The document discusses the origins and evolution of the Internet. It began in 1969 as ARPANET, a network created by the U.S. government to allow military and research institutions to share information. ARPANET demonstrated that computers could exchange data via packets and later merged with other networks to form the Internet. The Internet is now a vast global network that connects countless smaller networks and allows people worldwide to request and access data stored on computers anywhere on the network.
The document discusses the origins and evolution of the Internet. It began in 1969 as ARPANET, a network created by the U.S. government to allow military and research institutions to share information. ARPANET demonstrated that computers could exchange data via packets and later merged with other networks to form the Internet. The Internet is now a vast global network that connects countless smaller networks and allows people worldwide to request and access data stored on computers anywhere on the network.
The document discusses the origins and evolution of the Internet. It began in 1969 as ARPANET, a network created by the U.S. government to allow military and research institutions to share information. ARPANET demonstrated that computers could exchange data via packets and later merged with other networks to form the Internet. The Internet is now a vast global network that connects countless smaller networks and allows people worldwide to request and access data stored on computers anywhere on the network.
The document discusses the origins and evolution of the Internet. It began in 1969 as ARPANET, a network created by the U.S. government to allow military and research institutions to share information. ARPANET demonstrated that computers could exchange data via packets and later merged with other networks to form the Internet. The Internet is now a vast global network that connects countless smaller networks and allows people worldwide to request and access data stored on computers anywhere on the network.
The origin of Internet can be traced to 1969, when
the U.S. government established a network called ARPANET, and to the efforts beginning in 1989 that led to what is known today as the World Wide Web. ARPANET
The purpose of ARPANET, a product of the Advanced Research
Projects Agency, was to make it possible for military personnel and civilian researchers to exchange information relating to military matters. It was the first network to demonstrate the feasibility of computer-to-computer transmission of data in the form of packets.
ARPANET still exists. In facts, along with to other networks-
CSNET (Computer Science Network) and NSFNET (National Science Foundation Network), it forms what is today known as the Internet. Internet is the name given to the world’s largest collection of computer networks, each of which is composed of a collection of smaller networks.
When a person requests data from the Internet, the request
travels from computer to computer through the network until it reaches the location where the data stored. The response follows the same computer-to-computer path back to the person who made the request.