Date
|
Event
|
105 |
Paper Invented |
1454 |
Guttenberg press with movable type created
|
1636 |
Harvard University, the first
institution of higher learning in the United States,
founded [Harvard
Guide] |
1690 |
Unlicensed
newspaper Publick Occurrences publishes in Boston and is
suppressed [Alliance
Community Media] |
1704 |
Boston
News-Letter published, first successful colonial newspaper
[Alliance
Community Media] |
1741 |
American
Magazine, first magazine published in America |
1742 |
Benjamin
Franklin publishes first American magazine with
advertisements, General Magazine [Media Timeline
ketupa.net ] |
1747 |
Sir. William Watson demonstrates the transmission of electricity along a metal wire. [PBS The Great Transatlantic Cable] |
1752 |
Benjamin Franklin's Electricity Experiments [PBS The Great Transatlantic Cable] |
1776 |
Thomas Paine publishes "Common Sense"
|
1791 |
US Bill of
Rights, First Amendment
Optical Telegraph demonstrated |
1801 |
Jacquard
invents punch-card wood loom [Media Timeline ketupa.net
] |
1820 |
Electromagnetism
discovered [Alliance
Community Media ] |
1831 |
Joseph Henry
builds telegraph |
1835 |
Era of Telegraph Invention and Disruption
Morse invents
Morse Code |
1844 |
Samuel Morse
demonstrates telegraph
between Baltimore and Washington, D.C. [Griffiths, Hughes]
Bored Network Operators would play checkers over telegraph lines, establishing the first electronic games over networks. [Standage 132] |
1846 |
NYC to
Philadelphia telegraph line is opened and is profitable [Sterling p. 40] |
1849 |
Antonio Meucci
demonstrates the telephone in Cuba |
1850 |
Era of Telegraph Competition
Telegraph line laid between
England and France across the English Channel [Hughes ] |
1851 |
- Reuters
established [Media Timeline ketupa.net ]
- The New York
and Mississippi Valley Printing Telegraph
Company established [WU]
- New York Times
founded [Media Timeline ketupa.net ]
|
1856 |
The New York and
Mississippi Valley Printing Telegraph
Company becomes Western Union [WU]
|
1857 |
Treaty of the
Six Nations, establishing a telegraph
service cartel, dividing country up into six sections and
assigning each section to one firm. [Sterling
p. 43] |
1861 |
Era of Telegraph Consolidation
- Western Union completes first
transcontinental line [WU] [Sterling p 40]
- Pony Express
comes to an end [Media Timeline ketupa.net ]
- Civil War starts. Telegraph will be a vital tool for the Army of the North. One of the first wars where the leadership are in real time communications with the front. Western Union will emerge from the war as the dominant telegraph company, receiving telegraph assets from the Army of the North, and having its Southern competitors' networks destroyed.
|
1862 |
|
1865 |
Telegraphic
message transmitted by radio 18 miles [Alliance
Community Media] |
1866 |
Western Union introduces
stock ticker [WU] Western Union
acquires US Telegraph and American Telegraph.
|
1867 |
|
1870 |
The Telegraph Wars |
1876 |
Era of Telephone Invention and Disruption
Bell patents telephone |
1872 |
Western Electric
Manufacturing Company established
|
1873 |
Western Union
acquires Intl Ocean Telegraph Co |
1876 |
Alexander Graham
Bell transmits first telephone message "Mr. Watson, come
here, I want you." Bell and Elisha Gray patent telephone. [Alliance
Community Media, AT&T ] |
1877 |
American Bell established [AT&T] |
1878 |
First North
American Telephone Exchange in New Haven, CT [AT&T]
SNET
established.
|
1880 |
Bell Canada established [Media
Timeline ketupa.net ] |
1882 |
Bell Telephone acquires Western
Electric Company [AT&T] |
1884 |
First long distance telephone
call between NYC and Boston
IEEE Founded [IEEE
History Center Voice]
|
1885 |
AT&T established [Media
Timeline ketupa.net; AT&T ]
|
1887 |
Interstate Commerce Commission
created to regulate railroads - The first independent
regulatory agency |
1889 |
First Pay Phone
[Alliance
Community Media] |
1889 |
Herman
Hollerith develops first punch card machine
|
1891 |
Wireless Telegraphs begin to appear
on ocean going vessels [FCC] |
1892 |
AT&T opens first long distance
line between NY and Chicago Rate was $9 for 5 minutes [AT&T]
|
1894 |
Era of Telephone Competition
- Bell telephone
patents expire [AT&T]
- Marconi
successfully transmits radio signal 2 miles in Italy [Hughes]
- Dreyfus Affair
|
1896 |
|
1898 |
US Congress
imposes Excise Tax on telephone services as a part of
the Spanish War Act of 1898. |
1899 |
AT&T acquires American Bell [Alliance] |
1900 |
Fessenden transmits voice over
radio. [FCC] |
1901 |
Marconi
successfully transmits radio signal across Atlantic. [Hughes] [FCC]
Congress
creates National Bureau of Standards (will become
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)) [ITL]
|
1906 |
Russian Boris
Rosing invents first working TV [Hughes]
|
1908 |
AT&T Pres. Theodore Vail unveils
his PR campaign, "One System, One Policy, Universal Service." [AT&T] |
1909 |
First short
wave radio broadcasts [Alliance]
Legislation
|
1910 |
Mann-Elkin Act
brought interstate telecommunications within the
jurisdiction of the the ICC . ICC
initiates an investigation of AT&T
|
1912 |
Titanic
sinks - its radio calls for help go unheard [Media Timeline ketupa.net] [Faulhaber]
[FCC]
Radio
Act of 1912 gives Secretary of Commerce
and Labor authority to issue radio licenses and control
broadcasting [FCC]
|
1913 |
Kingsbury
agreement between US Government and AT&T. AT&T agreed to stop
acquiring independent phone
companies and to divest itself of Western
Union [Lessig
p 29] |
1914 |
|
1915 |
First
Transcontinental telephone line, utilized vacuum tubes [AT&T] |
1917 |
US Enters World
War I. USG nationalizes both radio service
and telephone service. |
1918 |
USG nationalizes
AT&T . AT&T is privatized
again in 1919. |
1919 |
CTR formed out
of merger of Computing Scale Company, Tabulating Machine
Company, and the Recording Company
AT&T introduces first dial telephone. [AT&T]
|
1920 |
KDKA
Pittsburgh broadcasts first regular programs [Media
Timeline ketupa.net ]
Hush-a-phone starts being
made.
|
1921 |
Era of Telephone Consolidation |
1922 |
ASCAP demands
royalties from radio stations [Alliance]
First Radio
daily news. First Radio commercials. [Alliance]
NIST builds
first AC radio. [NIST Centennial]
|
1923 |
Disney opens
Hollywood film studio [Media Timeline ketupa.net
]
FTC initiates
anti trust investigation of RCA, GE, Westinghouse,
AT&T and United Fruit [Alliance]
NIST radio
station WWV goes online [NIST Centennial]
|
1924 |
Calculating-Tabulating-Recording
company becomes IBM [Griffiths]
Bell labs
invents mobile phone. [Alliance]
First
presidential speech broadcast [Alliance]
|
1926 |
NBC founded by
GE [Media Timeline ketupa.net ] |
1927 |
FCC
- Radio Act of
1927 creates the Federal Radio Commission, declares
spectrum to be a public good
Industry
- Philo
Farnsworth successfully transmits first image [Hughes]
- AT&T begins
transatlantic service [AT&T]
|
1928 |
CBS created [Media Timeline ketupa.net ]
Disney releases first Mickey Mouse cartoon [Media Timeline ketupa.net ]
Olmstead v US (telephone calls not protected by 4th Amendment)
ITT acquires Mackay Companies
|
1929 |
Oct 29, Black Friday, the Stock Market
crashes
First telephone
installed in White House [Alliance]
Cathorade tube
invented [Alliance]
|
1930 |
AT&T becomes sanctioned telephony
monopoly under Theodore Vail's vision of "one system, one
policy, universal service." [Fraser]
|
1932 |
GE ordered to
divest RCA and NBC [Media Timeline ketupa.net ]
ITU established
[Media Timeline ketupa.net ]
|
1933 |
FM radio
demonstrated [Alliance] |
1934 |
Communications Act of 1934 establishes the Federal Communications Commission . Eugene Sykes (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman
At the time, the USG was operating the following communications networks:
"Under the Commerce Department, a radiotelegraph system for the airways division and marine beacons for the Lighthouse Service. Under the Treasury Department, a system of radiotelegraph sta- tions on both coasts of the United States for the Coast Guard for communication with their ships and for purposes of safety of life at sea.
"Under the Department of the Interior, a radiotelegraph service for the Forestry section (one of several small services).
"Under the Navy Department, a radiotelegraph system of comnm- nication between both coasts, between the naval districts. on both coasts to ships at sea (including radio direction-finder stations), and to Hawaii, Alaska, Manila, Panama, Puerto Rico, Guam. and Samoa.
"Under the War Department, a cable and radio service to Alaskf a radio and wire telegraph network within the United States and Alaska, and a radiotelegraph service to its overseas units and trans- ports.
[1934 Com. Study at 3]
|
1935 |
Eugene Sykes (Democrat) resigns as FCC Chairman; Anning Prall (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1936 |
Publication of
Alan Turin, On Computable Numbers, with an application to
the Entscheidungsproblem [Media Timeline ketupa.net]
|
1937 |
Anning Prall
(Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Frank McNinch (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1938 |
First publicly
broadcast football game, U Penn [Media Timeline
ketupa.net ]
War of the
Worlds broadcast [Media Timeline ketupa.net ]
Silicon Valley
born in a garage by HP [Nerds]
National Federation of Telephone
Workers formed.
|
1939 |
AT&T demonstrates Picturephone
[TCMHC]
First FM radio
station [Alliance]
Frank McNinch
(Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; James Lawrence Fly (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1940 |
CBS
demonstrates color TV [Media Timeline ketupa.net
]
First remote
job entry, George
Stibitz
demonstrated remote calculation via a teletype
demonstrated between Dartmouth and Manhattan during
meeting of the American Mathematical Society [Salus p 1]
|
1941 |
United States
enters World War II
FCC promulgates
national TV ownership rules.
|
1942 |
USG grants Hedy
Lamarr a patent for "Secret Communications System," spread spectrum
technology. |
1943 |
Western Union
pioneers first intercity microwave system [WU]
First African
American woman, Gloria Shepperson, is hired by Bell System
|
1944 |
IBM built the
Harvard Mark I, first large scale electronic calculator,
in order to calculate gun-firing tables [Griffiths]
ENIAC created and used by US
Army, at U Penn, to compute World War II ballistic
firing tables
Alan Turing
leads British effort to build Colossus at Bletchley
Park, breaks German code created by ENIGMA [Griffiths]
FCC Mayflower
Doctrine
James Lawrence
Fly (Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Ewell Jett (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
Ewell Jett
(Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Paul Porter (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1945 |
Supreme Court
upholds media ownership rules,
finding that mergers that narrow dissemination of
information are unconstitutional [Alliance]
Vannevar Bush,
As
We May Think, Atlantic Monthly (July 1945)
Vannevar Bush,
Science
- The Endless Frontier Report to the President
|
1946 |
"Formal
dedication and dinner for ENIAC - The world's first
operational electronic digital computer - developed by
Army Ordinance to computer WWII ballistic firing
tables." [CFP 2002 Calendar ]
NIST establishes an automated
electronic computing project. [NIST
Centennial]
AT&T
introduces mobile telephone service. [AT&T]
Paul Porter
(Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Charles Denny (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
Administrative Procedures Act enacted.
|
1947 |
ENIAC patent
filed
NIST builds
computers for government agencies. [NIST
Centennial]
ITU becomes
part of UN [Media Timeline ketupa.net]
Transistor
invented at Bell Labs [Hughes]
[AT&T]
McCarthy
Red-fear era begins
Communications Workers of America
union formed.
FCC
- Charles
Denny (Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Paul Walker (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
- Paul Walker
(Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Wayne Coy (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1948 |
Cable
television service begins [Cable]
BBN Founded [BBN]
|
1949 |
Pacifica radio
goes on the air in Berkeley [Pacifica] |
1950 |
NIST's Standards Eastern Automatic
Computer (SEAC) goes online. "First operational,
internally programmed digital computer in the United
States. It served the government for more than 13 years,
handling tasks such as Air Force planning, Social Security
accounting, and checking of calculations for the design of
the hydrogen bomb." [NIST Centennial]
National Science Foundation established.
|
1951 |
Remington-Rand
built UNIVAC I computer, the first commercial computer,
for US census [Griffiths]
[Nerds] [ITL] |
1952 |
USGovt sues
IBM for antitrust [Media Timeline ketupa.net ]
Wayne Coy
(Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Paul Walker (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1953 |
IBM ships its
first electronic computer, the 700 series [Griffiths] [IBM]
Paul Walker
(Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Rosel Hyde (Republican) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1954 |
Rosel Hyde
(Republican) resigns as FCC
Chairman; George McConnaughey (Republican) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC] |
1955 |
First color
television transmission of a US President, Pres. Dwight
D. Eisenhower [Hughes]
AT&T begins to develop T1
Digital Lines [Abbate p
16]
|
1956 |
Consent Decree
between DOJ and AT&T :
Prohibits AT&T through its manufacturing subsidiary
Western Electric from making non telecommunications
related computing equipment (in other words, AT&T
could not compete with IBM!) [Lehr]
DC Cir rules
that you can attach a Hush-a-phone
to an AT&T phone.
FCC rules that
cable television is not common
carriage and therefore the FCC lacks jurisdiction
over Cable. Frontier Broadcasting Company v. Collier, 24
FCC 251 [Cable]
|
1957 |
USSR launches Sputnik I (Oct 4) NIST
modifies equipment so as to receive transmissions from
Sputnik. [NIST Centennial]
Advanced Research Projects
Agency (ARPA) formed. [Griffiths]
[PBS Nerds2.0.1] [DARPA]
George
McConnaughey (Republican) resigns as FCC
Chairman; John Doerfer (Republican) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1958 |
NASA formed,
transferring missile responsibility from ARPA to NASA
(summer). [Griffiths] [Nerds]
UN Committee on
Peaceful Uses of Outer Space established [Hughes]
AT&T
introduces first commercial modem. [AT&T]
|
1960 |
Publication of
Man-Computer Symbiosis by JCR Licklider [PBS
Nerds2.0.1]
John Doerfer
(Republican) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Frederick Ford (Republican) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
BBN leased
Digital Equipment Corporations first PDP-1 computer with
serial number 1 [BBN]
|
1961 |
Radical group
blew up 4 microwave towers in Utah, cutting off
communications to Western USA, and demonstrating the
vulnerability of the US communications network. [Shabot] [Salus
p 1, 5] See Images of damage, at AT&T
Long Lines. These was a driving force in DOD's
concern about the survivability of the US Communications
network, and hiring Paul Baran.
President
Kennedy commits nation to landing a man on the moon. [NIST Centennial]
Industry
- IBM
introduces time sharing and remote access computers [Griffiths]
- Commercial
production of computer chip initiates [Griffiths]
Internet
- Publication
of Leonard Kleinrock, Information Flow in Large
Communications Nets, RLE Quarterly Progress
Report (July) [PBS Nerds2.0.1] [ACM] [Roberts]
FCC
- FCC Chairman
Newton Minow refers to TV as a "vast wasteland" [Alliance]
- Frederick
Ford (Republican) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Newton Minow (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
Legislation
|
1962 |
Internet
Industry
- BBN
demonstrates computer time-sharing [BBN]
- AT&T Deploys T1 Digital Lines
for first time [Abbate
p 16]
FCC
Other
|
1963 |
Rebirth of Telephone Competition
- ARPA contracts with
UCLA, MIT and BBN [TCMHC]
- BBN develops
first voice modem, DataDail [BBN]
- MCI Founded
- FCC
- National
Communications Systems established in response to
telephone network failures during Cuban Missile Crisis
- Newton Minow
(Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; E William Henry (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1964 |
Internet
Industry
- INTELSAT
established [Hughes]
- IBM releases
System 360 mainframe [TCMHC]
- SABRE air
travel computer network goes online for air travel
reservations
- Tymshare
Founded [CHM]
|
1965 |
Internet
- ARPA funds first
wide-area network built by Larry Roberts and Thomas
Marill [TCMHC]
- ARPA funded
JOSS system goes online [TCMHC]
Industry
- Gordon Moore
sets forth Moore's
law [CW]
- DEC releases
PDP-8 minicomputer [TCMHC] [IBM]
- "AT&T
installs the world's first electronic telephone switch
(special purpose computer) in a local telephone
exchange, Succasunna, NJ." [AT&T]
Government
- "The Brooks
Act of 1965 gave the National Bureau of Standards
(NBS)—now the Department of Commerce’s National
Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST)—responsibilities for developing automatic data
processing standards and guidelines pertaining to
federal computer systems." [2009 Review]
|
1966 |
Larry Roberts
joins ARPA IPTO,
becoming chief scientist [TCMHC]
Merit (Michigan Educational Research
Information Triad) established. [Merit History]
FCC
- FCC
initiates Computer Inquiry I.
- E William
Henry (Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Rosel Hyde (Republican) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1967 |
Internet
- ARPA creates ARPANET
plans. [TCMHC]
- Larry
Roberts, Multiple Computer Networks and
Intercomputer Communication, Proceedings of the
ACM Gatlinburg Conference (October) [ACM]
[Roberts]
Public
Broadcasting Act of 1967, establishing the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting
Jef Raskin
writes PhD thesis on GUI
Katz v US (4th
Amendment applies to people, not places; therefore 4th
Amendment applies to private telephone calls)
|
1968 |
ARPANET
- ARPA RFP for construction of first four IMPs on ARPANet (August) [PBS Nerds2.0.1][Roberts]
- ARPA awards contract to BBN for development of ARPANET IMPs (December) [TCMHC][Roberts]
FCC releases Carterphone decision (CPE)
NationalBureau of Standards approved and released FIPS 1, Code for Information Interchange (ASCII) [ITL] "All computers procured by the federal government after mid-1969 had to be capable of using ASCII, which was originally developed by an industry standards committee chaired by a NIST staff member." [NIST Centennial]
Industry
- AT&T introduces 911 service [AT&T]
- Steve Jobs meets Steve Wozniak
- MCI established
- Intel established by Moore, Robert Noyce, and Andy Grove [CW] [Intel]
- DOJ Blocks ITT's acquisition of ABC Broadcasting. In 1970, DOJ blocks ITT's acquisition of Hartford Insurance as well. [ITT Corp History]
|
1969 |
Era of Internet Invention
Industry
- Compuserv
Founded
- Intel
releases the 1101, first metal oxide semiconductor
(MOS) static RAM chip and the 3101 Schotiky bipolar
RAM chip [CW] [Intel]
- FCC approves MCI's 1963 application for operations.
ARPANET
NSF grants $400,000 to MERIT for
"Development of a Prototype Network of Computer Services
for Self-Instruction and Teaching" [Merit History]
FCC
- Rosel Hyde
(Republican) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Dean Burch (Republican) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
- FCC Approves MCI's application to offer service
National Bureau
of Standards establishes Center for Computer Science and
Technology [ITL]
|
1970 |
General
- ARPANet
adopts NCP [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
- Network
Working Group completes the Network Control Protocol
(NCP), network protocol for ARPANet (implementation of
NCP completed 1971-72) (December) [TCMHC]
[ACM]
- Alohanet goes
online [Nerds]
- Jon Postel,
somewhere around this time, volunteers to manage the
networks names and numbers, what will become the IANA
function, conducted at ISI UCLA with DARPA funding
Industry
|
1971 |
Internet
- Telnet protocol released by NWG [TCMHC]
- 23 Host Computers on ARPANet [Griffiths] 15 Nodes on ARPANet [Nerds]
- First email sent on ARPANet by Ray Tomlinson "testing 1-2-3" sent to himself [Griffiths Email] [BBN]
- BBN establishes first Network Operations Center (NOC) [BBN]
First Amendment / Media
Industry
- Intel releases first microprocessor, 4004; Intel issues IPO [CW] [Intel]
- ITT accused of interferring with Chilean elections and of bribing Republican officials so as to locate the Republican convention in San Diego. [ITT Corp History] [ITT Virt. History]
FCC
|
1972 |
ARPANET
- Release of
Jon Postel and Abhay Bhushan, RFC 354, FTP Protocol
Specification [Roberts] [Nerds]
- Robert Kahn,
Communications Principles for Operating Systems,
Internal BBN Memo [ACM]
- ARPANet
Publicly Demonstrated at International Conference on
Computer Communications [Griffiths]
[PBS Nerds2.0.1]
- Ray
Tomlinson (BBN) writes email program for ARPANet,
adopting use of @ sign [TCMHC] [ACM]
- AT&T declines
ARPA's offer to take over the ARPANet.
- Internetworking
Working Group organized [Griffiths]
[PBS Nerds2.0.1]
Industry
- Steve Jobs
gets a job at Atari
- AT&T developers C [TCMHC]
- HBO Starts
in New York City . See Cable
- MCI initiates service, publicly traded.
|
1973 |
Internet
- BBN Encrypts
first message over ARPANet [BBN]
- Bob Kahn
joins DARPA [TCMHC]
- Release of
RFC 454: FTP [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
- DARPA
contracts with Stanford, BBN, and University College
of London for work on TCP [TCMHC]
- Kahn and
Cerf present paper on TCP at International Network
Working Group meeting [TCMHC]
- Larry
Roberts leaves DARPA, Joins Telenet, first
commercial packet switched network; Telenet files
application with FCC seeking permission under Title II
to operate a communications network
- Licklider
returns to ARPA IPTO as director
Xerox Parc
invents distributed computing. Alto personal computer
becomes operational. Ethernet invented. [Parc]
Bob Metcalfe
competes PhD thesis on Ethernet [PBS
Nerds2.0.1]
FCC authorizes
MCI to offer foreign
exchange service.
|
1974 |
Internet
- Licklider
returns to DARPA [TCMHC]
- Publication
of Kahn and Cerf, A Protocol for Packet Network
Interconnection, IEEE Transactions on Communications
Technology (May) [TCMHC] [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
- 62 hosts on
ARPANet [Nerds p 376]
Industry
- Telenet
opened by Larry Roberts [Griffiths]
[PBS Nerds2.0.1] [BBN]
FCC approves of Telenet's
application to become a common carrier
- Western
Union launches Western I, first domestic
communications satellite [WU]
- MCI and DOJ
bring antitrust suits
against AT&T
- Intel
releases 8080 microprocessor [Intel]
- MCI launches Execunet. In 1975 FCC will order MCI to cease Execunet operations. FCC's order will be overturned in 1978.
Dean Burch
(Republican) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Dick Wiley (Republican) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1975 |
Internet
- Administration
of ARPANet transferred from DARPA to Defense
Communications Agency (aka DISA) [TCMHC]
[Nerds p 376]
Industry
- Microsoft founded by
Bill Gates and Paul Allen. Gates and Allen develop
Altair Basic. [CW]
- HBO begins
service [Cable]
- Sprint
launches first public data network [Sprint]
- Xerox Parc
demonstrates GUI [Parc]
FCC
- George
Carlin's Seven Dirty Words routine on Pacifica Radio
("Seven Dirty Words" is currently the name of the
Federal Communication Bar Association's ultimate
frisbee team) [Pacifica]
- FCC adopts
Part 68 rules, permitting CPE
attachments to the telephone network.
|
1976 |
Internet
- Vint Cerf
joins ARPA (July) [Nerds p 376]
- DARPA
supports work at UC Berkeley to incorporate TCP/IP
into UNIX [TCMHC]
- Queen
Elizabeth sends an email.
FCC
Industry
- HP turns
down Wozniak's proposal for the Apple I computer
- Commodore
turns down Wozniak's proposal for the Apple II
computer
- Wozniak and
Jobs begin to produce Apple computers out of a garage.
[IBM]
- Tymnet
established as a subsidiary of Tymshare. Offers FCC
Tarriffed computer network services. [CHM]
Legislation
|
1977 |
Internet
- "First TCP
Operation over ARPANet" (October) [Roberts]
- 111 Hosts on
ARPAnet [Nerds p 377]
- Tymnet
launched [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
- BBN
develops first Internet routers [BBN]
- USENET
established [IBM]
Industry
- Apple
introduces APPLE II [TCMHC]
- Apple
founded by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak (Jan 3)
- Tandy
introduces TRS-80 [TCMHC]
- AT&T
installs first fiber optic cable in commercial
communications [AT&T]
Dick Wiley
(Republican) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Charles Ferris (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
National Bureau
of Standards approves FIPS 46, Data Encryption Standard
(DES) [ITL]
|
1978 |
Internet
- Potentially
the first SPAM on the Net, a commercial announcement
by DEC promoting the DECSYSTEM 2020 (May 1) [Reaction
to the DEC Spam of 1978]
- Vint Cerf,
Jon Postel, Danny Cohen, TCP split into TCP/IP (March)
[Roberts]
Industry
- Last manual,
non dial, telephone retired [AT&T]
- Intel
releases 8086 microprocessor [CW] [Intel]
|
1979 |
Internet
- Compuserv
offers email and tech support for PC users
- USENET
established [Griffiths] [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
- USPS
attempts to outlaw private email service,
retaining message delivery business for itself; this
effort is thwarted by the FCC and the US Postal
Commission.
FCC
- FCC Grants
GTE's application to acquire Telenet
- FCC asserts
jurisdiction over USPS
E-COM electronic mail service, and concludes
that email is common carriage.
- FCC Chair
Ferris recruits S. J. Lukasik to be FCC Chief
Scientist in the Office of Science & Technology
(currently the Office of Engineering and Technology);
Lukasik was Chief of ARPA
from 1971 to
1973. Lukasik
meets Michael
Marcus at a
meeting in Chicago; they had met previously when
Marcus administered ARPA R&D projects in nuclear
test detection. Lukasik offers Marcus job at FCC. [M Marcus 2008] [Lukasik 1982]
National Bureau
of Standards approves FIPS 60, I/O Channel Interface [ITL]
|
1980 |
Internet
- TCP/IP
"adopted as a defense standard in 1980, enabling the
defense community to begin sharing the DARPA Internet
technology base" [ACM]
Industry
- Apple goes
public
- IBM chooses
DOS for use in its PCs [TCMHC]
FCC
|
1981
Fowler
|
Internet
- DARPA
Internet Working Group releases RFC 801 setting forth
plan to migrate network to TCP/IP [TCMHC]
- 213 nodes on
ARPAnet [Nerds p 377]
- NSF grant
goes to establish CSNET (Computer Science Network) -
uses TCP/IP in CSNET [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
CSNet established by City University NSF starts CSNET New
York [Griffiths]
- BITNET
established [Griffiths] [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
- David Clark,
Jerome Saltzer, and David Reed, End-to-end
architecture
- IETF RFC
799, Internet Name Domains
Industry
- IBM selects
Intel 8088 microprocessor chip for its PC [CW] [Intel]
- Osborne
releases portable computer [TCMHC]
Judiciary
FCC
FCC Releases Spread Spectrum
NOI.
- Charles
Ferris (Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Robert E Lee (Republican) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
- Robert E Lee
(Republican) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Mark Fowler (Republican) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1982 |
FCC
- Judge Green
approves of the Modified Final Judgment providing for
divestiture of AT&T
- Stephen
Lukasik departs from the position of FCC Chief
Scientist (had been Chief of ARPA from 1971 to 1975).
Internet
- TCP/IP
adopted as protocol suite for ARPANET [PBS
Nerds2.0.1]
- Release of
RFC 819, defining initial top level domain ARPA [Donelan]
Industry
- USPS
Introduces E-COM (messages
originate electronically, are printed off at a post
office, and delivered in hard copy form; this service
would only last 3 years and reportedly lost
significant money for USPS)
- IBM
introduces IBM PC
- Time names computer as
"Man of the Year"
- Intel
releases 286 processor [Intel]
|
1983 |
Internet
General
- Bill Gates
announces windows, which will not be released for
another 4 years.
DNS
- DNS
"designed by Jon Postel, Paul Mockapetris, and Craig
Patridge" November [Roberts] [Nerds p 378]
- DNS name
server developed [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
Industry
- LLDS
established
- BBN
Communications launched [BBN]
FCC
|
1984 |
FCC
- Consent Decree with
AT&T goes into effect. AT&T is broken
up into AT&T long distance and the Bell Operating
Companies. (Jan 1)
Internet
- DNS
introduced. [Griffiths] [PBS Nerds2.0.1] Release of RFC
920,Domain Requirements (adds GOV, EDU, COM, MIL and
ORG) (October) [Donelan]
- AS1 assigned to BBN. There are 35 AS Numbers Assigned.[AS1] AS1 will be acquired by Level 3 in 2004.
- NSF Launches
its Supercomputing program
- 1000 hosts
on Internet 562 hosts on ARPAnet [Nerds
p 378]
- William
Gibson in his book Neuromancer reportedly coins the
term "cyberspace" [TCMHC]
Legislation
Industry
- Prodigy
Founded
- Richard
Stallman founds GNU Project [IBM]
- Apple
announces macintosh (Jan 24) [TCMHC]
- IBM develops
the 80286-based PC-AT running MS-DOS establishing the
IBM PC standard [CW]
- MCI installed Single Mode Fiber Optic Cable between NYC and WDC
Government
- "In 1984,
Executive Order 12472 re-chartered the National
Communication System (NCS) as those telecommunication
assets owned or leased by the Federal government that
can meet U.S. national security and emergency
preparedness needs. The Department
of Homeland Security inherited the NCS in 2003."
[2009
Review]
|
1985 |
Internet
- "Symbolics.com
registered" (Mar. 15) [Donelan]
BBN.COM is second commercial domain name registered [BBN]
- "Berkeley
releases BIND" (Apr 1) [Donelan]
- NSFNET Established, using
TCP/IP, AUP prohibited network use for purposes "not
in support of research and education." Funded at $200
m 1986-95 [Griffiths] [ACM]
- "DARPA/DCA
implements RFC 920, 921 (U.S.C. §-ISI/SR-NIC)" [Donelan]
- The WELL
goes online at The Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link [The Well]
- October Richard Stallman establishes the Free Software Foundation [Free Software Foundation] [See Open]
Industry
- Quantum
Computer Services (AOL) incorporated, hires Steve Case
[Vanity Fair]
- GE
reacquires NBC
- MS releases
Windows 1.0
- Level3 Founded as Kiewit Diversified
Group Inc. (KDG), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Peter
Kiewit Sons', Inc. (PKS). [Level3
History]
FCC
|
1986 |
Internet
- Cleveland
Freenet established (first freenet) (Jul 16) [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
- IETF first
meeting [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
- Network News
Transfer Protocol introduced [IBM]
- First
'netiquette' guide created [Griffiths
Email]
- NSFNET established [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
- 5000 hosts
on Internet 562 hosts on ARPAnet [Nerds
p 379]
- NSF signs
cooperative agreement with Merit.net for operation of
NSFNET [TCMHC]
- Al Gore
introduces National Science Foundation Authorization
Act, supporting computer network research [Wiggins]
- Clifford
Stoll of Berkeley, detecting a 75 cent accounting
error, uncovers the allegedly Russian sponsored hacker
"Hunter" who had been using the Berkeley systems to
attack sensitive US information over the network. The
investigation of the hacker led to the publication of
"The Cuckoo's Egg: Tracking a Spy Through The Maze of
Computer Espionage (1989)
- First
Interop conference (for vendors implementing TCP/IP) [Roberts]
Industry
- United
Telecom becomes Sprint.
- Sprint
starts long distance service, with its "pin-drop"
commercials [Sprint]
Other
- Brain PC Virus detected
(considered the first virus)
Law
- ECPA signed into law
(Oct 21)
FCC
|
1987 |
Internet
Industry
FCC
- Mark Fowler
(Republican) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Dennis Patrick (Republican) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
National Bureau
of Standards approves FIPS 127, Database Language SQL [ITL]
Computer
Security Act (PL 100-235) formally assigned to National
Bureau Standards responsibility for computer security
for unclassified federal systems.
|
1988 |
Cybersecurity
Industry
- First
Interop conference (for vendors implementing TCP/IP)
(1988)[TCMHC] [ACM]
- Qwest founded as SP
Construction. Lays fiber along all of its railroad
ownings.
- MFS
Communications founded [Funding
Universe]
Government
- US
Government releases procurement requirement that OSI must be supported in IT [TCMHC]
- National
Institute of Standards and Technology Act (PL 100-418)
renamed the National Bureau of Standards to National
Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
Legislation
- Al Gore
introduces National High-Performance Computer
Technology Act of 1988 [Wiggins]
Internet
- CSNET and
BITNET merged to become Corporation for Research and
Educational Networking (CREN) [Living
Internet]
- Publication
of Kahn, Towards a National Research Network [Wiggins]
- IANA funded
by DOD DARPA
- Southern
Pacific Telecom established to lay fiber along
railroad lines. SP Telecom will become Qwest. Acquired
by CenturyLink in 2011. [CenturyTel
Timeline]
|
1989
Sikes
|
Legislation
Industry
- "AOL Service
Launched for Macintosh and Apple II"
- "Steve Case
wins contest to rename the Quantum online service
& America Online is born. The AOL service is
launched including e-mail, games, special interest
forums, plus a ground breaking feature allowing AOL
members to communicate in one-on-one, real time [AOL]
- PSINet
founded
Internet
- NSF, ARPA
fund Gigabit Testbed by Kahn and Cerf at CNRI [TCMHC]
- "Internet
opened to commercial mail through MCI mail" [Roberts]
- World Wide
Web developed by Tim Berners-Lee at CERN [Griffiths] [W3C]
- First
commercial dial up ISP: World world.std.com [PBS Nerds2.0.1] [TheWorld]
FCC
- Dennis
Patrick (Republican) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Alfred Sikes (Republican) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1990 |
Internet
FCC
Industry
- CISCO IPO
- UUNet
launches Alternet
|
1991 |
Era of Commercial Internet Disruption and Competition
Internet
- Tim
Berners-Lee WWW files made
available on The Net via FTP (August) [W3C]
- NSF assumes
control of civilian Internet
- NSF permits
private and commercial access to NSFNET
backbone [TCMHC]
- NSF permits
private / commercial+E24 access to NSFNET backbone [Griffiths]
- Phil
Zimmerman releases PGP [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
- Mark
McCahill releases Gopher [Wiggins]
- Trojan
Room Coffee Pot goes online (first
webcam)
- Linus Torvalds posts Linux kernel to the Internet [Wired]
Industry
FCC
Legislation
- "Gore Act"
passed US High Performance Computing Act creating
National Research and Education Network [TCMHC]
|
1992 |
Internet
- 50 websites world wide [Griffiths]
- ISOC Formed
- Mark
Andreesen develops MOSAIC at University of Illinois
Industry
Legislation
- Cable Television
Consumer Protection and Competition Act
- The Audio
Home Recording Act
|
1993
|
Legislation
Industry
- SouthWestern
Bell becomes SBC.
- FleetNet
becomes Nextel.
- Intel
introduces the Pentium processor [CW]
[Intel]
- MFS builds
first nationwide ATM network. [Funding
Universe]
Internet
- CERN
declares that WWW technology
will be freely available [W3C] 150
websites world wide [Griffiths]
- Marc
Andreesen's Mosaic Browser released, alpha version
while at at National Center for SuperComputing
Applications, Illinois [W3C]
- White House
and UN go online [Nerds p 380]
- NSF creates
InterNIC. AT&T awarded contract
for directory and database services, Network Solutions
Inc awarded contract for DNS registration, General
Atomics/CERFNet awarded contract for information
services [PBS Nerds2.0.1]
- IETF sets to work on IPv6
FCC
- Alfred Sikes
(Republican) resigns as FCC
Chairman; James Quello (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
- James Quello
(Democrat) resigns as FCC
Chairman; Reed Hundt (Democrat) is named as FCC Chairman [FCC]
|
1994 |
Internet
FCC
Legislation
Industry
- Mosaic
founded by Marc Andreesen and Jim Clarke (becomes
Netscape) [W3C] Netscape 1.0
released
- Netscape Browser incorporates cookies.
- "AOL links to Internet
for first time" [AOL]
- Yahoo! (known as
Jerry and David's Guide to the WWW) is created [Yahoo!]
- BBN Planet
(ISP) formed [BBN]
- Amazon
incorporated (opens doors for business next year) [Amazon 2009]
|
1995 |
Legislation
Internet
Industry
Govt
|
1996 |
Internet
- Internet2 formed
- Xanga, the
first blog service, launched
Legislation
DNS
Industry
FCC
- ACTA files
petition at FCC requesting that Internet telephony
be regulated under title II (the FCC never closed this
proceeding). Voice on the Network Coalition formed in
response.
|
1997
|
Judicial
DNS
Intellectual Property
Industry
FCC
|
1998 |
DNS
Legislation
FCC
Internet
- "The Internet2 Abilene Network is announced at the White House with Vice President Al Gore, Vint Cerf, and others. The network is made possible through a partnership with Qwest Communications, Cisco Systems, and Nortel Networks." [Internet2 Timeline]
- IPv6 Standard completed.
Industry
|
1999 |
Judicial
- COPA declared
unconstitutional by district court
History
- CNN
interview between Wolf Blitzer and Al Gore in which
Gore stated "I took the initiative in creating the
Internet." Gore was referring to his support of
legislation to fund national information
infrastructures such as NSFNET.
This quote quickly became [Wiggins]
- Larry Lessig's, CODE
Legislation
DNS
- ISI UCLA
transfers IANA to ICANN
- IANA officially announced IPv6 allocations July 14
Cybercrime
- David Smith
enters guilty plea for disseminating the Melissa
virus.
Intellectual Property
- DeCSSS
program created.
- Netscape
releases source code and declares it open
- Napster
Created [Pew]
Industry
- AOL acquired
Netscape [AOL]
- AT&T / TCI Merger
(FCC rejects Open Access Arguments)
- DOCSIS 1.0
Issued by Cablelabs
- Google
removes "Beta" from its website [Google]
- Cogent starts
operations [Cogent]
- PSINet buys naming
rights to the Baltimore Ravens football stadium
- Qwest acquires US
West
- Victoria Secrets webcast causes internet to crash. See CDN.
- Excite@Home Merger
VoIP
- Packetcable
VoIP service initiated in Union, NJ. Charter initiates
VoIP service in Fitchburg, WI [Cable]
FCC
Literature
|
2000 |
Judicial
Internet
- First
Internet election, Arizona democratic primary (Mar 1)
- COPA Commission released
its final report (Oct 20)
- ITU adopted
Recommendation D.50 (ICAIS);
USG took a reservation
DNS
- "Internet2
backbone network deploys IPv6"
(May 16)
Industry
FCC
|
2001
|
Dot-Com Bubble bursts
9/11 creates a flash demand event on the Internet. The Internet suffers major damage in the New York region.
Industry
- AOLTW Merger
Completed [AOL]
- Apple
Introduces iPod and iTunes
- AT&T divests
AT&T Wireless
- AT&T /
MediaOne Merger
- DOCSIS 2.0
Released by Cablelabs
- Google
acquires Deja.com (USENET archive) [Google]
- PSINet declares bankruptcy
- Wikipedia
Goes Online
- Cogent acquires Netrail. [Funding
Universe]
- Sprint/MCI
merger falls through.
- WCOM acquires Intermedia Communications / Digex on condition that it sells off Intermedia Backbone
- Limelight initiates CDN service
- Excite@Home Bankruptcy. Network sold to AT&T.
Cybersecurity
Legislation
USG
FCC
|
2002 |
Era of Commercial Internet Consolidation
Judicial
- Supreme
Court strikes down the Child
Pornography Prevention Act, making illegal
virtual kiddie porn, as unconstitutional
- US
District Court for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania ruled that the Children's
Internet Protection Act, as it applies to
libraries, is facially unconstitutional as a violation
of the First Amendment.
- GulfPower v FCC,
(S.Ct.) (ruling FCC can set pole attachment rates for
Internet over Cable)
Industry
- SBC Acquires
Ameritech.
- Level3 Acquires Genuity.
- Vonage initiates
service
- Google News
launches [Google]
- PSINet acquired by Cogent
- BBN builds
first network protected by quantum cryptography [BBN]
- WCOM divests of Intermedia Backbone, selling it to Allegiance Telecom.
FCC
|
2003 |
Judicial
FCC
Legislation
DNS
Industry
- Blogger.com
acquired by Google; Google introduces AdSense [Google]
- Intel
releases Centrino processor with wireless capability
built in [Intel]
- February Level3 acquired Genuity [Level3
History]
Cybersecurity
|
2004 |
Industry
- SBC acquires AT&T
Wireless
- WCOM renames itself
MCI
- Google
launches GMail [Google]
- Verizon
divests BBN, which becomes an independent company
again. [BBN]
- Allegiance Telecom, in bankruptcy, is sold to XO
Judicial
FCC
|
2005
|
DNS
- WGIG releases its report
on Internet governance.
FCC
Industry
Judicial
- In FCC v. Brandx, the
Supreme Court affirms that the FCC can categorize
Internet over cable as an information service.
- Texas
Attorney General files suit against Vonage re 911 service
General
|
2006 |
FCC
Industry
Cybercrime
Legislation
Industry
Level3
acquired Progress Telecom, ICG, TelCove and Looking
Glass Networks [Level3
History]
|
2007 |
FCC
Industry
- Level3 acquired Broadwing, the Content Delivery Network (CDN) services business of SAVVIS, Inc. and Servecast. [Level3 History]
- Netflix launches streaming video service
- Apple introduces the iPhone. [YouTube video of introduction]
- "It’s OK—we’ll be fine," Mr. Jim Balsillie, co-CEO of RIm on the release of the iPhone, Forbes
- "There's no chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share" Jim Ballmer, USA Today April 2007
|
2008 |
FCC
Industry
- Amazon CDN service launched
|
2009
|
FCC
- Kevin Martin
Resigns as FCC Chairman; Michael Copps is named as
Acting FCC Chairman (in the first all hands meeting, as he walked to the podium but before he had said a word, Acting Chairman Copps received a standing ovation from the FCC staff)
- Julius
Genachowski is named as FCC Chairman
USG
- GSA releases FAR requiring IPv6 compliant products be included in all new IT acquisitions using Internet Protocol
Industry
- CenturyLink acquires Embarq, changes its name from
CenturyTel to CenturyLink [CenturyTel
Timeline]
- Time Warner spins off AOL, undoing the 2001 merger. [TW]
|
2010 |
FCC
- More People get their news online than from traditional print newspapers
|
2011 |
FCC
Internet
- Feb. 3:
IANA/ICANN hands out last IPv4
block
- Sept:
Internet Governance Forum Nairobi
- Steve Jobs, co founder of Apple Computer, dies.
- Stuxnet Worm attacks Iranian nuclear site
Industry
|
2012 |
- June 30: France terminates Minitel
|
2013
|
FCC
- Ch. Genachowski resigns
- Mignon Clyburn named acting Chair
- Thomas Wheeler named FCC Chair
|
2014 |
FCC
|
2015 |
FCC
- Feb. 26: Open Internet Rules released
Industry
- Verizon acquires AOL Fortune June 24, 2015
- Comcast attempt to acquire TWC is blocked
- AT&T acquires DirecTV
- Charter announces intent to acquire TWC
- Netflix agrees to pay paid peering to Comcast and other large BIAS providers
|
2016 |
FCC
- FCC issues Set Top Box rules
Election of 2017 and Social Media
Industry
|
2017
|
|
2018
|
FCC
|