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    Контрольные вопросы:

    1. What famous scientists dealing with the Internet do you know?

    2. What is the “ARPANET”?

    3. What was selected to be the first node on the ARPANET?

    4. What is the Network Control Protocol (NCP)?


    TEXT XI

    HISTORY OF THE FUTURE

    On October 24, 1996, the FNC unanimously passed a resolution defining the term Internet. This definition was developed in consultation with members of the internet and intellectual property rights communities. RESOLUTION: The Federal Networking Council (FNC) agrees that the following language reflects our definition of the term "Internet". "Internet" refers to the global information system that - (i) is logically linked together by a globally unique address space based on the Internet Protocol (IP) or its subsequent extensions/.follow-ons: (ii) is able to support communications using the Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) suite or its subsequent extensions/follow-ons, and/or other IP-compatible protocols; and (iii) provides., uses or makes accessible, either publicly or privately, high level services layered on the communications and related infrastructure described herein.

    The Internet has changed much in the two decades since it came into existence. It was conceived in the era of time-sharing, but has survived into the era of personal computers, client-server and peer-to-peer computing, and the network computer. It was, designed before LANs existed, but has accommodated that new network technology, as well as the more recent ATM arid frame switched services. It was envisioned as supporting a range of functions from file sharing and remote login to resource sharing and collaboration, and has spawned electronic mail and more recently the World Wide Web. But most important, it started as the creation of a small band of dedicated researchers, and has grown to be a commercial success with billions of dollars of annual investment.

    One should not conclude that the Internet has now finished changing. The Internet, although a network in name and geography, is a creature of the computer, not the traditional network of the telephone or television industry. It will, Indeed it must, continue to change and evolve at the speed of the computer industry if it is to remain relevant. It is now changing to provide such new services as real time transport, in order to support, for example, audio and video streams. The availability of pervasive networking (i.e., the Internet) along with powerful affordable computing and communications in portable form (i.e., laptop computers, two-way pagers, PDAs, cellular phones), is making possible a now paradigm of nomadic computing and communications.

    This evolution will tire us new applications - Internet Telephone and, slightly further out, Internet television. It is evolving to permit more sophisticated forms of pricing and coot recovery, a perhaps painful requirement in this commercial world. It is changing to accommodate yet another generation of underlying network technologies with different characteristics and requirements, from broadband residential access to satellites. New modes of access and new forms of service will spawn new applications, which in turn will drive further evolution of the net itself.

    The most pressing question for the future of the Internet is not how the technology will change, but how the process of change and evolution itself will be managed. As this paper describes, the architecture of the Internet has always been driven by a core group of designers, but the form of that group has changed as the number of interested parties has grown. With the success of the Internet has come a proliferation of stakeholders - stakeholders now with an economic as well as an intellectual investment in the network. We now see, in the debates is over control of the domain name space and the form of the next generation IP addresses, a struggle to find the next social structure that will guide the Internet in the future. The form of that structure will be harder to find, given the large number of concerned stake-holders. At the sentinel the industry struggles to find the economic rationale for the large investment needed for the future growth, for example to upgrade residential access to a more suitable technology. If the Internet stumbles. It willnot be because we lack for technology, vision, or motivation. It will be because we cannot set a direction and march collectively into the future.

    Контрольные вопросы:

    1. What does the term “Internet” mean?

    2. How has the Internet changed in the two decades?

    3. What does the Internet Telephone mean?

    4. What is the future of the Internet?



    БИБЛИОГРАФИЧЕСКИЙ СПИСОК

    1. Акулинина Т.В., Андреева Н.П., Арзуманян Н.В., Кондратюкова Л.К., Ложникова Л.Н. Моя специальность. Методические указания для развития навыков устной речи на английском языке для студентов факультета автоматизации. – Омск: Изд-во ОмГТУ, 2002. – 32 с.

    2. Аннотирование и реферирование английской научно-технической литературы: Учебное пособие /Л.К. Кондратюкова, Л.Б, Ткачева, Т.В. Акулинина. – Омск: 2001. – 182 с.

    3. Santiago Remacha Esteras. InfoTech. English for computer users. Fourth Edition. Teacher’s book. Cambridge University Press, 2008. – 161 pp.

    4. Santiago Remacha Esteras. InfoTech. English for computer users. Fourth Edition. Student’s book. Cambridge University Press, 2008. – 168 pp.

    5. Elena Marco Fabré, Santiago Remacha Esteras. Professional English in use ICT. Cambridge University Press, 2007. – 118 pp.

    6. David Bonamy. Technical English. Publishing House: Pearson/Longman, 2009. – 120 pp.

    7. Celia Bingham. Technical English I. Pearson Education Limited, 2008. – 141 pp.

    8. Eric H. Glendinning, John McEwan. Oxford English for Information Technology. Oxford University Press, 2008. – 224 pp.






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