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First Satelite
The USSR launched the first artificial satellite named Sputnik into space. As a counter act, the US government creates the Advanced Research Projects Agency . They do so in an attempt to become the world leader in science and technology, in relation with the military. -
The Experimental Network.
Nine years after its formation, the ARPA hosts a study on “cooperative network of time–sharing computers.” Shortly thereafter, two computers, one from the MIT Lincoln Lab and one from the System Development Corporation (SDC), are successfully connected with a dedicated 1200bps phone line. A third computer, at ARPA, is added to form “The Experimental Network.” -
New Network Developed
A network is developed using 15 nodes at University of California Los Angeles, Stanford Research Institute, University of California Santa Barbara, University of Utah, Bolt Beranek and Newman, Inc., MIT Lincoln Lab, RAND, SDC, Harvard, Lincoln Lab, Stanford, Upper Iowa University, Case Western Reserve University, Central Michigan University and NASA/Ames. -
MSG
John Vittal develops MSG. This is the first all–inclusive email program that offers reply, forward and filing capabilities. -
.COM
The domain name system is developed and the “.com” era is born. Other domains are also developed including .edu and .gov. -
Introduciing the Internet
The Internet is introduced to the public. World.std.com becomes the first company to provide Internet access through dial–up. -
CERN
The European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) releases World–Wide Web (WWW). -
Advertising online
Shopping malls, banks, radio stations and advertising become commonplace online. -
Online connections
Companies like CompuServe, America Online and Prodigy begin to provide online connections through traditional dial–up services. Households across the world go online. -
Internet Service
Companies begin providing free computers with a signed contract for Internet service.