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Mortgage Leads - Internet Mortgage Leads, Debt consolidation, Mortgage Marketing
- By Ron Porter
- Published 02/18/2008
- Computers and Technology
- Unrated
Mortgage Leads - Internet Mortgage Leads, Debt consolidation, Mortgage Marketing
The Internet’s beginnings took place in a United States
Department of Defense program for a strategic computer network. It was designed
to carry sensitive and critical data over a computer network that was supposed
to be able to remain intact in the event of nuclear attack. The project was
called ARPANET, for “Advanced Research Projects Agency Network.
The ARPANET was
based on a packet-switching network. Any given unit of data could be divided
into packets, and these packets could be sent computer to computer, to be
reassembled by the receiver. Along the way, these packets of data were routed
through various computers along the network, requiring that each computer be
able to communicate with all the others. The network was designed to provide
simultaneous links among all the computers on the network.
Depending on whether a given computer site on the ARPANET
was busy – or perhaps taken out by a bomb – the same route might not be
available for all the data packets. This was okay, because it was not necessary
for all of the packets to take the same route.
As long as the packets carried the information to the destination
computer where it could be reassembled, any computer on the network was as good
as the next. ARPANET also created certain basic network communications and
control protocols known as Transmission Control Protocol/ Internet Protocol, or
the ever famous TCP/IP. It simply refers to the set of rules by which computers
linked to the Internet use to operate and handle the data received over a
network.
The ARPANET became ever more popular and interconnected, and
its user base grew by leaps and bounds. Eventually, commercial computer sites
began hooking into the network as well as educational, scientific and
governmental sites that had more tradition on the network. As the network grew,
the military moved its portion of ARPANET to another entity, and thus the
Internet was left to take shape.
In 1989, researchers at the European Organization for
Nuclear Research (CERN) created a worldwide network of supercomputers to smooth
the progress of access to data for doctors, physicists, and other scientists
and technocrats. The CERN network quickly grew into the massive Internet area
called the World Wide Web. The web is what most people today call the Internet,
although there is in fact much more to it. With page-oriented documents and
links to graphics, sounds, and videos, today the Internet is truly a multimedia
experience.
Here, Ron E. Porter writes about the history of Internet
that started with a small network called ‘ARPANET’ and grew to WWW what we call
today as Internet. Internet today had big revenue. For gaining more information
on how to go for, web traffic
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