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Folks who had a vision of what universal networking could become
and worked to make it happen. Norbert Wiener was born on November 26, 1894,
and received his Ph.D. in Mathematics from Harvard University at the age of 18 for a thesis on mathematical
logic. At MIT he also worked on the SAGE project as a human factors expert, which helped convince him of the
great potential for human / computer interfaces. He generally felt that the
developments he described would be positive, but particularly worried about the potential for very
sophisticated, manipulative advertising. Davies had independently decided upon some of the same parameters for
his network design as Baran, such as a packet size of 1024 bits. Kleinrock has
continued to be active in the research community, and has published more than 200 papers and authored six books.
The requirements specification development was led by Kahn and released as specification #1822 in April, 1969.
MILNET later become part of the DoD Defense Data Network, or DDN. The TCP/IP
protocol was deployed to the ARPANET network with some persuasion, as noted in the emails at the top of the
page. It was an interesting lesson in the inefficiencies of mismatched packet
sizes. As part of the NSFNET contract, Krol authored the Hitchhiker's Guide to the
Internet to provide a help manual for NSFNET users. Ted Nelson invented hypertext,
the concept behind links on the web, influencing several developers of the Internet, most notably Tim
Berners-Lee. Engelbart joined the Stanford
Research Institute and in 1962 started work on Augment, a project to develop computer tools to augment human
capabilities.
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