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  1. BBN Report 1822. BBN Report 1822 specifies the method for connecting a host computer to an IMP. This connection and protocol is generally referred to as 1822, the report number. The specification was written by Bob Kahn.: 116, 149 The initial version of the 1822 protocol was developed in 1969.

  2. The IMP's capabilities were specified by the Host/IMP Protocol in BBN Report 1822. Since lower protocol layers were provided by the IMP-host interface, NCP essentially provided a transport layer consisting of the ARPANET Host-to-Host Protocol (AHHP) and the Initial Connection Protocol (ICP).

  3. 8 de mar. de 2021 · The IMP-Host Protocol was specified by BBN in a lengthy document called BBN Report 1822. The document was revised many times as the ARPANET evolved; what I’m going to describe here is roughly the way the IMP-Host protocol worked as it was initially designed.

  4. 1 de ene. de 2015 · “ Data Networking at BBN,” “Email,” and “Distributed Communications”; www.cbi.umn.edu/hostedpublications/pdf/CultureInnovation_bbn.pdf. Google Scholar; 30. “ Specification for the Interconnection of a host and an IMP,” BBN report 1822, May 1978. It is unclear how long VDHIs extended on the ARPANET. Google Scholar; 31.

  5. · Spring 1969 – UCLA computer experts received BBN report 1822 – a set of specifications for connecting host computers to IMPs. UCLA computer experts, lead be Mike Wingfield began building the host-to-IMP interface.

  6. the current ARPANET 1822 Host Access Protocol, which is described in sections 3.3 and 3.4 of BBN Report 1822 [1]. Although the 1822L protocol uses different Host-IMP leaders than the 1822 protocol, hosts using either protocol can readily communicate with each other (the IMPs handle the translation automatically).