Before the advent of computer networks that were based upon some type of telecommunications system, communication between calculation machines and early computers was performed by human users by carrying instructions between them. Many of the social behaviors seen in today's Internet were demonstrably present in the nineteenth century and arguably in even earlier networks using visual signals.
In September 1940 George Stibitz used a
teletype machine to send instructions for a problem set from his Model at Dartmouth
College in New Hampshire to his Complex Number Calculator in New York and
received results back by the same means. Linking output systems like teletypes
to computers was an interest at the Advanced Research Projects Agency
(ARPA) when, in 1962, J.C.R. Licklider was hired and developed a working group
he called the "Intergalactic Network", a precursor to the ARPANet.
In 1964, researchers at Dartmouth developed
the Dartmouth Time Sharing System for
distributed users of large computer systems. The same year, at MIT, a research group
supported by General Electric and Bell Labs
used a computer DEC's to route and manage telephone connections.
Throughout the 1960s Leonard Kleinrock, Paul
Baran and Donald Davies independently conceptualized and developed network
systems which used datagrams or packets that could be used in a
network between computer systems. 1965 Thomas Merrill and Lawrence G. Roberts
created the first wide area network (WAN).
The first widely used PSTN switch that used
true computer control was the Western
Electric introduced in 1965.
In 1969 the University of California at Los
Angeles, SRI (in Stanford), University of California at
Santa Barbara, and the University of Utah were connected as the
beginning of the ARPANET
network using 50 kbit/s circuits.
Commercial services using X.25 were deployed in
1972, and later used as an underlying infrastructure for expanding TCP/IP networks.
Computer networks, and the technologies
needed to connect and communicate through and between them, continue to drive
computer hardware, software, and peripherals industries. This expansion is
mirrored by growth in the numbers and types of users of networks from the
researcher to the home user.
Today, computer networks are the core of
modern communication. All modern aspects of the Public Switched Telephone Network
(PSTN) are computer-controlled, and telephony increasingly runs over the
Internet Protocol, although not necessarily the public Internet. The scope of
communication has increased significantly in the past decade, and this boom in
communications would not have been possible without the progressively advancing
computer network.
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