We live in exciting times. We have over the last few years seen the birth of a new telecommunications service which will fundamentally change the way we live, much as the telephone has over the last 100 years. The birth of the Internet can be traced back to a conference on computer communications held in 1972. As a result of that conference a working group was set up, under the chairmanship of Vint Cerf, to propose new prools to facilitate computer communications. In 1974 the working group published the transmission control prool (fCP) and the Interworking prool (lP). These were rapidly adopted and the number of computers linked using these prools has almost doubled every year since. Thus the Internet was born. Another major step happened in 1990. Tim Berners Lee, a Scottish nuclear physicist working at CERN, created some higher level prools. These still used TCP/IP for the networking, but defined how computers could communicate multimedia information and be linked together to form a World Wide Web of information. A number of computer databases adopted these prools and things really took off in 1993 when Marc Andreesen at the University of Illinois developed Mosaic, the first client software (a browser) that gave a windows-style interface to these databases.
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The Internet and Beyond
We live in exciting times. We have over the last few years seen the birth of a new telecommunications service which will fundamentally change the way we live, much as the telephone has over the last 100 years. The birth of the Internet can be traced back to a conference on computer communications held in 1972. As a result of that conference a working group was set up, under the chairmanship of Vint Cerf, to propose new prools to facilitate computer communications. In 1974 the working group published the transmission control prool (fCP) and the Interworking prool (lP). These were rapidly adopted and the number of computers linked using these prools has almost doubled every year since. Thus the Internet was born. Another major step happened in 1990. Tim Berners Lee, a Scottish nuclear physicist working at CERN, created some higher level prools. These still used TCP/IP for the networking, but defined how computers could communicate multimedia information and be linked together to form a World Wide Web of information. A number of computer databases adopted these prools and things really took off in 1993 when Marc Andreesen at the University of Illinois developed Mosaic, the first client software (a browser) that gave a windows-style interface to these databases.
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The Internet and Beyond
454![The Internet and Beyond](http://img.images-bn.com/static/redesign/srcs/images/grey-box.png?v11.10.4)
The Internet and Beyond
454Paperback(Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1998)
$109.99
109.99
In Stock
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9789401060622 |
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Publisher: | Springer Netherlands |
Publication date: | 11/05/2012 |
Series: | BT Telecommunications Series , #15 |
Edition description: | Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1998 |
Pages: | 454 |
Product dimensions: | 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.04(d) |
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