[ih] history of protocol bugs
Barbara Denny
b_a_denny at yahoo.com
Sun Nov 12 19:22:10 PST 2023
Thanks Jack! I am wondering what happened to Jil. She isn't in the photograph. It would have been nice to have the only woman attendee in the picture.
barbara
On Saturday, November 11, 2023 at 03:32:23 PM PST, Jack Haverty via Internet-history <internet-history at elists.isoc.org> wrote:
In January 1983, the Internet had been operating as a "24x7 service" for
a year or so. Vint Cerf was leaving ARPA and Barry Leiner was taking
over the ARPA Internet projects. Barry arranged a "Network Management
Workshop" in January 1983 to bring together a group of people who had
been working on Internet projects to discuss how to manage the beast we
had built and gotten some experience in operating and using.
The "Proceedings" of that workshop were unusual - we were asked, after
the workshop had ended, to each write up short notes on what we thought
about the state of the Internet and its future. Much of what we thought
was wrong - projecting that the Internet might eventually grow to
contain the unbelievable configuration of 1000 networks for example.
But those writeups might provide insight into what we were all thinking
at the time about the technology inside the Internet.
I haven't been able to find those Proceedings anywhere online. But I
did find my paper copy in a box in the basement, along with a photograph
of the group. It's now been scanned. Rather than inflict it on this
mailing list, I've put it online for whoever wants to retrieve it:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1cK8Lc22vidgnCxHhyT1qcHmhS82d7xzO/view?usp=sharing
I'm sure there are lots of other historical artifacts, many probably
only captured in boxes in someone's basement. The early days of
networking were, IMHO, quite unusual. Much of the interaction,
discussion, and debate that might formerly have been captured in
journals and learned publications was instead carried out using our
new-fangled network. There was no web or massive cloud warehouses
yet. So much of that history was only captured in email or other
ephemeral files accessible through FTP from somewhere else on the net.
All gone now, except for boxes in basements.
Hope this helps some historians...
Jack Haverty
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