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n-1-4-003.01a
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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.