On this day, 56 years ago:
"At 10:30 p.m., 29 October 1969, the first ARPANET message was sent from this UCLA site to the Stanford Research Institute."
https://ethw.org/Milestones:Birthplace_of_the_Internet,_1969
#Tag
On this day, 56 years ago:
"At 10:30 p.m., 29 October 1969, the first ARPANET message was sent from this UCLA site to the Stanford Research Institute."
https://ethw.org/Milestones:Birthplace_of_the_Internet,_1969
The actual first message that was sent that day was just "LO", first two letters of the word "LOGIN", when the system crashed.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20241028-the-failure-that-started-the-internet
On this day, 56 years ago:
"At 10:30 p.m., 29 October 1969, the first ARPANET message was sent from this UCLA site to the Stanford Research Institute."
https://ethw.org/Milestones:Birthplace_of_the_Internet,_1969
The actual first message that was sent that day was just "LO", first two letters of the word "LOGIN", when the system crashed.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20241028-the-failure-that-started-the-internet
On this day, 56 years ago:
"At 10:30 p.m., 29 October 1969, the first ARPANET message was sent from this UCLA site to the Stanford Research Institute."
https://ethw.org/Milestones:Birthplace_of_the_Internet,_1969
Thank you!
Thank you! I have watched the Youtube video, nice summary and easy to follow.
I was wondering if there is #MVT implementation available somewhere, as 360/75 was the third #arpanet node at UCSB.
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/tr/pdf/ADA155057.pdf has a very interesting summary how NCP and then TCP were done on the mainframe later at UCLA
It was based on ICT (a multiprocessing supervisor) and The Exchange (some form of IPC).
Any chances to find the docs and the implementations running back then?
A reconstruction of the ARPAnet by @larsbrinkhoff running some of the original PDP10 OSes and an IMP simulator. Fascinating!
https://obsolescence.dev/obsolescence-newsletter-jul-2025.html#c3
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