slides03 Flashcards
history of the Internet
- Email and discussion groups are popular
- 1973 Internet reaches London
- 1974 TCP/IP replaces NCP
- 1980s 1000s of machines on the Internet
- Domain Name System arrives
- 1980/90 Original ARPANET decommissioned and replaced
- Commerce arrives
- Other networks based on other protocols are replaced by the Internet
- 1992 1,000,000 hosts
- Gopher
- Tim Berners-Lee invents the Web
- The Internet starts to enter the home
- Microsoft gives up on its own network and falls into line
- The Dot Com boom
- The Dot Com crash
- Broadband to the home
- Large commerce over the Internet
- Mobile revolution
purpose of standards and standardised protocols
ensure maximum interoperability
overseeing bodies
- Internet Society (ISOC); oversees the Internet standard development processes
- Internet Architecture Board (IAB); ISOC committee that oversees the technical and engineering development of the Internet, particularly IETF and IRTF
- Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF); IAB committee that develops standards and publishes RFCs
- Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG); executive sub-committee of IETF that has final say over RFCs
- Internet Research Task Force (IRTF); IAB committee that does long-term research and development of Internet technology
- Internet Research Steering Group (IRSG); sub-committee of IRTF that manages the research groups
- Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN); nonprofit internationally-organised organisation to oversee global resources such as names and numbers
- Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA); the part of IANA that deals with domain names and IP addresses, run by a company named “Public Technical Identifiers”
IANA delegates management of various things to Regional Internet Registries (RIRs), e.g., domain names and addresses
Current RIRs:
- African Network Information Centre (AfriNIC); Africa
- American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN); North America and Antarctica
- Asia-Pacific Network Information Centre (APNIC); Asia, Australia, New Zealand
- Latin America and Caribbean Network Information Centre (LACNIC); South America
- Re ́seaux IP Europe ́ns Network Coordination Centre (RIPE); Europe, Russia, the Middle East, and Central Asia
other bodies
• IEEE Institute for Electric and Electronic Engineers; hardware like Ethernet and Wi-Fi
• ISO International Standards Organisation; e.g., XML standards
• IEC International Electrotechnical Commission; e.g., Digital Living Network Alliance (DLNA)
• ITU-T Telecommunication Standardization Sector of the ITU (International Telecommunication Union); e.g., DSL standards
• lots more national and international institutions
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How to build a network
- We pick a layering model
- We use this to guide us in making a standard
- We use the standard to direct the implementations
- We can then use the implementations
two main Models in use
the ISO Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) Seven-Layer Model; and the Internet Four-Layer Model