[ih] ARPANet anniversary
Noel Chiappa
jnc at mercury.lcs.mit.edu
Mon Nov 2 07:43:08 PST 2009
> From: "Bernie Cosell" <bernie at fantasyfarm.com>
> the first message sent over the net was, of course, nowhere *NEAR*
> that ... The net, itself, had been up and running for a little while by
> that time. ... first saw the light on the imp lights-panel tell him
> that the SRI IMP had just come up, which to my view would _really_ be
> when the ARPAnet first came alive.
As a systems person, I have a somewhat different perspective. Yes, the event
you mention was a very important milestone, but to me, the most significant
milestone would have been something that exercised the entire system, and did
_what the system was intended to achieve as an overall goal_: i.e. have a
packet go from the source host, through the host and IMP host->Imp interface
pair, across the network, out the Imp->host interface pair on the other side,
and into the destination host.
Something I'm curious about, though: how much of this stuff was all
demonstrated internally at BBN, first? E.g. I would have guessed that the
first frame (for want of a better word to differentiate IMP-IMP datagrams
from host-host datagrams) sent from one IMP to another happened at BBN? Or
was there insufficient hardware/testbed stuff to do that, and in fact the
first IMP-IMP frames sent actually were sent between the SRI and UCLA IMPs?
Did BBN have any host-IMP host interfaces (and hosts) they could play with,
or were the host interfaces at the user sites the first ones actually plugged
in and tried?
Noel
More information about the Internet-history
mailing list