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The first link-state routing concept was published in 1979 by [[John M. McQuillan]] (then at [[Bolt, Beranek and Newman]]) as a mechanism that would calculate routes more quickly when network conditions changed, and thus lead to more stable routing.<ref>[[John M. McQuillan]], Isaac Richer and Eric C. Rosen, ''ARPANet Routing Algorithm Improvements'', BBN Report No. 3803, Cambridge, April 1978</ref><ref>[[John M. McQuillan]], Isaac Richer and Eric C. Rosen, ''The New Routing Algorithm for the ARPANet'', [[IEEE]] Trans. on Comm., 28(5), pp. 711–719, 1980</ref>
<ref>{{cite news |last1=Bolat |first1=Dorris, M |title=Route4Me |url=https://route4me.com/ |access-date=12 December 2021}}</ref>
Later work at [[BBN Technologies]] showed how to use the link-state technique in a hierarchical system (i.e., one in which the network was divided into areas) so that each switching node does not need a map of the entire network, only the area(s) in which it is included.{{Citation needed|reason=where can we read more about this work?|date=February 2013}}
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