Great History Of Telecommunication And How Is Effective Today


Before the advent of computer networks that were based upon some type  of  telecommunications  system,  communication  between  calculation  machines  and  early  computers  was  performed  by  human  users  by  carrying instructions between them. Many of the social behaviors seen  in today's Internet were demonstrably present in the nineteenth century  and arguably in even earlier networks using visual signals.

In  September  1940,  George  Stibitz  used  a  teletype  machine  to  send  instructions for a problem set from his Model at Dartmouth College to  his Complex Number Calculator in New York and received results back  by  the same means. Linking output systems like teletypes to computers  was  an  interest  at  the  Advanced  Research  Projects  Agency  (ARPA)  when,  in  1962,  J.C.R.  Licklider  was  hired  and  developed  a  working  group  he  called  the  "Intergalactic  Network",  a  precursor  to  the
ARPANET. In  1964,  researchers  at  Dartmouth  developed  the  Dartmouth  Time  Sharing  System  for  distributed  users  of  large  computer  systems.  The  same  year,  at  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology,  a  research  group supported by General Electric and Bell  Labs  used a computer to route
and manage telephone connections. Throughout  the  1960s,  Leonard  Kleinrock,  Paul  Baran  and  Donald
Davies  independently  conceptualised  and  developed  network  systems  which used packets that could be used in a network between computer systems.  In  1965,  Thomas Merrill and Lawrence G. Roberts created the first wide area network (WAN). The first widely used telephone switch that used true computer control
was introduced by Western Electric in 1965.  In 1969,  the University of  California at Los Angeles, the Stanford Research Institute, University of  California at Santa Barbara, and the University of Utah were connected  as  the  beginning  of  the  ARPANET  network  using  50  kbit/s  circuits.Commercial services using X.25 were deployed in 1972, and later used as an underlying infrastructure for expanding TCP/IP networks. Today, computer networks are the core of modern communication. All modern aspects of the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) are computer-controlled,  and  telephony  increasingly  runs  over  the  Internet  Protocol,  although  not  necessarily  the  public  Internet.  The  scope  of
communication has increased significantly in the past decade, and this boom  in  communications  would  not  have  been  possible  without  the  progressively advancing computer network. Computer  networks  and the
technologies needed to connect and communicate through and between them,  continue  to  drive  computer  hardware,  software,  and  peripherals industries.  This  expansion  is  mirrored  by  growth  in  the  numbers  and  types of users of networks from the researcher to the home user.

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