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In 1968 the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the U.S.
Department of Defense began implementation of a computer
communication network which permits the interconnection of heter
ogeneous computers at geographically distributed centres through
out the United States. This network has come to be known as the
ARPANET and has grown from the initial four node configuration in
1969 to almost forty nodes (including satellite nodes in Hawaii,
Norway, and London) in late 1973. The major goal of ARPANET is to
achieve resource sharing among the network users. The resources to
be shared include not only programs, but also unique facilities
such as the powerful ILLIAC IV computer and large global weather
data bases that are economically feasible when widely shared. The
ARPANEr employs a distributed store-and-forward packet switching
approach that is much better suited for computer communications
networks than the more conventional circuit-switch ing approach.
Reasons favouring packet switching include lower cost, higher
capacity, greater reliability and minimal delay. All of these
factors are discussed in these Proceedings."
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