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- Subject: n-1-4-003.01
-
- Internet: The Living Network*
- by Anthony-M. Rutkowski <amr@isoc.org>
-
-
- This issue marks the end of volume one, the conclusion of
- the Internet Society's first year, and a period of remarkable
- evolution in the life of the Internet.
-
- The agglomeration called the Internet has clearly become much
- more than just a networking technology. It is a means for
- individuals and organizations of all kinds to individually
- or collectively share information, think, act, and respond
- to external environments. In many respects, it has become a
- kind of collective human organism that continues to grow and
- evolve at an unparalleled rate.
-
- This great level of individual and organizational involvement
- and committment from the bottom-up in the internetworking
- technologies and their use spills over in the standards making,
- in the development of new applications, in the creation and
- operation of high performance, low cost networks. It also
- spills over in the activities of the Internet Society.
-
- Internet Society News was created to be more than just a
- chronicle of Internet developments, but rather a means to
- help understand all that the Internet is and represents.
- We have been most fortunate to have so many people around the world
- who are willing every few weeks to take "verbal snapshots" of
- their part of the Internet and share them with our readership.
- I thank all of them for their contributions.
-
- The coming year holds even more promise; and ISOC News intends
- itself to evolve its coverage, perspectives, form and distribution.
- By the middle of next year, every computer
- operating system including the PC mass market will have TCP/IP
- provided as the ubiquitous open systems glue. The USA's National
- Science Foundation which had been providing the largest national
- Internet backbone just announced a transition to private-sector
- provisioning. Prominent national and regional figures and bodies
- worldwide have focussed on the Internet environment as critical
- national infrastructure. We have begun to see Internet video and
- audio multicasts. The present growth curve of Internet hosts
- intersects with the human population curve in the year 2001.
- A significant fraction of that population is already now using
- and evolving the Internet organism.
-
- Clearly 1993 should be challenging and exciting!
-
- *From a forthcoming book by the same name.
-