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Internet Creation Apr 2026

In the early 1960s, researchers like Leonard Kleinrock , Paul Baran , and Donald Davies independently developed "packet switching". This method breaks data into small "packets" that can take different routes to a destination and reassemble upon arrival, making networks more resilient than traditional telephone lines. 2. ARPANET: The Precursor (1969)

The creation of the internet was not a single "eureka" moment but a decades-long evolution involving government agencies, academic researchers, and visionary computer scientists. It transitioned from a Cold War-era military project into the global, commercial network we use today. 1. The Seeds of Connectivity (1950s–1960s)

As more independent networks emerged, they were often incompatible. and Bob Kahn , often called the "Fathers of the Internet," solved this by designing a universal language. internet creation

The journey began in the late 1950s, catalyzed by the Cold War.

ARPANET, the first real prototype of the internet, was launched by ARPA to allow researchers at different universities to share computer resources. In the early 1960s, researchers like Leonard Kleinrock

By 1971, Ray Tomlinson sent the first network email and introduced the "@" symbol. By 1973, ARPANET became international, connecting nodes in Norway and the UK. 3. The Invention of TCP/IP (1970s–1983)

They developed TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol). TCP handles data assembly/disassembly, while IP ensures packets reach the correct address. ARPANET: The Precursor (1969) The creation of the

On October 29, 1969, the first message was sent between UCLA and the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) . The intended message was "LOGIN," but the system crashed after the first two letters, making "LO" the first data ever transmitted over the network.