Oooh.. one of my favorite topics.
ARPANET was the beginning of the internet. It was designed as a way for military installations to stay in touch with a de-centralized architecture. In other words, if part of the big "loop" got blown up, the rest of it would still work.
With the launch of communications satellites, however, that became a far more cost-effective way of communicating across the nation without relying on wires and so forth, so they abandoned ARPANET, essentially giving it to the colleges that were also connected to it doing military research.
That, in conjunction with a new standard from Bell Labs called TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol / Internetworking Protocol... where the Internet got its name), which Bell Labs provided to the colleges for free, the Internet was born. Since then, of course, it has grown.
ARPANET is the computer network developed by the U.S. Department of Defense in 1969 from which the Internetoriginated.
The Internet started as Arpanet; today it is called the Internet.The Internet started as Arpanet; today it is called the Internet.The Internet started as Arpanet; today it is called the Internet.The Internet started as Arpanet; today it is called the Internet.
yea ARPAnet
The Internet is the system of communication that developed from ARPANET. The internet is its civilian counterpart.
arpanet
ARPANET was original name of the computer network that eventually morphed into the Internet.
The Internet as we know it today is based on Arpanet.
The internet Early research on the internet was supported by the U.S. military. ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network)
Yes ARPANET is the predecessor to our Internet today. What we all are able to use was first done as ARPANET. It was made by american defense and research team to transfer messages.
First there was ARPAnet, then there was internet. Simple enough?
Arpanet was a government collaboration with Stanford and USC. this was at the beginning of the internet.
ARPANET -- The Advanced Research Projects Agency Network -- was an early packet-switching network It was the first to use TCP/IP -- Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol -- as a technical communication language. Together, today, we know these as the Internet.