The History of a internet

  • ARPANET

    ARPANET
    the first computer link, known as ARPANET, was established between three universities in California as a means of communication between different academic and state institutions.
  • Email

    Email
    in this year, e-mail is standardized due to the demand it generates and the ease of sending and receiving information at the national level in America.
  • TCP/IP

    in this year all computers connected to arpanet need to have a virtual identification, so it is mandatory to create the tcp and the ip
  • NFSNET

    was a general purpose network to connect the above mentioned supercomputers as well as regional networks and campuses using the already existing TCP/IP in 1986, developed and tested on the ARPANET. The implementation used PDP-11/73 computers as routers which were called "Fuzzballs".
  • Mosaic

    Its operation on various operating systems (at that time Unix, Windows and Macintosh), its ability to access web services via HTTP in its primitive version (HTTP 0.9) as conceived by Tim Berners-Lee,
  • Google

    s a web search engine owned and operated by Google, is the most widely used search engine on the Web, receiving hundreds of millions of queries each day across its various services. The main purpose of Google's search engine is to search for text on web pages, rather than other types of data, and was originally developed by Larry Page and Sergey Brin in 1997.
  • 160 million users

    at the turn of the century, the internet becomes massive, reaching an incredible 160 million people.
  • Period: to

    streaming

    Webcasting is usually time-shifted or of previously recorded content, such as a movie from a video-on-demand service. Live streaming is also possible, which would be the broadcasting of content in real time over the Internet of an event as it occurs, such as a concert or a television network's signal. Live streaming requires a video and audio recording source.