then, that cant be rite, i remember watching youtube vids with my mates in school allot, and it wasnt exactly "new" back then :o
 
So what's next, where do you lot think it's heading?

I think as the web continues to improve it will start to go more 3d and move into the real world as augmented reality via mobile devices and wireless start to become more mainstream, we'll start to see our large displays and boxes disappear out of sight and our mobile devices will relay all our info to a head mounted display, probably projected on the retina by laser at some point.

These devices would require far less resources and energy to run so be cheaper and widespread, people would probably walk around with them on all day, accessing info from the internet and environment by thought, more games would probably start moving out of house as people could physically play them outside, with a complete environment being overlaid onto their surroundings, eventually a direct two way brain interface could be made and that's when we enter the matrix! :eek: ;)

Seriously i think it will go along this path of total information access given time, everything will go mobile and people will have far less need to travel for work and recreation, there would be less need for physical stuff as a lot can be done in augmented reality.
 
It is strange how stuff like facebook and youtube are so popular and such household names yet until a few years ago no one had heard of them.

I think I got the net around 97.


I think as connections get fster and computers more powerful/smaller and cheaper I agree that mobile devices will be the way forward, already laptops are replacing desktops, once mobile phones have a decent keyboard and screen they might take over. They are already making them with projectors in but really I think the big breakthrough will be 3D and holographic displays.

After the success of the Wii motion capture technology is growing fast, I reckon all next gen consoles will feature it and if we can makee it good without the need for sensors on the person it could mean VR when combined with the 3d displays.

We are pretty advanced now if you think about it, I can be almost anywhere and whip out my iphone and access any computer in the world or data on it for 10 quid a month, ok so it isn't 3g everywhere but still impressive.

In the closer term the net will be much more pretty and slick with all these Flash style technologies racing to be the next flash it should all become nice and shiny.

I think normal TV will continue but at the same time more people will use VOD services like iplayer and it will all be HD ofcourse.

Gonna be a few years yet before we all get Fibreoptic though. But with fibre to the cabinet and VdSL2 or something you can still get around 100mb so we don't need fibre all the way to your door, but eventually maybe.
 
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It is strange how stuff like facebook and youtube are so popular and such household names yet until a few years ago no one had heard of them.

I think I got the net around 97.

Same thing happened to Amazon, Yahoo and Google. If you see what tech infrastructure google had when they started and what they have now, it's unbelievable. At the same time it's depressing to see how little our Government seems to understand the power of the internet, only now are they looking to try and get broadband to everyone. Let alone how slow they have been to offer e-services online :/
 
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