Published the earliest packet-switching / information-flow work (his 1961/1962 PhD proposals and 1961 papers) that provided mathematical foundations for breaking messages into packets.
From its humble beginnings as an experimental network to the backbone of modern life, the internet has transformed how we connect, create, and communicate. What started as a bold idea to link computers has become a force that shapes culture, commerce, and community across the globe.
The History of the Internet is a special series that uncovers the stories behind this revolution, featuring exclusive interviews and first-hand accounts from the visionaries who built its foundations. Join us as we celebrate the milestones, explore the challenges, and hear directly from the pioneers who changed the course of technology forever.
Published the earliest packet-switching / information-flow work (his 1961/1962 PhD proposals and 1961 papers) that provided mathematical foundations for breaking messages into packets.
Articulated the “Intergalactic Computer/Network” vision (early 1960s memos — e.g.,1963) that inspired ARPA’s networking goals and the idea of a globally-connected computing commons
RAND memorandum On Distributed Communications (1964) laid out distributed (packetstyle) network designs intended to be survivable — a key conceptual precursor to later packet networks.
At the UK’s NPL Davies coined the word “packet” and developed packet-switched network prototypes (mid-1960s papers / Mark I Mark II) that contributed directly to packet-switching practice.
Demonstrated the oN-Line System (NLS) at the December 9, 1968 “Mother of All Demos” — showing hypertext, shared editing, the mouse and other interactive concepts that shaped future online tools.
As ARPA program manager he designed and led the ARPANET construction (late-1960s), turning packet-switching proposals into the first operational research network (ARPANET, 1969).
Became central to the RFC series and began his long stewardship of protocol documentation and numbering (RFC series began 1969; Postel edited and authored core RFCs).
Instigated the ARPANET “Network Working Group” and created the Request for Comments (RFC) series in 1969 — the primary open documentation mechanism for ARPANET/Internet protocols.
Co-designed the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and later TCP/IP, enabling communication across multiple networks — the birth of internetworking
Invented Ethernet at Xerox PARC, making local networking fast and scalable for office and campus environments.
Developed CYCLADES in France, a datagram-based packet network that directly influenced TCP/IP’s design.
Pioneered early packet voice transmission and endianness concepts, key to interoperability in TCP/IP systems. Founded NetEase, one of China’s earliest Internet portals, later a leader in gaming and online content.
Promoted and implemented early packet networking in Scandinavia, connecting European research networks.
Managed the ARPANET Network Information Center (NIC) at SRI, maintaining the official host name directory before DNS.
Helped establish early ARPANET links in Europe and co-authored the first Internet (TCP/IP) experiments between continents.
Conducted the first three-network TCP/IP test (ARPANET, SATNET, PRNET), proving the architecture’s viability.
Led early IETF-like protocol coordination and RFC series continuity — the core of today’s open standards process.
Developed early routing algorithms that evolved into the Spanning Tree Protocol (finalized 1985) — fundamental to Ethernet networks.
Invented the Domain Name System (DNS) to replace the central HOSTS.TXT file. Introduced hierarchical, distributed naming via RFC 882/883 (1983).
Published “On Holy Wars and a Plea for Peace,” formalizing the concept of byte ordering (“endianness”), key to interoperability in TCP/IP systems.
Helped build EUnet, the first pan-European Internet Service Provider (ISP) and in 1989was one of the founders of RIPE (Réseaux IP Européens).
Oversaw the January 1, 1983 “flag day” switchover from NCP to TCP/IP — the operational birth of the modern Internet.
Developed the Spanning Tree Protocol (STP), which made Ethernet networks reliable and loop-free, forming the backbone of modern LANs.
Created ping, one of the simplest and most enduring diagnostic tools in networking.
Wrote Sendmail, the first general-purpose Internet email transport system, crucial for global email interoperability.
Led development of key Internet standards and chaired IETF working groups, promoting IPv6 and architectural consistency.
Significant early work on SMTP, FTP, and internationalization of Internet protocols.
Contributed to RFC editing, TCP/IP documentation, and Internet research group coordination, maintaining the open RFC process.
Developed Archie, the first Internet search engine, enabling users to find files across FTP servers.
Invented the World Wide Web at CERN — creating HTTP, HTML, and the first web server and browser (1990–91). This unified hypertext with the Internet.
Created the Linux kernel, which became a cornerstone of Internet infrastructure, web servers, and open-source computing.
Led the development of CERNET, China’s first academic Internet network, linking universities across the country.
Key figure in IETF standardization and Internet governance; helped define early Internet policy and protocol stewardship.
Built KREONET, the Korean Research Network, pioneering Internet connectivity in Asia.
Co-developed Mosaic, the first mainstream graphical web browser, which popularized the Web and inspired Netscape.
Collaborated with Berners-Lee at CERN to promote and refine the World Wide Web and its first browser/server setup.
Led the Mozilla project, defending open web standards and community-driven browser development during the Netscape era.
Architect of CERNET, China’s first academic network (1994), and early IPv6 advocate for Asia-Pacific.
Principal developer of BIND, the most widely used DNS server software; improved DNS reliability and security.
Created CSNET and helped connect over 25 countries to the early Internet, bridging academia and policy.
Authored Interconnections, formalizing network protocol design principles and influencing Internet routing education.
Demonstrated control over the DNS root servers and led the IANA transition, symbolizing his lifelong role as the Internet’s numbering authority.
Helped found ICANN and promoted the institutional frameworks for managing Internet naming and numbering globally.
Sponsored the 1991 High Performance Computing and Communications Act, which funded Internet expansion — earning the nickname “the Information Superhighway.
Packet switching, the basis of data communication, is conceptualized
The first computer-to-computer message is sent via ARPANET
ARPANET, the first experimental network, comes online
Email, the first person-to-person digital communication tool, is created
Ethernet standardizes local area networking (LANs)
TCP/IP protocol defines the rules of the internet
The term “Internet” is first used to describe interconnected networks
UUCP enables Unix systems to exchange data over phone lines
Domain Name System (DNS) replaces numeric addresses with names
ARPANET officially adopts TCP/IP, marking the birth of the Internet
NSFNET expands academic networking, forming the Internet backbone
The first commercial Internet Service Providers (ISPs) appear
The first domain name “symbolics.com” is registered
The World Wide Web is proposed and built
The first graphical web browser (Mosaic) popularizes the web
The first search engines emerge (Archie, Lycos, Yahoo!)
ICANN is founded to coordinate global domain management
Google redefines online search and indexing
Wikipedia launches as a collaborative online encyclopedia
Broadband replaces dial-up, enabling video and multimedia online
Facebook revolutionizes social networking
YouTube transforms video sharing and digital content
IPv6 introduced to expand Internet address capacity
Smartphones and mobile apps reshape global Internet use
Cloud computing becomes the backbone of digital infrastructure
Internet of Things (IoT) connects everyday devices
Cybersecurity and data privacy emerge as critical global issues
SpaceX launches Starlink for satellite Internet access
5G networks deliver ultra-fast, low-latency Internet connectivity
AI-driven Internet transforms content creation and automation
Blockchain and Web3 enable decentralized applications and ownership
Edge computing and metaverse development reshape digital interaction
Sustainability and Internet governance become global priorities