[ih] A revolution in Internet point-of-view - Was Re: Internet analyses (Was Re: IPv8...)
Jack Haverty
jack at 3kitty.org
Thu Apr 30 23:41:48 PDT 2026
On 4/30/26 20:06, Dave Crocker via Internet-history wrote:
> On 4/30/2026 4:55 PM, vinton cerf wrote:
>> To add to Dave's story
>
>
> Since MCI Mail wound up being relevant to Internet history, when Vint
> used MMDF to interconnect with Internet mail, I'll add to his addition.
>
> MCI Mail was built using a collection of vendors for different parts
> of the system. (HP had the remote laster printers.)
>
> Six months before the scheduled public demo was the first meeting,
> with all the vendors in the same room.
>
> Vint got up to greet everyone and set the stage. He said we did not
> have much time but we were going to meet the September deadline. Then
> he said that if anything stopped us -- not that it would, but if it
> did -- it would be a connector.
>
> As I recall, that middle-of-the-night-before-the-demo problem that
> Vint described turned out to be a connector.
>
> d/
>
Do Computer Science curricula today teach anything about connectors? /Jack
From my archives, a message I sent about a year ago:
"In the late 1960s as an undergraduate I had a student job programming a
PDP-8 doing data collection at the MIT Instrumentation Lab (also known
as "The ILab"). The group I worked for was designing and deploying
inertial navigation systems. At the time their focus was on the Apollo
moon missions and "PIGA" devices (Pendulous Integrating Gyroscopic
Accelerometers), but their technology had been in use for years in older
systems such as the Minuteman ICBMs. (Google "minuteman piga" if
you're curious).
In EE classes, we had been learning about all sorts of Engineering
techniques for optimizing circuit designs - things like Karnaugh maps.
One day while sitting at my desk in the ILab, I realized that the
engineer sitting at the next desk was an actual "rocket scientist"
working on rocket stuff. So I asked him what Engineering principles and
techniques he found most useful in his design work.
His answer surprised me -- "Connectors are all that matters!". All
designs were focussed on minimizing the number of connectors. Nothing
else was considered important, as long as it fit in the size, weight,
and power budget.
Over years of accumulated field data, they had determined that failures
were mainly associated with connectors. A few extra logic gates didn't
matter. An extra connector made the system noticeably less reliable.
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