|
Inventors Of The Modern Computer
The Ethernet
Local Area Network
|
I
came to work one day at MIT and the computer had been stolen, so I called
DEC to break the news to them that this $30,000 computer that they'd lent
me was gone. They thought this was the greatest thing that ever happened,
because it turns out that I had in my possession the first computer small
enough to be stolen! - Robert Metcalfe on the trials and tribulations
of inventing the Ethernet.
Ethernet
is a system for connecting computers within a building using hardware running
from machine to machine. It differs from the Internet,
which connects remotely located computers by telephone line, software protocol
and some hardware. Ethernet uses some software (borrowed from Internet
Protocol), but the connecting hardware was the basis of the patent
(#4,063,220) involving newly designed chips and wiring. The patent describes
ethernet as a "multipoint data communication system with collision
detection".
Robert
Metcalfe was a member of the research staff for Xerox,
at their Palo Alto Research
Center (PARC) where some of the first personal computers were being
made. Metcalfe was asked to build a networking system for PARC's computers.
Xerox's motivation for the computer network was that they were also building
the world's first laser printer and wanted all of the PARC's computers
to be able to print with this printer.
Metcalfe
had two challenges: the network had to be fast enough to drive the very
fast new laser printer; and it had to connect hundreds of computers within
the same building. Never before had hundreds of computers been in the same
building -- at that time no one had more than one, two or maybe three computers
in operation on any one premise.
The
press has often stated that ethernet was invented on May 22, 1973, when
Metcalfe wrote a memo to his bosses stating the possibilities of ethernet's
potential, but Metcalfe claims ethernet was actually invented very gradually
over a period of several years. In 1976, Robert Metcalfe and David Boggs
(Metcalfe's assistant) published a paper titled, "Ethernet: Distributed
Packet-Switching For Local Computer Networks."
Metcalfe
left Xerox in 1979 to promote the use of personal computers and local area
networks (LANs). He successfully convinced Digital Equipment, Intel, and
Xerox Corporations to work together to promote ethernet as a standard.
Now an international computer industry standard, ethernet is the most widely
installed LAN protocol.
Related
Links
The King Of Connectivity
An interview with Bob Metcalfe where he discusses the Internet's "indigenous
peoples", the notorious Canter and Siegel "spamming" controversy, and value
on the Net.
The
Internet After the Fad
Remarks of Dr. Robert Metcalfe at the University of Virginia
Charles Spurgeon's
Ethernet Web Site
Technical site for all things ethernet, includes the drawing of the
first ethernet system by Metcalfe.
US Patent #4,063,220
Multipoint data communication system with collision detection.
Local
Computer Networks
Definitions.
all artwork ©MaryBellis
Previous
Features
General Invention/Inventor
Index
|