Hey guys, we wanted to post this for a while now and are happy to present to you: The History of the Internet (Part 1), which is intended to be brief, gripping, necessarily cursory and also therefore incomplete. If you feel there's something missing, comment beneath this article. Also we don't begin somewhere in the 1980s, but already in 1957.

Let‘s get started:

1957 – Soviet Union Launches Sputnik – ARPA Created

In 1957 the Soviet Union became the first nation to launch a satellite into orbit. While the satellite didn’t do much, its launch concerned the United States. Not wanting the fall behind in the technological innovations, the US government reacted by launching a variety of programs and initiatives, including NASA and announcing their place in the race to land a man on the moon. One lesser-known government agency that was formed during this time was the Department of Defense’s Advanced Research Projects Agency, or ARPA (later referred to as DARPA.)

1962 – The Intergalactic Network of Computers

As many computer scientists were working on a way to connect computers for a wide variety of reasons, advancements in the Cold War provided much of the funding. Some military strategists were worried that a Soviet attack on the phone system would be able to cripple the entire network rendering Washington, and other command centers, unable to communicate. An ARPA affiliated scientist named J.C.R. Licklider proposed an “intergalactic network” of linked computers in a series of memos. Such linked computers would be less susceptible to Soviet attack.

1968/69 – Buying & Building an ARPAnet

In 1968, ARPA put out a request for proposals to actually build a network of computers. This network, the original ARPAnet, and its continuous addition of systems would eventually become the modern internet. The first two computers were connected in 1969. One computer was located at UCLA, and a second at Stanford. The team at UCLA would begin by sending the “login” to the Stanford system. Both the ‘L’ and ‘O’ of the “login” were received before the system crashed, but it proved that the two systems could be linked over long distances. By the end of 1969, there were four nodes connected to the ARPAnet: Two from the original UCLA and Stanford locations, and one at University of California Santa Barbara, and one at the University of Utah.

1970: ARPAnet Grows

During 1970, the ARPAnet grew to 13 different nodes, including a half-dozen east of the Mississippi River. Though the military needs for such communications diminished due to advancements in other forms of communication, ARPAnet still realized the original vision of coast-to-coast communication. At the end of 1970 the Network Working Group finished the initial ARPAnet protocol called the Network Control Protocol.

1972: Email and ARPAnet Is Ready for Its Closeup