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 Hacker Historical Timeline
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1928
 Internet Growth Backbones: None - Hosts: None  
 Early use of the word "punk" to signify a criminal 
 1934
 The Communications Act of 1934 is passed, it is the first effort to regulate the telephone
 industry at the federal level.
 1934
 The first electronic digital computer, the Atanasoff-Berry Computer is created by John
 Vincent Atanasoff and Clifford Berry at Iowa State University with a $7000 grant.
 1940
 First electronic computers in US, UK, and Germany
 1947
 John Bardeen, William Shockley, and Walter Brattain invent the transistor while at Bell
 Labs. They received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1956 for their work.
 1948
 The word "cybernetics" coined by Norbert Wiener 
 1955
 The Naked Lunch published 
 1957
 The USSR launches Sputnik, the first artificial earth satellite. In response, the United 
 States forms the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) within the Department of Defense
 (DoD) to establish US lead in science and technology applicable to the military.
 1960
 The word "cyborg" coined by Manfred Clynes 
 "Spacewar" first videogame on PDP-1 at MIT
 Donald Bitzer initiates PLATO computer-based education project
 1962
 RAND Paul Baran, of the RAND Corporation (a government agency), was commissioned by the
 U.S. Air Force to do a study on how it could maintain its command and control over its
 missiles and bombers, after a nuclear attack. This was to be a military research network
 that could survive a nuclear strike, decentralized so that if any locations (cities) in
 the U.S. were attacked, the military could still have control of nuclear arms for a
 counter-attack. 
 Baran's finished document described several ways to accomplish this. His final proposal
 was a packet switched network. 
 "Packet switching is the breaking down of data into datagrams or packets that are labeled
 to indicate the origin and the destination of the information and the forwarding of these
 packets from one computer to another computer until the information arrives at its final
 destination computer. This was crucial to the realization of a computer network. If packets
 are lost at any given point, the message can be resent by the originator." 
 1963
 Doug Engelbart's "A Conceptual Framework"
 Quillian lays AI groundwork for semantic nets
 ASCII 7-bit standard digitizes alphabet; first 'teletext'
 1968
 Internet Growth Backbones: 50Kbps ARPANET - Hosts: 4  
 Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep published 
 ARPA awarded the ARPANET contract to BBN. BBN had selected a Honeywell minicomputer as the
 base on which they would build the switch. The physical network was constructed in 1969,
 linking four nodes: University of California at Los Angeles, SRI (in Stanford), University
 of California at Santa Barbara, and University of Utah. The network was wired together via
 50 Kbps circuits.
 1972
 Internet Growth Backbones: 50Kbps ARPANET - Hosts: 23  
 K.W. Jeter completes Dr. Adder (Spring) 
 The first e-mail program was created by Ray Tomlinson of BBN.
 The Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) was renamed The Defense Advanced Research
 Projects Agency (or DARPA)
 ARPANET was currently using the Network Control Protocol or NCP to transfer data. This
 allowed communications between hosts running on the same network.
 1973
 Internet Growth Backbones: 50Kbps ARPANET - Hosts: 23+  
 "The Girl Who Was Plugged In" published in New Dimensions 3
 Development began on the protocol later to be called TCP/IP, it was developed by a group
 headed by Vinton Cerf from Stanford and Bob Kahn from DARPA. This new protocol was to
 allow diverse computer networks to interconnect and communicate with each other.
 Gravity's Rainbow published 
 1974
 Internet Growth Backbones: 50Kbps ARPANET - Hosts: 23+  
 First Use of term Internet by Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn in paper on Transmission Control
 Protocol.
 1975
 Microsoft founded 
 Shockwave Rider published 
 1976
 Internet Growth Backbones: 50Kbps ARPANET, plus satellite and radio connections -Hosts:111+  
 The Ramones release first album; punk begins 
 Dr.Robert M. Metcalfe develops Ethernet, which allowed coaxial cable to move data extremely
 fast. This was a crucial component to the development of LANs.
 The packet satellite project went into practical use. SATNET, Atlantic packet Satellite
 network, was born. This network linked the United States with Europe.
 Surprisingly, it used commercial Intelsat satellites that were owned by the International
 Telecommunications Satellite Organization, rather than government satellites.
 UUCP (Unix-to-Unix CoPy) developed at AT&T Bell Labs and distributed with UNIX one year
 later.
 The Department of Defense began to experiment with the TCP/IP protocol and soon decided to
 require it for use on ARPANET.
 1977
 Apple Computers founded (April)
 "Fragments of a Hologram Rose" published in Unearth (summer) 
 Never Mind the Bullocks - Here's the Sex Pistols released; punk gets notorious 
 The Clash release first album; punk gets serious 
 1978
 Generation X, with Billy Idol on lead vocals, releases first album 
 1979
 The Clash release London Calling 
 USENET (the decentralized news group network) was created by Steve Bellovin, a graduate
 student at University of North Carolina, and programmers Tom Truscott and Jim Ellis. It
 was based on UUCP.
 The Creation of BITNET, by IBM, "Because its Time Network", introduced the "store and
 forward" network. It was used for email and listservs.
 1980
 City Come A-Walkin' published 
 The Artificial Kid published 
 1981
 Internet Growth Backbones: 50Kbps ARPANET, 56Kbps CSNET, plus satellite and radio
 connections - Hosts: 213  
 "Johnny Mnemonic" published in Omni (May) 
 National Science Foundation created backbone called CSNET 56 Kbps network for institutions
 without access to ARPANET. Vinton Cerf proposed a plan for an inter-network connection
 between CSNET and the ARPANET.
 Spacetime Donuts published 
 "The Gernsback Continuum " published in Universe 11
 "True Names" published 
 Sterling introduces Gibson's "Burning Chrome" to the writer's workshop in Austin 
 1982
 Software published (Jan.) 
 Gibson attends ArmadiloCon and reads the opening chapter of his work-in-progress,
 Neuromancer. "Behind the Mirrorshade: A Look at Punk SF" panel held. (Oct.) 
 Blade Runner released 
 Tron released 
 1983
 Internet Growth Backbones: 50Kbps ARPANET, 56Kbps CSNET, plus satellite and radio 
 connections - Hosts: 562  
 Cheap Truth begins publication 
 Internet Activities Board (IAB) was created in 1983.
 On January 1st, every machine connected to ARPANET had to use TCP/IP. TCP/IP became the
 core Internet protocol and replaced NCP entirely.
 The University of Wisconsin created Domain Name System (DNS). This allowed packets to be
 directed to a domain name, which would be translated by the server database into the 
 corresponding IP number. This made it much easier for people to access other servers,
 because they no longer had to remember numbers.
 Gibson, Sterling and Shiner visit Rudy Rucker in Lynchburg after Balticon;
 Virginia hasn't been this hip since Thomas Jefferson was alive 
 War Games released 
 The short story "Cyberpunk" by Bruce Bethke published in Amazing
 Science Fiction Stories; this is, allegedly, the first use of the term anywhere (Nov.) 
 The word "transrealism" coined by Rudy Rucker who issues "A
 Transreal Manifesto" in The Bulletin of the SFWA (Winter) 
 1984
 Internet Growth Backbones: 50Kbps ARPANET, 56Kbps CSNET, plus satellite and radio
 connections - Hosts: 1024  
 Neuromancer published; "cyberspace" coined 
 The ARPANET was divided into two networks: MILNET and ARPANET. MILNET was to serve the
 needs of the military and ARPANET to support the advanced research component, Department
 of Defense continued to support both networks.
 Upgrade to CSNET was contracted to MCI. New circuits would be T1 lines,1.5 Mbps which is
 twenty-five times faster than the old 56 Kbps lines. IBM would provide advanced routers
 and Merit would manage the network. New network was to be called NSFNET (National Science
 Foundation Network), and old lines were to remain called CSNET.
 Dr. Adder published 
 Decoder, a film by Klaus Maeck, released 
 Frontera published 
 Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution published 
 In Japan, robots kill four humans in separate incidents 
 Terminator released 
 2535 begins publication 
 VPL Research Inc. founded by Jason Lanier 
 Gardner Dozois, reviewing "hot new writers" for The Washington Post, refers to a group
 called "cyberpunks". The name sticks (Dec. 30) 
 1985
 Internet Growth Backbones: 50Kbps ARPANET, 56Kbps CSNET, 1.544Mbps (T1) NSFNET, plus
 satellite and radio connections - Hosts: 1961  
 Schismatrix published 
 The National Science Foundation began deploying its new T1 lines, which would be finished
 by 1988.
 20 Minutes into the Future (aka Max Headroom) released 
 Eclipse published 
 Donna Haraway's "Manifesto for Cyborgs" published in Socialist Review (Apr.) 
 Japanese translation of Neuromancer published (July) 
 "Cyberpunks" panel convenes at the National SF Convention in Austin. Panelists are Rudy
 Rucker, John Shirley, Bruce Sterling, Lou Shiner, Pat Cadigan and Greg Bear (Aug. 31) 
 "Slamdancing in SF" published in REM #2 
 1986
 Internet Growth Backbones: 50Kbps ARPANET, 56Kbps CSNET, 1.544Mbps (T1) NSFNET, plus
 satellite and radio connections - Hosts: 2308  
 Burning Chrome published 
 The Internet Engineering Task Force or IETF was created to serve as a forum for technical
 coordination by contractors for DARPA working on ARPANET, US Defense Data Network (DDN),
 and the Internet core gateway system. 
 Hardwired published 
 "Pakistani Brain" virus infects IBM computers world-wide (Jan.)
 Rudy Rucker's "What is Cyberpunk?" appears in REM #3 (Feb.) 
 Count Zero published (Mar.) 
 Kim Stanley Robinson's parody "Down and Out in the year 2000" appears in IASF (Apr.) 
 Norman Spinrad's "The Neuromantics" published in IASF (May) 
 John Shirley confounds the elders at the Science Fiction Research Association panel
 "Cyberpunk or Cyberjunk" (June 28) 
 Cheap Truth ceases publication (Aug.) 
 Michael Swanwick's "A User's Guide to the Post Moderns" published in IASF (Nov.) 
 Mirrorshades published (Dec.) 
 Interzone reprints "the New Science Fiction" by Vincent Omniaveritas (Winter) 
 1987
 Internet Growth Backbones: 50Kbps ARPANET, 56Kbps CSNET, 1.544Mbps (T1) NSFNET, plus
 satellite and radio connections - Hosts: 28,174  
 First German translation of Neuromancer published by Heyne 
 BITNET and CSNET merged to form the Corporation for Research and Educational Networking
 (CREN), another work of the National Science Foundation.
 Science Fiction Eye premiers with all cyberpunk issue 
 Robocop released 
 Akira released 
 Bubble Gum Crisis begins in Japan 
 Decoder magazine begins in Italy
 1988
 Internet Growth Backbones: 50Kbps ARPANET, 56Kbps CSNET, 1.544Mbps (T1) NSFNET, plus
 satellite and radio connections - Hosts: 56,000  
 In England, Max Dowhham's "Cyberpunk: the Final Solution" published in Vague
 Soon after the completion of the T1 NSFNET backbone, traffic increased so quickly that
 plans immediately began on upgrading the network again.
 Merit and its partners formed a not for profit corporation called ANS, Advanced Network
 Systems, which was to conduct research into high speed networking. It soon came up with
 the concept of the T3, a 45 Mbps line. NSF quickly adopted the new network and by the end
 of 1991 all of its sites were connected by this new backbone.
 Islands in the Net published 
 Mississippi Review entire issue published devoted to cyberpunk; academic colonization of
 the Movement begins in earnest
 Metrophage published 
 Shatter graphic novel published
 Going GaGa begins publication
 bOING bOING begins publication 
 Wetware published (Apr.) 
 The Internet worm strikes (Nov.) 
 Mona Lisa Overdrive published (Nov.)
 1989
 "Fiction 2000" conference held in Leeds (June) 
 Mondo 2000 begins publication 
 Neuromancer: The Graphic Novel published 
 The Cuckoo's Egg published 
 Semiotext(e):SF published 
 Crystal Express published 
 Tetsuo:The Iron Man released 
 Timothy Leary interviews William Gibson 
 Phrack #24 distributed containing the E911 document hacked from BellSouth (Feb. 24) 
 1990
 Internet Growth Backbones: 56Kbps CSNET, 1.544Mbps (T1) NSFNET, plus satellite and radio
 connections - Hosts: 313,000  
 The Difference Engine published 
 While the T3 lines were being constructed, the Department of Defense disbanded the ARPANET
 and it was replaced by the NSFNET backbone. The original 50Kbs lines of ARPANET were taken
 out of service.
 Tim Berners-Lee and CERN in Geneva implements a hypertext system to provide efficient
 information access to the members of the international high-energy physics community.
 Hardware released 
 EFF founded 
 Secret Service raids Steven Jackson Games in Austin (Mar. 1) 
 Harper's Magazine publishes"Is Computer Hacking a Crime?",a transcript of a WELL conference
 during which Phiber Optik hacks the TRW database and distributes John Barlow's credit
 history (Mar.) 
 Operation Sun Devil (May 7-9) 
 Paul Di Filippo's "Ribofunk" published in bOING bOING #2 (Winter)
 In England, The Hardcore special "Cyberpunk is Dead" issue published (Winter) 
 1991
 Internet Growth Backbones: Partial 45Mbps (T3) NSFNET, a few private backbones, plus
 satellite and radio connections - Hosts: 617,000  
 Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism published
 CSNET (which consisted of 56Kbps lines) was discontinued having fulfilled its important
 early role in the provision of academic networking service. A key feature of CREN is that
 its operational costs are fully met through dues paid by its member organizations.
 The NSF established a new network, named NREN, the National Research and Education Network.
 The purpose of this network is to conduct high speed networking research. It was not to be
 used as a commercial network, nor was it to be used to send a lot of the data that the 
 Internet now transfers.
 Storming the Reality Studio published 
 Synners published 
 Terminator 2 released 
 The Silicon Man published 
 Transreal! published 
 U.S. intelligence agents reportedly cripple Iraqi air defense computers with a virus during
 the Gulf War (Jan) 
 Lewis Shiner announces in the Op-Ed pages of the New York Times that he has resigned from
 cyberpunk (Jan.7) 
 Steven Jackson Games sues the Secret Service (May 1) 
 "Michelangelo" virus media panic begins (Dec.) 
 
 1992
 Internet Growth Backbones: 45Mbps (T3) NSFNET, private interconnected backbones consisting
 mainly of 56Kbps, 1.544Mbps, plus satellite and radio connections - Hosts: 1,136,000  
 EFF moves to Washington D.C. and is immediately compromised 
 Internet Society is chartered.
 World-Wide Web released by CERN.
 NSFNET backbone upgraded to T3 (44.736Mbps)
 The Hacker Crackdown published 
 Snow Crash published 
 Mondo 2000: A User's Guide to the New Edge published
 Lawnmower Man released 
 "Michelangelo" doomsday; nothing happens (Mar. 6)
 Jaron Lanier loses his patents to his creditors (Nov) 
 1993
 Internet Growth Backbones: 45Mbps (T3) NSFNET, private interconnected backbones consisting
 mainly of 56Kbps, 1.544Mbps, and 45Mpbs lines, plus satellite and radio connections -
 Hosts: 2,056,000  
 Wired begins publication 
 InterNIC created by NSF to provide specific Internet services: directory and database
 services (by AT&T), registration services (by Network Solutions Inc.), and information
 services (by General Atomics/CERFnet).
 Marc Andreessen and NCSA and the University of Illinois develops a graphical user interface
 to the WWW, called "Mosaic for X".
 Virtual Light published 
 Fringe Ware Review begins publication 
 Nemisis released. Gibson will later praise the film as "sort of early Gibson meets 
 Terminator 2 ... it has a few bits that are just brilliant Cyberpunk." 
 Bubble Gum Crisis released in the West
 Time Magazine "Cyberpunk" cover story; real cyberpunks outraged (Feb. 8) 
 Court rules in favor of Steven Jackson Games, Secret Service ordered to pay damages (Feb.) 
 Wild Palms premiers (May 16)
 Billy Idol's new album Cyberpunk released; real cyberpunks outraged (July)
 Flame Wars; The Discourse of Cyberculture published 
 
 1994
 Internet Growth Backbones: 145Mbps (ATM) NSFNET,private interconnected backbones consisting
 mainly of 56Kbps, 1.544Mbps, and 45Mpbs lines, plus satellite and radio connections -
 Hosts: 3,864,000  
 No major changes were made to the physical network.The most significant thing that happened
 was the growth. Many new networks were added to the NSF backbone. Hundreds of thousands 
 of new hosts were added to the INTERNET during this time period.
 Pizza Hut offers pizza ordering on its Web page.
 First Virtual, the first cyberbank, opens.
 ATM (Asynchronous Transmission Mode, 145Mbps) backbone is installed on NSFNET.
 The Hacker and the Ants published 
 Data Trash published 
 Cyberia published 
 "VNS Manifesto" published in Unnatural: Techno-theory for a Contaminated Culture 
 Phiber Optic begins serving a 13 month sentence for computer intrusion and conspiracy (Jan.) 
 In Paris, "Cyber SM" gives first public demonstration of virtual sexuality, S&M style (Jan.) 
 Line Noiz e-zine distributes results of its opinion poll "Does 
 Cyberpunk Still Exist?"; no conclusions, as usual (Aug. 12) 
 Western news media reports two thirds of Russian computer users have encountered viruses,
 85% of those viruses were Russian made (Nov.) 
 1995
 Internet Growth Backbones: 145Mbps (ATM) NSFNET (now private), private interconnected
 backbones consisting mainly of 56Kbps, 1.544Mbps, 45Mpbs, 155Mpbs lines in construction,
 plus satellite and radio connections - Hosts: 6,642,000  
 The National Science Foundation announced that as of April 30, 1995 it would no longer
 allow direct access to the NSF backbone. The National Science Foundation contracted with
 four companies that would be providers of access to the NSF backbone (Merit). These
 companies would then sell connections to groups, organizations, and companies.
 $50 annual fee is imposed on domains, excluding .edu and .gov domains which are still
 funded by the National Science Foundation.
 Diamond Age published 
 EFF retreats to San Francisco 
 The Cyberpunk Handbook published; cynical opportunism reaches new low 
 Wired UK edition begins (March) 
 Synthetic Pleasures released
 The Net released 
 Hackers released
 From Australia, Geekgirl debuts on the Net (Jan.) 
 Kevin Metnick arrested by the FBI for numerous computer crimes (Feb. 15) 
 Italian police raid BITS Against the Empire BBS accusing the computer group of subversion
 (Feb. 28)
 The Steampunk Trilogy published (Apr.) 
 VR 5 premiers (May 24) 
 Virtual Futures conference meets at Warwick University (May 26-28) 
 Johnny Mnemonic released (May 26) 
 Arthur & Marilouise Kroker publish "Johnny Mnemonic:The Day Cyberpunk Died" in Ctheory(Jun.) 
 K.W.Jeter's Blade Runner 2:The Edge of Human published-- to the consternation of all (Nov.) 
 
 1996
 Internet Growth Backbones: 145Mbps (ATM) NSFNET (now private), private interconnected
 backbones consisting mainly of 56Kbps, 1.544Mbps, 45Mpbs, and 155Mpbs lines, plus satellite
 and radio connections - Hosts: over 15,000,000, and growing rapidly  
 Escape Velocity; Cyberculture at the End of the Century published
 Most Internet traffic is carried by backbones of independent ISPs, including MCI, AT&T,
 Sprint, UUnet, BBN planet, ANS, and more.
 Currently the Internet Society, the group that controls the INTERNET, is trying to figure
 out new TCP/IP to be able to have billions of addresses, rather than the limited system 
 of today. The problem that has arisen is that it is not known how both the old and the 
 new addressing systems will be able to work at the same time during a transition period. 
 Ribofunk! collection published (Mar.) 
 Datableed - the second Virtual Futures conference meets (May)
 Holy Fire Published (July) 
 Idoru published (Sept.) 
 Kyoko Date, the virtual girl, activated 
 Hacking the Future by Arthur & Marilouise Kroker published
 Clinton signs Communications Decency Act into US law (Feb. 8) 
 Wired magazine, as a preliminary action to a planned IPO, files a prospectus with the SEC
 valuing itself at $447 million -- 17 times greater than its actual revenues. Much derision
 follows in the financial press (May 30)
 Wired magazine's IPO tanks (Oct. 24) 
 Blade Runner 3: Replicants Night by K.W. Jeter published -- for no good reason (Nov) 
  
 1997
 Freeware published (April) 
 Wired UK edition folds (Feb) 
 US Supreme Court rules Communications Decency Act unconstitutional (Jun 26)
 Blade Runner computer game released by Westwood (Nov) 
 1998
 Gibson / Maddox episode, "Kill Switch" premiers on The X-Files (Feb 15)
 If you know of a historical milestones that should be part of this list please email the
 information and proper documentation to me and I will gladly make the addition.

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