Vint Cerf Banner
By Charlotte Dunlap

CONTENTS
Editor's Letter

Industry Hall Of Fame Introduction

Paul Allen Programming Pioneer

Tim Berners-Lee Developer Of The World Wide Web

Dan Bricklin Creator Of The Electronic Spreadsheet

Vint Cerf The Father Of The Internet

Ross Cooley Compaq's Channel Champion

Larry Ellison Database Dynamo

Bronson Ingram King Of Global Distribution Empire

Charles Wang Software Mangement Mogul

John Warnock Wizard Of Type

Steve Wozniak Apple's Engineering Genius

Development Teams Introduction

The Compaq Portable

The Intel 386SX

Lotus 1-2-3

Microsoft Windows

"This is a case whre people like us are really building on the shoulders of giants."
--Marc Andreessen, executive vice president, Netscape

Vinton Cerf has been hailed as the father of the Internet. He co-created TCP/IP 24 years ago and broke down policy barriers, a feat that turned the government-based network into a revolutionary commercial medium.

Throughout his entire career, the 55-year-old Cerf has taken his love of science fiction, his knowledge of computer science and his sensitivity toward humanity and melded these qualities to vastly improve the way the entire world communicates and gathers knowledge. The Internet has become the fastest-growing communications network, touched by everyone from techies at NASA to schoolchildren in rural America.

TITLE: Senior vice president, Internet Technology and Architecture, MCI WorldCom

BORN: June 23, 1943

EDUCATION: B.S. Mathematics, Stanford Universioty; M.S., PhD., Computer Science , UCLA

ACCOMPLISHMENT Co-creator of TCP/IP, the common computer language of the Internet

Most people would be content to sit back and let others continue growing the Net, but not Cerf. In fact, as senior vice president of Internet Technology and Architecture at MCI WorldCom Inc., Washington, D.C., when he is not designing new Internet-based technology, delivering speeches about the Internet and accepting prestigious awards from heads of state, he is quietly working on new ventures with NASA to broaden the Net's reach into outer space.

"Vint is many things and is probably as close to a renaissance man as there is in the 21st century. He is part scientist, engineer, philosopher, businessperson but perhaps, most of all, a great teacher. Not just in the sense of imparting information, which he does very well, but in making you think and looking at not just networks but life in a whole new perspective," said Fred Briggs, chief engineering officer of MCI WorldCom and Cerf's boss for years.

On the brink of his professional career, barely graduated from UCLA and working as an assistant professor at Stanford University, Cerf created the Internet language Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) with his partner Robert Kahn. Later with MCI Communications Corp. after creating one of the industry's first commercial E-mail products, he worked to break the government policy barrier that prohibited commercial contact with the Internet.

Cerf is considered an authority on Internet matters, having formed the Internet Society in 1992, and he is a national treasure to those in the high-tech community as well as government circles, as was illustrated last December when he received the U.S. National Medal of Technology from President Clinton. And yet, despite his fame and influence, everyone who knows Cerf said he is an extremely kind and humble man.

His never-ending contribution to the Internet's success has made him a hero of budding Internet pioneers in recent years. "This is a case where people like us are really building on the shoulders of giants," said Marc Andreessen, executive vice president of Netscape Communications Corp., who invented the graphical user interface, or browser, to Cerf's Internet.

Research into the Internet initially began in the early 1960s when people explored the idea of packet switching, which involved sending data in individual packets to different destinations. This led to a major experiment in the late 1960s called the ARPAnet, a large wide-area packet switching network funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, later known as ARPA. Cerf's involvement in this network began when he was a graduate student at UCLA and worked with a group of researchers who tested and analyzed how the network worked. He helped to design the software used by the computers in order to communicate, called the host-to-host protocol, or the Network Control Program.

"This was really breaking very new ground. No one quite knew exactly what it meant to build a computer communications network, and so we were out there exploring territory that was largely terra incognita," Cerf said.

In 1972 Cerf received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from UCLA and participated in a public demonstration in Washington, D.C., at a major computer conference, the International Conference on Computer Communication. It was the first time the public had been exposed to packet switching and the notion of interactive computing at a distance. It was also the year Cerf left UCLA and joined Stanford to take a joint appointment as Computer Science and Electrical Engineering professor.

At the same time, Kahn began new packet switching research at ARPA. He shared design problems related to linking various packet nets together with Cerf, who at Stanford in 1973 did research on advanced content in packet switch networking.

That problem of connecting the different networks together became known as the Inter-net problem. So in 1973, Cerf and Kahn began basic design for the Internet and came up with an outline of the protocols needed to make this multinet work in a transparent way.

In May 1974 the very first paper on the Internet was published by the two men. Cerf continued to lead the development effort to turn TCP into a detailed specification that people could write software to. Cerf left Stanford and went to ARPA in 1976.

Much of Cerf's career revolves around testing, analyzing, scheming, brainstorming and going back to the drawing board. But everything clicked in 1977 in what Cerf calls a "major milestone." A test involving the successful communications between three different networks showed data communications going from a mobile packet radio unit being driven up and down a San Francisco area freeway, through ARPAnet, out a satellite link, and to a service site in Los Angeles. The test illustrated an 88,000-mile round-trip to send packets 400 miles from Northern to Southern California.

No one truly knows the far-reaching impact Cerf's work will have on the world, but one likely scenario would be that he brought better communications tools to a group of people who struggle with communicating more than most others--the hearing impaired. In fact, the Alexander Graham Bell Association awarded Cerf with the Alexander Graham Bell Award earlier this year.

Cerf's wife, Sigrid, who had been completely deaf since age 3, said E-mail has become the communications tool for the deaf and describes the traditional telecommunications devices for the deaf as "about as intolerable as if we had a telegraph system going today." Sigrid researched a new technology, via the Internet, called cochlear implants, had the procedure two and half years ago and hears perfectly today.

Now Cerf is looking to bring his expertise to learning about other worlds. While still with MCI, a year ago Cerf began working with NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab, Pasadena, Calif., to try to bring interplanetary capabilities to today's Internet. Cerf is looking to develop technology to support the deployment of standard Internet onto planetary and satellite surfaces on the moons of Jupiter, Saturn, Mars and Venus. Standard Internet could be used in space vehicles traveling throughout the solar system, as well as let the various pieces of Internet interact with each other across interplanetary distances.

Cerf said he is far from having complete specifications but hopes his basic design will be carried in not-too-distant space travel, such as the Mars missions scheduled to start in the year 2001.

"We have only scratched the surface in terms of what will change [with the Internet] with respect to how we live and work. Vint has the concept of the IP chip in a light bulb where every device in the universe can communicate with all other devices over a vast, seamless network. We cannot begin to comprehend what those types of changes will bring to our lives in just a few short years, and yet Vint is already laying the foundation to provide those capabilities not only here on earth, but beyond," said MCI WorldCom's Briggs.

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