How We Made the Internet

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 28 май 2024
  • On March 9, 1999, U.S. Vice President Al Gore, made a statement during a campaign interview that, unbeknownst to him, would soon become the subject of somewhat humorous controversy. What followed were a bunch of newspaper articles, comic strips, and “memes” mocking the vice president, starting a new wave of political humor for his candidacy in the 2000 Presidential Election.
    Ridiculous. Did Al Gore really just claim that he created the internet? Well, not exactly. What he had meant to say was that he was an integral part of putting forward legislation that made the internet so easily accessible and as powerful as it was in the 1990s. But because of his poor choice of words, naturally they were stripped of their context and even completely changed altogether. That answer wouldn’t be as interesting as telling everybody that Gore was bold enough to claim that he sat down, designed, and built the internet as a technology, all by himself. Gore’s lack of forethought with his remarks lead to an influx of embellishment and misinformation.
    But what started off as mass media shenanigans ended up becoming a valid burning question: If Al Gore can’t take credit for creating the internet, then who can? Who Invented the Internet? Well, that’s a ridiculous question. I mean, obviously it’s Tim Burners Lee, the man who created the World Wide Web in 1989 and finally made it public in 1991. Clearly, he is the Founding Father of what we recognize today as the internet…right? Actually, no. There are so many things that we are taught in school as being “absolute truths”: Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin, Ben Franklin discovered electricity, Thomas Edison invented the light bulb. But when it comes to a relatively recent technology like the internet, the answer is unclear. Who is our “guy” for the internet? Or “gal” even? As there are many women out there who could just as easily take the credit.
    Deciding who is responsible for the internet has become a discussion of great debate. Depending on who you ask, the answer will be different but the reasons still just as valid. Perhaps the story behind who’s responsible is just as complicated as the invention itself, filled with so many moving parts that are only visible when seeing the big picture, and that includes a lot of US government intervention. If that’s the case, was Mr. Gore’s comment really that unreasonable? Could he unironically take credit for inventing the internet?
    The reason why a question like this is so open-ended is because the internet itself is an open-ended technology. It wasn’t something that just appeared overnight. It was gradual and took literal generations to master. The internet is so complicated, that even we don’t fully understand it ourselves. We often use the terms “internet” and “world wide web” interchangeably, but they are very different things. In its simplest form, the “internet” is just a bunch of computers talking to each other, and the “World Wide Web” is the software we use to understand what those computers are saying. Now this may seem like some arbitrary distinction to make, I mean when someone says they “bought something on the internet,” we all know what they mean. But knowing the difference is crucial to understanding the internet and its history.
    Website: www.nationsquid.com/
    Twitter: / nationsquidyt
    Patreon: / nationsquid
    Merchandise: teespring.com/stores/squids-s...
    Google +: just kidding.
    Beauty Flow by Kevin MacLeodLink:
    incompetech.filmmusic.io/song...
    License: creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
    Link for images licensed under Creative Commons (CC):creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    All images and clips are created by me, in the public domain, licensed, under a Creative Commons license with attribution provided, or protected under Fair Use.
    ENJOY THE PROGRAM.

Комментарии • 935

  • @nationsquid
    @nationsquid  Год назад +145

    Sponsored by Blockbuster Video.
    Check me out on Twitter! twitter.com/NationSquidYT

  • @panqueque445
    @panqueque445 Год назад +175

    The "Gore bill" sounds metal as hell.

  • @1000huzzahs
    @1000huzzahs Год назад +1431

    People mocked Al Gore for his comment, but look at how tough it is to pass any meaningful legislation that betters public education and libraries today. He deserves kudos

    • @septic6425
      @septic6425 Год назад +12

      fall guys 😀

    • @lunarna
      @lunarna Год назад +40

      Is it difficult, or do they refuse to pass any meaningful legislation?

    • @1000huzzahs
      @1000huzzahs Год назад +33

      @@lunarna It's difficult

    • @RunicSigils
      @RunicSigils Год назад +19

      It should be difficult to pass legislation. Way more difficult than it actually is.

    • @Savariable
      @Savariable Год назад +45

      @@lunarna those 2 ideas aren't mutually exclusive, it can be difficult BECAUSE they refuse.

  • @lamegrape
    @lamegrape Год назад +263

    If I remember correctly, Firefox was not a rebranding of Netscape. Rather, it was an different browser made by Netscape employees who left the company to start Mozilla. Great video, learned something new!

    • @nationsquid
      @nationsquid  Год назад +79

      That’s right! I could have been more descriptive on that for sure haha. Thanks for the note and thanks for watching! :)

    • @SlCKB0Y-sb1kg
      @SlCKB0Y-sb1kg Год назад +17

      Mozilla Suite (including and email client and browser) was released after the Netscape code was open sourced. Firefox was not originally made by the Mozilla Foundation. It was a private code fork of Mozilla intended to be much faster and less bloated. I started using it when it was called Phoenix browser. This was then changed to Firebird and finally Firefox. It attracted users at such a speed that eventually Mozilla Foundation adopted it.

    • @LiveUIClient5048
      @LiveUIClient5048 Год назад

      ​@@SlCKB0Y-sb1kg w

    • @ayushshukla8748
      @ayushshukla8748 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@nationsquid Haven't learned from Al Gore bruv

    • @mitch_the_-itch
      @mitch_the_-itch 9 месяцев назад

      The same Nahtzees that fired the CEO because he disagreed with the Commie/Fascist huer Progressives that worked for him.

  • @wishdj
    @wishdj Год назад +533

    Thanks!
    Learned so much about the history of the internet in 22 minutes than I knew all my life. Likely the best video in all of RUclips on this topic.

    • @nationsquid
      @nationsquid  Год назад +76

      Wow!! Thank you so much for the contribution!! I really appreciate it!!! More content to come! 💙

    • @ITAC85
      @ITAC85 Год назад +5

      Same here!

    • @rtxon69
      @rtxon69 Год назад +3

      what do you term the contributory comment, super comment? is it that?

    • @hiddenguy67
      @hiddenguy67 Год назад +1

      nice

    • @markusTegelane
      @markusTegelane Год назад +1

      @@rtxon69 if you press the "Thanks" button, you can leave a comment with a donation
      not sure what’s the term for this type of comment tough

  • @panqueque445
    @panqueque445 Год назад +477

    I can't believe Al Gore single-handedly sat down and invented the internet. Amazing.

    • @lilmamaxyungpapa
      @lilmamaxyungpapa Год назад +17

      you better believe 'cause it's super cereal

    • @lainiwakura1776
      @lainiwakura1776 Год назад +8

      Don't forget manbearpig.

    • @ytgadfly
      @ytgadfly Год назад +3

      he actually had no role in its creation. It existed well before he ever held office

    • @LiveUIClient5048
      @LiveUIClient5048 Год назад +8

      ​@@ytgadfly didn't get the joke

    • @mikemattingly5128
      @mikemattingly5128 11 месяцев назад +7

      I wish we had a president who was capable of that. Instead we have an entire government of 80 year olds who dont even use the internet. Especially not our last two presidents lol

  • @kyanoang3l0_old
    @kyanoang3l0_old Год назад +753

    As a socially awkward teen back then, I'd be a target of bullying/teasing just for my poor choice of words.
    I feel you, Al Gore.

    • @skulleaglesnake
      @skulleaglesnake Год назад +16

      yeah i agree man bear pig turned out real

    • @drewb4653
      @drewb4653 Год назад +13

      Nobody took him cereal

    • @ologhai8559
      @ologhai8559 Год назад +2

      i see people of culture

    • @theoneandonlyjim902
      @theoneandonlyjim902 Год назад +8

      Al Gore... A i Gore. A.I GORE. He's an evil robot I call it.

    • @kenirainseeker539
      @kenirainseeker539 Год назад +6

      I mean he turned out to be right about climate change. Everyone made fun of him but he was right. Maybe we kind of owe him a collective apology.

  • @s_ludge
    @s_ludge Год назад +280

    This is one of my favorite real life history stories, as someone who grew up on the internet it's always been so fascinating to me, although I'd admit that fascination has died in the last decade. Because of that it's always great as well to hear it again, and you did a great job as per usual in both your coverage and editing that I feel like I could share to people since it's not heavy into the complicated details. Thanks NationSquid.

    • @mrdiscophoria
      @mrdiscophoria Год назад +6

      I feel the same. As a 90s kid, I have memories of being so fascinated, and stimulated, by the influx of information and images/video made available. I learned html and css coding because I was obsessed with making websites just for the sake of it.
      Not so much nowadays, but it's been amazing to gain more insight on the internet phenomenon

    • @s_ludge
      @s_ludge Год назад +4

      @@mrdiscophoria It's definitely had a lot of impact on my interests as well, I started out just messing with HTML and CSS but it evolved into my love for personal computing and technology in general. I'll be getting my associates in a comp sci course and plan on working for other certifications as well in the next coming years.

    • @emobassist
      @emobassist Год назад

      The reason the internet isnt interesting anymore is that is there isnt any more innovation because we have a system that works as well as it will ever get

  • @m3talh3ad18
    @m3talh3ad18 Год назад +116

    Simplified yet true to its original history. Well scripted and paced. Video editing is good too. I'm going to share this to a bunch of my peers! Keep going.

  • @realstormdancer
    @realstormdancer Год назад +115

    You know it's top tier informative video when you learn more in it than in 5 years of IT high school and 3 years of IT University

    • @ytgadfly
      @ytgadfly Год назад +4

      What is an IT university? I have a degree in computer science from a real uni, and we covered all this.

    • @CarlyCatharsis
      @CarlyCatharsis Год назад +1

      @@ghost_mall Some People
      Keep Returning To Add Extra
      Credits Torwards Additional
      Associates Degrees They'll
      Never Really Use Torwards
      ANY Carrier; Just For Academic
      Bragart Accomplishments🏅.

    • @Trollleben
      @Trollleben 8 месяцев назад +1

      You need a better university then if that's the care lol

    • @Bpinator
      @Bpinator 6 месяцев назад

      The invention of network address translation is also super important to I wish that was mentioned

    • @realstormdancer
      @realstormdancer 6 месяцев назад

      @@Trollleben i mean consider that we did programming, only high school cared about the history of it itself, the teaching was good, they just thought it was not important to mention the origin itself but just how it works and what to make on it in uni, in high school a little bit of mention but just a few times just for curiosity

  • @blakedellinger5300
    @blakedellinger5300 Год назад +70

    Great video. NS really tackled a very complex topic and explained it so well.

    • @nationsquid
      @nationsquid  Год назад +7

      Thank you so much for your support as always, Blake!!!! :)

  • @mikewheeler9011
    @mikewheeler9011 Год назад +112

    What an amazing documentary. I'm a technology engineer student and this stuff fascinates me. Also my monke brain thinks, internet is just phones 2.0. crazy to think how much information the CIA and other governments sent 'over the wire' and then later how much of a huge backend the actual internet has

    • @TecnoTyler
      @TecnoTyler Год назад +4

      How monke make rock think? How monke make rock talk to each other? Grog scratch head.

    • @TheDennys21
      @TheDennys21 10 месяцев назад

      @@TecnoTyler **confused unga-bunga**

  • @gnooshguhh
    @gnooshguhh Год назад +43

    The REAL internet was the friends we made along the way.

    • @Christobanistan
      @Christobanistan Год назад +2

      Copied, but always funny! :D

    • @NightCloudI
      @NightCloudI Месяц назад +1

      Maybe it's because I'm an introvert, but am I the only one that doesn't like this type of comment?

    • @mirzaahmed6589
      @mirzaahmed6589 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@NightCloudI nothing wrong with the comment, it's an obvious joke.
      As another introvert, I do get annoyed when people say the Internet made us isolated. No it hasn't. I've met most of my closest friends on the Internet.

    • @NightCloudI
      @NightCloudI Месяц назад

      @@mirzaahmed6589 Ikr, and for us introverts internet is a great way to spend fun time with a friend. We can watch videos and discuss or theorize about it after or we can play some online games. :)

  • @cxctuses1383
    @cxctuses1383 Год назад +35

    Hahaha, leave it to beaver is so great!! This was an interesting video, as I always thought it was Tim Berners Lee. Thanks for enlightening me on the origins of the Internet! Again, great video as always, you just keep outdoing yourself!! I love that you have a turntable as well, I never knew you were into records!

    • @wagnerperez8050
      @wagnerperez8050 Год назад +4

      Agree too

    • @nationsquid
      @nationsquid  Год назад +8

      Thank you so much!! Yes, I sure love my turntable. Been using it a lot around the house! As always, more content to come! :)

    • @cxctuses1383
      @cxctuses1383 Год назад +1

      @@nationsquid That's so cool! Dark side of the moon is always going to have one of my favorite album covers. Smooth UDP joke by the way!

    • @wagnerperez8050
      @wagnerperez8050 Год назад +1

      @@nationsquid yay 😁

  • @splendidcyan
    @splendidcyan Год назад +48

    Your content is always so clean and crisp and informative, really love it.

  • @MarshalerOfficial
    @MarshalerOfficial Год назад +19

    Man, the Cold War brought to us some wild stuff that we take for granted nowadays

  • @Nathanator
    @Nathanator Год назад +33

    Awesome content as usual man! This taught me SO much about the internet and your voice and style of narration and editing is super engaging and mesmerizing, along with the little jokes you throw in throughout your videos! You’re my favorite channel and I’m glad you’ve been uploading more lately :)

    • @neanda
      @neanda 10 месяцев назад +1

      i totally agree. this guy is refreshigly unique and very informative.
      TIL that it was willy wonka that invented the internet

  • @strongbadman2
    @strongbadman2 Год назад +11

    Had “great gig in the sky” stuck in my head for the rest of the video after it played and it honestly kinda gave me some deep existential feelings, just thinking about how much technology has evolved in such a relatively small amount of time. Great video

  • @Nazereth666
    @Nazereth666 Год назад +27

    This has to be one of your best videos yet! I have kind of dug into this topic in the past but really came out more confused. Growing up I didn't really question what internet was or how it came to be. Actually funny enough I remember when we got our first pc we referred to it as "the internet." We didn't use it for much else at the time.

    • @nationsquid
      @nationsquid  Год назад +2

      Glad you enjoyed it!! More videos coming your way soon. :)

  • @Unpug
    @Unpug Год назад +12

    This was so well made, respect and appreciation for another video this high quality!

  • @somosvenezuela4364
    @somosvenezuela4364 10 месяцев назад +10

    I loved how you highlighted how individual people can have such a big impact on the course of history. It’s crazy to thing about. Great video 😊

  • @AndyJayRayy
    @AndyJayRayy Год назад +21

    This is one of only two channels for which I've actually clicked the bell. Excellent video as always.

  • @anenglishmanplusamerican7107
    @anenglishmanplusamerican7107 9 месяцев назад +3

    I enjoy your every videos, they give me enjoyment and education at the same time. By the way, I ended up getting the joke, because it was dropped off safely by the mailman. keep creating man, you are one of the few who gives me the old feeling of the simpler times

  • @TylerFurrison
    @TylerFurrison Год назад +17

    He didn't invent the Internet, no, but what he did was very monumental in driving the Internet forward for everyone to access.

    • @nakayle
      @nakayle 9 месяцев назад +1

      He also warned us about global warming- people laughed at him- but we are seeing the effects of it now.

  • @aromanticfranziskavonkarma
    @aromanticfranziskavonkarma Год назад +7

    okay almost completely unrelated but i keep misreading al gore's name as artificial intelligence gore

  • @richardperhai8292
    @richardperhai8292 10 месяцев назад +3

    Amazing at the time, in 1995 we planned an entire 3-week trip, using MapQuest, online hotel reservations, and message boards. We even advance purchased tickets for a Cinema show in Dayton, OH. Nowdays thats the norm, but some of this tech was brand new and amazed people. As a side note, everything went flawlessly.

  • @onesimesirois
    @onesimesirois Год назад +9

    Man this channel is an absolute gem of interesting information. Keep it up!

  • @a7x5631
    @a7x5631 Год назад +9

    Poor Al Gore . The one time people take him cereal it was a poorly worded sentence.

  • @ShawnPConroy
    @ShawnPConroy Год назад +9

    18:46 internet service providers (ISP) did not charge long distance fees for accessing websites on the other side of the world. The video says that with a world spanning network, charging people long distance became a turn-off because you couldn't tell where a server was and would suddenly be hit with long distance charges until AOL came around and offered a fixed monthly fee. That's not what I recall at all.
    What I recall is that we were charged per minute of connection. This sounds like long distance charges, but is not. You were simply charged whenever you were connected, even if you weren't downloading anything but preparing and email to be sent. And eventually it moved to a fixed rate for unlimited access. I think the script took what we all know of long distance charges now (and then), and got confused when they heard of pay by the minute charges and wild internet bills. But it had nothing to do with the location of the server. Only your connection time.
    I did a quick search and couldn't find anything like that. If anyone can confirm that any ISPs ever did this, that would be great. I certainly don't recall ever hearing this when I had dial-up internet in the 90s as a teen, but I do recall the unlimited use being a promotional point for ISPs.

    • @Fireberries
      @Fireberries Год назад +1

      What I got from the sentence is what other people (general public) assumed and didn't understand - as they were used to only how phones work. You tell somebody in 1991 that you can "use your phone to connect to somebody across the world", they would assume you would be charged for long distance.
      When AOL came in with its massive marketing campaign, they took advantage of this confusion, but also improved the billing system to be cheaper (assuming you use it enough) and easily understood.
      I have faint memories of the early days of AOL (as in, I remember a time before people got AOL despite it being around at the time). My family was already using AOL and had been long before anybody else I knew (my dad used to code games and programmes so he was tech savvy at the time). I remember that we'd call my aunt in the evenings after a specific time because it was cheaper due to the package we had. One of my friends had only DOS on her family's computer for a long time and no internet. Another who was more well off got AOL before others. I do remember adult discussions of how it worked / how it charged etc - just like how I know it was cheaper to call my aunt after a specific time. I was very young at the time so I can't recall much other than the vague understanding that most people didn't understand the billing system outside of AOL.
      I suppose it's like using data on pay-as-you go and being charged so much per X MB of data. You just have no concept of how much it will charge you until you check your balance (or in their case, the monthly phone bill)
      I also remember the big ass beige boxes in the darkest corner of pubs where you'd put in a £2 coin to use it for 10 minutes lol

    • @christopherritter4149
      @christopherritter4149 Год назад

      The high bill came from the fact that they charged you for usage by the hour but eventually went to an unlimited plan. The only long distance charge may have been if you used a local access number from a different location. Also Service providers such as AOL and Compuserve didn't originally provide internet service, they provided a connection to their private network. They also didn't use a web browser, they used proprietary software.

  • @Jackosaurus117
    @Jackosaurus117 Год назад +3

    Another awesome video NationSquid. I could listen to you literally all day

  • @playwonderwall
    @playwonderwall 10 месяцев назад +3

    This video gave such a great recap/overview of what I studied in my networking courses 💕 The internet is so wonderful and complex, still hard to wrap my head around haha

  • @Alicx1
    @Alicx1 Год назад +2

    Your videos are so underrated . Loved it.

  • @rigm8982
    @rigm8982 11 месяцев назад +1

    @nationsquid - what an amazing job explaining a concept so complicated!

  • @user-qj3rv2mo1b
    @user-qj3rv2mo1b 9 месяцев назад +3

    The group that developed TCP/IP deserve the credit for pioneering internet.

  • @nickpalmierivideos2145
    @nickpalmierivideos2145 Год назад +15

    Incredible video. Super ambitious but covers so many important developments clearly and succinctly. So far the video hasn't performed near as well as the others on your channel, but I wouldn't be surprised if it consistently gets views over a long period of time. It deserves that for sure.

  • @PelonMusk
    @PelonMusk 4 месяца назад +2

    This video takes longer to get going than my 1997 dial-up connection.

  • @ScienceVashu
    @ScienceVashu Год назад +1

    Nation squad and magnatesmedia, both of your channels are so so underrated, I wish you guys grow , and I want to help in any ways I can

  • @ologhai8559
    @ologhai8559 Год назад +5

    Edison invented light bulb? In parallel universe maybe....

  • @vihaanv9032
    @vihaanv9032 Год назад +6

    I found this channel because the Goggle video was in my recommended and I watched it and then saw your other great videos and subbed and now you're my favourite RUclipsr!

    • @nationsquid
      @nationsquid  Год назад +1

      Thank you for your support! More content coming your way! :)

  • @Ronnocbot
    @Ronnocbot Год назад

    What are the odds that I was just thinking of Great Gig in the Sky and you play it at 7:41 right as I’m internally listening to it. Did not except that in this video but it literally just made my day. Great content also.

  • @ytgadfly
    @ytgadfly Год назад +2

    "During my service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet. I took the initiative in moving forward a whole range of initiatives that have proven to be important to our country's economic growth and environmental protection, improvements in our educational system." - Al Gore.
    I like Gore and think he did a lot of good things like help more people access it, but he completely overstated his role in the creation of the Internet. How can one take "I took the initiative in creating the Internet" as anything but claiming something he didnt do? The Internet's creation took place well before he ever held any office.
    I have used the Internet since the early 80s. Well before the web. Thank god people have made documentaries about the real engineers who created the Internet. They spent decades doing the real work. Why didnt Al Gore acknowledge them?

  • @CrevYT
    @CrevYT Год назад +6

    The real creator of the internet is the friends we made along the way

  • @Anonymous-qb4vc
    @Anonymous-qb4vc Год назад +3

    This is criminally underrated!

  • @SurenDrakensberg
    @SurenDrakensberg 3 месяца назад +2

    As someone who was born in 1971. It's been interesting to experience the real time development of the INTERNET. From not really understanding or appreciating the potential, to fascination, slow integration, access to endless amounts of knowledge, the promise of a united world, and now the destruction of individual liberties and lives. 😢

  • @mukuljaitu
    @mukuljaitu 8 месяцев назад

    Brilliant video brother ❤, loved it you made clear every single bit of ARPANET TO INTERNET very clear and with proper video cuts it is very much connecting and easy to remember. As you said in last
    You are also making the internet insanely helpful and great for people around the globe.
    Keep making these kinds of amazing stuff.
    Loved your video❣️

  • @diskoverio1020
    @diskoverio1020 Год назад +5

    Wow. This is basically the entire lecture of basic computer networking in under 30 minutes. 👏

  • @agranero6
    @agranero6 Год назад +5

    Hedi Lamar was a brilliant engineer, but didn't invented CDMA or WiFi. She invented what was called frequency hopping communication. The patent specifies using it to control torpedoes or drones (I really can't remember). This was used for a long time after, like in radars. But CDMA although is a broad spectrum system has nothing to do with it and WiFi can change channels but just sometimes for avoiding interference, so is not a frequency hopping system.

  • @mervynstudio
    @mervynstudio Месяц назад +1

    i really enjoyed this video! I've been looking for something of thing kind in a long while.
    Thank to RUclips for recommending

  • @kevb7451
    @kevb7451 Год назад

    Reminded me of the Jeremy Irons version of Spaceship Earth at Epcot. Great video!

  • @patriautism
    @patriautism 10 месяцев назад +3

    Just so you lnow Al Gore never ever once said that he invented the internet. He said exactly "During my service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet. I took the initiative in moving forward a whole range of initiatives that have proven to be important to our country's economic growth and environmental protection, improvements in our educational system." By that he meant legislation for the internet. Which is 100 percent true.

  • @tatertotter808
    @tatertotter808 Год назад +7

    Imagine being one of these people that helped create the internet and coming back to see what it’s become and it’s just people sharing videos of themselves eating ass online 🤣

  • @listless9384
    @listless9384 4 месяца назад +1

    As a network engineer, all of this is my bread and butter. The simplicity and in depthness of your explanations is amazing! I got giddy when you mentioned STP! This is an amazing video

  • @SA77888
    @SA77888 Год назад

    I like this content, youve got a good neutral / relaxing voice........and the editing style doesnt have loads of kabooms, whizzbangs and wallops

  • @picklikeapro6952
    @picklikeapro6952 11 месяцев назад +5

    Back in 1995 it was amazing to me that I could get in the internet with just my phone line and AOL and it only took 5 minutes to load a page. 🤯 😂

  • @jnb756
    @jnb756 Год назад +13

    "I would tell you a UDP joke, but you probably wouldn't get it" ... dying.... said so straight faced people probably missed that little gem...

  • @dudemetoo2053
    @dudemetoo2053 4 месяца назад

    Damn dude. Some high quality output great video.

  • @chrisvw352
    @chrisvw352 Год назад

    Awesome video and I always thought about this. Hysterical jump scare at the end also.

  • @benszekely4336
    @benszekely4336 Год назад +3

    hearing great gig in the sky there immediately put a smile on my face.

  • @Mr_SSK
    @Mr_SSK Год назад +3

    Amazing! Thank you so much for such an wonderful, informative video :)

  • @alexis0a
    @alexis0a Год назад +1

    Great video, I love this kind of short documentary, it's awesome your work, I just subscribed!

  • @God_Loves_You07
    @God_Loves_You07 9 месяцев назад +2

    thanks for this helped A LOT😂💯, if college classes could teach in the form of RUclips videos like this, I'm pretty sure more people would pass/understand the topic better but to each his own.

  • @oldthug7624
    @oldthug7624 10 месяцев назад +3

    Imagine how amazing it must have been to be a part of creating the internet. I feel like I would love my job everyday.

  • @Akyuu2608
    @Akyuu2608 Год назад +3

    Now we need how the internet was ruined

  • @CYLITM
    @CYLITM 4 месяца назад +1

    This is probably one of your best videos.

  • @madpoet
    @madpoet Год назад

    Thanks for posting! A little light on some details, but a great video just the same.

  • @cdvideodump
    @cdvideodump Год назад +5

    Al Gore may have invented it, but Timmy Turner inherited it

    • @NiteDriv3r
      @NiteDriv3r 11 месяцев назад +1

      N Timmy Burners Launched It

    • @cdvideodump
      @cdvideodump 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@NiteDriv3r Timmy burn these nutz

    • @NiteDriv3r
      @NiteDriv3r 11 месяцев назад

      @@cdvideodump No

  • @thatgirlchelsea2085
    @thatgirlchelsea2085 Год назад +5

    I thought it was ARPA, since ARPANET was the first iteration of the internet we know today.

    • @sultanofsaturn
      @sultanofsaturn Год назад +1

      Nah bruh it’s Al gore

    • @thatgirlchelsea2085
      @thatgirlchelsea2085 Год назад

      @@sultanofsaturn Bing, bong, sing-along; your team’s Al Gore ‘cause your views are wrong

  • @AJ-ho1jv
    @AJ-ho1jv Год назад

    This channel is so underrated! How did I not find out about it before?!

  • @user-nt8kn7js6f
    @user-nt8kn7js6f 2 месяца назад

    Thanks, buddy! That was a fantastic video. It really provides a thorough snapshot of how the internet got its start. Your video will help people from generation to generation understand one of the most iconic inventions in all of human history.

  • @MrRipman
    @MrRipman Год назад +8

    That thumbnail is a great meme

  • @areamusicale
    @areamusicale Год назад +20

    Saying that Al Gore invented internet is like saying that Newton invented gravity.

    • @MartyrKomplx
      @MartyrKomplx 9 месяцев назад

      So, without Newton supporting gravity, it wouldn't be as strong as it is? Damn you Newton. I could have been bouncing like I was on the moon today.

  • @abomarsyr103
    @abomarsyr103 6 месяцев назад

    that was such a good short documentary with intense info and easily given to audience thanks for sharing

  • @billcypher5240
    @billcypher5240 4 месяца назад

    Great video dude loved it

  • @b.critical7873
    @b.critical7873 8 месяцев назад +3

    Please tell me you're joking about Edison at the beginning of this vid.

  • @BACONHAIR_YT_69420
    @BACONHAIR_YT_69420 Год назад +5

    uh yeah Al Gore invented the internet

  • @UnCuervoEnMedicina
    @UnCuervoEnMedicina Год назад +1

    You deserve a lot more of subscribers!!

  • @theoneandonly09
    @theoneandonly09 9 месяцев назад +1

    For a subject so vast with information, thanks for taking the time to explain it in layman’s terms. I know you did your research 💯

  • @deathdogg0
    @deathdogg0 Год назад +10

    There are so many people here claiming they created the internet. Let me set the record straight. In spite of the fact that I wasn’t born until a few years after the world wide web came about, I most definitely created the internet. The whole thing. That's right!
    But in all seriousness, i had no idea of just how much of the internet’s history I’d missed. I never heard much except Russians, Arpa net and internet. So thank you for expanding my knowledge

  • @xaza8uhitra4
    @xaza8uhitra4 Год назад +4

    for anyone interested in the shadowy origins of today’s Internet I would highly recommend reading “surveillance Valley “ by Yasha Levine . amazing book

  • @michaeltse4711
    @michaeltse4711 Месяц назад

    Thanks. So Informative

  • @Yosetime
    @Yosetime 5 месяцев назад +1

    Great explanation! Thanks!

  • @test1q7
    @test1q7 Год назад +47

    We all know it was Al Gore, he's even said it himself in his iconic quote "I invented the Internet"

    • @Allen.Christian
      @Allen.Christian Год назад +1

      He said no such thing

    • @test1q7
      @test1q7 Год назад +10

      @@Allen.Christian my uncle who works for Nintendo confirmed it

    • @bluemetal04606
      @bluemetal04606 Год назад +4

      @@Allen.Christian He did, actually.

    • @JSLeeds
      @JSLeeds Год назад +1

      Simply watching the video before you stuff your foot in your mouth in the comments section is easy…see.

    • @test1q7
      @test1q7 Год назад +1

      @@JSLeeds simply re-reading my comments before you stuff your foot in your mouth in my replies is easy...see.

  • @mann277
    @mann277 4 месяца назад +1

    Good overview

  • @sabkafather
    @sabkafather Год назад +1

    if we ignore the freaky 5 and all the horror stories you've uploaded initially .. all you videos except those are very underrated

  • @Christobanistan
    @Christobanistan Год назад +3

    To anyone who is interested in what he meant about the internet's two core data transmissions TCP vs UDP protocols:
    TCP is the one that you use when you need to transmit data and make sure that the recipient got it. When the recipient gets the packet, it sends back a response (acknowledgement) and if the sender doesn't get that, it sends it again. This is what you might use when requesting a web page and sending it back.
    UDP is a much quicker 'fire and forget' protocol where you send lots of data to a recipient, but with no acknowlegement because you don't care if it was received. Games use this so send players' position data over and over as you move. The recipient doesn't care if it doesn't receive some of the updates because the player has already moved anyway!
    TCP is reliable but slow because of the back and forth and verification process. UDP is quick.

  • @christaltaylor473
    @christaltaylor473 Год назад +4

    This is gonna be EPIC

    • @raxadian
      @raxadian Год назад +1

      Well... you do need to be always Online to use Games from Epic.

  • @gilgilbert5866
    @gilgilbert5866 10 месяцев назад

    Absolutely great video on the history of networking! Thank you!

  • @seanc.5310
    @seanc.5310 Год назад

    Awesome job with this!

  • @user-do2ez8hh1w
    @user-do2ez8hh1w Год назад +13

    According to the thumbnail, Al Gore it seems

    • @jmal
      @jmal Год назад +1

      He has ridden the mighty Moon Worm!

  • @boldCactuslad
    @boldCactuslad Год назад +14

    I'm glad someone made a video that actually says when the internet happened: the US defense industries/gov created the internet in 1969 when the first computers were connected to ARPANET, which would soon become the first wide-area TCP network.
    Al Gore deserves about as much credit as the next guy who invented the internet. At least, this must be the case on average - the average "person who made the internet" will receive the average amount of credit, obviously. So, it took a thousand people, and we could get this done quickly by giving each of them 0.1% credit for ruining the planet and the societies on it. Thank you, Al Gore, for your part in ruining the attention span and critical thinking ability of our species.
    Sure, Al Gore enabled the aol-based september that never ended which ruined the internet, but that disaster would have occured eventually. There's just too much obvious money in connecting arbitrarily large quantities of customers to automated services of your company's own design, and too much obvious power inherent to any billionaire thinking of buying up another ten newspapers/TV stations in letting some of that "news" exist perpetually on a server accessible to the public.
    Reminder that javascript is an existential risk and was invented as a scripting language for netscape navigator to add a bit of flair to static webpages but ended up just giving us popup ads, virus embeds, tracking, and security risks.
    Didn't the drug transaction predate the Sting CD purchase? I could've sworn that was the first online transaction. Maybe it doesn't count since those students knew eachother.

    • @montezuma4353
      @montezuma4353 Год назад +3

      bruh you just wasted so much time just re-saying and explaining what nationsquid already said in the video. unnessesary.

  • @Momerz
    @Momerz Год назад +1

    What a video bro, good efforts

  • @ianbirkinhead4103
    @ianbirkinhead4103 9 месяцев назад +1

    This is such a great tutorial. So many things have come together in my understanding.

  • @LiveUIClient5048
    @LiveUIClient5048 Год назад +3

    "I'm just kidding it was all Willy Wonka."
    Greatest quote since ARPANET was created

  • @spritvio639
    @spritvio639 Год назад +5

    I know who invented it, it's Joe.
    Joe mama. 🤡

  • @TheSilentMajorityNation
    @TheSilentMajorityNation 7 месяцев назад +1

    What a great video! Very informative.

  • @scitobor
    @scitobor Год назад

    I have to just give you a thumbs up! For this video. It was really good and explained things very easy for me. Thanx.

  • @bryantgomez7135
    @bryantgomez7135 Год назад +4

    All hail Al Gore!

  • @jdnart
    @jdnart Год назад +6

    Very interesting video thanks for making it, I'm gonna go rewatch the You are an idiot virus video again lol

  • @tryxer
    @tryxer Год назад +1

    That was a really good Video thanks for that. And even though I now a lot of this it is still fascinating ^^

  • @aidentheboss102
    @aidentheboss102 Год назад +1

    Thanks for sharing this amazing video!