Bazsites.com Arpanet
Directory Topics
On the Web
- ArpaNet Map - Part of An Atlas of Cyberspaces - An atlas of maps and graphic representations of the geographies of ArpaNet.
- Arpanet - Servicios de diseño gráfico, programación a medida, redes y reparación de equipos y periféricos para empresas.
- ArpaNet Maps - Scanned maps of the network for twelve distinct periods from December 1969 to March 1977.
- Arpanet (ARPA) - L'association de recherche paléoécologique en archéologie présente ses qualifications et la base de données des sites qu'elle a étudiés.
- RFC 0802 - ARPANET 1822L Host Access Protocol. A.G. Malis. November 1981.
- RFC 0518 - ARPANet Accounts. N. Vaughan, E.J. Feinler. June 1973.
- RFC 0508 - Real-Time Data Transmission on the ARPANet. L. Pfeifer, J. McAfee. May 1973.
- RFC 0584 - Charter for ARPANET Users Interest Working Group. J. Iseli, D. Crocker, N. Neigus. November 1973.
- RFC 0511 - Enterprise Phone Service to NIC From ARPANET Sites. J.B. North. May 1973.
- RFC 0585 - ARPANET Users Interest Working Group Meeting. D. Crocker, N. Neigus, E.J. Feinler, et al. November 1973.
Wikipedia Articles
- Arpanet (band) - Arpanet is one of the pseudonyms of Detroit Techno producer Gerald Donald. It was named after ARPANET, one of the precursors to the internet.
- Arpanet (producer) - Arpanet is an electronic musician/laboratory technician, Gerald Donald. Initially a suspected duo between Drexciya-frontmen James Stinson and Gerald Donald, since Stinsons death in 2002, Arpanet is now firmly established as Gerald Donald alone.
- ARPANET - The ARPANET, developed by DARPA of the United States Department of Defense, was the world's first operational packet switching network, and the predecessor of the global Internet.
- Geoff Goodfellow - Geoff Goodfellow is an arpanet wireless email visionary. He came up with the idea in 1982 and published it in an article titled "Electronic Mail for People on the Move" in Telecom Digest, a widely read arpanet mailing list.
- Network Control Program - The ARPANET Network Control Program (NCP) provided the middle layers of the protocol stack running on an ARPANET host computer. (Sometimes the abbreviation NCP is mistakenly expanded to Network Control Protocol, but this term is not found in the contemporary documentation.