From craig at tereschau.net Tue May 9 17:02:26 2017 From: craig at tereschau.net (Craig Partridge) Date: Wed, 10 May 2017 00:02:26 -0000 Subject: [ih] old BBN reports on TCP Message-ID: Thanks to a request from a team led by Noel Chiappa, I've gotten the OK to re-release some old BBN reports on TCP. > > Report No. 3900, "TCP/PSIP Development Report", August 1978 > > Report No. 3907, "THP Development Report", August 1978 > > Report No. 4295, M. A. Wingfield, "TCP Software Documentation", Let me know if you'd like a copy. Also, this now means I have a process for releasing other old BBN reports. If there's one you've been craving, let me know. Thanks! Craig -- ***** Craig Partridge's email account for professional society activities and mailing lists. For Raytheon business, please email: craig. partridge at raytheon.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jtk at depaul.edu Mon May 15 15:06:13 2017 From: jtk at depaul.edu (John Kristoff) Date: Mon, 15 May 2017 22:06:13 -0000 Subject: [ih] Looking for F. Yates and P. Baran paper Message-ID: <20170515170535.09ca78f0@p50.localdomain> In February 2012, I had posted to this list: > In Paul Baran's paper entitled "Reliable Digital Communications Systems > Using Unreliable Network Repeater Nodes", published May 27, 1960 as > P-1995 by RAND, he refers to two other papers. One in particular is > co-authored by Frank Yates and Paul Baran entitled "A Non Synchronous > Digital Data Link Transmission System Using Randomly Surviving Relay > Points". > I don't seem able to locate a copy of it and I'm interested in reading > it. Does anyone know if it is available online or how I might obtain a > copy if possible? Thank you, A month ago, a colleague Ryan Moss asked if I had ever found the seemingly lost RAND Report P-1996. When I indicated I followed the trail a bit further. Posted here with permission, for which I'm grateful: I've still had no luck finding Baran's P-1996 report, but I did come across an interesting footnote in a 1995 paper written by Judy O'Neill in the IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, "The Role of ARPA in the Development of the ARPANET, 1961-1972". It reads: /There has been some confusion as to the status of these reports/ [P-1995 thru -1997?]/. [Lawrence] Roberts reported that they were classified and not generally available... However, most were not classified and they seem to have been somewhat available as Davies was given a copy when he was circulating his reports in 1965, Walden says BBN used Baran as a starting point for their network discussions, and Baran notes that all government depositories had a copy of all RAND reports./ I did call RAND's Publications Customer Service a few weeks ago and gave them both the report number and title, but they said they didn't have a record of it. In the hopes this is of any particular interest to current or future Internet archaeologists. John From camillepaloqueberges at gmail.com Mon May 29 01:10:19 2017 From: camillepaloqueberges at gmail.com (Camille Paloque-Berges) Date: Mon, 29 May 2017 08:10:19 -0000 Subject: [ih] Call for papers for the Internet histories journal : Arpanet (1969-2019) Message-ID: Dear all, please find below a call for papers issued by the new* Internet histories* journal. We are sure the theme will be of interest to quite a number of you on this list! Best regards, Val?rie Schafer and Camille Paloque-Berges -- *Call For Papers: ARPANET (1969-2019)* *Camille Paloque-Berges & Val?rie Schafer (ed.) * *Special issue of Internet Histories. Digital Technology, Culture and Society.* This call for papers aims at revisiting the history of ARPANET, its genesis, development, heritage, memories and the writing of its history 50 years after the first four nodes came into service. ARPANET?s story is today part of the Internet?s official heritage, as a first crucial step in its development. Seminal research, such as Janet Abbate?s *Inventing the Internet* (1999) or Alexandre Serres? *Aux sources d?Internet: l??mergence d?ARPANET* (2000) has extensively covered its history. However, the 50th anniversary of ARPANET provides an occasion to reflect on existing histories, to open the debate to new perspectives and approaches. What have these pioneering researchers provided and what lessons have they taught us in terms of studying the history of computer networks? When considering ARPANET as a first step towards the Internet: how did this determine ? and is still determining ? our current understanding of the Internet and of the ARPANET? What other chronologies and territories involving the ARPANET can be advanced? What is left to explore and discover in the ARPANET?s history? If the ARPANET is dead today, are its heritage and spirit still alive and if so, how? Suggested topics: - The ARPANET?s inspirations: previous concepts, models, theories, technologies - Development of computer networks from the mid-1960s to the mid-1980s: society, culture, politics and economics in the ARPANET?s times (from a local, national and international perspective) - The place of ARPANET in the history of ARPA/DARPA or funding agencies more generally - The place of ARPANET within the history of military networks - Trajectories of ARPANET?s developments: from experiments to achievements, through mistakes and failures - ARPANET?s communities: from developers to users - ARPANET?s hardware and software within the history of computers and computing - Famous and less-known protagonists or witnesses of ARPANET - Spaces, places, maps, territories, geographies, and geopolitics of ARPANET - Communicating with, through, and about ARPANET - ARPANET as a model: reception and influence on other networks and/or in other countries - ARPANET?s governance and architecture - ARPANET and infrastructures for digital information - ARPANET?s cultures: perimeters, specificities, limits ? - The history of networks shaping collaborative work - Writing ARPANET?s history: critical historiography, methodology, epistemological issues - New discoveries in the history of ARPANET - ARPANET?s heritage in the present Internet and digital cultures Of course, we encourage and welcome other topics and perspectives on ARPANET?s history too. * Submissions* The proposals are to be submitted to camillepaloqueberges at gmail.com valerieschafer at wanadoo.fr explicitly mentioning *CFP ARPANET*. They need to fit in one page, detail an explicit angle of analysis and outline, and integrate a short bibliography. Successful authors will be invited to submit then a full paper through the editorial system, which will undergo full peer review and will determine acceptance of papers for publication. *Calendar* Deadline for the submission of proposals: October 15th 2017 Notification of proposal acceptance: November 15th 2017 Submissions of the full paper (6000-8000 words): April 15th 2018 Feedback based on reviews: June 30th 2018 Deadline for Revisions: October 15th 2018 *Internet Histories: Digital Technology, Culture and Society* is an international, inter-disciplinary peer-reviewed journal concerned with research on the cultural, social, political and technological histories of the internet and associated digital cultures. More information on the journal can be found at http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?show= aimsScope&journalCode=rint20 Instructions for Authors are available at http://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?show=inst ructions&journalCode=rint20#Word_limits Should you have any questions regarding this CfP, please feel free to contact us: camillepaloqueberges at gmail.com valerieschafer at wanadoo.fr -- Institutional email address : camille.paloque_berges at cnam.fr *Laboratory for the History of Techno-Sciences (HT2S), Conservatoire national des arts et m?tiers, 2 rue Cont?, 75003 Paris, France *Associate researcher at the Digital Paths cluster of CNRS' Institute for Communication Sciences (ISCC) -- Institutional email address : camille.paloque_berges at cnam.fr *Laboratory for the History of Techno-Sciences (HT2S), Conservatoire national des arts et m?tiers, 2 rue Cont?, 75003 Paris, France *Associate researcher at the Digital Paths cluster of CNRS' Institute for Communication Sciences (ISCC) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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