[ih] Early Internet history

John Day jeanjour at comcast.net
Fri Jul 6 12:40:45 PDT 2018


Indeed this is a good analogy of how the Internet worked. However, this approach of a connectionless datagram network layer with a reliable end-to-end transport originates in 1972 with the CYCLADES network.  CYCLADES was the first to have the classic 5 layer model.  The link layer was HDLC-like because of the error-prone lines of the time, over which ran a connectionless network layer, called Cigale. The primary purpose of the  end-to-end Transport Protocol, called TS, was end-to-end reliability with flow control and recovery from loss due to congestion.

> On Jul 6, 2018, at 12:49, John Levine <johnl at iecc.com> wrote:
> 
> In article <11fd50bf-d495-c4a5-ce77-06d96d04f14b at meetinghouse.net>,
> Miles Fidelman  <mfidelman at meetinghouse.net> wrote:
>> Kind of sounds like the international postal system.� Or shipping 
>> packages internationally.� 
> 
> About 20 years ago, in Internet for Dummies, I analogized the
> operation of the Internet to paper mail.  The pre-TCP protocols were
> sort of like registered mail, where each package has great value* and
> is carefully logged in and out every time it is sorted or transported
> to be sure it doesn't get lost.
> 
> TCP is more like certified mail, where the package itself is of no
> value, only its message ("usually a letter from your insurance company
> saying your policy has been cancelled.")  Certified mail is only
> logged when mailed and delivered.  If it isn't delivered after a
> while, you just send another copy.
> 
> I further tortured the analogy by saying you were mailing a copy of
> the ten-pound manuscript of your novel, but the regulations limit each
> package to one pound so you divide it into pieces and mark each one
> PART 1, PART 2, and so forth.  The packages arrive in whatever order
> the post office delivers them, and the recipient puts them back in
> order.
> 
> R's,
> John
> 
> * - in the 1800s the government shipped gold bars by registered mail
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