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Internet Experiment Note

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An Internet Experiment Note (IEN) is a sequentially numbered document in a series of technical publications issued by the participants of the early development work groups that created the precursors of the modern Internet.

History

After DARPA began the Internet program in earnest in 1977, the project members were in need of communication and documentation of their work in order to realize the concepts laid out by Bob Kahn and Vint Cerf some years before. The Request for Comments (RFC) series was considered the province of the ARPANET project and the Network Working Group (NWG) which defined the network protocols used on it. Thus, the members of the Internet project decided on publishing their own series of documents, Internet Experiment Notes, which were modeled after the RFCs.[1][2]

Jon Postel became the editor of the new series, in addition to his existing role of administering the long-standing RFC series. Between March, 1977, and September, 1982, 206 IENs were published. After that, with the plan to terminate support of the Network Control Protocol (NCP) on the ARPANET and switch to TCP/IP, the production of IENs was discontinued, and all further publication was conducted within the existing RFC system.[2]

Key networking principles, such as the robustness principle, were defined during the IEN work.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ Scheible, Jeff (2015-03-15). Digital Shift: The Cultural Logic of Punctuation. U of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-1-4529-4437-1.
  2. ^ a b "History » RFC Editor". Retrieved 2025-04-25.
  3. ^ Council, National Research; Sciences, Division on Engineering and Physical; Applications, Commission on Physical Sciences, Mathematics, and; Board, Computer Science and Telecommunications; Infrastructure, Committee on the Internet in the Evolving Information (2001). The Internet's Coming of Age. National Academies Press. ISBN 978-0-309-17205-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)