Home Site Map Make Your Home Page Suggestions Enquiry Advertise With Us
Thursday, February 09, 2012  
 
 
News Home
Video News
Press Releases
Features
Events
Special Articles
   
  News Updated on Thursday, February 09, 2012 10:04:42 PM
   Find Us on Facebook    Follow Us
» India » Asia » World » Sports » Business » Sci-Tec » Health » Entertainment » Bollywood » Picture Gallery
 
 Science

Internet's 40th anniversary celebrated in US
San Francisco |Friday, 2009 2:05:06 PM IST
 

 

 

The 40th anniversary of the birth of the Internet was celebrated in the US with events being organised at the University of California and the Computer History Museum in Los Angeles to mark the occasion.

Industry leaders, researchers and analysts, among others, attended the function at the California University Thursday, Xinhua reported.

Computer science professor of the university, Leonard Kleinrock, who on Oct 29, 1969 headed a team to send the first message over the ARPANET, which later came to be known as Internet, also attended the event.

"The moment the Internet was born, ushered in a technological revolution that has transformed communications, education, culture, business and entertainment across the globe, leading to dramatic change in our social, political and economic lives," the university said in a statement.

Activities were also planned at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California, to mark the occasion.

"The 1969 connection was not just a symbolic milestone in the project that led to the Internet, it connected computers and eventually billions of people to each other," Marc Weber, founding curator of the museum's Internet History Programme, said in a statement.

"In the 1960s, a few hundred users could have accounts on a single large computer using terminals, and exchange messages and files between them. But each of those little communities was an island, isolated from others," Weber noted.

"By reliably connecting different kinds of computers to each other, the ARPANET took a crucial step toward the online world that links nearly a third of the world's population today," he said.

Four decades after its birth, the Internet is seen by some to have encountered some kind of middle-age crisis. But others argue that it is still in the early stage of innovations.

At a symposium hosted this month by market research firm Gartner, Eric Schmidt, chief executive officer of Internet search giant Google, said he envisions a radically changed Internet five years from now.

In the next five years, the Internet is expected to be dominated by social media content, delivered over super-fast bandwidth in real time, he predicted.

"It's because of this fundamental shift towards user-generated information that people will listen more to other people than to traditional sources. Learning how to rank is the great challenge of the age," Schmidt said.

snb/mj

( 393 Words)

2009-10-30-12:35:38 (IANS)

 
  Viewer's Comment
Comments Not Available
 
 More Stories

EC censures Salman Khurshid over sub-quota remarks 

Rahul Gandhi slams regional parties for betraying people in poll-bound UP 

Mughal Gardens open to public from tomorrow 

YSR Congress Party welcomes house committee to probe into land allotments 

Two Chhattisgarh cops killed in Maoist ambush (Lead) 

Dog kills woman who saves children from attack 

Court reserves order on dropping charges against Salem (Lead) 

Five held with tiger, leopard skins 


Print this Page
Printer Friendly Version
SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

Search Archives :  



Quick Links - Webindia123.com
Services
Health
Hobbies
Entertainment
Classifieds
Career / Education
UK, USA, Canada
Utilities
E-Booking
India Reference
 
 
 
 
 
Personalities
 
 
 
 
IndianStates
Punjab
 
Rajasthan
 
Sikkim
 
  
Tripura
 
 
 
 
Pondicherry

Copyright 2000-2012 Suni Systems (P) Ltd.
All rights reserved