From Booklist
This work presents a readable history of perhaps the biggest technological phenomena of this century. The intent, according to the preface, is to weave "together . . . the many strands that make up the history of the Internet: technological, military, educational, corporate, and civilian." The chronology is current through the November 1998 announcement of America Online's plan to purchase Netscape. (To satisfy the curious, the year 1843 saw the publication of Ada Lovelace's
Sketch of the Analytical Engine, a work that helped publicize Charles Babbage's ideas.)
Each of the first seven chronologically arranged chapters opens with five or six pages giving a descriptive overview of the span of years covered within that chapter, the work features year-by-year entries of key events. The descriptions are quite detailed compared to most chronologies, typically ranging from two hundred to more than eight hundred words per event. Because of the intertwining of the Internet with computers in general, History of the Internet can practically be considered a history of computing. Entries cover such topics as the invention of the transistor, the debut of the Macintosh, Usenet, and the first use of the term cyberspace. In addition to the chronology entries, there are several separate boxed entries in each chapter on such themes as "Biography," "From the Hacker File," "Media History," and "Netspeak." The various biographies feature a "who's who" of computing: Tim Berners-Lee, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, and Mitchell Kapor, among others. The work's eighth chapter, "Future Trends," covers such topics as the Microsoft trial, advertising on the Internet, and Internet2. The work concludes with some statistical appendixes, bibliographies for each chapter, a brief glossary, biographies of the four authors, and a detailed index. Black-and-white photographs are scattered throughout the volume. The bibliographies are noteworthy for including recent works as well as historically significant works. Many entries in the bibliography, appropriately enough, are Web sites^-with the caveat that the addresses are current as of January 1999.
There are places where the breezy style of the authors almost detracts from the information itself. A section heading in the introduction of chapter 2, for example, is titled "A Sputnik Cocktail: (Two Parts Stolichnaya and One Part Sour Grapes)." The lack of cross-references within the entries themselves is unfortunate. The 1998 entry Linux Operating System Becomes a Cause Celebre, for example, fails to refer the reader to an earlier entry, Linus Torvalds Develops the Linux Operating System, that appears in the 1991 section. One error was spotted--it is stated that the Yahoo! Web directory uses the AltaVista engine when in fact they switched to Inktomi in July_ 1998.
This work can justifiably find a home in the reference collection or in the circulating collection, because an interested layperson could read it cover to cover. Public, academic, and secondary-school libraries looking for a readable, nontechnical history of the Internet will want to purchase this reasonably priced volume. But do so quickly--the Internet is changing as this is written.
Review
"a monumental piece of research...a technological tapestry that is engaging, well-structured, and extensive...
"Exploding many of the myths that have developed around the Internet over the past few years, this chronology of its evolution is a fascinating journey...
"Histories of the Internet have come and gone....This one is all-encompassing, concise, comprehensive; but above all, multifaceted." -- The Daily Telegraph, UK
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