Network Control Program

The Network Control Program (sometimes the abbreviation NCP is mistakenly expanded to Network Control Protocol, but this term is not found in the contemporary documentation) was the original protocol suite of the ARPANET. In NCP, the physical layer, the data link layer, and the network layer were all specified by the Host/IMP Protocol. The transport layer was the Host-to-Host Protocol, together with the Initial Connection Protocol. Layers above that were all joined in with the application (e.g. FTP, SMTP, etc). On January 1, 1983, parts of NCP were rendered obsolete when the ARPANET changed its core networking protocols from NCP to the more flexible and powerful TCP/IP protocol suite, marking the start of the Internet as we know it today.

Further reading

  • Feinler, E.; Postel, Jon B. ARPANET Protocol Handbook (Network Information Center, Menlo Park, 1978)

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
obadiah ben jacob sforno
remington steele
dobson hall
hms captain (1869)
doris roberts
mh
monotone
astrophysics
list of special forces units
suppressor
flash suppressor
chersonissos
computer lab
colonial national historical park
umm (urban male magazine)
battle of kirksville
order theory
triforce
toro (magazine)
hylian
strut
molly ivins
legatus
rongbuk glacier
colonial williamsburg
i love the 70s
conti
folk psychology
rideau hall: the tv series
ered wethrin
mount chimborazo
dejan bodiroga
list of football clubs in serbia and montenegro
fk red star
radium chloride
spanish steps
eduardo palomo
river teiglin
william julius wilson
george mallory
rockcliffe park, ontario
mount cook national park
ripening
where's george?