Is IP actually encapsulated in PPP, or is PPP and IP sent out at the same
time at different protocol layers? Kinda holding hands in a sense to each
other.
----- Original Message -----
From: "vint cerf" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Christopher Evans" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Bill Cunningham"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Brian Lloyd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, March 01, 2002 7:16 AM
Subject: Re: PPP


> christopher,
>
> it is called tcp/ip because the encapsulation was read left to right
>
> so, for example:
>
> smtp/tcp/ip
> telnet/tcp/ip
> ftp/tcp/ip
> http/tcp/ip
>
> and
>
> ip/ppp/ethernet
> ip/ethernet
> ip/ppp/dial-up
> ip/ppp/dsl
>
> and so on
>
> the ordering is arbitrary, of course - we just picked "higher level
protocol to the left"
> as in "higher order bit to the left" as a way of presenting the protocol
layers.
>
> vint cerf
>
> At 11:58 PM 2/28/2002 -0800, Christopher Evans wrote:
> >Why do they call it TCP/IP  ?   that sound reversed. it should be
> >IP/TCP-UDP   as that makes sense in
> >my head.
> >
>

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