home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- Subject: Short History of the Internet by Bruce Sterling
-
-
- bruces@well.sf.ca.us
-
- Literary Freeware -- Not for Commercial Use
-
- From THE MAGAZINE OF FANTASY AND SCIENCE FICTION, February 1993.
- F&SF, Box 56, Cornwall CT 06753 $26/yr USA $31/yr other
-
-
- F&SF Science Column #5
- "Internet"
-
- Some thirty years ago, the RAND Corporation, America's
- foremost Cold War think-tank, faced a strange strategic problem. How
- could the US authorities successfully communicate after a nuclear
- war?
- Postnuclear America would need a command-and-control
- network, linked from city to city, state to state, base to base. But
- no matter how thoroughly that network was armored or protected, its
- switches and wiring would always be vulnerable to the impact of
- atomic bombs. A nuclear attack would reduce any
- conceivable network to tatters.
- And how would the network itself be commanded and
- controlled? Any central authority, any network central citadel,
- would be an obvious and immediate target for an enemy missile. The
- center of the network would be the very first place to go.
- RAND mulled over this grim puzzle in deep military secrecy,
- and arrived at a daring solution. The RAND proposal (the brainchild
- of RAND staffer Paul Baran) was made public in 1964. In the first
- place, the network would *have no central authority.* Furthermore,
- it would be *designed from the beginning to operate while
- in tatters.*
- The principles were simple. The network itself would be
- assumed to be unreliable at all times. It would be designed from the
- get-go to transcend its own unreliability. All the nodes in the
- network would be equal in status to all other nodes, each node with its own
- authority to originate, pass, and receive messages. The
- messages themselves would be divided into packets, each packet
- separately addressed. Each packet would begin at some specified
- source node, and end at some other specified destination node. Each
- packet would wind its way through the network on an individual
- basis.
- The particular route that the packet took would be unimportant.
- Only final results would count. Basically, the packet would be
- tossed like a hot potato from node to node to node, more or less in the
- direction of its destination, until it ended up in the proper place.
- If big pieces of the network had been blown away, that simply
- wouldn't matter; the packets would still stay airborne, lateralled
- wildly across the field by whatever nodes happened to survive. This
- rather haphazard delivery system might be "inefficient" in the usual
- sense (especially compared to, say, the telephone system) -- but it
- would be extremely rugged.
- During the 60s, this intriguing concept of a decentralized,
- blastproof, packet-switching network was kicked around by RAND,
- MIT and UCLA. The National Physical Laboratory in Great Britain set
- up the first test network on these principles in 1968. Shortly
- afterward, the Pentagon's Advanced Research Projects Agency decided
- to fund a larger, more ambitious project in the USA. The nodes of the
- network were to be high-speed supercomputers (or what passed for
- supercomputers at the time). These were rare and valuable machines
- which were in real need of good solid networking, for the sake of
- national research-and-development projects.
- In fall 1969, the first such node was installed in UCLA. By
- December 1969, there were four nodes on the infant network, which
- was named ARPANET, after its Pentagon sponsor. The four computers could
- transfer data on dedicated high-speed transmission lines. They could
- even be programmed remotely from the other nodes. Thanks to ARPANET,
- scientists and researchers could share one another's computer facilities
- by long-distance. This was a very handy service, for computer-time was
- precious in the early '70s. In 1971 there were fifteen nodes in ARPANET;
- by 1972, thirty-seven nodes. And it was good.
- By the second year of operation, however, an odd fact became
- clear. ARPANET's users had warped the computer-sharing network
- into a dedicated, high-speed, federally subsidized electronic post-
- office. The main traffic on ARPANET was not long-distance computing.
- Instead, it was news and personal messages. Researchers were using
- ARPANET to collaborate on projects, to trade notes on work,
- and eventually, to downright gossip and schmooze. People had their
- own personal user accounts on the ARPANET computers, and their
- own personal addresses for electronic mail. Not only were they using
- ARPANET for person-to-person communication, but they were very
- enthusiastic about this particular service -- far more enthusiastic
- than they were about long-distance computation.
- It wasn't long before the invention of the mailing-list, an
- ARPANET broadcasting technique in which an identical message could
- be sent automatically to large numbers of network subscribers.
- Interestingly, one of the first really big mailing-lists was "SF-
- LOVERS," for science fiction fans. Discussing science fiction on
- the network was not work-related and was frowned upon by many
- ARPANET computer administrators, but this didn't stop it from
- happening.
- Throughout the '70s, ARPA's network grew. Its decentralized
- structure made expansion easy. Unlike standard corporate computer
- networks, the ARPA network could accommodate many different
- kinds of machine. As long as individual machines could speak the
- packet-switching lingua franca of the new, anarchic network, their
- brand-names, and their content, and even their ownership, were
- irrelevant.
- The ARPA's original standard for communication was known as
- NCP, "Network Control Protocol," but as time passed and the technique
- advanced, NCP was superceded by a higher-level, more sophisticated
- standard known as TCP/IP. TCP, or "Transmission Control Protocol,"
- converts messages into streams of packets at the source, then
- reassembles them back into messages at the destination. IP, or
- "Internet Protocol," handles the addressing, seeing to it that packets
- are routed across multiple nodes and even across multiple networks
- with multiple standards -- not only ARPA's pioneering NCP standard,
- but others like Ethernet, FDDI, and X.25.
- As early as 1977, TCP/IP was being used by other networks to
- link to ARPANET. ARPANET itself remained fairly tightly controlled,
- at least until 1983, when its military segment broke off and became
- MILNET. But TCP/IP linked them all. And ARPANET itself, though it
- was growing, became a smaller and smaller neighborhood amid the
- vastly growing galaxy of other linked machines.
- As the '70s and '80s advanced, many very different social
- groups found themselves in possession of powerful computers. It was
- fairly easy to link these computers to the growing network-of-
- networks. As the use of TCP/IP became more common, entire other
- networks fell into the digital embrace of the Internet, and
- messily adhered. Since the software called TCP/IP was public-domain,
- and the basic technology was decentralized and rather anarchic by its
- very nature, it was difficult to stop people from barging in and
- linking up somewhere-or-other. In point of fact, nobody *wanted* to
- stop them from joining this branching complex of networks, which
- came to be known as the "Internet."
- Connecting to the Internet cost the taxpayer little or nothing,
- since each node was independent, and had to handle its own financing
- and its own technical requirements. The more, the merrier. Like the
- phone network, the computer network became steadily more valuable
- as it embraced larger and larger territories of people and resources.
- A fax machine is only valuable if *everybody else* has a fax
- machine. Until they do, a fax machine is just a curiosity. ARPANET,
- too, was a curiosity for a while. Then computer-networking became
- an utter necessity.
- In 1984 the National Science Foundation got into the act,
- through its Office of Advanced Scientific Computing. The new NSFNET
- set a blistering pace for technical advancement, linking newer,
- faster, shinier supercomputers, through thicker, faster links, upgraded and
- expanded, again and again, in 1986, 1988, 1990. And other
- government agencies leapt in: NASA, the National Institutes of
- Health, the Department of Energy, each of them maintaining a digital satrapy
- in the Internet confederation.
- The nodes in this growing network-of-networks were divvied
- up into basic varieties. Foreign computers, and a few American ones,
- chose to be denoted by their geographical locations. The others were
- grouped by the six basic Internet "domains": gov, mil, edu, com, org
- and net. (Graceless abbreviations such as this are a standard
- feature of the TCP/IP protocols.) Gov, Mil, and Edu denoted
- governmental, military and educational institutions, which were, of
- course, the pioneers, since ARPANET had begun as a high-tech
- research exercise in national security. Com, however, stood
- for "commercial" institutions, which were soon bursting into the
- network like rodeo bulls, surrounded by a dust-cloud of eager
- nonprofit "orgs." (The "net" computers served as gateways between
- networks.)
- ARPANET itself formally expired in 1989, a happy victim of its
- own overwhelming success. Its users scarcely noticed, for ARPANET's
- functions not only continued but steadily improved. The use of
- TCP/IP standards for computer networking is now global. In 1971, a
- mere twenty-one years ago, there were only four nodes in the
- ARPANET network. Today there are tens of thousands of nodes in
- the Internet, scattered over forty-two countries, with more coming
- on-line every day. Three million, possibly four million people use
- this gigantic mother-of-all-computer-networks.
- The Internet is especially popular among scientists, and is
- probably the most important scientific instrument of the late
- twentieth century. The powerful, sophisticated access that it
- provides to specialized data and personal communication
- has sped up the pace of scientific research enormously.
- The Internet's pace of growth in the early 1990s is spectacular,
- almost ferocious. It is spreading faster than cellular phones, faster
- than fax machines. Last year the Internet was growing at a rate of
- twenty percent a *month.* The number of "host" machines with direct
- connection to TCP/IP has been doubling every year since
- 1988. The Internet is moving out of its original base in military
- and research institutions, into elementary and high schools, as well as
- into public libraries and the commercial sector.
- Why do people want to be "on the Internet?" One of the main
- reasons is simple freedom. The Internet is a rare example of a
- true, modern, functional anarchy. There is no "Internet Inc." There
- are no official censors, no bosses, no board of directors, no
- stockholders. In principle, any node can speak as a peer to any other
- node, as long as it obeys the rules of the TCP/IP protocols, which are strictly
- technical, not social or political. (There has been some struggle
- over commercial use of the Internet, but that situation is changing as
- businesses supply their own links).
- The Internet is also a bargain. The Internet as a whole, unlike
- the phone system, doesn't charge for long-distance service. And
- unlike most commercial computer networks, it doesn't charge for
- access time, either. In fact the "Internet" itself, which doesn't
- even officially exist as an entity, never "charges" for anything. Each
- group of people accessing the Internet is responsible for their own machine
- and their own section of line.
- The Internet's "anarchy" may seem strange or even unnatural,
- but it makes a certain deep and basic sense. It's rather like the
- "anarchy" of the English language. Nobody rents English, and nobody
- owns English. As an English-speaking person, it's up to you to
- learn how to speak English properly and make whatever use you please
- of it (though the government provides certain subsidies to help you
- learn to read and write a bit). Otherwise, everybody just sort of
- pitches in, and somehow the thing evolves on its own, and somehow
- turns out workable. And interesting. Fascinating, even. Though a
- lot of people earn their living from using and exploiting and teaching
- English, "English" as an institution is public property, a public
- good. Much the same goes for the Internet. Would English be improved if
- the "The English Language, Inc." had a board of directors and a chief
- executive officer, or a President and a Congress? There'd probably
- be a lot fewer new words in English, and a lot fewer new ideas.
- People on the Internet feel much the same way about their own
- institution. It's an institution that resists institutionalization.
- The Internet belongs to everyone and no one.
- Still, its various interest groups all have a claim. Business
- people want the Internet put on a sounder financial footing.
- Government people want the Internet more fully regulated.
- Academics want it dedicated exclusively to scholarly research.
- Military people want it spy-proof and secure. And so on and so on.
- All these sources of conflict remain in a stumbling balance
- today, and the Internet, so far, remains in a thrivingly anarchical
- condition. Once upon a time, the NSFnet's high-speed, high-capacity
- lines were known as the "Internet Backbone," and their owners could
- rather lord it over the rest of the Internet; but today there are
- "backbones" in Canada, Japan, and Europe, and even privately owned
- commercial Internet backbones specially created for carrying business
- traffic. Today, even privately owned desktop computers can become
- Internet nodes. You can carry one under your arm. Soon, perhaps, on
- your wrist.
- But what does one *do* with the Internet? Four things,
- basically: mail, discussion groups, long-distance computing, and file
- transfers.
- Internet mail is "e-mail," electronic mail, faster by several
- orders of magnitude than the US Mail, which is scornfully known by
- Internet regulars as "snailmail." Internet mail is somewhat like fax.
- It's electronic text. But you don't have to pay for it (at least
- not directly), and it's global in scope. E-mail can also send software
- and certain forms of compressed digital imagery. New forms of mail are in
- the works.
- The discussion groups, or "newsgroups," are a world of their
- own. This world of news, debate and argument is generally known as
- "USENET. " USENET is, in point of fact, quite different from the
- Internet. USENET is rather like an enormous billowing crowd of
- gossipy, news-hungry people, wandering in and through the
- Internet on their way to various private backyard barbecues.
- USENET is not so much a physical network as a set of social
- conventions. In any case, at the moment there are some 2,500
- separate newsgroups on USENET, and their discussions generate about
- 7 million words of typed commentary every single day. Naturally
- there is a vast amount of talk about computers on USENET, but the
- variety of subjects discussed is enormous, and it's growing larger all
- the time. USENET also distributes various free electronic journals
- and publications.
- Both netnews and e-mail are very widely available, even
- outside the high-speed core of the Internet itself. News and e-mail
- are easily available over common phone-lines, from Internet fringe-
- realms like BITnet, UUCP and Fidonet. The last two Internet
- services, long-distance computing and file transfer, require what is known as
- "direct Internet access" -- using TCP/IP.
- Long-distance computing was an original inspiration for
- ARPANET and is still a very useful service, at least for some.
- Programmers can maintain accounts on distant, powerful computers,
- run programs there or write their own. Scientists can make use of
- powerful supercomputers a continent away. Libraries offer their
- electronic card catalogs for free search. Enormous CD-ROM catalogs
- are increasingly available through this service. And there are
- fantastic amounts of free software available.
- File transfers allow Internet users to access remote machines
- and retrieve programs or text. Many Internet computers -- some
- two thousand of them, so far -- allow any person to access them
- anonymously, and to simply copy their public files, free of charge.
- This is no small deal, since entire books can be transferred through
- direct Internet access in a matter of minutes. Today, in 1992, there
- are over a million such public files available to anyone who asks for
- them (and many more millions of files are available to people with
- accounts). Internet file-transfers are becoming a new form of
- publishing, in which the reader simply electronically copies the work
- on demand, in any quantity he or she wants, for free. New Internet
- programs, such as "archie," "gopher," and "WAIS," have been
- developed to catalog and explore these enormous archives of
- material.
- The headless, anarchic, million-limbed Internet is spreading like
- bread-mold. Any computer of sufficient power is a potential spore
- for the Internet, and today such computers sell for less than $2,000
- and are in the hands of people all over the world. ARPA's network,
- designed to assure control of a ravaged society after a nuclear
- holocaust, has been superceded by its mutant child the Internet,
- which is thoroughly out of control, and spreading exponentially
- through the post-Cold War electronic global village. The spread of
- the Internet in the 90s resembles the spread of personal
- computing in the 1970s, though it is even faster and perhaps more
- important. More important, perhaps, because it may give those
- personal computers a means of cheap, easy storage and access that is
- truly planetary in scale.
- The future of the Internet bids fair to be bigger and
- exponentially faster. Commercialization of the Internet is a very hot
- topic today, with every manner of wild new commercial information-
- service promised. The federal government, pleased with an unsought
- success, is also still very much in the act. NREN, the National
- Research and Education Network, was approved by the US Congress in fall
- 1991, as a five-year, $2 billion project to upgrade the Internet
- "backbone." NREN will be some fifty times faster than the fastest
- network available today, allowing the electronic transfer of the
- entire Encyclopedia Britannica in one hot second. Computer networks
- worldwide will feature 3-D animated graphics, radio and cellular
- phone-links to portable computers, as well as fax, voice, and high-
- definition television. A multimedia global circus!
- Or so it's hoped -- and planned. The real Internet of the
- future may bear very little resemblance to today's plans. Planning
- has never seemed to have much to do with the seething, fungal
- development of the Internet. After all, today's Internet bears
- little resemblance to those original grim plans for RAND's post-
- holocaust command grid. It's a fine and happy irony.
- How does one get access to the Internet? Well -- if you don't
- have a computer and a modem, get one. Your computer can act as a
- terminal, and you can use an ordinary telephone line to connect to an
- Internet-linked machine. These slower and simpler adjuncts to the
- Internet can provide you with the netnews discussion groups and
- your own e-mail address. These are services worth having -- though
- if you only have mail and news, you're not actually "on the Internet"
- proper.
- If you're on a campus, your university may have direct
- "dedicated access" to high-speed Internet TCP/IP lines. Apply for an
- Internet account on a dedicated campus machine, and you may be
- able to get those hot-dog long-distance computing and file-transfer
- functions. Some cities, such as Cleveland, supply "freenet"
- community access. Businesses increasingly have Internet access, and
- are willing to sell it to subscribers. The standard fee is about $40
- a month -- about the same as TV cable service.
- As the Nineties proceed, finding a link to the Internet will
- become much cheaper and easier. Its ease of use will also improve,
- which is fine news, for the savage UNIX interface of TCP/IP leaves
- plenty of room for advancements in user-friendliness. Learning the
- Internet now, or at least learning about it, is wise. By the
- turn of the century, "network literacy," like "computer literacy"
- before it, will be forcing itself into the very texture of your
- life.
-
- For Further Reading:
-
- The Whole Internet Catalog & User's Guide by Ed Krol. (1992)
- O'Reilly and Associates, Inc. A clear, non-jargonized introduction
- to the intimidating business of network literacy. Many computer-
- documentation manuals attempt to be funny. Mr. Krol's book is
- *actually* funny.
-
- The Matrix: Computer Networks and Conferencing Systems Worldwide.
- by John Quarterman. Digital Press: Bedford, MA. (1990) Massive and
- highly technical compendium detailing the mind-boggling scope and
- complexity of our newly networked planet.
-
- The Internet Companion by Tracy LaQuey with Jeanne C. Ryer (1992)
- Addison Wesley. Evangelical etiquette guide to the Internet
- featuring anecdotal tales of life-changing Internet experiences. Foreword
- by Senator Al Gore.
-
- Zen and the Art of the Internet: A Beginner's Guide by Brendan P.
- Kehoe (1992) Prentice Hall. Brief but useful Internet guide with
- plenty of good advice on useful machines to paw over for data. Mr
- Kehoe's guide bears the singularly wonderful distinction of being
- available in electronic form free of charge. I'm doing the same
- with all my F&SF Science articles, including, of course, this one.
- My own Internet address is bruces@well.sf.ca.us.
-
- .
-