| Marion J. Ball - 1992 - 346 lapas
...systems that allow true interoperability is only a recent phenomenon. The farsighted and pioneering work of the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the US Department of Defense led to the creation of a national computer network, the ARPANET, in which data are transmitted using... | |
| M. Dokiya - 1995 - 1194 lapas
...cm active length AE-supported cells will be installed in the above SCE system under a program with the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the US Department of Defense. In addition to the new SOFC stack, a logistics fuel processor will be added that will enable the system... | |
| Scott O. Bradner, Allison Mankin - 1996 - 376 lapas
...they are not always distinguishable from each other. Historically they both stem from the same roots: the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the US Department of Defense (DoD) was the creator of TCP/IP and of the seminal Internet. The services provided by the Internet... | |
| Ravi Kalakota, Andrew B. Whinston - 1997 - 450 lapas
...phenomenon. Its roots lie in a collection of computers that were linked together in the 1960s as a project of the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the US Department of Defense. Initially, ARPA linked together the four mainframe computers at Stanford Research Institute, the University... | |
| G.W.A Drummer - 1997 - 296 lapas
...Barbara and at Los Angeles — were linked by an experimental computer network, ARPAnet, funded by the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the US Department of Defense (DoD). With the benefit of a quarter of a century of hindsight, this military-inspired development... | |
| John Lorriman - 1997 - 256 lapas
...Santa Barbara and at Los Angeles linked themselves using an experimental computer network funded by the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the US Department of Defense (DoD). This network was named ARPAnet and was designed to be sufficiently flexible to withstand a nuclear... | |
| National Academy of Engineering - 1999 - 308 lapas
...scientist and then as director from 1956 to 1963. In 1963, he became director for nuclear test detection in the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the US Department of Defense and in 1965 became ARPA deputy director. In 1966, Frosch was appointed assistant secretary of the Navy... | |
| Inga D. Schmidt, Thomas Döbler, Michael Schenk - 2000 - 212 lapas
...of California at Los Angeles across a four-node network. The Internet worked. The project was part of the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the US Department of Defense. The project's initial goal was to create a system in which networked computers from the military, government... | |
| Manny Rayner - 2000 - 360 lapas
...automatic recognition of continuous speech was the Speech Understanding Research (SUR) program sponsored by the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the US Department of Defense in the early 1970s. The program failed to produce practical speech recognition technology at that time... | |
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