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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 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>
 
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>
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</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> [[Jon Postel]], [[Vint Cerf]], [[Steve Crocker]], and other Internet pioneers were first connected with ARPANET projects and innovations.
    
==1976 - ==  
 
==1976 - ==  
Bureaucrats, Check users, lookupuser, Administrators, translator
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