The first two nodes that formed the ARPANET were UCLA and the Stanford Research Institute, followed shortly thereafter by the University of Utah.
UC Santa Barbara and University of Utah
The first two nodes of ARPANET were connected in October 1969.
Of the initial 4 nodes 3 were Universities: UCLA, UCSB, and BYU.
It is NOT!The internet is a network not a website.The internet is a network connecting many different nodes: some are websites but many are not websites. Many nodes on the internet are specialized servers that provide information as individual computers request it and no more (e.g. time standards), other nodes are computers that do not support the protocols used by websites and must be accessed only with lower level internet protocols, etc.
too many =D
sending data via nodes
The internet was created to save money on the budget for ARPA. The agency was responsible for funding computers for most colleges. There were only four nodes to begin with.
Although I can't come up with a name, it was the US government, with the ARPA Net, mostly used for military communications. It was later expanded to become the internet. ~ ARPAnet was the first "user" of what's now the Internet. It connected 4 nodes: U of California @ LA, U of California @ Santa Barbara, Stanford Research Institute, and U of Utah.
NAT
The surgeon may clear a path and feel the patient's lymph nodes first to evaluate any abnormalities within the nodes.
No. FIFO is a first-in, first-out structure, and this describes how nodes are inserted and extracted from a queue. That is, new nodes are inserted at the back of the queue while existing nodes are extracted from the front of the queue. In other words, nodes are processed on a first-come, first-served basis. However, LIFO is a last-in, first-out structure and this describes how nodes are inserted and extracted from a stack. You can think of a stack as being like a stack of plates such that the top-most plate is always the first to be extracted while new plates are placed on top of existing plates. Stacks are typically used in backtracking algorithms because nodes are extracted in the reverse order they were inserted upon the stack.
Routers connects different network to internet.There are 2 ways to connect to the internet.
IP stands for Internet Protocol and it is is a numerical label that is assigned to devices participating in a computer network that uses the Internet Protocol for communication between its nodes.