About IOTAShow TimesContact Us IOTA Homepage

Our season so far
Browse by subject
Search the site
IOTA Home

relatedlinks.jpg (7167 bytes)interview.jpg (6444 bytes)

Pure InternetMore shows in this subject heading:

History of the Internet


Aired February 14 and 15, 1998

Listen to the show.
You must have RealAudio installed to listen to the show. Download RealAudio here.

This is Internet On The Air, I'm Todd Mundt. Watch history in the making...details in a moment.

Funding Credit: Internet On The Air is a production of the University of Michigan School of Information and Michigan radio, made possible by a grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.

In the novel by Washington Irving, Rip Van Winkle wakes up from a 20-year nap to find a world he hardly recognizes. Had early developers of the Internet taken a similar nap, they would be just as astonished to awake to what has transpired in the two decades since the birth of the medium.

Paul Edwards is a professor at Stanford University who studies the history of computers. He compares the growth of the Internet to that of other networks like railroads and telephones. At an early stage, competing technologies give way to common standards. In the case of the Internet, standardization occurred in network protocols, which allow computers to talk to each other. Twenty years ago, companies like I-B-M and Digital offered competing protocols...but free software, often developed by graduate students, led to a common standard now in use around the world.

Technologies are often used in ways their creators never envisioned. But Professor Edwards says the speed at which the Internet has evolved is unusual. He points out that the growth of many of its most popular applications, like e-mail, news groups and browsers, was not envisioned by the creators of the Internet. But once they appeared, they spread rapidly.

The flexibility of software helps explain the rapid rate of change now seen on the Internet. But none of this would have been possible without the acceptance of a common standard for communication.

To learn more about the history of the Internet,...and to hear remarks by Paul Edwards...visit our Web site at www.iota.org. For Internet On The Air, I'm Todd Mundt.


Top of Page

Related Links


For further information, try these Web sites:

Visit Paul Edwards home page to learn more about his work and read some of his articles.

For brief Internet histories and timelines try:

Web sites built from discussion lists can be good places to find more indepth material on the history and evolution of the Internet:

  • For articles on the history of the Internet written by the people who created it, visit the The Internet Society. The site provides a general overview as well as articles on technical and political issues involved in the creation of the web.
  • Read documents and newsletters from the early days of the Internet at NetHistory site. The site serves as an archive of Internet related articles and documents, focusing on the technological history of the Internet.
  • Computer Memory is a discussion list on the history of cyberspace, sponsored by Computer Professionals for Social Responsiblity. Archived postings and instructions on subscribing are available on its Web page.
  • Phil Agre, a Communications Professor at the University of California San Diego, regularly provides insightful view on the Internet history and issues. His postings are available through the #B0001A Rock Eater News Service. To subscribe, send an e-mail to rre-request@weber.ucsd.edu. The subject line should read: "subscribe firstname lastname", for example "Subject: subscribe Jane Doe"
  • Some of Agre's previous work is available on the The Network Observer (TNO) site. TNO was a free on-line newsletter about networks and democracy published monthly from published monthly from January 1994 to July 1996.

Top of Page

The Interview


Use the RealAudio Player to listen in as IOTA talks with Paul Edwards.

This IOTA interview took place in December 1997.

Q. How do you define yourself as a historian?

Q. Why was ARPAnet, the predecessor to the Internet, built?

Q. How did e-mail develop and what influence did it have on the network?

Q. What is the story behind the development of the Internet's standard communication language, TCP/IP protocol?

Q. Why did the TCP/IP protocol win out on the Internet?

Q. What can we learn about the Internet by looking at the evolution of other communications media?

Q. Is the convergence of media on the Web a new network phenomenom?

Q. What comparisons can you draw between the Internet and other communications networks in terms of their social influence?

Q. What were some of the important developments that preceded the Web and allowed it to expand as quickly as it did?



Please direct questions or comments to iota.webmaster@umich.edu.

Last Updated September 21, 1998