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         Internet History:     more books (100)
  1. Jerry Yang And David Filo (Internet Career Biographies) by Chris Hayhurst, Michael R. Weston, 2007-01
  2. Shift!: The Unfolding Internet - Hype, Hope and History by Edward Burman, 2003-04-18
  3. The American History Highway: A Guide to Internet Resources on U.S., Canadian, and Latin American History
  4. Ruling the Waves: From the Compass to the Internet, a History of Business and Politics along the Technological Frontier by Debora L. Spar, 2003-01-07
  5. World History Sticker Atlas: Internet Referenced (Sticker Atlases) by Elizabeth Dalby, 2006-06
  6. Multimedia Histories: From the Magic Lantern to the Internet (Exeter Studies in Film History) (University of Exeter Press - Exeter Studies in History) by James Lyons; John Plunkett, 2007-04-30
  7. The Genealogist's Internet: Third Expanded Edition by Peter Christian, 2005-09-01
  8. Love Online: Emotions on the Internet by Aaron Ben-Ze'ev, 2004-01-19
  9. The Cdnow Story: Rags to Riches on the Internet by Jason Olim, Matthew Olim, et all 1999-01
  10. Guide to History and the Internet by Patrick Reagan, 2002-01-03
  11. Internet-linked Romans (Illustrated World History) by Anthony Marks, Graham I.F. Tingay, 2009-12-25
  12. Netizens: On the History and Impact of Usenet and the Internet (Perspectives) by Michael Hauben, Ronda Hauben, et all 1997-04-27
  13. Using the Internet: History by Charles Maltman, 2000-12-31
  14. The European History Highway: A Guide to Internet Resources

41. Internet History - Remove All Traces Of Internet Activity And Permanently Shred
All Evidence Eraser 2007.59 All Evidence Eraser can completely remove all traces of your Internet activity and protect sensitive information while improving your computer's
http://internet-history.softalizer.com/
Search our site:
Internet History
All Evidence Eraser 2007.59
All Evidence Eraser can completely remove all traces of your Internet activity and protect sensitive information while improving your computer's performance. Every move you make on the Web leaves footprints which consume valuable disk space and put your privacy and identity at risk. Evidence Eraser thoroughly scrubs dozens of areas on your hard drive, removing and permanently shredding unnecessary files and protecting your privacy. FREE Scan!
all evidence eraser
evidence eraser evidenceeraser erase evidence ... Privacy Mantra 2.00
Privacy Mantra cleans your computer from online and offline tracks. Most people are unaware of that every web site they have visited remains in the undeletable index.dat file. This cleaner will erase and wash away most privacy threats in your machine including, Internet history, cache, cookies, index.dat files, auto complete forms, search assistant and more. Privacy Mantra allows the user to easily download the latest database of threats.
codeode
privacy mantra clean ... index.dat

42. History Timelines And Articles - History Explorer
World, art, jazz, Internet history and timelines plus articles.
http://www.historyexplorer.net

43. The Japanese American Network
Pointers to Japanese American information on the internet such as history, social services, public policy, arts, and culture. Includes billboard and listservers.
http://janet.org/
help/discussion forums calendar job postings member login The Japanese American Network (JA*Net) is a partnership of Japanese American organizations based in Little Tokyo, Los Angeles. A goal of this partnership is to encourage the use of the Internet and interactive communications technologies to exchange information about Japanese Americans art, culture, community, history, news, events, social services, and public policy issues. The website is a volunteer project and depends on community participation and contributions. [ Last Update on this Website: January 4, 2002 ] Members Login Regisistered members of this website can add calendar events , links, job postings , and participate in the forums . There is no charge for this service, but a valid email address and name is required. Email Address: Password: Remember this address and password? help Address The Japanese American Network
231 East Third Street, Suite G-104

44. Internet History - Key Events In Internet History
Internet history from its humble beginnings to the social web. In reading Internet history, you will learn how spam got its name, how bulletin boards influenced the web, and
http://webtrends.about.com/od/history/a/history1.htm
zWASL=1;zGRH=1 zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') zDO=0
  • Home Web Trends
  • Web Trends
    Search
    A Brief Look at the Key Events in Internet History
    From Daniel Nations , former About.com Guide
    See More About:
    At the beginning of Internet history, we used the Internet as a tool. With Web 2.0, we are becoming a part of the Internet. (Flickr Image by Woodleywonderworks) zSB(3,3) To understand emerging web trends, it is helpful to understand Internet history and how it has evolved into what some call the dawn of the Age of Information. My own personal Internet history began in the fall of 1988 when I enrolled in college as a Computer Science Engineering student. At this time, the most popular use of the Internet could probably be best explained as college students goofing off. Certainly, it had more useful applications, but there were also many late nights spent in Internet relay chat channels with students exchanging such brilliant ideas like what they were watching on television and what they had for dinner. During this period of Internet history, a popular activity was sending text pictures through email. This was before the age of graphics hit the Internet, and a text picture filled with ASCII symbols (i.e. text like 'X' and 'O') was used to create a picture. The most popular picture floating around was a big picture of spam, no doubt a reference to the famous

    45. Internet History
    Your Internet History is a list that details every website you have ever visited and it’s stored deep within the depths of your hard drive. Originally this list was created
    http://articles.winferno.com/internet-privacy/internet-history/
    document.topnav = "articles"; pc security utilities business multimedia ... photo compression You are here: : Internet History
    Internet History Friday, January 12th, 2007
    Getting rid of your Internet history is a lot more difficult than you would think.
    Even when you tell Windows to erase Internet history, only the references to your Internet history are deleted. The actual files are still kept on your hard drive. Getting rid of your Internet History completely requires going into DOS and working from the command prompt. PC Confidential completely erases all of your Internet history . Even the hidden files deep on your hard drive. PC Confidential also deletes cookies and cache and other sensitive files that could jeopardize your privacy. PC Confidential is a program that was designed for the purpose of managing and deleting all the files on your computer that a hacker could potentially use to build a profile for you and steal your identity. PC Confidential will:
    • Erase Your Internet History Clear Your Personal Search History Delete Online Tracking Cookies Clear Internet Cache Delete Temporary Internet Files Erase All Media Player History (Videos Watched) Destroy All Online Chat Logs Erase Recent Documents List Delete the Locked Index.dat File

    46. Internet: History Summary | BookRags.com
    Internet History Table of Contents. Internet History summary with 6 pages of encyclopedia entries, research information, and more.
    http://www.bookrags.com/research/internet-history-csci-04/

    47. Eglum Software - E-mail Marketing Software (Opt In & Opt Out)
    Offer Easyclean, desktop PC and internet history cleanup software. Windows
    http://www.eglum.com/

    48. Internet History
    1969 Birth of a Network. The Internet as we know it today, in the mid-1990s, traces it origins back to a Defense Department project in 1969. The subject of the project was
    http://www.freesoft.org/CIE/Topics/57.htm
    Connected: An Internet Encyclopedia
    Internet History
    Up: Connected: An Internet Encyclopedia
    Up: Topics
    Prev: Topics
    Next: Internet Organization
    Internet History
    1969 - Birth of a Network
    The Internet as we know it today, in the mid-1990s, traces it origins back to a Defense Department project in 1969. The subject of the project was wartime digital communications. At that time the telephone system was about the only theater-scale communications system in use. A major problem had been identified in its design - its dependence on switching stations that could be targeted during an attack. Would it be possible to design a network that could quickly reroute digital traffic around failed nodes? A possible solution had been identified in theory. That was to build a "web" of datagram network, called an "catenet", and use dynamic routing protocols to constantly adjust the flow of traffic through the catenet. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) launched the DARPA Internet Program.
    1970s - Infancy
    DARPA Internet, largely the plaything of academic and military researchers, spent more than a decade in relative obscurity. As Vietnam, Watergate, the Oil Crisis, and the Iranian Hostage Crisis rolled over the nation, several Internet research teams proceeded through a gradual evolution of protocols. In 1975, DARPA declared the project a success and handed its management over to the Defense Communications Agency. Several of today's key protocols (including IP and TCP) were stable by 1980, and adopted throughout ARPANET by 1983.

    49. Paul Halsall/Fordham University: Internet History Sourcebooks Project
    A set of collections of public domain and copypermitted historical texts, maps, and articles on a wide variety of historical areas and subjects. Compiled by Prof. Paul Halsall
    http://www.fordham.edu/halsall
    Ancient History Sourcebook Medieval Sourcebook Modern History Sourcebook Byzantine Studies Page
    Other History Sourcebooks: African East Asian Global Indian ... Women's IHSP Main Ancient Medieval Modern Search Subsidiary
    Sourcebooks African East Asian Global Indian ... Women Special
    Resources Byzantium Medieval Web Medieval NYC Medieval Music ... IHSP Credits Paul Halsall, editor
    Last Modified: Dec 10, 2006
    [linked pages may have been updated more recently] The Internet History Sourcebooks Project is a collection of public domain and copy-permitted historical texts presented cleanly (without advertising or excessive layout) for educational use. Update Information 2006: In 2006 the Internet History Sourcebook s Project is undergoing a major overhaul to remove bad links and add more documents. 2. This project is both very large and fairly old in Internet terms. At the time it was instigated (1996), it was not clear that web sites [and the documents made available there] would often turn out to be transient. As a result there is a process called "link rot" - which means that a "broken link" is a result of someone having taken down a web page. In some cases some websites have simply reorganized sub-directories without creating forwarding links. Since 2000, very few links to external sites have been made. An effort is under way to remove bad links. 2. All links to documents marked [at this Site] should be working.

    50. The History Of The Net | From Inception To World-wide Success
    Ross Shannon provides an overview of the Internet s origins, from ARPANET and email to the Web. Includes a breakdown of the components that make up the Internet.
    http://www.yourhtmlsource.com/starthere/historyofthenet.html

    51. W3J.Com: Journals, Plans, Papers & Documentation
    Published from the winter of 1996 thru the fall of 1997. All issues online, including the Fourth International World Wide Web Conference Proceedings.
    http://www.w3j.com/
    Site Navigation
    W3J.Com
    Contact Page
    ITIL
    Other Frameworks
    Standards
    ISO 17799

    ISO 27001

    BS 25999

    ISO Standards
    ...
    EN Standards

    Toolkits
    Balanced Scorecard
    Knowledge Management ERP Process Engineering ... Avian Influenza Planning In The PipeLine Legal Information The Bookshop Research Papers W3J.Com is a specialist portal for business and technical journals, documents, standards, templates, plans and information, particularly with respect to corporate and IT governance. In addition to publishing our own documents, we are distributors of a growing range of internationally recognized publishers and developers. The W3J portal itself is intended to form a hub for all such documentation. Through the navigation options on the left, and below, it is hoped that you will easily find the materials you seek. However, please note that we are expanding very quickly, and adding new material all the time. It is worth, therefore, paying regular visits to check out the additions. THE INFORMATION TOOLKITS These are comprehensive and focused collections of items and materials to support carefully selected issues. They usually include guides, presentations, audit checklists, templates and similar documents. Although the range of topics covered is expanding, we currently offer toolkits to support: the Balanced Scorecard, Knowledge Management, and ITIL.

    52. Internet History
    hey how do i completely delete my internet history so theres no evidence of what sites i've been to? thx
    http://www.computing.net/answers/windows-xp/internet-history/88645.html

    53. World Wide Web History Center
    A collaborative effort to record and publish the history of the World Wide Web and its roots in hypermedia and networking.
    http://www.webhistory.org/
    Know the past. Invent the future.
    About the WHC
    • Purpose Why it matters Activities Sustainability ...
      Contacts
      Help the WHC and Donate online!
      Introducing the Web History Center
      The World Wide Web was designed to bolster the sharing and availability of information. Ironically, the actual records of this technical and cultural transformation are in danger of being lost. "The good thing about digital media is that you can save everything. The bad thing about digital media is that you can lose everything."
      - Brewster Kahle, Web pioneer, founder of The Internet Archive The Web History Center is a non-profit educational organization to make public the history of the World Wide Web and preserve it for posterity. The Web History Center helps researchers and collection holders to preserve and promote the history of the web era by:
      • identifying important and at-risk collections; facilitating the preservation of historical materials; linking conservation efforts by various institutions and individuals; making the web's heritage accessible to educators, students, corporations and the general public.
      Support the cause
      The Web History Center is raising $100,000 to help fund its mission. Show your support by

    54. Utility To Clear Internet History And Traces From Your PC . Utility To Clear Int
    Utility to clear internet history and traces from your PC . Utility to clear internet history and traces from your PC .
    http://internet-history.qarchive.org/

    55. The Internet: Past, Present And Future - Internet & WWW History
    Scholarly article by Jesper Vissing Laursen on the development of the Internet.
    http://www.vissing.dk/inthist.html
    Jesper Vissing Laursen "The ARPA theme is that the promise offered by the computer as a communication medium between people, dwarfs into relative insignificance the historical beginnings of the computer as an arithmetic engine" If one were to suggest one single occurrence which led to the creation of the Internet, it would be the Soviet Union's launch of the Sputnik satellite in 1957. This seminal incident in space exploration caused then American President Dwight David Eisenhower to appoint MIT President James A. Killian as a presidential assistant for science, and subsequently sparked the creation of a new department within the Department of Defense, named the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA). ARPA was the answer to the rising American Cold War paranoia about military inferiority, fuelled not least by the Sputnik success. The agency was designed to perform long term high risk/high payoff research and development, and in this context placed great emphasis on the development of the at that time fledgling computer technology. It was felt by ARPA that too many resources had been allocated by public and private research in order to procure short-term advances in computer hardware and software. Instead, the Agency realized that "machines needed greater capability to interact with each other to gather relevant information, solve problems, anticipate data requirements, communicate effectively across distances, present information visually, and do all this automatically."

    56. Brief Timeline Of The Internet - Webopedia.com
    Just in case you missed the development of the Internet, here is a brief timeline highlighting some of the major occurrences over the past 49 years.
    http://www.webopedia.com/quick_ref/timeline.asp
    Webopedia.com Sign Up Sign In Search

    57. The Morris Internet Worm
    Charles Schmidt and Tom Darby explain the what, why, and how of the 1988 Internet worm.
    http://www.snowplow.org/tom/worm/worm.html
    HOME HISTORY EFFECT TOUR ... BIBLIOGRAPHY
    The What, Why, and How of the 1988 Internet Worm
    There may be a virus loose on the internet. Andy Sudduth of Harvard, 34 minutes after midnight, Nov. 3, 1988 The above may be the computer understatement of the year. As of the time that Sudduth posted his message, the internet was coming apart. VAX and Sun machines across the country were being overloaded by invisible tasks, preventing users from being able to use the machines effectively, if at all, and eventually forcing system administrators to cut off many of their machines from the internet entirely in an attempt to cut off the source of infection. The culprit of all this chaos is a small (99 line, not including object files) program written by Robert Tappan Morris who was, at the time, a 23 year old doctoral student at Cornell University. This code, or this type of code, has since been given then name, worm. There has been a great deal of discussion as to whether or not the name "worm" is appropriate. Many still refer to the program which paralyzed the internet in late 1988 as a virus. However, there is a major difference between the average viral program, and the program in question, and for this reason, we will use the term "worm" to describe programs of the type in question, capitalizing when describing the specific Internet Worm launched in November of 1988. A worm, on the other hand, is far more powerful. When a worm gains access to a computer (usually by breaking into it over the internet) it launches a program which searches for other internet locations, infecting them if it can. At no time does the worm need user assistance (accidental or not) in order to operate its programming. Moreover, the worm travels over the internet, so all machines attached to an infected machine are at risk of attack. Considering the connectivity of the internet on the whole, this includes a huge number computers whose only defense is the sealing of the security gaps which the worm uses to enter. Secondly, worms can spread with no assistance (as opposed to viruses which must literally be carried from one machine to another). Once the worm discovers an internet connection, all that it must do is download a copy of itself to that location, and continue running as normal.

    58. Articles About Internet History - Life123
    This brief history of the Internet and a history of Internet security can give you an idea of just how far safe Web surfing has come.
    http://www.life123.com/technology/internet/internet-history/index.shtml

    59. A Short History Of Internet Protocols At CERN
    Ben Segal traces the history of the Internet at CERN.
    http://ben.home.cern.ch/ben/TCPHIST.html
    A Short History of Internet Protocols at CERN
    Ben Segal / CERN IT-PDP-TE
    April, 1995
    Now that the Internet has exploded in popularity on a world wide scale, with a major component of its success (the World Wide Web ) being developed at CERN , it seems a good time to look back and trace the history of the Internet at CERN. Even before the Web allowed Internet penetration in the most unexpected places, the presence of the Internet protocols at CERN had already encouraged their adoption not only in many other parts of Europe but also in such influential organizations as the ITU and ISO in Geneva. Another interesting element, apart from the rapidity of change, is the factor of accident or coincidence, often traceable to a personal event or a meeting of one or two people in critical circumstances. Bringing the Internet to CERN was not a simple business, although similar events probably occurred at other pioneer sites. Being very well acquainted with the people involved, the present author was ideally placed to observe the interplay of technical, personal and political elements at CERN that helped bring about a major part of today's Information Revolution. In the Beginning - the 1970's
    In the beginning was - chaos. In the same way that the theory of high energy physics interactions was itself in a chaotic state up until the early 1970's, so was the so-called area of "Data Communications" at CERN. The variety of different techniques, media and protocols used was staggering; open warfare existed between many manufacturers' proprietary systems, various home-made systems (including CERN's own "FOCUS" and "CERNET"), and the then rudimentary efforts at defining open or international standards. There were no general purpose Local Area Networks (LANs): each application used its own approach. The only really widespread CERN network at that time was "INDEX": a serial twisted pair system with a central Gandalf circuit switch, connecting some hundreds of "dumb" terminals via RS232 to a selection of accessible computer ports for interactive login.

    60. Internet Modern History Sourcebook: Main Page
    the counter is approximate since it only records graphical hits. The Internet Modern History Sourcebook is part of the Internet History Sourcebooks Project.
    http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/modsbook.html
    Halsall Home Ancient History Sourcebook Medieval Sourcebook Modern History Course
    Other History Sourcebooks: African East Asian Indian Islamic ... Science
    Main Page Full Texts Multimedia Additions Search ... 21st Century The Internet Modern History Sourcebook now contains thousands of sources and the previous index pages were so large that they were crashing many browsers.
    • See Introduction for an explanation of the Sourcebook's goals. Explanation of Sources of Material Here See the Help! page for all the help on research I can offer.
      Although I am more than happy to receive notes if you have comments on this web site, I cannot answer specific research enquiries [and - for students - I cannot, or rather will not, do your homework.]
    The Modern History Sourcebook now works as follows:
    • This Main Index page has been much extended to show all sections and sub sections. These have also been regularized in a consistent hierarchy. This should allow rapid review of where texts are. To access the sub-section pages , simply browse the sections below and select the highlighted (white text with green background) section title on the left.

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