Time and Place: The Birth of the Internet
Research, formulation, and development of the Internet began in 1962 and was successfully publicly released in 1969. Once President Eisenhower approved, the Internet began to be formulated by agencies and intelligence groups all across the United States. The University of California in Los Angeles, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the University of Utah were some of the many different locations of peoples who worked together to formulate the Internet.
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"The history of the Internet all began with President Eisenhower. He created the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) in 1958. President Eisenhower was afraid that the United States was falling behind the Soviet Union. In 1962, ARPA was still developing when an MIT graduate student named Leonard Kleinrock invented the technology of the Internet. Then in 1966 ARPA quickly got back into the action and formed the ARPAnet. This became the start of the Internet."