Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
‘RHOBH’ Alum Adrienne Maloof Fighting Former Housekeeper’s ,000 Demand in Court (Exclusive)

‘RHOBH’ Alum Adrienne Maloof Fighting Former Housekeeper’s $40,000 Demand in Court (Exclusive)

November 11, 2025
bet365 bonus code NYPBET: Bet , get 0 in bonus bets for Creighton vs. Gonzaga

bet365 bonus code NYPBET: Bet $5, get $200 in bonus bets for Creighton vs. Gonzaga

November 11, 2025
Gold and gems quiz: What do you know about sparkly treasures made by nature?

Gold and gems quiz: What do you know about sparkly treasures made by nature?

November 11, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • ‘RHOBH’ Alum Adrienne Maloof Fighting Former Housekeeper’s $40,000 Demand in Court (Exclusive)
  • bet365 bonus code NYPBET: Bet $5, get $200 in bonus bets for Creighton vs. Gonzaga
  • Gold and gems quiz: What do you know about sparkly treasures made by nature?
  • Facebook makes major change to Like and Comment buttons
  • China plans to block rare earth shipments to US military contractors: report
  • Trump says Veterans Day now ‘Victory Day’ in Arlington cemetery speech
  • Hochul casts doubt on NYC Mayor-elect Mamdani’s free buses proposal
  • Danielle Fishel’s Son Told Teacher She Died During ‘Dancing With the Stars,’ Wanted Her to ‘Quit’
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Science history: First computer-to-computer message lays the foundation for the internet, but it crashes halfway through — Oct. 29, 1969
Science history: First computer-to-computer message lays the foundation for the internet, but it crashes halfway through — Oct. 29, 1969
Science

Science history: First computer-to-computer message lays the foundation for the internet, but it crashes halfway through — Oct. 29, 1969

News RoomBy News RoomOctober 29, 20252 ViewsNo Comments

Quick facts

Milestone: First computer-to-computer transmission

When: 10:30 p.m. on Oct. 29, 1969

Where: Los Angeles to Menlo Park, California

Who: Graduate student Charley Kline to computer engineer Bill Duvall

Late one evening, UCLA graduate student Charley Kline sat in front of a refrigerator-sized computer and sent the message “lo” to a rack of computers operated by systems engineer Bill Duvall at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI), hundreds of miles away.

This message itself was nothing special; it was meant to be the word “login,” but the system crashed before it could be completed. However, the transmission was revolutionary, because it formed the foundation for the internet.

The two computers were part of a four-computer network that made up the first Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET).


You may like

The notion of computers communicating was part of a grand vision to “augment human intellect,” but ARPANET was ultimately funded for a more practical purpose: to enable the U.S. government to communicate in the wake of a nuclear attack. Although telephone lines would likely be intact in that case, the major switching centers could be destroyed, the military worried.

In 1964, RAND Corp. scientists Paul Baran and Sharla Boehm sent a memo proposing a solution: a “distributed network” that involved “hot potato” switching so that no single node would be crucial to the system’s functioning.

From there, the military agency funded a project to create such a network. For the system to work, it needed a way to break up messages from a sender into smaller portions that were then reassembled at the destination. Boehm and Baran simulated this process, which would eventually become known as packet switching, using a program written in the computer language Fortran.

Even before ARPANET was realized, however, the scientists involved in the project clearly saw the potential of the concept. Baran, for instance, envisioned that by the year 2000, people would be able to do their shopping from home using a TV.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

In 1968, ARPANET was approved, and by the summer, scientists at the University of California, Santa Barbara; SRI; UCLA; and the University of Utah began building the infrastructure to allow their computers to communicate using these packets.

For the first transmission, each computer at these locations had a separate, “mini-computer” called an interface message processor (IMP), which would evolve into the routers of today. The IMPs were meant to break up the messages into smaller chunks and send them to the IMP at the receiving end, which would then reassemble them and echo them to the receiving terminal.

On the storied evening the message was sent, Kline and Duvall were on the phone with each other, confirming when each letter arrived. But the system crashed because the Stanford computer was expecting the data to be transmitted at 10 characters per second, while ARPANET had an unprecedented speed of 5,000 characters per second. This overloaded the “buffer” in the Stanford computer, according to BBC Future.


You may like

“It was like filling a glass with a fire hose,” Duvall told BBC Future.

Duvall identified the problem and got the system up and running an hour later.

Almost immediately, researchers realized the potential of the system.

“As of now, computer networks are still in their infancy, but as they grow up and become more sophisticated, we will probably see the spread of ‘computer utilities,’ which, like present electric and telephone utilities, will service individual homes and offices across the country,” Leonard Kleinrock, a computer science professor who was in charge of that UCLA node, said in a statement at the time.

ARPANET would be tied to its military roots until 1981, when the military spun off its own MILNET. And while the term “internetwork” was coined in a 1970s paper to describe a standardized protocol for transmitting and receiving data, the internet itself technically wasn’t born until 1983, when ARPANET switched over to that protocol.

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Gold and gems quiz: What do you know about sparkly treasures made by nature?

Gold and gems quiz: What do you know about sparkly treasures made by nature?

No, comet 3I/ATLAS hasn’t exploded — and no, that doesn’t mean it’s an alien spaceship

No, comet 3I/ATLAS hasn’t exploded — and no, that doesn’t mean it’s an alien spaceship

Newly discovered toads skip the tadpole stage and give birth to live ‘toadlets’

Newly discovered toads skip the tadpole stage and give birth to live ‘toadlets’

Merach NovaRow R50 rowing machine review: A budget-friendly alternative to the Concept2 RowErg

Merach NovaRow R50 rowing machine review: A budget-friendly alternative to the Concept2 RowErg

Prehistoric Jomon people in Japan had ‘little to no’ DNA from the mysterious Denisovans, study finds

Prehistoric Jomon people in Japan had ‘little to no’ DNA from the mysterious Denisovans, study finds

Extreme ‘paradise’ volcano in Costa Rica is like a piece of ancient Mars on our doorstep — Earth from space

Extreme ‘paradise’ volcano in Costa Rica is like a piece of ancient Mars on our doorstep — Earth from space

Scientists have developed the world’s first microwave brain microchip, a new type of processor that performs calculations using microwaves and requires very little power.

Scientists have developed the world’s first microwave brain microchip, a new type of processor that performs calculations using microwaves and requires very little power.

Leonids 2025: One of the year’s last meteor showers could peak with bright ‘fireballs’ this week

Leonids 2025: One of the year’s last meteor showers could peak with bright ‘fireballs’ this week

Physicists found a novel way to peer inside a radioactive molecule — and revealed a strange phenomenon in its nucleus

Physicists found a novel way to peer inside a radioactive molecule — and revealed a strange phenomenon in its nucleus

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

bet365 bonus code NYPBET: Bet , get 0 in bonus bets for Creighton vs. Gonzaga

bet365 bonus code NYPBET: Bet $5, get $200 in bonus bets for Creighton vs. Gonzaga

November 11, 2025
Gold and gems quiz: What do you know about sparkly treasures made by nature?

Gold and gems quiz: What do you know about sparkly treasures made by nature?

November 11, 2025
Facebook makes major change to Like and Comment buttons

Facebook makes major change to Like and Comment buttons

November 11, 2025
China plans to block rare earth shipments to US military contractors: report

China plans to block rare earth shipments to US military contractors: report

November 11, 2025

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Trump says Veterans Day now ‘Victory Day’ in Arlington cemetery speech

Trump says Veterans Day now ‘Victory Day’ in Arlington cemetery speech

November 11, 2025
Hochul casts doubt on NYC Mayor-elect Mamdani’s free buses proposal

Hochul casts doubt on NYC Mayor-elect Mamdani’s free buses proposal

November 11, 2025
Danielle Fishel’s Son Told Teacher She Died During ‘Dancing With the Stars,’ Wanted Her to ‘Quit’

Danielle Fishel’s Son Told Teacher She Died During ‘Dancing With the Stars,’ Wanted Her to ‘Quit’

November 11, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2025 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.