Internet & Technology History Timeline
From Vannevar Bush's visionary 1945 essay to the modern World Wide Web, this timeline traces the key milestones, pioneers, and breakthroughs that built the digital world we live in today. Each entry links back to deeper coverage on the Educational CyberPlayGround.
Antikythera Mechanism
An intricate bronze mechanism of wheels and dials — possibly the world's oldest computer — used by ancient Greeks to predict planetary motion. Discovered on a shipwreck off the island of Antikythera in 1900.
Read more →Vannevar Bush: "As We May Think"
Vannevar Bush published his visionary essay in The Atlantic, proposing the "Memex" — a device for storing and linking all human knowledge. This planted the seed that grew into the Internet and hypertext.
Read more →ENIAC — First Electronic Computer
Built during WWII at the University of Pennsylvania, ENIAC was the first general-purpose electronic computer. Six women — Kay McNulty, Betty Jennings, Betty Snyder, Marlyn Meltzer, Fran Bilas, and Ruth Lichterman — programmed it.
Read more: Computer Wonder Women →Alan Turing's Intelligence Test
British mathematician Alan Turing proposed that if a computer could successfully impersonate a human in a typed conversation, it could be called intelligent. The "Turing Test" remains a foundational concept in artificial intelligence.
Read more →IBM Stretch Project
IBM initiated Project Datatron (later Stretch) to build a computer 100x faster than the IBM 704. It pioneered extensive parallelism and became a landmark in high-performance computing architecture.
Read more →Dave Farber Graduates Stevens
David Farber, the future "Grandfather of the Internet," graduated from Stevens Institute of Technology and joined Bell Laboratories, where he helped design the first electronic switching system and co-designed the SNOBOL programming language.
Read more →Sputnik & the Space Race
The Soviet Union launched Sputnik, triggering the space race and spurring massive U.S. investment in science and technology. This led directly to the creation of DARPA (originally ARPA) the following year.
Read more →DARPA Founded
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA, originally ARPA) was established in response to Sputnik. It would go on to fund the creation of ARPANET and, ultimately, the Internet itself.
Read more →PLATO Computer System
Dr. Donald Bitzer at the University of Illinois began building PLATO — one of the first computer-assisted instruction systems. It eventually became a global network with interconnected systems, funded by ARPA and NSF.
Read more →Paul Baran & Packet Switching
At RAND Corporation, Paul Baran outlined fundamentals for packaging data into discrete "message blocks" — later called packet switching. His idea for distributed communications networks with redundant routes laid the groundwork for the Internet.
Read more →Timesharing at MIT
MIT professor Fernando Corbato demonstrated timesharing — allowing multiple users to share a single computer simultaneously. This concept would evolve through decades, eventually reappearing as cloud computing.
Read more →Douglas Engelbart's "Mother of All Demos"
At Stanford Research Institute, Douglas Engelbart demonstrated the computer mouse, graphical user interface, hypertext, video conferencing, and collaborative editing in a legendary 90-minute presentation that changed computing forever.
Read more →ARPANET — First Message Sent
On October 29, 1969, a UCLA student programmer sent the first message over ARPANET to a computer at Stanford. The system crashed after transmitting just "LO" (trying to type "LOGIN"), but the connected world had begun.
Read more →The Ware Report — Computer Security
Willis Ware chaired a Defense Science Board committee that produced "Security Controls for Computer Systems" — classified for 9 years, it was one of the first comprehensive examinations of computer security challenges.
Read more →FTP — File Transfer Protocol
RFC 114 launched the File Transfer Protocol on April 16, 1971 — a backbone technology of the Internet that has survived two full transplants of the transport layer and remains essential today.
Read more →Project Gutenberg Founded
Michael Hart typed in the U.S. Declaration of Independence on a university mainframe and attempted to share it over ARPANET — founding Project Gutenberg, the world's first free digital library, 12 years before the free software movement.
Read more →Robert Kahn Joins DARPA
Robert Kahn moved to DARPA after designing the system architecture of ARPANET at Bolt Beranek and Newman. He conceived open-architecture networking and would co-invent TCP/IP, originating DARPA's Internet Program.
Read more →Ray Tomlinson Invents Email
At BBN, Ray Tomlinson rescued the @ symbol from obscurity by using it to separate mailbox names from host names in email addresses. He invented networked electronic mail — a concept that now reaches billions.
Read more →Xerox Alto — First Personal Workstation
Xerox PARC built the Alto, featuring Ethernet networking, a full-page display, mouse, laser printing, email, and a windowed user interface. Years ahead of its time, it inspired the Apple Macintosh and Microsoft Windows.
Read more →TCP/IP Design Begins
"When Bob and I started writing the specs for the Internet in 1973..." — Vinton Cerf. Together with Robert Kahn, they designed the TCP/IP protocols that remain the backbone of the Internet today.
Read more →TCP/IP Proven in Beer Garden Test
In the summer of 1976, a small team proved that internetworking worked — demonstrating that the Internet could connect different types of networks. Cerf and Kahn designed it to run anywhere, because the U.S. military is everywhere.
Read more →Apple II Launches the Home Computing Revolution
Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs unveiled the Apple II, ushering in the home computing revolution. It proved to be a great computer for schools, small businesses, and homes — and set the course for millions into the Apple ecosystem.
Read more →CSNET — Expanding Beyond ARPANET
The Computer Science Network was funded by the NSF to connect academic computer science departments not on ARPANET. Dave Farber, Larry Landweber, and Peter Denning were on the first management team. CSNET became a forerunner of NSFNet and the Internet backbone.
Read more →First .com Domain Name Registered
On March 15, 1985, Symbolics Inc. registered symbolics.com — the first .com domain name in history. The domain name system had been established only the year before. By 1993, there would be approximately 21,000 .com registrations, setting the stage for the Web's commercial explosion.
Read more →CNRI Founded by Robert Kahn
Robert Kahn founded the Corporation for National Research Initiatives after 13 years at DARPA, creating a not-for-profit to provide leadership for research and development of the National Information Infrastructure.
Read more →The Morris Worm
Robert Morris created the first Internet worm, crippling the network. This watershed moment demonstrated the Internet's vulnerability and catalyzed the formation of CERT/CC and serious computer security research.
Read more →World Wide Web Proposed
On March 12, 1989, Tim Berners-Lee at CERN wrote "Information Management: A Proposal," outlining "a universal linked information system." He described much of what the Web has come to be — connecting documents and sites via the Internet.
Read more →First Web Browser Created
Tim Berners-Lee wrote the first web browser (later renamed Nexus) — it was the only way to see the Web. This was the birth of the browsable, hyperlinked information space we now take for granted.
Read more →Internet Opens to Consumers
The National Science Foundation relaxed its Acceptable Use Policy, lifting commercial restrictions on the Internet backbone. The Commercial Internet eXchange (CIX) formed the same year, enabling ISPs to exchange traffic freely. The World (world.std.com), which had launched in 1989 as the first commercial dial-up ISP, could now offer true Internet access to the general public.
Read more →Linux Kernel Released
Linus Torvalds released the first Linux kernel, creating the open-source operating system that now powers the majority of the Internet's servers, Android phones, supercomputers, and cloud infrastructure worldwide.
Read more →Viola Browser & Mosaic
Pei Wei's Viola browser preceded Mosaic and represents a valuable repository of prior art for the Web. Viola's development preceded even Mosaic, and any feature found in it can be said to be public knowledge.
Read more: Email from Pei Wei to Marc Andreessen →Gigabit Network Testbed
The Aurora gigabit network experiment launched — a collaboration of Bell Atlantic, Bellcore, IBM, MCI, Nynex, and universities. Conceived by Dave Farber and Robert Kahn and funded by DARPA and the NSF, it pioneered broadband Internet.
Read more →Internet Fully Privatized
The Internet was fully privatized, transitioning from government-funded backbone networks to commercial operation. This coincided with the beginning of the commercial Web boom that transformed global commerce and communication.
Read more →Internet Archive / Wayback Machine Founded
Brewster Kahle founded the Internet Archive, dedicated to preserving the digital record of humanity. Its Wayback Machine would go on to archive billions of web pages, becoming an indispensable resource for researchers, journalists, and the public.
Read more →National Medal of Technology
Robert Kahn and Vinton Cerf received the National Medal of Technology for co-inventing TCP/IP. Kahn also received the John Scott Award. Dave Farber was named in UPSIDE's Elite 100 as one of the Visionaries of the field.
Read more →Dave Farber — FCC Chief Technologist
Internet pioneer Dave Farber was appointed Chief Technologist at the FCC, bringing decades of hands-on networking experience to telecommunications policy. He warned about the Internet's security vulnerabilities and the challenge of retrofitting security.
Read more →Turing Award for Internet Creators
Vinton Cerf and Robert Kahn received the A.M. Turing Award — computing's highest honor — from the ACM for their foundational work on TCP/IP and the architecture of the Internet.
Read more →Presidential Medal of Freedom
Robert Kahn was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his pioneering contributions to networking and the Internet. "If Vinton Cerf and Robert Kahn are considered fathers of the Internet, then Farber is the grandfather."
Read more →Internet Hall of Fame Inaugurated
The Internet Society inducted its first class, including Pioneers (Baran, Cerf, Kahn, Postel, Kleinrock), Innovators (Berners-Lee, Torvalds, Tomlinson), and Global Connectors (Brewster Kahle, Al Gore). The Internet "connects more than two billion people."
Read more →Keio Cyber Civilization Research Center
Keio University in Japan established the Cyber Civilization Research Center, appointing Dave Farber and Jun Murai as co-directors. The university recognized that information technologies "are far more than being useful tools and are changing the fundamental nature of societies."
Read more →Dave Farber (1934–2026)
Dave Farber — the "Grandfather of the Internet" — passed away in 2026 in Japan, where he had been co-directing the Keio University Cyber Civilization Research Center. From Bell Labs to DARPA to the FCC, Farber spent seven decades shaping the networks that connect the world.
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