Re: Testing my new newsreader...



Uncle Dave wrote:
On Aug 23, 5:12 pm, didgerman <didger...@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Uncle Dave wrote:
On Aug 23, 1:53 pm, "mg" <nosp...@xxxxxxx> wrote:
"didgerman" <didger...@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:Ckfzi.25808$Db6.10322@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Dave Keegan wrote:
On Aug 23, 4:36 am, "mg" <nosp...@xxxxxxx> wrote:
"Devs" <spamt...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:xxzQNFsALKzGFw+F@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
In message <slXyi.24475$4A1.16...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, mg
<nosp...@xxxxxxx> writes
Test post... lol
Test Match Rugby, it is ruined.
Hows that for netiquette devlin, you kilt wearing nancy.
Well done. You can now turn to page 2 of "The internet for dummies".
Yeah, coz I'm so new to the internet, lol.
No, it's called internet for Dummies not Newbies.
I'm afraid you proved Pete's point for him...
Keegan...
I believe it was mg that once said MIT invented the internet, or
something.
Whatever it was, I've always known his IT skills amount to posting on
RSRU, after that it goes tits up....
No, very wrong. So wrong that it's not worth correcting.
lol
UD
Indeed, our mg persisted that the web wasn't invented at CERN.....

Well, it depends doesn't it? If you recognise that what makes the web
works is hyperlinks those were in use some time before the web and BT
apparently applied for a patent for them in the 1970s.

Or so they say. Would you believe a room full of Tories after a few easy quid?
Anyway, hyperlinks, http, and tcp/ip, html.... all equally relevant. But the idea of making it all work together and user friendly was B-Lee's baby.
And that's *not* from wikipedia.....

The web was
the coming together of a number of things and without the internet it
wouldn't have worked.

As to where the internet came from, it's definitely not as simple as
people (e.g. in Wikipedia) think and depends on how you define
"network" and whether you're a yank or a European. For example, SITA
had an international network by 1950 and the world's first worldwide
packet switching network by 1969. I would argue that telecomunicatons
networks are just as apposite to the history of the internet as
academic ones. As ever, the really clever inventions will be
overlooked - nobody knows who invented the wheel do they?

The academics had the time and inclination to do things for non-
commercial reasons and - more importantly were not reluctant to share
information which businessed were reluctant to do. The idea of a
company linking networks even with business partners was anathema even
by the time that such things as JANET and USENET came along.

Here endeth today's lesson.

Well mg will learn something....


UD

.



Relevant Pages

  • drone armies C&C report - July/2005
    ... 3356 LEVEL3 Level 3 Communications ... 3491 BTN-ASN - Beyond The Network A ... 3801 MISNET - Mikrotec Internet Ser ... 15857 DIALOG-AS DIALOG-NET Autonomuo ...
    (Bugtraq)
  • Masquerading problem... can you help?
    ... server to masquerade a simple network and allow access to ... My server uses a modem to dial the internet. ... `SuSE-FW-DROP-DEFAULT' ...
    (comp.os.linux.security)
  • RE: can ping but not browse
    ... I have stopped the firewall. ... # are safed from all (security) hazards. ... firewall/bastion host to the internet ... # internet and to an internal network, ...
    (Fedora)
  • Network Neutrality
    ... everyone on the net should be given equal use of network facilities ... latest piece) also seem to favor network neutrality. ... end the free and open Internet as we know it. ... Tell Congress to preserve the free and open Internet today. ...
    (comp.dcom.telecom)
  • Re: Linux als Router
    ... # Enter all trusted network interfaces here. ... # which should be available to the internet and set FW_ROUTE to yes. ... space separated list of ports, ... # Packets to silently reject without log message. ...
    (de.comp.os.unix.linux.misc)