MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA and MENLO PARK, CA and CAMBRIDGE, MA--(Marketwire - October 27, 2009) - Forty years ago this week, two programmers sat in front of computer
terminals four hundred miles apart. Unknowingly, they were about to make
history. At the University of California, Los Angeles, Charley Kline typed
the word "LOGIN" at around nine p.m. on October 29, 1969. The command went
through interface computers built by Cambridge's BBN Technologies (formerly
Bolt, Beranek, and Newman) on its way to Kline's counterpart Bill Duvall,
at SRI International (then known as Stanford Research Institute) in Menlo
Park, California. The first letters, "LO," came through to the SRI machine
before the system crashed. The minor setback would be fixed quickly, and
the connection was fully in place by 10:30 p.m. The very first data had
been sent between two nodes of the ARPANET, a key precursor to the
Internet.
New interviews with pioneers Duvall and Kline will be made available on
October 29 on www.computerhistory.org, along with links to other resources.
This will kick off a series of Computer History Museum activities on the
history of the Internet and the Web.
"The 1969 connection was not just a symbolic milestone in the project that
led to the Internet, but in the whole idea of connecting computers -- and
eventually billions of people -- to each other," said Marc Weber, founding
curator of the Museum's Internet History Program. "In the 1960s, as many as
a few hundred users could have accounts on a single large computer using
terminals, and exchange messages and files between them. But each of those
little communities was an island, isolated from others. By reliably
connecting different kinds of computers to each other, the ARPANET took a
crucial step toward the online world that links nearly a third of the
world's population today."
"The development of the ARPANET, which had no commercial application at the
time, underscores the power of coordinated basic research and the
importance of that research to our society," said Bill Duvall. "In the
1960s, computers were not interconnected and most were not even
interactive. A few research groups were looking at the potential of
networked computing and how distributed systems might be used as
information repositories and collaboration tools, but they were hampered by
a huge obstacle: they lacked a network to weave their projects together.
Bob Taylor and Larry Roberts at ARPA understood not only the potential of
computer networking, but also the challenge of networking during an era
when computers were generally not standardized, and did not use a common
language or alphabet."
"The ARPANET was built to permit ARPA-supported computer researchers to
share common interests without geographical limits," said Bob Taylor, who
helped conceive and fund the ARPANET in the mid 1960s as head of computing
research at ARPA (U.S. Department of Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency). Taylor and his Program Manager Larry Roberts chose the people and
places to build the network, assigning unique roles to three institutions:
Cambridge-based BBN built the special Interface Message Processors (IMPs)
that connected the main computers to the net and served as the system's
administrator; SRI was the Network Information Center, which besides acting
as a central library kept track of all the computers on the net and ran the
Domain Name System until 1991; and UCLA was the Network Measurement Center,
researching and improving how data moved across the network. An original
BBN Interface Message Processor (IMP) computer is in the Computer History
Museum's collection.
By early 1970, those three Centers were all connected, along with the
University of California at Santa Barbara and the University of Utah. By
1972, the network had 37 nodes. A few years later, the ARPANET would begin
the process of connecting itself to other networks that had sprung up -- a
process known as internetworking -- leading to the Internet on which the
World Wide Web and email run today. Both SRI and BBN played key roles in
internetworking, and SRI's mobile radio van was used in several watershed
experiments. The van is now a part of the Computer History Museum's
collection.
Note to editors:
-- See addendum for more historical detail.
-- Visit the Computer History Museum's Website throughout the year for news
on commemorative networking and Web history activities organized by the CHM
Internet History Program.
-- Some of the information included in this press release references "A
Heritage of Innovation: SRI's First Half Century," by Donald L. Nielson.
About the Computer History Museum
The Computer History Museum (CHM), in Mountain View, Calif. is a nonprofit
organization with a four-decade history. The Museum is dedicated to the
preservation and celebration of computer history, and is home to the
largest international collection of computing artifacts in the world,
encompassing computer hardware, software, documentation, ephemera,
photographs and moving images.
CHM brings computer history to life through an acclaimed speaker series,
dynamic website, onsite tours, as well as physical and online exhibits.
Current exhibits include "The Silicon Engine," "Charles Babbage's
Difference Engine No. 2," "Mastering the Game: A History of Computer
Chess," "Innovation in the Valley" -- a look at Silicon Valley startups --
and the unique "Visible Storage Gallery," featuring over 600 key objects
from the collection.
The signature "Computer History: The First 2,000 Years" exhibition will
open in late 2010.
For more information, visit www.computerhistory.org or call (650) 810-1010.
About SRI International
Silicon Valley-based SRI International is
one of the world's leading independent research and technology development
organizations. SRI, which was founded by Stanford University as Stanford
Research Institute in 1946 and became independent in 1970, has been meeting
the strategic needs of clients and partners for more than 60 years.
Perhaps best known for its introduction of interactive computing and the
invention of the computer mouse, SRI has also been responsible for major
advances in networking
and communications, robotics, drug discovery and
development, advanced
materials, atmospheric
research, education
research, economic
development, national security,
and more. The nonprofit institute performs sponsored research and development
for government
agencies, businesses, and foundations. SRI
also licenses its
technologies, forms strategic alliances,
and creates spin-off
companies. In 2008, SRI's consolidated revenues, including its wholly
owned for-profit subsidiary, Sarnoff
Corporation, were approximately $490 million.
About BBN Technologies
BBN Technologies is a legendary R&D organization that leverages its
substantial intellectual property portfolio to produce advanced, repeatable
solutions such as the Boomerang shooter detection system. With expertise
spanning information security, speech and language processing, networking,
distributed systems, and sensing and control systems, BBN scientists and
engineers have amassed a substantial collection of innovations and patented
solutions. BBN now employs approximately 700 people in seven locations in
the US: Cambridge, Massachusetts (headquarters); Arlington, Virginia;
Columbia, Maryland; Middletown, Rhode Island; San Diego, California; St.
Louis Park, Minnesota; and O'Fallon, Illinois. For more information, visit
www.bbn.com.
Addendum -- Detailed Historical Information
By the end of 1969, the ARPANET had added the University of California,
Santa Barbara and the University of Utah as the third and fourth nodes. BBN
itself was connected in March 1970, meaning it could begin live system
administration over the new network. By 1972, the ARPANET included 37
networked computers. In the ensuing years it was opened to other research
and development organizations including universities, research contractors,
and government labs.
But the ARPANET itself had now become an island, with no links to the other
networks that had sprung up. By the early 1970s, researchers in France, the
UK, and the U.S. began developing ways of connecting networks to each
other, a process known as internetworking.
In 1977 SRI was a key player in an experiment connecting the ARPANET to two
other networks, using the SRI packet radio van now in the Computer History
Museum's collection. By 1983 the ARPANET and other networks had switched
over to the internetworking protocols still used today and the Internet was
rapidly growing. We now run the World Wide Web, email, telephony, and
countless other applications over this network of networks as part of our
daily lives.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:
Media Contacts:
Samantha Hallock
Eastwick Communications, for CHM
(+1) 650-480-4071
Email Contact
Ellie Javadi
SRI International
(+1) 650-859-4874
Email Contact
Joyce Kuzmin
BBN Technologies
(+1) 617-873-8120
Email Contact