Sunday, August 21, 2016

History of the Internet



Introduction
The Internet has revolutionized the computer and communications world like nothing before. The invention of the telegraph, telephone, radio, and computer set the stage for this unprecedented integration of capabilities. The Internet is at once a world-wide broadcasting capability, a mechanism for information dissemination, and a medium for collaboration and interaction between individuals and their computers without regard for geographic location. The Internet represents one of the most successful examples of the benefits of sustained investment and commitment to research and development of information infrastructure. Beginning with the early research in packet switching, the government, industry and academia have been partners in evolving and deploying this exciting new technology. Today, terms like "bleiner@computer.org" and "http://www.acm.org" trip lightly off the tongue of the random person on the street.
This is intended to be a brief, necessarily cursory and incomplete history. Much material currently exists about the Internet, covering history, technology, and usage. A trip to almost any bookstore will find shelves of material written about the Internet.
In this paper, 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 infrastructure along several dimensions, such as scale, performance, and higher-level functionality. There is the operations and management aspect of a global and complex operational infrastructure. There is the social aspect, which resulted in a broad community of Internauts working together to create and evolve the technology. And there is the commercialization aspect, resulting in an extremely effective transition of research results into a broadly deployed and available information infrastructure.
The Internet today is a widespread information infrastructure, the initial prototype of what is often called the National (or Global or Galactic) Information Infrastructure. Its history is complex and involves many aspects - technological, organizational, and community. And its influence reaches not only to the technical fields of computer communications but throughout society as we move toward increasing use of online tools to accomplish electronic commerce, information acquisition, and community operations.

Origins of the Internet
The first recorded description of the social interactions that could be enabled through networking was a series of memos written by J.C.R. Licklider of MIT in August 1962 discussing his "Galactic Network" concept. He envisioned a globally interconnected set of computers through which everyone could quickly access data and programs from any site. In spirit, the concept was very much like the Internet of today. Licklider was the first head of the computer research program at DARPA,4 starting in October 1962. While at DARPA he convinced his successors at DARPA, Ivan Sutherland, Bob Taylor, and MIT researcher Lawrence G. Roberts, of the importance of this networking concept.
Leonard Kleinrock at MIT published the first paper on packet switching theory in July 1961 and the first book on the subject in 1964. Kleinrock convinced Roberts of the theoretical feasibility of communications using packets rather than circuits, which was a major step along the path towards computer networking. The other key step was to make the computers talk together. To explore this, in 1965 working with Thomas Merrill, Roberts connected the TX-2 computer in Mass. to the Q-32 in California with a low speed dial-up telephone line creating the first (however small) wide-area computer network ever built. The result of this experiment was the realization that the time-shared computers could work well together, running programs and retrieving data as necessary on the remote machine, but that the circuit switched telephone system was totally inadequate for the job. Kleinrock's conviction of the need for packet switching was confirmed.
In late 1966 Roberts went to DARPA to develop the computer network concept and quickly put together his plan for the "ARPANET", publishing it in 1967. At the conference where he presented the paper, there was also a paper on a packet network concept from the UK by Donald Davies and Roger Scantlebury of NPL. Scantlebury told Roberts about the NPL work as well as that of Paul Baran and others at RAND. The RAND group had written a paper on packet switching networks for secure voice in the military in 1964. It happened that the work at MIT (1961-1967), at RAND (1962-1965), and at NPL (1964-1967) had all proceeded in parallel without any of the researchers knowing about the other work. The word "packet" was adopted from the work at NPL and the proposed line speed to be used in the ARPANET design was upgraded from 2.4 kbps to 50 kbps.
In August 1968, after Roberts and the DARPA funded community had refined the overall structure and specifications for the ARPANET, an RFQ was released by DARPA for the development of one of the key components, the packet switches called Interface Message Processors (IMP's). The RFQ was won in December 1968 by a group headed by Frank Heart at Bolt Beranek and Newman (BBN). As the BBN team worked on the IMP's with Bob Kahn playing a major role in the overall ARPANET architectural design, the network topology and economics were designed and optimized by Roberts working with Howard Frank and his team at Network Analysis Corporation, and the network measurement system was prepared by Kleinrock's team at UCLA.
Due to Kleinrock's early development of packet switching theory and his focus on analysis, design and measurement, his Network Measurement Center at UCLA was selected to be the first node on the ARPANET. All this came together in September 1969 when BBN installed the first IMP at UCLA and the first host computer was connected. Doug Engelbart's project on "Augmentation of Human Intellect" (which included NLS, an early hypertext system) at Stanford Research Institute (SRI) provided a second node. SRI supported the Network Information Center, led by Elizabeth (Jake) Feinler and including functions such as maintaining tables of host name to address mapping as well as a directory of the RFC's.
One month later, when SRI was connected to the ARPANET, the first host-to-host message was sent from Kleinrock's laboratory to SRI. Two more nodes were added at UC Santa Barbara and University of Utah. These last two nodes incorporated application visualization projects, with Glen Culler and Burton Fried at UCSB investigating methods for display of mathematical functions using storage displays to deal with the problem of refresh over the net, and Robert Taylor and Ivan Sutherland at Utah investigating methods of 3-D representations over the net. Thus, by the end of 1969, four host computers were connected together into the initial ARPANET, and the budding Internet was off the ground. Even at this early stage, it should be noted that the networking research incorporated both work on the underlying network and work on how to utilize the network. This tradition continues to this day.
Computers were added quickly to the ARPANET during the following years, and work proceeded on completing a functionally complete Host-to-Host protocol and other network software. In December 1970 the Network Working Group (NWG) working under S. Crocker finished the initial ARPANET Host-to-Host protocol, called the Network Control Protocol (NCP). As the ARPANET sites completed implementing NCP during the period 1971-1972, the network users finally could begin to develop applications.
In October 1972, Kahn organized a large, very successful demonstration of the ARPANET at the International Computer Communication Conference (ICCC). This was the first public demonstration of this new network technology to the public. It was also in 1972 that the initial "hot" application, electronic mail, was introduced. In March Ray Tomlinson at BBN wrote the basic email message send and read software, motivated by the need of the ARPANET developers for an easy coordination mechanism. In July, Roberts expanded its utility by writing the first email utility program to list, selectively read, file, forward, and respond to messages. From there email took off as the largest network application for over a decade. This was a harbinger of the kind of activity we see on the World Wide Web today, namely, the enormous growth of all kinds of "people-to-people" traffic.

References:
http://www.internetsociety.org/internet/what-internet/history-internet/brief-history-internet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Internet
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9hIQjrMHTv4

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

IBM Centennial Presentation


International Business Machines Corporation (commonly referred to as IBM) is a multinational technology company headquartered in Armonk, New York, United States, with operations in over 170 countries. The company originated in 1911 as the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company (CTR) and was renamed "International Business Machines" in 1924.

IBM manufactures and markets computer hardware, middle ware and software, and offers hosting and consulting services in areas ranging from mainframe computers to nanotechnology. IBM is also a major research organization, holding the record for most patents generated by a business (as of 2016) for 23 consecutive years.[5] Inventions by IBM include the automated teller machine (ATM), the floppy disk, the hard disk drive, the magnetic stripe card, the relational database, the SQL programming language, the UPC bar code, and dynamic random-access memory (DRAM).


Nicknamed Big Blue, IBM is one of 30 companies included in the Dow Jones Industrial Average and one of the world's largest employers, with (as of 2016) nearly 380,000 employees. Known as "IBMers", IBM employees have been awarded five Nobel Prizes, six Turing Awards, ten National Medals of Technology and five National Medals of Science.

References:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XrhDaAmn5Uw

History of Computers: Brief Summary (American Perspective)





Punch cards, known as Hollerith cards and IBM cards and originally invented by Herman Hollerith, are paper cards containing several punch holes that were punched by hand or machine to represent data that allowed different companies to store and access information by entering the card into the computer. It was the primary method of storing and retrieving data in the early 1990s.


References:
https://www.google.com.ph/search?q=punch+card&safe=strict&espv=2&biw=1440&bih=809&site=webhp&tbm=isch&imgil=N2fNZIHlkPvqHM%253A%253B823TfzvE10nNnM%253Bhttp%25253A%25252F%25252Fwww.computerhistory.org%25252Frevolution%25252Fpunched-cards%25252F2&source=iu&pf=m&fir=N2fNZIHlkPvqHM%253A%252C823TfzvE10nNnM%252C_&usg=__qh594q-ES0GgDC3AjAGG9vkT2vs%3D&ved=0ahUKEwiLy46fqdLOAhWFOJQKHUTmDk0QyjcIQg&ei=aIW5V4v3FYXx0ATEzLvoBA#imgrc=N2fNZIHlkPvqHM%3A
http://www.computerhope.com/jargon/p/punccard.htm
http://whatis.techtarget.com/reference/History-of-the-punch-card

Pirates of Silicon Valley



Pirates of Silicon Valley is a 110-minutes drama film directed and written by Martyn Burke, starring Noah Wyle as Steve Jobs, Anthony Michael Hall as Bill Gates, Joey Slotnick as Steve Wozniak, John DiMaggio as Steve Ballmer, and Josh Hopkins as Paul Allen. The film was originally released on June 20, 1999 and it explores the impact of the rivalry between the two founders of Apple Computer and Microsoft on the development of personal computers.

The film started with the flashback story of Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak in the University of Berkeley during the period of the Opposition of students to the US Government for their involvement in the Vietnam War. Wozniak then commented, as he was one of the narrators of the film, that "Steve Jobs was never like you or me. He always saw things differently." This just implies that Steve Jobs is not contented with what is known and obvious but also keen on making the impossible to possible. The film then turns to the flashback story of Bill Gates when he was still a student at Harvard University together with Steve Ballmer (CEO of Microsoft from 2000-2014 and now the owner of NBA Team Los Angeles Clippers) and high school friend Paul Allen who is co-founder of Microsoft alongside Bill Gates.

In summary, the film tells us the journey and struggles of two persons who contributed a lot to the revolution of computers. From a computer that is as big of three rooms and need a lot of people to operate to computer that is handy and can be carried anywhere you want. The films also tells us the different personality of Bill Gates and Steve Jobs in terms of business tactics and strategies. Steve Jobs is best known for his passion for perfection and demanded everyone to do the same, while Bill Gates have been considered anti-competitive. In sociological or psychological perspective, Steve Jobs is more of a Instrumental Leader who focuses on the completion of the tasks, whereas Bill Gates is a Expressive Leader who focuses on the well-being of others (Sociology, John Macionis). Though Bill Gates has been criticized for his tactics for years, you can say that his strategy could be considered as the best. He's not the World's Wealthiest People since 1995 for nothing.




References:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pirates_of_Silicon_Valley
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Gates
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Jobs
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Ballmer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Allen

History of Computers (BBC Documentary)



The purpose of this blog post is to inform everyone the history of computers in accordance to BBC.

The following are the basic know what's of computers:

1. What was the original use of computers?
Computers are mainly used as tools to calculate various data.

2. What was the first generation electronic computer made of?
Programs written in simple codes, then converted to punch tapes and fed into the machine was originally used by Camp Bridge Machine to speed the actions of scientific calculations.

3. In World War II, what is the electronic digital computer used for?
Colossus, designed by Alan Turing, used to decode letters and broke many top secret messages unlike ENIAC during World War II.

4. What is the contribution of Allan Turing during the World War II?
Alan Turing, British Mathematician who is involved in cracking German’s code during the World War II, designed the Pilot Ace in 1946 and Lorenz, a machine that scrambled letter in a pattern way for communication purposes.

5. What is the name of the first commercial computer in US?
UNIVAC is made of vacuum tubes but too complex as people are required to understand and master Advanced Math and logic just to operate the machine.

6. Which company finally made the first commercial computer in US?
Eckert-Mauchly sold the machine to US Census Bureau to process population data, record keeping and accounting purposes for $350,270 in September 1946.

7. When did IBM enter the computer business and who was the main driver?
International Business Machine was originally keen on keep using the punch cards on tabulating data until 1951 when US Census Bureau, one of their customers, ordered UNIVAC machines. That’s why Thomas Watson Jr. decided to change IBM from inside out as the market clearly changed and enter the computer business and designed scientific computer rather than a commercial computer.

8. In UK, which company has the first computer for commercial use and which company manufactured it?
J. Lyons Company Limited, large scale food manufacturer and distributor, is the first ever company in UK who first ever used computer for commercial use in UK to keep track of their employees and products. But in 1947 there was no available computer to buy in London so J. Lyons decided to build their own computer with the help from a student in Campbridge University named Maurice Wilkes. This machine was named as LEO.

9. What are the social effects of using computers in factory and office automation?
UNIVAC was used to forecast the outcome of election in 1952 which simplified a lot of things.

10. When did Apple design the first personal computer?

11. When the mouse was designed?

12. What is ALTAIR 8800 and when did it appear in the market?

13. What is the contribution of Xerox in the evolution of computer?

14. When did IBM design the first personal computer and why it failed?

15. What was the major problem in the first generation personal computers?

16. What are the main features of Macintosh as compared with other personal computers in 1984?

17. What are the technological advancements, both in hardware and software, from the first generation electronic computers to the era of personal computers?

18. What is program?


19. How disable persons can be benefited from the computer technologies?

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

CNBLUE'S Jung Yong Hwa

CNBlue's Jung Yong Hwa


http://www.soompi.com/2016/06/28/cnblues-jung-yong-hwa-investigation-insider-trading/


Ok, so Insider Trading is illegal. But this is Yonghwa we're talking about. Zero scandals since trainee days (not counting the rumors with Park Shin Hye or Seohyun). Just because he's personally close to the CEO of FNC Entertainment doesn't mean he's been tipped to buy stocks after learning about FNC's plans to sign a major celebrity who is speculated to be Yoo Jae Suk. I mean he has a lot of investments, just because he bought and sold that particular stocks within a week don't mean he's guilty. Possibly, he only heard the news after buying the stocks (which maybe he meant to hold for a long time since he bought it together with his Mom), but, just like any other SANE business-minded or profit-seeking person, you'll sell your stocks if there is a profit to gain. Right? I mean who wouldn't?

I hope Yonghwa's name will be cleared.