Internet
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... This memo is an introductory guide to some of the most commonly-available TCP/IP and Internet tools and utilities that allow users to access the wide variety of information on the network, from determining if a particular host ...
... network, from determining if a particular host is up to viewing a multimedia thesis on foreign policy. It also describes discussion lists accessible fromthe Internet, ways to obtain Internet and TCP/IP documents, and some resources that help users weave their way through the Internet ...
... host is up to viewing a multimedia thesis on foreign policy. It also describes discussion lists accessible fromthe Internet, ways to obtain Internet and TCP/IP documents, and some resources that help users weave their way through the Internet. This memo may be used as a tutorial for individual self-learning, a step-by-step ...
... Internet, ways to obtain Internet and TCP/IP documents, and some resources that help users weave their way through the Internet. This memo may be used as a tutorial for individual self-learning, a step-by-step laboratory manual for a course, or as the basis for a site's users manual. It is intended as a basic guide only and will
refer to other sources for more detailed information.
...
... version of this document; in addition, most GUI-based TCP/IP packages obscure some of the detail that is essential for understanding what is really happening when you click on a button
or drag a file. The Internet has many exciting things to offer but standardized interfaces to the protocols is not yet one of them! This guide will not provide any detail or motivation about the Internet Protocol Suite; more information about the TCP/IP ...
... TCP/IP packages obscure some of the detail that is essential for understanding what is really happening when you click on a button
or drag a file. The Internet has many exciting things to offer but standardized interfaces to the protocols is not yet one of them! This guide will not provide any detail or motivation about the Internet Protocol Suite; more information about the TCP/IP protocols and related issues may be found in RFC 1180 [29 ...
... There are several tools that let you learn information about Internet hosts and domains. These tools ...
... Requests the name of the host with the given IP address. The result points to the Internet gateway to Australia, munnari.oz.au. ...
... hill.com nameserver = ns.netcom.com
mail.hill.com internet address = 199.182.20.4
mailme.hill.com internet address = 199.182.20.3
...
... mail.hill.com internet address = 199.182.20.4
mailme.hill.com internet address = 199.182.20.3
netcomsv.netcom.com internet address = 192.100.81.101
...
... mailme.hill.com internet address = 199.182.20.3
netcomsv.netcom.com internet address = 192.100.81.101
ns1.noc.netcom.net internet address = 204.31.1.1
...
... netcomsv.netcom.com internet address = 192.100.81.101
ns1.noc.netcom.net internet address = 204.31.1.1
ns.netcom.com internet address = 192.100.81.105
...
... ns1.noc.netcom.net internet address = 204.31.1.1
ns.netcom.com internet address = 192.100.81.105
**> exit
...
... tools bundled with TCP/IP software packages. Ping uses a series of Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) [22] Echo ...
... The Finger program may be used to find out who is logged in on another system or to find out detailed information about a specific user.
This command has also introduced a brand new verb; fingering someone on the Internet is not necessarily a rude thing to do! The Finger User Information Protocol is described in RFC 1288draft [32 ...
... Adjunct Faculty Member, Graduate College
INTERNET: kumquat@smcvt.edu
===================================================================
...
... network and system managers as a simple, yet powerful, debugging tool, traceroute can be used by end users to learn something about the ever-changing structure of the Internet. ...
... domain smcvt.edu) and a host at Hill Associates (www.hill.com), both located in Colchester, VT but served by different Internet service providers (ISP). ...
... St. Michael's College is connected to the Internet via BBN Planet; since the mid-1980s, BBN operated the NSF's regional ISP, called the New England Academic and Research Network (NEARNET), which was renamed in 1994. The first hop, then, goes to St. Mike's BBN Planet gateway router ...
... The two most basic tools for Internet applications are TELNET and the File Transfer Protocol (FTP ...
... It is important to note that TELNET is a very powerful tool, one that may provide users with access to many Internet utilities and services that might not be otherwise available. Many of these features are accessed by specifying a port number with the TELNET ...
... This guide discusses several TCP/IP and Internet utilities that require local client software, such as Finger, Whois, Archie, and Gopher ...
... Some services are available on the Internet using TELNET and special port numbers. A geographical information database ...
... username anonymous is used. Historically, the password for the anonymous user (not shown in actual use) has been guest, although most systems today ask for the user's Internet e-mail address (and several sites attempt to verify that packets are coming from that address before allowing the user to login ...
... Finding other users on the Internet is an art, not a science. Although there is a distributed database listing all of the 16+ million hosts on the Internet ...
... Internet is an art, not a science. Although there is a distributed database listing all of the 16+ million hosts on the Internet, no similar database yet exists for the tens of millions of users. While many commercial ISPs provide directories of the users of their network ...
... network, these databases are not yet linked. The paragraphs below will discuss some of the tools available for finding users on the Internet. ...
... WHOIS may be accessed by TELNETing to an appropriate WHOIS server and logging in as whois (no password is required); the most common Internet name server is located at the Internet Network Information Center (InterNIC) at rs.internic.net. This specific database ...
... password is required); the most common Internet name server is located at the Internet Network Information Center (InterNIC) at rs.internic.net. This specific database only contains INTERNET domains ...
... name server is located at the Internet Network Information Center (InterNIC) at rs.internic.net. This specific database only contains INTERNET domains, IP network numbers, and domain ...
... WHOIS-like interface that allows users to query several Internet user databases (White Pages services ...
... query command to locate a user named "Steven Shepard"; this command automatically starts a search through the default set of Internet databases. ...
... Client (V2.0). Copyright CNRI 1990. All Rights Reserved.
KIS searches various Internet directory services
to find someone's street address ...
... File transfer, remote login, and electronic mail remained the primary applications of the ARPANET/Internet until the early 1990s. But as the Internet user population shifted from hard-core computer researchers and academics to more casual users, easier-to-use tools ...
... login, and electronic mail remained the primary applications of the ARPANET/Internet until the early 1990s. But as the Internet user population shifted from hard-core computer researchers and academics to more casual users, easier-to-use tools were needed for the Net to become accepted as a useful resource. That means making things easier to find. This section will
discuss some of the early tools ...
... researchers and academics to more casual users, easier-to-use tools were needed for the Net to become accepted as a useful resource. That means making things easier to find. This section will
discuss some of the early tools that made it easier to locate and access information on the Internet. ...
... The Internet Gopher protocol was developed at the University of Minnesota's Microcomputer Center in 1991, as a distributed information search and retrieval tool ...
... Gopher protocol was developed at the University of Minnesota's Microcomputer Center in 1991, as a distributed information search and retrieval tool for the Internet. Gopher is described in RFC 1436 [1 ...
... Gopher also allows a user to view a file on demand without requiring additional file transfer protocols. In addition, Gopher introduced the capability of linking sites on the Internet, so that each Gopher site can be used as a stepping stone to access other sites and reducing the amount of duplicate information and effort on
the network. ...
... In the sample dialogue below, the user attaches to the Gopher server at the Internet Network Information Center (InterNIC) by TELNETing to ds.internic.net. With the menu interface shown here, the user merely follows the prompts. Initially, the main menu will appear. Selecting item 3 causes Gopher to seize and display the "InterNIC Registration ...
... domain data, registration forms, and other information related to registering names and domains on the Internet. ...
... ********************************************************************
Internet Gopher Information Client v2.1.3
...
... Press ? for Help, q to Quit, u to go up a menu Page: 1/1
**View item number: 1
Internet Gopher Information Client v2.1.3
...
... The Wide Area Information Server (WAIS, pronounced "ways") was initiated jointly by Apple Computer, Dow Jones, KMPG Peat Marwick, and Thinking Machines Corp. It is a set of free-ware, share-ware, and commercial
software products for a wide variety of hardware/software platforms, which work together to help users find information on the Internet. WAIS provides a single interface through which a user can access many different information databases. The user interface ...
... The World Wide Web (WWW) is thought (erroneously) by many to be the same thing as the Internet. But the confusion, in many ways, is justified; by early 1996, the WWW accounted for over 40% of all of the traffic on the Internet. In addition, the number of hosts ...
... World Wide Web (WWW) is thought (erroneously) by many to be the same thing as the Internet. But the confusion, in many ways, is justified; by early 1996, the WWW accounted for over 40% of all of the traffic on the Internet. In addition, the number of hosts on the Internet named www has grown from several hundred in mid-1994 to 17,000 in mid-1995 to 212,000 in mid-1996 to over 410,000 by early
1997. The Web has made information on the Internet ...
... traffic on the Internet. In addition, the number of hosts on the Internet named www has grown from several hundred in mid-1994 to 17,000 in mid-1995 to 212,000 in mid-1996 to over 410,000 by early
1997. The Web has made information on the Internet accessible to users of all ages and computer skill levels. It has provided a mechanism so that nearly anyone can become
a content provider. According to some, growth in the number of WWW users is unparalleled by any other event in human history. ...
... Internet. In addition, the number of hosts on the Internet named www has grown from several hundred in mid-1994 to 17,000 in mid-1995 to 212,000 in mid-1996 to over 410,000 by early
1997. The Web has made information on the Internet accessible to users of all ages and computer skill levels. It has provided a mechanism so that nearly anyone can become
a content provider. According to some, growth in the number of WWW users is unparalleled by any other event in human history. ...
... Gopher, which were primarily used for the indexing of text-based files. The Web allows users to access information in many different
types of formats, including text, sound, image, animation, and video. WWW treats all searchable Internet files as hypertext documents. Hypertext is a term which merely refers to text that contains pointers to other text, allowing
a user reading one document to jump to another document for more information on a given topic, and then return to the same
location in the original document. WWW hypermedia documents are able to employ images, sound, graphics ...
... hardware and software platform-independent. Users point the browser at some location using a shorthand format called a Uniform Resource Locator (URL), which allows a WWW servers to obtain files from any location on the public Internet using a variety of protocols, including HTTP, FTP, Gopher ...
... Mosaic, developed in 1994 at the National Center for Supercomputer Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, was the first widely-used browser. Because it was
available at no cost over the Internet via anonymous FTP, and had a version for Windows, Mac, and UNIX ...
... version for Windows, Mac, and UNIX systems, Mosaic was probably the single reason that the Web attracted so many users so quickly. The most commonly used browsers
today include the Netscape Navigator (http://www.netscape.com), Microsoft's Internet Explorer (http://www.netscape.com), and NCSA Mosaic (http://www.netscape.com). ...
... As more and more protocols have become available to identify files, archive and server sites, news lists, and other information resources on the Internet, it was inevitable that some shorthand would arise to make it easier to designate these sources. The common shorthand format
is called the Uniform Resource Locator. The list below provides information on how the URL format should be interpreted for the protocols and resources that will be discussed in this document. A complete description
of the URL ...
... Identifies an individual's Internet mail address. E.g.: mailto:s.shepard@hill.com. ...
... While finding users on the Internet remains somewhat like alchemy if using the tools and utilities mentioned earlier, the Web has added a new dimension to finding people. Since 1995, many telephone companies ...
... For a while, it seemed that the easiest and most reliable approach to finding people's e-mail address on the Internet was to look up their telephone number on the Web, call them, and ask for their e-mail address! More recently, however, many third parties are augmenting the standard telephone ...
... Among the most useful features of the Internet are the discussion lists that have become available to allow individuals to discuss topics of mutual concern. Discussion list topics range ...
... discussion lists that have become available to allow individuals to discuss topics of mutual concern. Discussion list topics range from SCUBA diving and home brewing of beer to AIDS research and foreign policy. Several, naturally, deal specifically with
the Internet, TCP/IP protocols, and the impact of new technologies. ...
... Most of the discussion lists accessible from the Internet are unmoderated, meaning that anyone can send a message to the list's central repository and the message will then be automatically
forwarded to all subscribers of the list. These lists provide very fast turn-around between submission of a message and delivery, but often result in a lot of messages (including inappropriate junk mail, or "spam ...
... Internet Discussion Lists ...
... discussion groups is maintained using a program called LISTSERV. LISTSERV is a service provided widely on BITNET and EARN, although it is also available to Internet users. A LISTSERV User Guide can be found on the Web at http://www.earn.net/lug/notice.html. ...
... Majordomo is another popular list server for Internet discussion lists. The Web site http://www.greatcircle.com/majordomo/ ...
... While Usenet newsgroups are usually accessible at Internet sites, a prospective Usenet client host must have appropriate newsreader software to be able to read news. Users will have to check with their local host or network administrator ...
... ieee IEEE information
info Various Internet and other networking information
k12 K-12 education
u3b AT&T 3B computers
...
... There are tens of thousands of e-mail discussion lists on the Internet. One List of Lists may be found using anonymous FTP at ftp://sri.com/netinfo/interest-groups.txt; the List of Lists can be searched using a Web browser by going to http://catalog.com/vivian/interest-group-search.html ...
... http://www.neosoft.com/internet/paml/byname.html ...
... Note that there is often some overlap between Usenet newsgroups and Internet discussion lists. Some individuals join both lists in these circumstances or, often, there is cross-posting of messages. Some Usenet newsgroup ...
... join both lists in these circumstances or, often, there is cross-posting of messages. Some Usenet newsgroup discussions are forwarded onto an Internet mailing list by an individual site to provide access to those users who do not have Usenet available. ...
... Internet Documentation ...
... To fully appreciate and understand what is going on within the Internet community, users might wish to obtain the occasional Internet specification. The main body of Internet documents are Request for Comments (RFCs), although a variety of RFC subsets have been defined for various specific purposes.
The sections below will describe the RFCs and other documentation, and how to get them. ...
... To fully appreciate and understand what is going on within the Internet community, users might wish to obtain the occasional Internet specification. The main body of Internet documents are Request for Comments (RFCs), although a variety of RFC subsets have been defined for various specific purposes.
The sections below will describe the RFCs and other documentation, and how to get them. ...
... To fully appreciate and understand what is going on within the Internet community, users might wish to obtain the occasional Internet specification. The main body of Internet documents are Request for Comments (RFCs), although a variety of RFC subsets have been defined for various specific purposes.
The sections below will describe the RFCs and other documentation, and how to get them. ...
... The Internet standardization process is alluded to in the following sections. The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) is the guiding body for Internet standards ...
... The Internet standardization process is alluded to in the following sections. The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) is the guiding body for Internet standards; their Web site ...
... Internet standardization process is alluded to in the following sections. The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) is the guiding body for Internet standards; their Web site is http://www.ietf.org. The IETF ...
... Web site is http://www.ietf.org. The IETF operates under the auspices of the Internet Society (ISOC), which has a Web site at http://www.isoc.org ...
... ISOC), which has a Web site at http://www.isoc.org. For complete, up-to-date information on obtaining Internet documentation, go to the InterNIC's Web site at http://ds.internic.net/ds/dspg0intdoc.html. The IETF ...
... http://ds.internic.net/ds/dspg0intdoc.html. The IETF's history and role in the Internet today is described in Kessler [15]. For information on the organizations involved in the IETF standards process, see RFC 2028 ...
... RFCs are the body of literature comprising Internet protocols, standards, research questions, hot topics, humor (especially those dated 1 April), and general information. Each RFC is uniquely issued a number which is never
reused or reissued; if a document is revised, it is given a new RFC number and the old RFC is said to be obsoleted. Announcements are sent to the RFC-DIST mailing list ...
... on-line. One easy way to obtain RFCs on-line is to use RFC-INFO, an e-mail-based service to help users locate and retrieve RFCs and other Internet documents. To use the service, send e-mail to rfc-info@isi.edu and leave the Subject: field blank; commands that may go in the main body of the message include: ...
...
ds.internic.net rfc
nis.nsf.net internet/documents/rfc
nisc.jvnc.net rfc
ftp.isi.edu in-notes
...
... The sample dialogue below, although highly abbreviated, shows a user obtaining RFC 1594(-> 2664fyi4) (Answers to Commonly asked "New Internet User" Questions) using e-mail and anonymous FTP. ...
... Internet Standards ...
... RFCs describe many aspects of the Internet. By the early 1990s, however, so many specifications of various protocols had been written that it was not always clear as
to which documents represented standards for the Internet. For that reason, a subset of RFCs have been designated as STDs to identify them as Internet standards ...
... RFCs describe many aspects of the Internet. By the early 1990s, however, so many specifications of various protocols had been written that it was not always clear as
to which documents represented standards for the Internet. For that reason, a subset of RFCs have been designated as STDs to identify them as Internet standards. ...
... Internet. By the early 1990s, however, so many specifications of various protocols had been written that it was not always clear as
to which documents represented standards for the Internet. For that reason, a subset of RFCs have been designated as STDs to identify them as Internet standards. ...
... mailing list. STD-1 [23] always refers to the latest list of "Internet Official Protocol Standards". The Internet standards process is described in RFC 2026 [5 ...
... STD-1 [23] always refers to the latest list of "Internet Official Protocol Standards". The Internet standards process is described in RFC 2026 [5] and STD ...
... The For Your Information (FYI) series of RFCs provides Internet users with information about many topics related to the Internet. FYI topics range from historical to explanatory to tutorial, and are aimed at the wide spectrum of people that use the Internet ...
... The For Your Information (FYI) series of RFCs provides Internet users with information about many topics related to the Internet. FYI topics range from historical to explanatory to tutorial, and are aimed at the wide spectrum of people that use the Internet. The FYI series includes answers to frequently asked questions by both beginning and seasoned users of the Internet ...
... Internet users with information about many topics related to the Internet. FYI topics range from historical to explanatory to tutorial, and are aimed at the wide spectrum of people that use the Internet. The FYI series includes answers to frequently asked questions by both beginning and seasoned users of the Internet, an annotated bibliography of Internet ...
... Internet. FYI topics range from historical to explanatory to tutorial, and are aimed at the wide spectrum of people that use the Internet. The FYI series includes answers to frequently asked questions by both beginning and seasoned users of the Internet, an annotated bibliography of Internet books, and an explanation of the domain name system ...
... Internet. The FYI series includes answers to frequently asked questions by both beginning and seasoned users of the Internet, an annotated bibliography of Internet books, and an explanation of the domain name system. ...
... Like the STDs, an FYI number always refers to the latest version of an FYI. FYI 4, for example, refers to the answers to commonly asked questions by new Internet users; its complete citation would be "FYI-4/RFC-1594(-> 2664fyi4)." The FYI notes are explained in FYI 1 [18]. ...
... IETF standards process, subject to peer review, and intended to culminate in an official Internet Standard. Other RFCs are published on a less formal basis and are not part of the IETF process. To provide a mechanism of publishing relevant technical information which it endorsed, the IETF created ...
... Best Current Practices (BCP) series. BCP topics include variances from the Internet standards process and IP address allocation in private networks. ...
... Perusing the Internet ...
... This guide is intended to provide the reader with a rudimentary ability to use the utilities that are provided by TCP/IP and the Internet. By now, it is clear that the user's knowledge, ability, and willingness to experiment are about the only limits to what
can be accomplished. ...
... There are several books that will help you get started finding sites on the Internet, including The INTERNET Yellow Pages [9]. But much more timely and up-to-date information can be found on the Internet ...
... There are several books that will help you get started finding sites on the Internet, including The INTERNET Yellow Pages [9]. But much more timely and up-to-date information can be found on the Internet itself, using such search ...
... Internet, including The INTERNET Yellow Pages [9]. But much more timely and up-to-date information can be found on the Internet itself, using such search tools as Yahoo! (http://www.yahoo.com ...
... Another list is Yanoff's Internet Services List, which may be found at http://www.spectracom.com/islist/ or ftp://ftp.csd.uwm.edu/pub/inet.services.txt. Gary Kessler, one of the co-author's of this document, maintains his own eclectic Miscellaneous Sites List at http://www.together.net/~kessler/gck_site.html ...
... If you are looking for Internet-specific information, one good starting point is http://www.yahoo.com/Computers_and_Internet/Internet/. The InterNIC is another valuable resource, with their Scout Report and Scout Toolkit (http://rs.internic.net/scout/toolkit ...
... There is also a fair amount of rudimentary tutorial information available on the Internet. The InterNIC cosponsors "The 15 Minute Series" (http://rs.internic.net/nic-support/15min/), a collection of free, modular, and extensible training materials on specific Internet topics. ROADMAP96 (http://www.ua.edu/~crispen/roadmap.html ...
... There is also a fair amount of rudimentary tutorial information available on the Internet. The InterNIC cosponsors "The 15 Minute Series" (http://rs.internic.net/nic-support/15min/), a collection of free, modular, and extensible training materials on specific Internet topics. ROADMAP96 (http://www.ua.edu/~crispen/roadmap.html) is a free, 27-lesson Internet training workshop over e-mail. ...
... http://rs.internic.net/nic-support/15min/), a collection of free, modular, and extensible training materials on specific Internet topics. ROADMAP96 (http://www.ua.edu/~crispen/roadmap.html) is a free, 27-lesson Internet training workshop over e-mail. ...
... More books and specialized articles came out about the Internet in 1993 and 1994 than in all previous years (squared!), and that trend has seemed to continue into 1995, 1996, and beyond.
Three books are worth notable mention because they do not directly relate to finding your way around, or finding things on,
the Internet. Hafner and Lyon [8] have written Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins of the Internet ...
... More books and specialized articles came out about the Internet in 1993 and 1994 than in all previous years (squared!), and that trend has seemed to continue into 1995, 1996, and beyond.
Three books are worth notable mention because they do not directly relate to finding your way around, or finding things on,
the Internet. Hafner and Lyon [8] have written Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins of the Internet, a history of the development of the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA ...
... Internet in 1993 and 1994 than in all previous years (squared!), and that trend has seemed to continue into 1995, 1996, and beyond.
Three books are worth notable mention because they do not directly relate to finding your way around, or finding things on,
the Internet. Hafner and Lyon [8] have written Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins of the Internet, a history of the development of the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), packet switching, and the ARPANET, focusing primarily on the 1960s and 1970s. While culminating with the APRANET's 25th Anniversary in 1994, its main thrusts
are on the groups ...
... Network Working Group). Salus' book, Casting The Net: From ARPANET to INTERNET and beyond... [28], goes into the development of the network from the perspective of the people, protocols, applications, and networks ...
... network from the perspective of the people, protocols, applications, and networks. Including a set of "diversions," his book is a bit more whimsical than Hafner & Lyon's. Finally, Carl Malamud has written a delightful book called Exploring the Internet: A Technical Travelogue [17], chronicling not the history of the Internet as much as a subset of the people currently active ...
... bit more whimsical than Hafner & Lyon's. Finally, Carl Malamud has written a delightful book called Exploring the Internet: A Technical Travelogue [17], chronicling not the history of the Internet as much as a subset of the people currently active in building and defining it. This book will not teach you how to perform an anonymous FTP file transfer ...
... Internet Control Message Protocol
IP Internet Protocol
ISO International Organization for Standardization ...
... RTR RARE Technical Reports
STD Internet Standards series of RFCs
TCP Transmission Control Protocol ...
... Our thanks are given to all sites that we accessed or otherwise used system resources in preparation for this document. We
also appreciate the comments and suggestions from our students and members of the Internet community, particularly after the last version of this document was circulated, including Mark Delany and the rest of the gang at the Australian Public Access Network Association ...
... Anklesaria, F., M. McCahill, P. Lindner, D. Johnson, D. Torrey, and B. Alberti, "The Internet Gopher Protocol," RFC 1436, University of Minnesota, March 1993. ...
... Bradner, S. "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision 3," RFC 2026, Harvard University, October 1996. ...
... Hafner, K. and M. Lyon. Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins of the Internet. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1997. ...
... Hahn, H. and R. Stout. The Internet Yellow Pages, 3/e. Berkeley (CA): Osborne McGraw-Hill, 1996. ...
... Kessler, G.C. "An Overview of TCP/IP Protocols and the Internet." URL: http://www.hill.com/library/tcpip.html. Last accessed: 17 February 1997 ...
... _____. "IETF-History, Background, and Role in Today's Internet." URL: http://www.hill.com/library/ietf_hx.html. Last accessed: 17 February 1997. ...
... Malamud, C. Exploring the Internet: A Technical Travelogue. Englewood Cliffs (NJ): PTR Prentice Hall, 1992. ...
... http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/General/Internet/WWW/HTMLPrimer.html. ...
... _____, "Internet Control Message Protocol," USC/Information Sciences Institute, RFC 792std5, September 1981. ...
... _____, Editor, "Internet Official Protocol Standards," STD 1/RFC 2000(-> 2200(-> 2300(-> 2400(-> 2500(-> 2600(-> 2700(-> 2800(-> 2900(-> 3000(-> 3300(-> 3600(-> 3700std1)))))))))))), Internet Architecture Board ...
... Internet Official Protocol Standards," STD 1/RFC 2000(-> 2200(-> 2300(-> 2400(-> 2500(-> 2600(-> 2700(-> 2800(-> 2900(-> 3000(-> 3300(-> 3600(-> 3700std1)))))))))))), Internet Architecture Board, February 1997. ...
... Salus, P.H. Casting The Net: From ARPANET to INTERNET and beyond... Reading (MA): Addison-Wesley, 1995. ...
... Williamson, S., "Transition and Modernization of the Internet Registration Service," RFC 1400 ...
