[ih] Jon Postel's papers
Ole Jacobsen
olejacobsen at me.com
Sun Jul 20 14:22:31 PDT 2025
You also may remember it because it happened the day the Challerger Space Shuttle exploded 73 seconds after liftoff and we had scrambled into an SRI conference room to watch the coverage on a small TV.
Ole
Ole J. Jacobsen
Editor & Publisher
The Internet Protocol Journal
Office: +1 415 550-9433
Cell: +1 415 370-4628
Norway cell: +47 98 00 26 30
UK Cell: +44 7805 977 889
Docomo Japan: +81 90 3337 9311
http://protocoljournal.org
Sent from my iPhone
> On Jul 20, 2025, at 20:27, Craig Partridge via Internet-history <internet-history at elists.isoc.org> wrote:
>
> On Sun, Jul 20, 2025 at 11:13 AM Eric Gade via Internet-history <
> internet-history at elists.isoc.org> wrote:
>
>>
>> One question I had throughout my research was how influential the
>> international community -- or at least the then prevalent assumption that
>> some international community would subsume any Internet naming system down
>> the road -- was on the structure and administration of the DNS from the
>> beginning. There were some strong indications in the Feinler collection and
>> elsewhere about this, but I think there's at least a chance more can be
>> found in Postel's papers.
>>
>>
> I may be able to add a little insight here. I was at the Jan 28-29, 1986
> meeting Jake arranged at SRI that finalized the initial TLD (about 15 to 20
> of us were there, representing the various email networks and NICs and DNS
> software teams. I was one of the two CSNET representatives, as well as
> being an alpha tester of bind for Kevin Dunlap, and was tasked by CSNET
> with arranging to get .NET added to the initial list of TLDs.
>
> The topic of DNS namespace compatibility with an internationally designed
> namespace -- most notably OSI's namespace -- came up repeatedly during the
> two days. Jon made clear that he viewed this as a non-goal, to the point
> that he was willing to make it hard to integrate the namespaces. He
> expressed the view that country codes were not terribly useful -- that
> people would prefer to advertise themselves as corporations and educational
> institutions, independent of their location. And he observed that he had
> already created a .US zone and purposefully handed out names in a way
> incompatible with OSI's name plans. (I seem to recall in a side discussion
> [Jon sat next to me on one of the two days*] that Jon admitted that
> creating .US was inconsistent with his position that country codes were not
> useful, but that Bob Kahn had wanted a .US domain for CNRI -- but my memory
> may be faulty).
>
> Craig
>
> PS: *You may wonder why I remember where I sat some 39 years later.
> Because it was my first Internet standards/policy/technical meeting -- and
> the first time I'd met Jon (and Paul Mockapetris, Jake, Ken Harrenstein,
> Steve Kille, Mary Ann Horton, Ole Jacobson, and other folks I knew only as
> names on emails). I was very aware of getting to know people and of trying
> to make a good impression.
> --
> *****
> Craig Partridge's email account for professional society activities and
> mailing lists.
> --
> Internet-history mailing list
> Internet-history at elists.isoc.org
> https://elists.isoc.org/mailman/listinfo/internet-history
> -
> Unsubscribe: https://app.smartsheet.com/b/form/9b6ef0621638436ab0a9b23cb0668b0b?The%20list%20to%20be%20unsubscribed%20from=Internet-history
More information about the Internet-history
mailing list