The foundations of the internet were set 56 years ago. However, like many other great moments in history, the story of the first computer-to-computer message sent over a distributed packet-switched network, began with an underwhelming fizz, rather than a bang. Moreover, it involved a computer crash and a ‘typo’ – how thoroughly modern.
If you’ve read or watched anything about the history of the internet, you will have probably heard of ARPANET (the Advanced Research Projects Agency Network). At around 10.30pm on October 29, 1969, two scientists set out to test communications between two of the four systems ARPANET systems, 350 miles apart.
Charley Kline from UCLA intended to send the first message across this embryonic distributed network. He’d settled on just five characters, typing out ‘LOGIN’ for the momentous occasion. However, Bill Duvall at Stanford Research Institute (SRI) only received ‘LO’ before his computer system crashed… Great start.
Kline didn’t realize the magnitude of this achievement at the time. Instead, he and Duvall, instantly went into troubleshooting mode to fix the issue that caused the crash.
Buffer overflow
It turned out that the Interface Message Processors used as a kind of ‘modem’ to connect the ARPANET machines were not ready for the throughput demanded. The IMPs were designed for data transfers of around 10 characters per second, but the ‘LOGIN’ message had been transmitted at 5,000 characters per second, Duvall noted in an interview with the BBC last year.
Ironing out this major issue took the scientists just an extra hour to complete. According to the first-hand testimony, after changing the communication buffer size and rebuilding the system, this distributed packet-switched network could send and receive messages without issues, as intended.
At the time, ARPANET was just a four system network. In addition to the UCLA and SRI nodes, noted above, there were systems at the UC Santa Barbara, and the University of Utah, forming this primordial internet.
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Two decades before the WWW
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