• First text message sent (3/12/1992)

    From Ross Clark@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 3 21:59:10 2024
    Sent (says Crystal) by Neil Papworth (using a personal computer) to
    RIchard Jarvis in Newbury, Berkshire (using an Orbitel 901, which
    weighed over 4 pounds). It said: "Merry Christmas".

    In Werner Herzog's 2016 film "Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected
    World", Prof.Leonard Kleinrock tells the story of the first message sent
    on ARPANET. On October 29, 1969, Kleinrock and his student Charley Kline
    were at an SDS Sigma 7 computer in the engineering school at UCLA,
    getting ready to send a message:

    "All we wanted to do was log in from our computer to a computer 400
    miles to the north up at Stanford Research Institute.
    To log in, you have to type "L O G" and that machine was smart enough to
    type the "I N".
    To make sure this was happening properly, we had our programmer and the programmer up north connected by a telephone handset, just to make sure
    it was going correctly.
    So Charlie typed the "L" and said "You get the 'L'?"
    Bill said, "Yup, got the L."
    Typed 'O'. "You get the 'O'?"
    "Yup, got the 'O'."
    Typed in the 'G' and crash! The SRI computer crashed.
    So the first message ever on the internet was "LO", as in "lo and behold"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Aidan Kehoe@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 4 07:41:01 2024
    Ar an triú lá de mí na Nollaig, scríobh Ross Clark:

    [...] "All we wanted to do was log in from our computer to a computer 400 miles to the north up at Stanford Research Institute.
    To log in, you have to type "L O G" and that machine was smart enough to type the "I N".
    To make sure this was happening properly, we had our programmer and the programmer up north connected by a telephone handset, just to make sure it was going correctly.
    So Charlie typed the "L" and said "You get the 'L'?"
    Bill said, "Yup, got the L."
    Typed 'O'. "You get the 'O'?"
    "Yup, got the 'O'."
    Typed in the 'G' and crash! The SRI computer crashed.
    So the first message ever on the internet was "LO", as in "lo and behold"

    Reminds me of ‘ghrelin’, a hormone of the gastrointestinal tract, asserted to
    be from Proto-Indo-European “gʰreh₁”, ‘to grow’, but suspiciously similar to
    the abbreviation ‘Growth Hormone RELeasing’ peptide, its function.

    --
    ‘As I sat looking up at the Guinness ad, I could never figure out /
    How your man stayed up on the surfboard after fourteen pints of stout’
    (C. Moore)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Athel Cornish-Bowden@21:1/5 to Ross Clark on Wed Dec 4 19:01:06 2024
    On 2024-12-03 08:59:10 +0000, Ross Clark said:

    Sent (says Crystal) by Neil Papworth (using a personal computer) to
    RIchard Jarvis in Newbury, Berkshire (using an Orbitel 901, which
    weighed over 4 pounds). It said: "Merry Christmas".

    In Werner Herzog's 2016 film "Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World", Prof.Leonard Kleinrock tells the story of the first message
    sent on ARPANET. On October 29, 1969, Kleinrock and his student Charley
    Kline were at an SDS Sigma 7 computer in the engineering school at
    UCLA, getting ready to send a message:

    "All we wanted to do was log in from our computer to a computer 400
    miles to the north up at Stanford Research Institute.
    To log in, you have to type "L O G" and that machine was smart enough
    to type the "I N".
    To make sure this was happening properly, we had our programmer and the programmer up north connected by a telephone handset, just to make sure
    it was going correctly.
    So Charlie typed the "L" and said "You get the 'L'?"
    Bill said, "Yup, got the L."
    Typed 'O'. "You get the 'O'?"
    "Yup, got the 'O'."
    Typed in the 'G' and crash! The SRI computer crashed.
    So the first message ever on the internet was "LO", as in "lo and behold"

    "Mr.Watsoncomehere,Iwantyou" is bit more impressive as a first message.


    --
    Athel -- French and British, living in Marseilles for 37 years; mainly
    in England until 1987.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Ross Clark@21:1/5 to Athel Cornish-Bowden on Thu Dec 5 08:47:36 2024
    On 5/12/2024 7:01 a.m., Athel Cornish-Bowden wrote:
    On 2024-12-03 08:59:10 +0000, Ross Clark said:

    Sent (says Crystal) by Neil Papworth (using a personal computer) to
    RIchard Jarvis in Newbury, Berkshire (using an Orbitel 901, which
    weighed over 4 pounds). It said: "Merry Christmas".

    In Werner Herzog's 2016 film "Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected
    World", Prof.Leonard Kleinrock tells the story of the first message
    sent on ARPANET. On October 29, 1969, Kleinrock and his student
    Charley Kline were at an SDS Sigma 7 computer in the engineering
    school at UCLA, getting ready to send a message:

    "All we wanted to do was log in from our computer to a computer 400
    miles to the north up at Stanford Research Institute.
    To log in, you have to type "L O G" and that machine was smart enough
    to type the "I N".
    To make sure this was happening properly, we had our programmer and
    the programmer up north connected by a telephone handset, just to make
    sure it was going correctly.
    So Charlie typed the "L" and said "You get the 'L'?"
    Bill said, "Yup, got the L."
    Typed 'O'. "You get the 'O'?"
    "Yup, got the 'O'."
    Typed in the 'G' and crash! The SRI computer crashed.
    So the first message ever on the internet was "LO", as in "lo and behold"

    "Mr. Watson come here, I want you" is bit more impressive as a first message.


    or "What hath God wrought" (first Morse-code message transmitted, 1844,
    to officially open the Baltimore–Washington telegraph line)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)