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Citation bot (talk | contribs) Alter: template type. Add: encyclopedia, authors 1-1. Removed parameters. Some additions/deletions were parameter name changes. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Abductive | Category:Computer network stubs | #UCB_Category 283/547 |
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'''Intergalactic Computer Network''' or '''Galactic Network'''<ref>{{cite web|author=Leiner, Barry M.|title="Origins of the Internet" in A Brief History of the Internet version 3.32|publisher=The Internet Society|date=2003-12-10| url=http://www.isoc.org/internet/history/brief.shtml#Origins|access-date=2007-11-03|display-authors=etal}}</ref> ('''IGCN''') was a computer networking concept similar to today's [[Internet]].
[[J.C.R. Licklider]], the first director of the [[Information Processing Techniques Office]] (IPTO) at [[The Pentagon]]'s [[DARPA|ARPA]], used the term in the early 1960s to refer to a networking system he "imagined as an electronic commons open to all, ‘the main and essential medium of informational interaction for governments, institutions, corporations, and individuals.'"<ref name="Garreau2006">{{cite book|last=Garreau|first=Joel|title=Radical Evolution: The Promise and Peril of Enhancing Our Minds, Our Bodies--and what it Means to be Human|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YCuOKOD5nY4C&pg=PA22|year=2006|publisher=Broadway|isbn=978-0-7679-1503-8|page=22}}</ref><ref name=britannica>{{cite
Licklider first learned about time-sharing from [[Christopher Strachey]] at the inaugural [[International Federation for Information Processing#History|UNESCO Information Processing Conference]] in Paris in 1959.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/howwebwasbornsto00gill|url-access=registration|title=How the Web was Born: The Story of the World Wide Web|
By the late 1960s, his promotion of the concept had inspired a primitive version of his vision called [[ARPANET]]. ARPANET expanded into a network of networks in the 1970s that became the [[Internet]].<ref name="Garreau2006"/>
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