ICANN Historical Timeline: Difference between revisions
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File:1969a ARPANET full.jpg|Interface Message Processor, 1969<ref>[https://www.darpa.mil/about-us/timeline/arpanet DARPA.mil - The ARPANET]</ref> | File:1969a ARPANET full.jpg|Interface Message Processor, 1969<ref>[https://www.darpa.mil/about-us/timeline/arpanet DARPA.mil - The ARPANET]</ref> | ||
File:1973 - TCP-IP - IEEE Image 1974.jpg TCP/IP Schematic, 1973<ref>[https://www.darpa.mil/about-us/timeline/tcp-ip DARPA.mil - TCP/IP]</ref> | File:1973 - TCP-IP - IEEE Image 1974.jpg TCP/IP Schematic, 1973<ref>[https://www.darpa.mil/about-us/timeline/tcp-ip DARPA.mil - TCP/IP]</ref> | ||
File:Queen-Elizabeth-II-sending-her-first-e-mail.jpg|Queen Elizabeth II | File:Queen-Elizabeth-II-sending-her-first-e-mail.jpg|Queen Elizabeth II sends an email, 1976<ref>[https://mraths.org.uk/?page_id=588 Malvern Radar and Technology History Society - HM Queen Elizabeth II sends Email]</ref> | ||
</gallery>The ARPANET was a product of [[DARPA]], the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. MIT, the University of Southern California, UCLA, and the Stanford Research Institute, under contract with DARPA, were all instrumental in the development of technologies that are still used today in the modern Internet.<ref>[https://www.livescience.com/20727-internet-history.html LiveScience.com - ARPANET to the World Wide Web], published June 2017</ref> | </gallery>The ARPANET was a product of [[DARPA]], the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. MIT, the University of Southern California, UCLA, and the Stanford Research Institute, under contract with DARPA, were all instrumental in the development of technologies that are still used today in the modern Internet.<ref>[https://www.livescience.com/20727-internet-history.html LiveScience.com - ARPANET to the World Wide Web], published June 2017</ref> | ||
Revision as of 20:22, 12 August 2021
1972:- DARPA era - Birth of the Internet[edit | edit source]
ARPANET[edit | edit source]
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NLS System at Stanford, 1968[1]
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The "Mother of All Demos," 1968[2]
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Concept drawing of ARPANET, 1969[3]
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Interface Message Processor, 1969[4]
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Queen Elizabeth II sends an email, 1976[5]
The ARPANET was a product of DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. MIT, the University of Southern California, UCLA, and the Stanford Research Institute, under contract with DARPA, were all instrumental in the development of technologies that are still used today in the modern Internet.[6]
1976 -[edit | edit source]
1983 -[edit | edit source]
1988 - IANA (legitimization era)[edit | edit source]
1992 - Internet goes commercial/ gains a public/ officially becomes marketplace[edit | edit source]
1994 - RFC 1591[edit | edit source]
1996 Internet Governance blueprint era: International Ad-Hoc Committee formed[edit | edit source]
1997 - MoU 1998 - green/white papers
1998 Birth of ICANN (scaffolding)[edit | edit source]
1999-2002: (infant) ICANN[edit | edit source]
Privatization Marilyn Cade DNSO exists PSO, ASO are reserved
2002 ICANN Reform (toddler)[edit | edit source]
2003 2004
2005-2006 (youth) fulfillment of Differentiation/Expansion of ICANN bodies[edit | edit source]
2007 - 2009 (youth) Infinite reviewing cycles begin[edit | edit source]
(IDNs?)