Read the Internet Society's roadmap for our work ahead - and let's join together to support our vision that the Internet is for everyone. 2019 Impact Report In the first-ever Internet Society Impact Report, we present some of our important work in 2019.

History: The First Internet - NSFNet In the 1960s and 1970s, there was a great deal of research done to build the first wide-area packet switched networks for the US Department of Defense. In the 1980s, the first "Internet" was formed to allow academic researchers to access supercomputer resources. Checking the Internet history of the other computers on your network can keep your family members or business associates on the straight and narrow, enabling you to see who has been visiting potentially untrustworthy or dangerous sites. The first iteration of the Internet available for commercial use was dial-up. Dial-up Internet required a phone-line to operate, so phone calls couldn't be made using a landline while the Internet was in use. Speed was a significant issue in the early days. By 1998, the best connection users could hope for was 56Kbps. Internet Explorer allows you to view the most recent Web sites you have visited and click on those sites to go back to them. You can tell Internet Explorer how long you want those Web sites saved and you can also delete them. Deleting your browsing history is the best way to keep your Internet travels a secret if you are sharing a computer. Read the Internet Society's roadmap for our work ahead - and let's join together to support our vision that the Internet is for everyone. 2019 Impact Report In the first-ever Internet Society Impact Report, we present some of our important work in 2019. However, collecting data such as someone's browsing history is a violation of their privacy. You should avoid accessing other people's private browsing history and confine this method to legitimate uses such as monitoring your child's internet usage, or your own.

In this paper, 3 several of us involved in the development and evolution of the Internet share our views of its origins and history. This history revolves around four distinct aspects. There is the technological evolution that began with early research on packet switching and the ARPANET (and related technologies), and where current research continues to expand the horizons of the

Al Gore didn't invent the Internet. Vinton Cerf & Bob Kahn are often called Fathers of the Internet. Our timeline of Internet history runs from ARPANET to World Wide Web and Facebook. AOL ended support for the Netscape Internet browser on March 1, 2008. 2008: On December 11, 2008, Google released the Chrome browser. 2009: A person under the fake name of Satoshi Nakamoto introduced the Internet currency Bitcoin on January 3, 2009. 2014: The HTML5 programming language was recommended and released to the public on October 28 [2019] Welcome to The Internet History Sourcebooks Project, a collection of public domain and copy-permitted historical texts presented cleanly (without advertising or excessive layout) for educational use.Primary sources are available here primarily for use in high-school and university/college courses. From the outset the site took a very broad view of the sources that should be available to

As next generation Internet development continues to push the boundaries of what's possible, the existing Internet is also being enhanced to provide higher transmission speeds, increased security and different levels of service. For more information on the history of the Internet, see the links below: How the Internet was Born

Checking the Internet history of the other computers on your network can keep your family members or business associates on the straight and narrow, enabling you to see who has been visiting potentially untrustworthy or dangerous sites. The first iteration of the Internet available for commercial use was dial-up. Dial-up Internet required a phone-line to operate, so phone calls couldn't be made using a landline while the Internet was in use. Speed was a significant issue in the early days. By 1998, the best connection users could hope for was 56Kbps. Internet Explorer allows you to view the most recent Web sites you have visited and click on those sites to go back to them. You can tell Internet Explorer how long you want those Web sites saved and you can also delete them. Deleting your browsing history is the best way to keep your Internet travels a secret if you are sharing a computer. Read the Internet Society's roadmap for our work ahead - and let's join together to support our vision that the Internet is for everyone. 2019 Impact Report In the first-ever Internet Society Impact Report, we present some of our important work in 2019. However, collecting data such as someone's browsing history is a violation of their privacy. You should avoid accessing other people's private browsing history and confine this method to legitimate uses such as monitoring your child's internet usage, or your own.