From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: jnc@mercury.lcs.mit.edu (Noel Chiappa) Date: Mon, 4 Dec 2017 20:05:20 -0500 (EST) Subject: [TUHS] ARPAnet now 4 nodes Message-ID: <20171205010520.2C91C18C087@mercury.lcs.mit.edu> > From: Deborah Scherrer > the initial research on the arpanet was done at Lawrence Berkeley Lab I was interested to find out more about this: I looked in Hafner, "Where Wizards Stay Up Late" (the popular, but well-researched, book on the ARPANET) but couldn't find 'Lawrence Berkeley' or 'LBL' in the index (although it did have Lawrence Livermore); there were a couple of 'Californa, University of (at Berkeley' listings, but none covered this. In Abbate, "Inventing the Internet" (the first half of which covers the ARPANET), nothing under any of 'Lawrence Berkeley', 'LBL', 'Berkeley' or 'California'. In Norberg/O'Neill, "Transforming Computer Technology" (the standard ARPA history, which has extensive coverage of the ARPANET project), there was one entry for 'Californa, University (Berkeley)', which might be about the work you refer to: "IPTO issued a contract for a 'network' project at the Berkeley campus of the University of California ... because of the presence at Berkeley of specialists in programming languages and heuristic programming". But there's nothing about what was produced. Is there anything you can point me at that provides more detail? Thanks! Noel