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To: Radim Parchansky who wrote (76409)9/3/1999 9:22:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Internet just leaving its Stone Age - U.S. experts
By Michael Fitzpatrick
LOS ANGELES, Sept 2 (Reuters) - The Internet is just now
leaving its Stone Age, scientists and entrepreneurs said on
Thursday at a conference to mark the 30th anniversary of the
vast network that has launched incredible fortunes and changed
the way the world communicates.
"We are now beginning to move out of the Stone Age of the
Internet," the conference was told by Leonard Kleinrock, a
professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, who is
considered one of the fathers of the Internet.
It was at UCLA on Sept. 2, 1969, that Kleinrock and his
team succeeded in hooking up a computer to a refrigerator-sized
switch, a precursor to getting two computers to talk to each
other the following month and a necessary condition for the
explosive growth of the Internet.
"It was the year of a raging war in Vietnam, Woodstock ...
we put a man on the moon, and the Internet was born," he said.
Or as UCLA said in a 1969 statement, "Creation of the
network represents a major step forward in computer technology
and may serve as the forerunner of large computer networks of
the future."
Thirty years later, the Internet is seemingly everywhere.
It has changed the way people communicate, shop and invest and
has transformed business -- in the process, creating great
wealth. Entrepreneurs said that was just the start.
"I think the Internet is about 20 percent invented, and we
have about 80 percent to go," said Sky Dayton, chairman of
Internet service provider Earthlink Network Inc. <ELNK.O>, who
himself is younger than the Internet's beginnings.
"We ain't seen nothing yet," said Dayton, who recently
formed an investment company to help create new Internet
start-ups.
Consumers can expect to see the Internet spread beyond
personal computers into a variety of devices with so-called
embedded functions linked to the Web. "Computing will change
and it will change profoundly," said Dan Rosen, general manager
of new technology at Microsoft Corp. <MSFT.O>.
As the Internet weaves itself more tightly into daily life,
businesses will have to keep up with the change, panelists
said.
"You have to move where the economy moves," said Ronald
Whittier, general manager of content services for semiconductor
giant Intel Corp. <INTC.O>. "We have to move where the action
is. Today the action is the Internet."
"Five years from now, there will be no business that
doesn't have an Internet component," Microsoft's Rosen said.
The Internet also means that the even big corporations have
to worry about upstart rivals with new technology, said George
Vradenburg, senior vice president for global and strategic
policy at Internet service America Online Inc. <AOL.N>.
Asked to identify the biggest threats to an established
Internet company such as AOL, Vradenburg said, "It's probably
the person we don't see."
REUTERS
Rtr 22:19 09-02-99