1993
DOI: 10.1016/0308-5961(93)90037-4
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The internet religious war

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Cited by 28 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…8 The religious, political, and military metaphors that participants used to describe the competition between the Internet and OSI confirm that this was no mere technical dispute. At the height of the "religious war" between TCP/IP and OSI, tensions within the IETF and IAB over architecture and organizational power created a "constitutional crisis."…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…8 The religious, political, and military metaphors that participants used to describe the competition between the Internet and OSI confirm that this was no mere technical dispute. At the height of the "religious war" between TCP/IP and OSI, tensions within the IETF and IAB over architecture and organizational power created a "constitutional crisis."…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…In retrospect, there was no point of time when OSI or SNA really had a chance for being successful. In this context, Drake accurately stated: "The debate is not about the comparative efficacy of two sets of standards, but is rather between two competing visions of how international standards and network development should be organized and controlled" (Drake 1993). The visions of SNA and OSI were not stable enough to weave the future of IT: 1.…”
Section: Internet: From the Option To Hegemony -Analogies To The Futumentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A partir de la creación de protocolos comunes (TCP/IP) y el World Wide Web (WWW) se dieron dos pasos claves para la apertura de la red a la sociedad y el mundo, que se completaron en 1995 cuando la Fundación Nacional de Ciencias de Estados Unidos (NSF) dejó el control de la red, que pasó a manos privadas. Así se consolidó la estructura básica de lo que hoy conocemos como Internet: una red abierta e interconectada, gestionada por corporaciones privadas, organizaciones sin ánimo de lucro y otras entidades colectivas, que es administrada y utilizada por diversos actores (Abbate, 1999;Hart, Red y Bar, 1992;Malamud, 1993;Drake, 1993;Bemers y Fischetti, 1999;Lessig, 2001;Castells, 2001;Werie, 2001 NUEVAS TECNOLOGÍAS, VIEJOS PROBLEMAS N" 37, ENERO-ABRIL, 2004 en que Internet adquiere sus características básicas^ los usuarios han pasado de los 16 millones iniciales a 680 millones en septiembre de 2003 y se estima que para finales de 2004 estarán cerca de los 1000 millones (Global Reach, 2003). Las razones cualitativas justifican aún más su interés.…”
Section: La Relevancia De Internet Y El Caso Españolunclassified