Q&A with scientists Charley Kline and Bill Duvall, who sent the first Arpanet message in 1969, on what the internet has become, lessons from Arpanet, and more
Scott Nover / BBC : Forums: Slashdot Forums: BeauHD / Slashdot : BBC Interviews Charley Kline and Bill Duvall, Creators of Arpanet
Humane plans to open Ai Pin pre-orders on November 16, starting at $699 plus $24/month for unlimited calls, texts, and data via T-Mobile, shipping in early 2024
Are they trying to succeed? … @sdw@mastodon.social : I don't have a wisecrack or snark — this takes a lot of courage and a lot of vision to do. It's worth celebrating that there's talented people try...
David Walden, who helped build the Interface Message Processor that switched data among computers using the Arpanet, the precursor to the internet, died at 79
Katie Hafner / New York Times : Tweets: @philiped and @nytimestech Tweets: Philip Elmer-DeWitt / @philiped : Never met Walden, but interested to see that he was hired at BBN the same year I was. Davi...
Q&A with computer scientist Stephanie Wehner, who is leading the Quantum Internet Alliance, an EU effort to build a network for transmitting quantum information
The first data ever transmitted over Arpanet, the precursor of the internet, blipped from a computer at the University of California … Tweets: @sustainhistory , @nattyover , @yale_qi , and @quantamaga...
Lawrence Roberts, who helped design the Arpanet and oversaw its implementation in 1969, dies at 81
In late 1966, a 29-year-old computer scientist drew a series of abstract figures on tracing paper and a quadrille pad. Some resembled a game of cat's cradle; others looked like heavenly constellation...
Lawrence Roberts, who helped design the Arpanet and oversaw its implementation in 1969, dies at 81
In late 1966, a 29-year-old computer scientist drew a series of abstract figures on tracing paper and a quadrille pad. Some resembled a game of cat's cradle; others looked like heavenly constellation...
Robert Taylor, the innovator who played key roles in the invention of Arpanet, the Alto computer, and the computer mouse, dies at 85
Like many inventions, the internet was the work of many inventors. But perhaps no one deserves more credit for that world-changing technological leap …