Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | PROKSCH J. K. |
Pages | 20 |
Loc. in Archive | đ·ïž /unreadăâ No DOI foundăâ No INSPIRE recid found |
Extra | đ·ïž /unreadăâ No INSPIRE recid foundăâ No DOI found Citation Key: j.k.ZurParacelsusForschungAntwort |
Library Catalog | Zotero |
Language | en |
Item Type | Book |
---|---|
Author | Lars Behrisch |
Author | Martin Aust |
Author | David Bitterling |
Author | Matthias Buschmeier |
Author | Christian Fieseler |
Author | Niels GrĂŒne |
Author | Achim Landwehr |
Author | Christine Lebeau |
Author | Anton Tantner |
Edition | 1 |
Place | Frankfurt am Main ; New York |
Publisher | Campus Verlag |
ISBN | 978-3-593-37995-1 |
Date | 2006 |
Loc. in Archive | đ·ïž /unreadăâ No INSPIRE recid foundăNUEVO! |
Extra | đ·ïž /unreadăâ No INSPIRE recid foundăNUEVO! Citation Key: Behrisch2006 |
Library Catalog | Amazon |
Language | en |
Abstract | MaĂe und Zahlen wurden im 18. Jahrhundert zu zentralen Kategorien der Wirklichkeit: FĂŒrsten, Beamte und Gelehrte erfassten FlĂ€chen und Territorien in Zahlen, begriffen aber auch wirtschaftliche Ressourcen und die Bevölkerung immer mehr als berechenbare Einheiten. Dies fĂŒhrte zu einer neuen Wahrnehmung des politischen Raums. Die Autoren des Bandes untersuchen diese Entwicklung im europĂ€ischen Vergleich und liefern damit einen Beitrag zur Kulturgeschichte von Herrschaft und Verwaltung. |
Short Title | Vermessen, ZĂ€hlen, Berechnen |
Item Type | Book |
---|---|
Contributor | Collectif |
Place | France |
Publisher | Albin Michel |
ISBN | 978-2-226-23314-1 |
Date | 1993 |
Loc. in Archive | đ·ïž /unreadăâ No INSPIRE recid foundăNUEVO! |
Extra | đ·ïž /unreadăâ No INSPIRE recid foundăNUEVO! Citation Key: collectif1993 |
Library Catalog | Open WorldCat |
Language | en |
Abstract | MĂ©decin, philosophe, successeur de Gaston Bachelard Ă la tĂȘte de l'Institut d'histoire des sciences et techniques de l'universitĂ© de Paris, Georges Canguilhem est l'un des fondateurs de la tradition Ă©pistĂ©mologique française. Penseur Ă la postĂ©ritĂ© dĂ©jĂ nombreuse, il a tirĂ© de ses Ă©tudes mĂ©dicales la matiĂšre d'une interrogation profonde sur les sciences du vivant qui s'avĂšre d'une extraordinaire actualitĂ©.Ce livre, fruit d'un colloque international, s'emploie pour la premiĂšre fois Ă dĂ©ployer dans toutes ses dimensions, scientifique, philosophique, Ă©thique et politique, la complexitĂ© de l'oeuvre de Canguilhem |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | William G. , III Thomas |
URL | http://digitalhistory.unl.edu/essays/thomasessay.php |
Rights | Journal article; publicly-accessible-online |
Volume | Essays |
Publication | Digital History Project |
Date | 2007-12 |
Extra | đ·ïž /unreadăâ No DOI foundăElectronic publishingăâ No INSPIRE recid foundăNUEVO!ăInternet & Web HistoryăJournal articleăScholarly periodicals Citation Key: thomas2007a |
Accessed | 2021-05-19 |
Language | en |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Niels BrĂŒgger |
URL | https://www.jstor.org/stable/41756477 |
Rights | Journal article; paywall; JSTOR |
Volume | 37 |
Issue | 4 (142) |
Pages | 102-117 |
Publication | Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung |
ISSN | 0172-6404 |
Date | 2012 |
Call Number | 3 |
Extra | JSTOR ID: 41756477 Citation Key: brugger2012 |
Library Catalog | 0.9 (Q1) |
Language | en |
Abstract | Taking as point of departure that since the mid-1990s the web has been an essential medium within society as well as in academia this article addresses some fundamental questions related to web historiography, that is the writing of the history of the web. After a brief identification of some limitations within digital history and internet studies vis-a-vis web historiography it is argued that the web is in itself an important historical source, and that special attention must be drawn to the web in web archives - termed reborn-digital material - since these sources will probably be the only web left for future historians. In line with this argument the remainder of the article discusses the following methodological issues: What characterizes the reborn-digital material in web archives, and how does this affect the historian's use of the material as well as the possible application of digital analytical tools on this kind of material? |
Short Title | When the Present Web is Later the Past |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Nick Ruest |
Author | Samantha Fritz |
Author | Ryan Deschamps |
Author | Jimmy Lin |
Author | Ian Milligan |
Author | Michael K. Bergman |
URL | http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.3336451.0007.104 |
Rights | Journal article; open-access; |
Volume | 7 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | Online/web version |
Publication | The Journal of Electronic Publishing |
ISSN | 1080-2711 |
Date | 2021/11 |
Loc. in Archive | 529 đ |
Extra | đ·ïž /unreadăNUEVO! Citation Key: bergman2019 |
Journal Abbr | Journal of Electronic Publishing |
DOI | 10.3998/3336451.0007.104 |
Library Catalog | Journal of Electronic Publishing |
Language | en |
Abstract | Searching on the Internet today can be compared to dragging a net across the surfgace of the ocean. While a great deal may be caught in the net, there is still a wealth of information that is deep, and therefore, missed. The reason is simple. Most of the Web's information is buried far down on dynamically generated sites, and standard search engines never find it. |
Short Title | White Paper |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Anat Ben-David |
URL | http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1461444816643790 |
Volume | 18 |
Issue | 7 |
Pages | 1103-1119 |
Publication | New Media & Society |
ISSN | 1461-4448 |
Date | 2016/8 |
Call Number | 1 |
Loc. in Archive | 27 đ |
Extra | DOI: Citation Key: ben-david2016 |
Journal Abbr | New Media & Society |
DOI | 10.1177/1461444816643790 |
Accessed | 2022-08-22 00:31:08 |
Library Catalog | 5 (Q1) |
Language | en |
Abstract | This article argues that the use of the Web as a primary source for studying the history of nations is conditioned by the structural ties between sovereignty and the Internet protocol, and by a temporal proximity between live and archived websites. The argument is illustrated by an empirical reconstruction of the history of the top-level domain of Yugoslavia (.yu), which was deleted from the Internet in 2010. The archival discovery method used four lists of historical .yu Uniform Resource Locators (URLs) that were captured from the live Web before the domain was deleted, and an automated hyperlink discovery script that retrieved their snapshots from the Internet Archive and reconstructed their immediate hyperlinked environment in a network. Although a considerable portion of the historical .yu domain was found on the Internet Archive, the reconstructed space was predominantly Serbian. |
Short Title | What does the Web remember of its deleted past? |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | L.G. Roberts |
URL | http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1338402/ |
Rights | Conference paper; paywall; IEEE Explore |
Publisher | Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineering |
Pages | 67- |
Date | 2018/10/2 |
Loc. in Archive | 47 đ |
Extra | DOI: 10.1109/LANMAN.2004.1338402 Citation Key: roberts2004 |
DOI | 10.1109/LANMAN.2004.1338402 |
Library Catalog | IEEE Xplore |
Conference Name | The 13th IEEE Workshop on Local and Metropolitan Area Networks, 2004. LANMAN 2004. |
Language | en |
Abstract | For the last 35 years routers have not changed and they still support only the "best effort" traffic. However, the bandwidth available to people has been increasing rapidly with the advent of broadband and wideband access. The result is that many new services like voice and video are now desired that requires far better QoS than what the "best effort" IP can support. Two new innovations were discussed in this paper. First, flow routing permits IP to support all the ATM QoS features like guaranteed rate and delay with lower cost and higher reliability. Second, the new additions to IPv6 now in the standards track permits users to signal at line rate their requirement for guaranteed rates, get rate feedback for TCP, and add priorities for delay and preemption. These QoS features along with IPv6's virus, spam protecting security, and full terminal mobility makes the IPv6 a compelling alternative in the near future. |
Proceedings Title | The 13th IEEE Workshop on Local and Metropolitan Area Networks, 2004. LANMAN 2004. |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Anat Ben-David |
URL | http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0539018412456769 |
Volume | 51 |
Issue | 4 |
Pages | 459-474 |
Publication | Social Science Information |
ISSN | 0539-0184 |
Date | 2012/12 |
Call Number | 4 |
Loc. in Archive | 24 đ |
Extra | DOI: Citation Key: ben-david2012 |
Journal Abbr | Social Science Information |
DOI | 10.1177/0539018412456769 |
Accessed | 2022-04-17 06:07:49 |
Library Catalog | 1.1 (Q3) |
Language | en |
Abstract | This article analyzes Web-based networks of Palestinian communities in Germany, France, Italy, Austria, Australia, the United States, Canada, Spain, Argentina, Chile and Uruguay. The findings show a thematic and demographic shift from organizations of Palestinian communities abroad to a transnational solidarity network focused on Palestinian rights and the Boycott movement. Although the Palestinian Territories function as the networkâs strong center of gravity, analysis of the references reveals that diaspora and non-diaspora actors operate as two distinct but intertwined networks: while diaspora actors are unique in putting emphasis on community as activity type and on diaspora and the right of return as primary cause, non-diaspora actors are mainly dedicated to solidarity as activity and Palestinian rights and the Boycott movement as primary cause. Despite this, ties between diaspora and non-diaspora actors are stronger than among diaspora actors, which indicates that part of the dynamics of Palestinian communities is manifest not just between diaspora communities, but mostly between diaspora communities and civil society organizations in their host societies. |
Short Title | The Palestinian diaspora on the Web |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | L.G. Roberts |
URL | http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/794165/ |
Rights | Conference paper; paywall; IEEE Explore |
Volume | 1 |
Publisher | Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineering |
Pages | 17-31 |
Date | 2019/4/3 |
Loc. in Archive | 2 đ |
Extra | DOI: 10.1109/AERO.1999.794165 Citation Key: roberts1999 |
DOI | 10.1109/AERO.1999.794165 |
Library Catalog | IEEE Xplore |
Conference Name | 1999 IEEE Aerospace Conference. Proceedings (Cat. No.99TH8403) |
Language | en |
Abstract | This article consists of a collection of slides from the author's conference presentation. |
Proceedings Title | 1999 IEEE Aerospace Conference. Proceedings (Cat. No.99TH8403) |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | L.G. Roberts |
URL | http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/963131/ |
Rights | Journal article; paywall; IEEE Explore |
Volume | 33 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | 117-119 |
Publication | Computer |
ISSN | 0018-9162 |
Date | 2000 |
Call Number | 4 |
Loc. in Archive | 168 đ |
Extra | DOI: 10.1109/2.963131 Citation Key: roberts2000 |
Journal Abbr | Computer |
DOI | 10.1109/2.963131 |
Library Catalog | 2.2 (Q3) |
Language | en |
Abstract | To keep pace with the Internet's growth, the maximum speed of core routers and switches must increase at the same rate. In a study conducted in 1969, the author analyzed 39 scientific computers released or planned for release from 1958 to 1972 to determine optimal computer replacement strategy (http://www.ziplink.net/lroberts/Forecast69.htm). This study looked at the trend of CPU throughput per dollar and predicted that computer performance would double every 18.6 months. Updating the study using data for 1999 PCs shows that the trend over 41 years is a doubling of computer performance every 21 months, a remarkably small correction. A similar study tracking the costs from the first ARPA packet switches in 1969 to the most modern routers and ATM switches in 1999 confirms that packet switches have followed the same trend as computers, with performance per dollar doubling every 21 months. Although the computer performance rate predicted in the updated 1969 study is similar to Moore's law, the trends are not identical. It would appear that both the performance per dollar for computers and the serial interface speed for communications are increasing at 94 percent of the yearly growth rate of semiconductor performance. We can use this information about performance and cost trends to predict the cost of computers and communications and to understand the Internet traffic growth. Keeping up with these trends will be a major engineering challenge. |
Short Title | Beyond Moore's law |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Megan Sapnar Ankerson |
URL | http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2056305115621935 |
Volume | 1 |
Issue | 2 |
Pages | 205630511562193 |
Publication | Social Media + Society |
ISSN | 2056-3051 |
Date | 2015/7/1 |
Call Number | 1 |
Loc. in Archive | 3 đ |
Extra | Citation Key: ankerson2015 |
Journal Abbr | Social Media + Society |
DOI | 10.1177/2056305115621935 |
Accessed | 2022-04-05 22:39:07 |
Library Catalog | 5.2 (Q1) |
Language | en |
Abstract | The webâs historical periodization as Web 1.0 (âread-onlyâ) and Web 2.0 (âread/writeâ) eras continues to hold sway even as the umbrella term âsocial mediaâ has become the preferred way to talk about todayâs ecosystem of connective media. Yet, we have much to gain by not exclusively positing social media platforms as a 21st-century phenomenon. Through case studies of two commercially sponsored web projects from the mid-1990sâMassachusetts Institute of Technology Media Labâs Day in the Life of Cyberspace and Rick Smolanâs 24 Hours in Cyberspaceâthis article examines how notions of social and publics were imagined and designed into the web at the start of the dot-com boom. In lieu of a discourse of versions, I draw on Lucy Suchmanâs trope of configuration as an analytic tool for rethinking web historiography. By tracing how cultural imaginaries of the Internet as a public space are conjoined with technological artifacts (content management systems, templates, session tracking, and e-commerce platforms) and reconfigured over time, the discourses of âread-only publishingâ and the âsocial media revolutionâ can be reframed not as exclusively oppositional logics, but rather, as mutually informing the design and development of todayâs social, commercial, web. |
Short Title | Social Media and the âRead-Onlyâ Web |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Lawrence G. Roberts |
URL | http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6366321/ |
Rights | Journal article; paywall; IEEE Explore |
Volume | 11 |
Issue | 2 |
Pages | 46-51 |
Publication | IEEE Spectrum |
ISSN | 0018-9235 |
Date | 1974 |
Call Number | 4 |
Loc. in Archive | 24 đ |
Extra | DOI: 10.1109/MSPEC.1974.6366321 Citation Key: roberts1974 |
Journal Abbr | IEEE Spectr. |
DOI | 10.1109/MSPEC.1974.6366321 |
Library Catalog | 3.1 (Q2) |
Language | en |
Abstract | Because computing costs are now so low, an unusual new concept of data communications is feasible. Called packet switching, this concept is strongly dependent on the cost of computing since it uses computers to correct transmission errors, to provide high reliability through alternate routing, and to allocate communication bandwidth dynamically on a demand basis rather than as a preassigned bandwidth. The ARPA computer network is discussed. |
Short Title | Computer report III |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Roy Rosenzweig |
URL | https://academic.oup.com/jah/article-lookup/doi/10.2307/2675105 |
Rights | Journal article; paywall; Publisher: Oxford University Press, Organization of American Historians; JSTOR |
Volume | 88 |
Issue | 2 |
Pages | 548 |
Publication | The Journal of American History |
ISSN | 0021-8723 |
Date | 2001/9 |
Call Number | 1 |
Loc. in Archive | 36 đ |
Extra | DOI: 10.2307/2675105 Citation Key: rosenzweig2001 |
Journal Abbr | The Journal of American History |
DOI | 10.2307/2675105 |
Library Catalog | 1.2 (Q1) |
Language | en |
Abstract | On August 24, 1965, Theodor Nelson presented a paper to the Association for Computing Machinery national conference in which he introduced the word "hypertext" to refer to "a body of written or pictorial material interconnected in such a complex way that it could not conveniently be presented or represented on paper." Nelson, who had started musing about this sort of associative thinking and linking as a Harvard University graduate student in 1960, viewed "hypertext" as an integral part of an imagined globally interconnected library and publishing system that would "grow indefinitely, gradually including more and more of the world's written knowledge" and "have every feature a novelist or absent-minded professor could want, holding everything he wanted in just the complicated way he wanted it held, and handling notes and manuscripts in as subtle and complex ways as he wanted them handled." 1 Two years later, while working at the publisher Harcourt Brace, Nelson an inveterate coiner of terms whose own Web page lists sixteen words or phrases that he claims to have introduced into general use started to describe his global library as "Xanadu." "For forty years," Nelson wrote recently, "Project Xanadu has had as its purpose to build a deep-reach electronic literary system for worldwide use and a differently-organized general system of data management. "2 |
Short Title | The Road to Xanadu |
Archive | JSTOR |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | James Hendler |
URL | https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.1078874 |
Rights | Journal article; paywall; Science |
Volume | 299 |
Issue | 5606 |
Pages | 520-521 |
Publication | Science |
ISSN | 0036-8075 |
Date | 2003/1/24 |
Call Number | 1 |
Loc. in Archive | 32 đ |
Extra | DOI: 10.1126/science.1078874 Citation Key: hendler2003 |
Journal Abbr | Science |
DOI | 10.1126/science.1078874 |
Library Catalog | 56.9 (Q1) |
Language | en |
Abstract | Scientists have become increasingly reliant on the World Wide Web [HN1] for supporting their research endeavors. The Web is used for finding preprints and papers in online repositories, for participating in online discussions at sites such as Science Online, for accessing databases through specialized Web interfaces, and even for ordering scientific supplies. When searching [HN2] for a specific Web site or a paper on a particular topic, engines like Google can do a phenomenal job of sorting through billions of possibilities and identifying potentially useful candidates, often within the first few search results. On specialized Web sites, domain-specific search engines can do even better, for example, enabling the mathematician to easily find papers on âsymplectic geometryâ or the physicist to see preprints relating to âmesoscopic systems and the quantum hall effect.â In fact, the Web has become indispensible for supporting the traditional communications within our disciplines and the needs of scientists within their disciplinary boundaries. |
Item Type | Report |
---|---|
Author | Matthew Gray |
URL | https://web.archive.org/web/19970503134546/http://www.mit.edu:8001/people/mkgray/growth/ |
Rights | Report; publicly-accessible; [web archive] |
Place | USA |
Date | 1995 |
Loc. in Archive | đ·ïž /unreadăNUEVO!ăInternet & Web History |
Extra | [Retrieved from Wayback Machine, timestamp: 1997-05-03 13:45:46; URL source: http://www.mit.edu:8001/people/mkgray/growth/] Citation Key: matthewgray1995 |
Accessed | 2022-03-01 16:02:16 |
Institution | Massachussets Institute of Technology |
Library Catalog | Massachussets Institute of Technology |
Language | en |
Abstract | This report documents my attempts to realistically measure how fast the Web is growing, specifically in terms of growth in the number of Web servers through the use of an automated Web agent, the Wanderer. The World Wide Web was started originally proposed in 1989 and the first implementation appeared in 1990. The Web however, did not gain any widespread popular use until NCSA Mosaic became available in early 1993. In Spring of 1993, I wrote the Wanderer to systematically traverse the Web and collect sites. I was initially motivated primarily to discover new sites, as the Web was still a relatively small place. As the Web grew rapidly, the focus quickly changed to charting the growth of the Web. This report covers the period from June 1993 to June 1995. |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Anat Ben-David |
Author | Adam Amram |
Author | Ron Bekkerman |
URL | http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s00799-016-0202-6 |
Rights | International Journal on Digital Libraries is a copyright of Springer, (2016). All Rights Reserved. |
Volume | 19 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | 95-106 |
Publication | International Journal on Digital Libraries |
ISSN | 1432-5012 |
Date | 2018/3 |
Loc. in Archive | 13 đ |
Extra | DOI: 10.1007/s00799-016-0202-6 Citation Key: ben-david2018a |
Journal Abbr | Int J Digit Libr |
DOI | 10.1007/s00799-016-0202-6 |
Accessed | 2022-04-17 06:10:50 |
Library Catalog | 1.5 |
Language | en |
Abstract | This study examines the use of visual data analytics as a method for historical investigation of national Webs, using Web archives. It empirically analyzes all graphically designed (non-photographic) images extracted from Websites hosted in the historical .yu domain and archived by the Internet Archive between 1997 and 2000, to assess the utility and value of visual data analytics as a measure of nationality of a Web domain. First, we report that only 23.5% of Websites hosted in the .yu domain over the studied years had their graphically designed images properly archived. Second, we detect significant differences between the color palettes of .yu sub-domains (commercial, organizational, academic, and governmental), as well as between Montenegrin and Serbian Websites. Third, we show that the similarity of the domainsâ colors to the colors of the Yugoslav national flag decreases over time. However, there are spikes in the use of Yugoslav national colors that correlate with major developments on the Kosovo frontier. |
Short Title | The colors of the national Web |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Daniel Karrenberg |
URL | https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/0169755288900281 |
Rights | Journal article; paywall; ScienceDirect |
Volume | 16 |
Issue | 1-2 |
Pages | 94-100 |
Publication | Computer Networks and ISDN Systems |
ISSN | 0169-7552 |
Date | 1988/9 |
Loc. in Archive | 2 đ |
Extra | đ·ïž /unreadăInternetăNUEVO!ăInternet & Web HistoryăInternet--HistoryăEUnet Citation Key: karrenberg1988 |
Journal Abbr | Computer Networks and ISDN Systems |
DOI | 10.1016/0169-7552(88)90028-1 |
Library Catalog | DOI.org (Crossref) |
Language | en |
Abstract | EUnet, a pan-European cooperative R&D network, is described in terms of applications, protocols and topology. A strategy for the introduction of OSI applications and protocols into this network is then presented. |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Janet Abbate |
URL | https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/24701475.2017.1305836 |
Rights | Journal article; paywall; Taylor and Francis Online |
Volume | 1 |
Issue | 1-2 |
Pages | 8-14 |
Publication | Internet Histories |
ISSN | 2470-1475 |
Date | 2017/1/2 |
Loc. in Archive | 32 đ |
Extra | đ·ïž Historyăinfrastructureăsocial capitală/unreadăâ No INSPIRE recid foundăInternet & Web HistoryăNUEVO!ăInternet--HistoryăJournal articleăScholarly periodicalsăComputer networksăPacket switchingăWide area networks (Computer networks)ăInternet definition Citation Key: abbate2017 |
Journal Abbr | Internet Histories |
DOI | 10.1080/24701475.2017.1305836 |
Accessed | 2018-05-31 |
Library Catalog | 1.3 |
Language | en |
Abstract | The ways in which historians define the Internet profoundly shape the histories we write. Many studies implicitly define the Internet in material terms, as a particular set of hardware and software, and consequently tend to frame the development of the Internet as the spread of these technologies from the United States. This essay explores implications of defining the Internet alternatively in terms of technology, use and local experience. While there is not a single âcorrectâ definition, historians should be aware of the politics of the definitions they use. |
Short Title | What and where is the Internet? |
Item Type | Book |
---|---|
Author | Tim Berners-Lee |
Author | Mark Fischetti |
Rights | Book; Harper Business |
Edition | 1st edition |
Place | San Francisco |
Publisher | Harper Business |
ISBN | 978-0-06-251587-2 |
Date | 1999 |
Extra | đ·ïž /unreadăNUEVO!ăInternet & Web History Citation Key: berners-lee1999 |
Library Catalog | Amazon |
Language | en |
Short Title | Weaving the Web |
# of Pages | 246 |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | V. Cerf |
Author | R. Kahn |
URL | https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1092259/ |
Rights | Journal article; |
Volume | 22 |
Issue | 5 |
Pages | 637-648 |
Publication | IEEE Transactions on Communications |
ISSN | 0090-6778 |
Date | 1974/5 |
Call Number | 2 |
Loc. in Archive | 34 đ |
Extra | Conference Name: IEEE Transactions on Communications Citation Key: cerf1974 |
Journal Abbr | IEEE Trans. Commun. |
DOI | 10.1109/TCOM.1974.1092259 |
Library Catalog | 8.3 (Q1) |
Language | en |
Abstract | A protocol that supports the sharing of resources that exist in different packet switching networks is presented. The protocol provides for variation in individual network packet sizes, transmission failures, sequencing, flow control, end-to-end error checking, and the creation and destruction of logical process-to-process connections. Some implementation issues are considered, and problems such as internetwork routing, accounting, and timeouts are exposed. |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Valérie Schafer |
Author | Benjamin G. Thierry |
URL | https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/24701475.2018.1521060 |
Volume | 2 |
Issue | 3-4 |
Pages | 225-229 |
Publication | Internet Histories |
ISSN | 2470-1475 |
Date | 2018/10/2 |
Loc. in Archive | 3 đ |
Extra | Publisher: Routledge Citation Key: schafer2018 |
Journal Abbr | Internet Histories |
DOI | 10.1080/24701475.2018.1521060 |
Accessed | 2022-07-24 22:50:48 |
Library Catalog | 1.3 |
Language | en |
Abstract | Abstract This special issue dedicated to the 90s as a turning decade for Internet and the Web highlights the developments and choices â both technical and economic, but also cultural, societal and political â that contributed to the massification of the Internet and the discovery of the Web by the general public. |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | L. Roberts |
URL | http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/696904/ |
Rights | Conference paper; paywall; IEEE Explore |
Place | Santa Barbara, CA, USA |
Publisher | Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineering |
Pages | G19-G19 |
Date | 1993-07 |
Loc. in Archive | 0 đ |
Extra | DOI: 10.1109/LEOSST.1993.696904 Citation Key: roberts1993 |
DOI | 10.1109/LEOSST.1993.696904 |
Library Catalog | IEEE Xplore |
Conference Name | LEOS 1993 Summer Topical Meeting Digest on Optical Microwave Interactions/Visible Semiconductor Lasers/Impact of Fiber Nonlinearities on Lightwave Systems/Hybrid Optoelectronic Integration and Packagi, 19-21 July |
Language | en |
Abstract | Summary form only given, as follows. Over the past 25 years, packet switching technology has progressed from the original ARPANET to the ATM networks being deployed this year. Over the next decade, there will be a major shift from private to public networks and a major integration of data, voice and video. In examining these trends, the technology issues still reamining will also be addressed. |
Proceedings Title | LEOS 1993 Summer Topical Meeting Digest on Optical Microwave Interactions/Visible Semiconductor Lasers/Impact of Fiber Nonlinearities on Lightwave Systems/Hybrid Optoelectronic Integration and Packaging/Gigabit Networks |
Item Type | Book |
---|---|
Author | Barry M. Leiner, |
Author | Vinton G. Cerf |
Author | David D. Clark |
Author | Robert E. Kahn |
Author | Leonard Kleinrock |
Author | Daniel C. Lynch |
Author | Jon Postel |
Author | Larry G. Roberts |
Author | Stephen Wolff |
URL | https://www.internetsociety.org/internet/history-internet/brief-history-internet/ |
Rights | Book; Internet Society; publicly-accessible-online |
Publisher | Internet Society |
Date | 1997 |
Extra | đ·ïž /unreadăInternetăInformation technologyăâ No INSPIRE recid foundăNUEVO!ăInternet & Web HistoryăARPANET (Computer network)ăComputer networksăInternet--HistoryăTime-sharing computer systemsăInternet SocietyăPacket switching Citation Key: leiner1997 |
Accessed | 2018-03-29 |
Library Catalog | Internet Society |
Language | en |
Abstract | 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 Barry M. Leiner, Vinton G. Cerf, David D. Clark, Robert E. Kahn, Leonard Kleinrock, Daniel C. Lynch, Jon Postel, Larry G. Roberts, Stephen Wolff. , , Larry G. Roberts, Stephen Wolff. |
Item Type | Document |
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Author | Catherin Ryan |
URL | https://repository.dri.ie/catalog/sx61t2042 |
Rights | Document; CC BY 4.0; DRI |
Publisher | Royal Irish Academy and National Library of IrelandRoyal Irish Academy and National Library of Ireland |
Date | 2014-05 |
Extra | DOI: 10.3318/DRI.2014.1 ISSN: 2009-6461 Citation Key: ryan2014 |
Accessed | 2021-07-06 |
Language | en |
Abstract | MoTIF was a collaborative project undertaken by the The Digital Repository of Ireland (DRI) and the National Library of Ireland (NLI) in 2014. These guidelines give professionals the advice they need to improve their own data practices by adhering to international standards and best practices. |
Short Title | MoTIF |