History Of Internet

     As expected, the technology is so vast and changing, that it is impossible to attribute the Internet alone to one person. The modern scientist, programmers and engineers developed new feature and technologies using the internet to make a new Informative roadmap.
    The Internet has long been a technology to build, many scientists already expected a global information network. Nicola Tesla played with the idea of ​​a "global wireless system" in the 1900s and theorized ideas such as Paul Ottel and Vonneur Bush had mechanical storage systems for books and media search in the 1930s and 1940s. When the first practical form for the Internet did not come until the early 1960s, JRCML leaked Elder popularized the concept of "interactive network" of computers. Soon, computer scientists developed the concept of "packet switching" to efficiently transmit electronic data, which would later become one of the largest building blocks on the Internet.
     The first usable prototype of the Internet came with the creation of the ARPANET or the Agency for Advanced Research Project Network in the late 1960s. Arpanet, originally funded by the United States Department of Defense. In the United States of America, it used packet switching to allow multiple computers to communicate over a network. Researchers Robert Kahn and Winton Surf developed the Transmission Control Protocol and the Internet Protocol, or TCP / IP, a communication model on how transmission can be transmitted, followed by technology until the 1970s. Transmission data between multiple networks. RPATT adopted TCP / IP on January 1, 1983, and from there, researchers began to modernize the "Internet network of networks" that became the modern Internet.      The online world assumed another acceptable form in 1990 when computer scientist Tim Berners-Lee hosted the World Wide Web. Although often confused by the Internet, it is a real source of access to online data in the form of websites and hyperlinks. The Internet helped popularize the Internet and served as an important step in the development of the wider information space that most of us have daily access to.

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