You are on page 1of 1

NSFNET

ARPANET was a restrictive club. The precursor to today’s internet, ARPANET


was open only open to organizations directly supporting the US Department of
Defense (DOD), which was picking up the bill. Expanding the club meant
expanding the funding base. The US National Science Foundation (NSF) did
just that in 1980, when it gave a consortium of universities $5 million to create
the Computer Science Network (CSNET), and again in 1985, when it
commissioned the National Science Foundation Network (NSFNET). The
networks interconnected at universities that had both DOD and NSF contracts.
CSNET featured a mix of technologies with the short-term goal of providing
computer science departments with email and limited-access remote terminal
capability. The number of hosts jumped from three in 1981 to 24 in 1982 and
84 in 1984. But the network’s fundamental goal was to get its academic
members access to the ARPANET so they could exchange email and use the
other resources.
NSFNET had the much broader goal of creating a nationwide network— and, in
particular, providing researchers around the US with access to the NSF’s five
supercomputing centers. The original NSFNET went live in 1986 with seven 56-
kilobit-per-second links—and they were almost immediately saturated. In
1988, the network was expanded to 13 nodes interconnected by 1.5-megabit-
per-second T1 links. Within three years, those T1 links were upgraded to 45-
megabit-per-second T3 links. By that point, NSFNET linked 3,500 networks at
16 sites. Few users noticed when ARPANET was shut down on February 28,
1990—the non-Defense users had all migrated.
While NSFNET could purchase faster network links, there was no hardware or
software that could run at such speeds. “No one had ever built a T3 network
before,” said Allan Weis, president of Advanced Network and Services, Inc., the
nonprofit created to manage the network, as reported in the NSFNET final
report. It took years of work before the T3s were running at full speed.
But while NSFNET greatly improved access to the internet, it also had an
“acceptable use policy” that limited the use of the network to the support of
research and education—and prohibited commercial ventures.
SEE ALSO ISP Provides Internet Access to the Public (1989)
A visualization study of inbound traffic measured in billions of bytes on the
NSFNET T1 backbone for the month of September 1991, ranging from purple (0
bytes) to white (100 billion bytes).

You might also like