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  1. Bob Kahn (born 1938) is an American electrical engineer who, along with Vint Cerf, first proposed the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and the Internet Protocol (IP), the fundamental communication protocols at the heart of the Internet.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Vint_CerfVint Cerf - Wikipedia

    While at UCLA, Cerf met Bob Kahn, who was working on the ARPANET system architecture. [22] Cerf chaired the International Network Working Group. He wrote the first TCP protocol with Yogen Dalal and Carl Sunshine, called Specification of Internet Transmission Control Program ( RFC 675 ), published in December 1974.

  3. Computer scientists Vinton Cerf and Bob Kahn are credited with inventing the Internet communication protocols we use today and the system referred to as the Internet. Before the current iteration of the Internet, long-distance networking between computers was first accomplished in a 1969 experiment by two research teams at UCLA and Stanford.

  4. Mar 20, 2017 · National Medal Laureate Vint Cerf, along with Robert Kahn, developed the protocols that paved the way for the creation of the Internet. Many of us alive today cannot remember what life was like before the Internet existed.

  5. Apr 30, 2023 · For the past three months, Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn had been working together on a problem Kahn had been pondering for some time: how to connect ground-based military computers seamlessly to communications satellites and mobile radios. The ARPANET and the way it handled communications was already well established.

  6. Vinton Cerf and Robert Kahn designed the software code that is used to transmit data over the Internet. Dr. Cerf and Dr. Kahn have been at the forefront of a digital revolution that has transformed global commerce, communication, and entertainment.

  7. Dec 3, 2020 · In 1974 two American computer scientists, Bob Kahn and Vint Cerf, proposed a new method that involved sending data packets in a digital envelope or ‘datagram’. The address on the datagram can be read by any computer, but only the final host machine can open the envelope and read the message inside.