The Internet has become an important part of our lives. It would not be wrong to say that all the technology and evolution of the world is due to the Internet. Billions of dollars of mobile phone industry or virtual worlds are masterpieces of the Internet.
More than 50 years have passed since the invention of the Internet. In late 1969, a few weeks after the lunar eclipse, a gray metal box was found in the office of Professor Leonard Kleinrock of the University of California. The box was about the size of a refrigerator. This was a surprise to the general public, but Klein Rock was very happy and excited about it. The photo taken in deep khaki in the 60's is a good expression of his happiness. He looks like he is standing in the photo. Like a father standing with his talented and proud children.
If Klein Rock had tried to explain his happiness to anyone but his close friends, he probably would not have understood. Some people who knew about the existence of this box did not even know what it was and its name. What is it. It is also known as the IMP "Interface Message Processor". It was recently awarded a contract by a Boston-based company to build it. Had expressed
The machine outside Klein's office was not only capable of creating harmony between the different peoples living in the world, but could do much more important work. Nothing can be said for sure. Because many people were involved in its creation and many people played a key role in its creation. Therefore, many people wanted to honor him. The Internet was launched on October 29, 1969, a strong claim to the Klein Rock, because on that date, for the first time, messages were sent from one end to the other using the Internet.
At 10:00 pm on October 29, 1969, when Klein, his fellow professors, and students gathered around him in a crowd, Klein Rock connected the computer to the IMP, which contacted another IMP who was hundreds of miles away with a computer. Attached. A student named Charlie Klein typed the first message on it and his words were the same as those used by Samuel Morris in sending the first telegraph message about 135 years ago.
The assignment given to Klein Rock was to sit in Los Angeles and log in to the machine at the Stanford Research Institute, but apparently there was no prospect.
Whatever Klein did is a history and now it is useless. It would be foolish to say so because 12 years after Klein Rock sent the first message, there were only 213 computers on the system. Fourteen years later, 16 million people were online on the same system, and e-mail was opening new doors to the world.
Surprisingly, users did not have a usable web browser until 1993. We had Amazon in 1995, Google in 1998 and Wikipedia in 2001, and by then 513 million people were online. One can only guess at the speed at which the Internet has progressed and now the Internet is ready to enter its next generation, which is called Metaverse. In the virtual world of MetaVars, you will be able to step into the digital world using your headset and perform your daily tasks.
The evolution of the Internet was so rapid that it became a witness to the many ups and downs that this world has seen. Today, the Internet has its own separate world. When Klein sent the first message, he would not have thought that 50 years later this world would be introduced through the Internet, virtual worlds like Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp and Instagram, which the world will use. What will the chief ministers and presidents of the superpowers do?
The Internet has radically changed the politics of the world. The Internet has witnessed many revolutions and uprisings and to some extent the reason. Worried for the same Internet development has reached the point today that the whole world has been captured in your hands by capturing only 135 to 150 grams of mobile. Today, 4.66 billion people worldwide are using the Internet.
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