Day of the Internet
It all started in 1958, when President Eisenhower created the Advanced Research Projects Agency.
UCLA Professor of Computer Science, Leonard Kleinrock, was working on developing an information transfer technology called "packet switching," which broke information into smaller bundles. This made the info easier to transmit and could be reassembled on the receiving end.
ARPANET was launched in September of 1969, when the networking hardware was installed.
And on this day, the first electronic message was successfully sent from UCLA to Stanford. The message was supposed to be "LOGIN" but the system crashed after the first two letters, so it was simply "LO."
The next nodes added were at UC Santa Barbara and the University of Utah, followed by Harvard and the University College of London.


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