On 10/23/2015 09:37 AM, Fred Cisin wrote:

TCP/IP would be 33, not 43 years ago. The internet was certainly not
"made possible" by TCP/IP. It was inevitable that eventually there
would be movementS towards standardization of protocols on the
arpanet.  They could have done much worse than TCP/IP!

Yeah, I had quite a number of problems with the original post also.

Early internet systems--I'm not sure where to draw the line between Usenet, ARPANet and Internet exactly often employed nothing more than POTS networking, using nothing more than UUCP or similar methods.

When I added email Internet communication, I used a package for Windows called UUPC, which was pretty much a UUCP clone. Others simply signed up to a service, such as Compuserve.

The Internet is not the World-Wide-Web. Indeed, I have a PC package and book titled "Internet Starter Kit" and there's no mention of a web browser.

I do miss the web-less Internet in some respects. People were more polite back then--at least in their written communication.

--Chuck

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