On 12/4/2019 8:19 PM, Larry McVoy wrote:
I'd love to know the order of nodes joining and
how that was scored.
There are a number of sites that contain fragments of the history of
sites/nodes joining the ARPAnet. Wikipedia's entry for ARPAnet has some
of that along with several logical maps of the network (though these
stopped including host #'s pretty early on.) One decent concise
accounting is at
https://www.zakon.org/robert/internet/timeline/
A collection of maps of the ARPAnet over time is available from the
Computer History Museum at
https://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/102646704
As others have noted the numbers were assigned chronologically starting
at UCLA's Sigma-7 system (1) such that the first 4 were:
1: UCLA: Sigma-7
2: SRI: SDS-940
3: UCSB: IBM 360/75
4: Utah: PDP-10
I know Case-10 was node 13 (more colloquially referenced as 15, in
octal, which was how we saw the numbers and updated the host table).
I've forgotten at this point whether the assignments were documented in
RFCs or other assigned numbers documents from the Network Information
Center (NIC).
I've been told that UW-Madison "was the 11th
IMP on the arpanet" but I'm
pretty sure that is not true.
You're correct that it's not true. Not sure when/if UW-Madison was on
the ARPAnet. Hosts did get decommissioned and I think the numbers were
eventually recycled so it's possible a later site got a lower number but
now it's my turn not to be sure.
My guess is that there are the original
IMPs that were arpanet, then there was an expansion to educational sites
and Madison was 11 on that. Or something like that.
ARPAnet "vs." educational sites isn't a distinction that existed. The
first 4 nodes consisted of 3 educational institutions and a
university-affiliated research organization (SRI). In 1971 when there
were 23 hosts and 15 IMPs more than half of the organizations were
universities though contractors and labs started appearing pretty
rapidly. IMPs apart from ARPAnet weren't a thing really.
There's a podcast, "50 Things that Made the Modern Economy" that had a
fairly recent episode about IMPs that was pretty interesting. Had a
economic, Adam Smith-like spin on the emergence of IMPs as an example of
specialization in an ecosystem which was a big part of "why IMPs": the
network was kept homogeneous among the IMPs and whatever weirdness was
associated with the different hosts (mostly) contained to the host-IMP
interface.
Those first 4 nodes were all pretty different systems. Some differences
percolated up to the applications protocols, TELNET's options set was
complicated by the heterogeneity of the hosts in a protocol architecture
pre-dating things like "presentation layers" in network models.
If you peruse the maps at the Computer History museum site you can see
some real diversity in the systems. For instance in April 1971 Burroughs
had an IMP and a B6500 front-ending the under-construction ILLIAC-IV
(later moved to Ames and front-ended by a couple of PDP-10s). PARC's
MAXC appears in the mid-1970s. One of the goals in creating the ARPAnet
was to provide access to unique resources to a wider research community
and you can certainly see a lot of unique systems in those early maps.