UCLA's Leonard Kleinrock displays Internet's first router
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
- Internet pioneer and UCLA computer science professor Leonard Kleinrock displays the Internet's first router, or "switch" -- known as an Interface Message Processor -- and describes the process of connecting it with UCLA's host computer, leading to the first-ever Internet message sent on October 29, 1969.
For more information visit:
www.newsroom.uc...
Kudos for keepeng this awesome machine safe for 39 years.
Happy 50th Birthday Internet! October 29th, 2019 at 10:30 PM Pacific Time
¡Feliz Cumpleaños número 50 Internet!
Thanks for being a genius
These creators really understood the importance of what they were creating... may be in hindsight. I think Dr. Kleinrock is one of the best story tellers of the creation - I've seen him in several documentaries on the subject. So please he knew to keep that first IMP.
Vengo por parte del curso de Google Actívate. Muy interesante la información, es un boom en nuestras mentes cuando llevas tiempo investigando acerca de eso. :)
Vengo del mismo lugar, mucha suerte amigo!
@@antonioortega2685 GRACIAS!
Vengo del mismo lugar jajaja
@@paumacedo8805 Éxitos!
Leonard is a legend. He saw the historical value in that thing when no one else did. It's sad to think what would have happened if he was not there to intervene
thank you for saving this piece of history.
Amazing piece of history. So unfortunate how we discard our old technology as though it doesn't matter.
es aquí donde empezó todo....interesante.
hermoso!!!
This is just an amazing piece of our history, and I'm glad to see it's still around and wasn't destroyed
Been in networking for 10+ years. Just learned about it all over again. Now I love it even more. Thank you Mr. Kleinrock.
Just watched your interview on PBS tonight. Amazing people. Amazing story. Not sure where this is at, but hope it's all still at UCLA - I'm hoping that there's a dedicated museum to represent the story the way it should be ! What an amazing time in history ... a burst of human science and technology on the moon and at UCLA !
Thanks for the internet :D
Looks like a high tech fridge...
I'm here thanks to Andrew Blum and "Tubes". Love this!
Que maravilla saludos desde Colombia muchas gracias profe por trabajar en este proyecto tan importante
About 1975 as a DEC field employee, I worked on a newer PDP-11 based IMP at National Bureau of Standards (later NIST). It fit on a table top...
The first router! Is it still at UCLA?
what happened to the router at the other end?
I'm going to assume there was no router at the other end. Routers are usually a go-between point for data so both computers were connecting to this router which was then forwarding the connection between the two computers. Same as if you're gaming over a Local network, your home router is the man in the middle from one computer in the building to another.
Edit: I was wrong. In this case, there was a second router. That one was in the Stanford Research Institute. He says this in his video on the big think channel "The Internet Utters Its First Words".
@NirvanaRox4Eva i think that's just a basic cord with the two clicky thingies on it, if you ask for a socket-to-socket connection cable at the store they should know what you mean.
How the fuck could someone want to throw this away?! so glad this guy managed to save it, would have been such a shame if it had been destroyed.
God Bless America.
"That's where it all began"!
Gracias por compartir.
Crazy how a modern 1U rack-mounted router can outperform this thing by 10,000 times.
last week, an internet was sent by my staff...I got it yesterday!
I need help quickly. What is the cable that goes from the phone socket to the router that gives it internet access? I havent got a clue what they care called, and therefore cannot find a new one :S Help please :)
lol, great machine. i wouldn't suspect that 40 years ago network has speed of todays (or, more precisely: yesterdays) dial-up modems :O
is it still working :?
hey! have idea. Can i make to Arduino lisen me router sound ?? recover the waves
Router ancestor
This guy doesn't know what he's talking about. The first internet router was Al Gore.
too bad the other end was at stanfurd. wouldve been cool if it was between LA and Cal.
There are two dislike votes. I want to pummel the two people who didn't like this video. This is history!
Guao , que interesante
Yeah. Progression at its finest.
parece una nevera el router xD
Is it possible subtittles in spanish?
+Alberto Espinoza Si! tienes que ir al asterisco de configuraciones, seleccionar subtitulos y luego traducir automaticamente, ahi buscas español y listo! ;)
Muchas Gracias, muy buen aporte.
Woow, es normal que me den ganas de llorar de la emoción al verlo o solo es que soy sentimentalista?
why the fuck would they throw it away??
@truthsquaw
No it wasn't. The 5 main people responsible for inventing the internet were all Americans.
lmao no it wasn't, it was Donald davies who coined term packet switching and he is from UK
in the end we are human hahaha
@@raghunotreghu Donald Davies "coined the term" . That's not the same as inventing. Paul Baran, an American, was the first person to come up with the concept/design of packet switching.
wena :)
Send this to the Smithsonian, please.
ALL HAIL GOD
Internet != World Wide Web.
boring
just kidding!Its great!!!