)SLAC Network
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- Les Cottrell's publications, also see those registered in OSTI, snd search for author Cottrell, or a generic OSTI search via https://www.slac.stanford.edu/cgi-wrap/getdoc/slac-pub-XXX.pdfosti.gov/search (e.g. https://www.osti.gov/search/semantic:SLAC-PUB-9202)
- Web's Killer "App", chapter in WEB 25:Histories from the first 25 years of the World Wide Web. Edited by Niels Brugger. 2017.
- Dick and Anna Johnson's recollections of SLAC computing
- SLAC's Computing Highlights, 2011 talk by Les Cottrell
- Happy Birthday, Dear Web, 2009
- SCS Pictures 2002-2008
- SCS Trip reports 1998-2008
- Email on end of dial up modem service Feb 7, 2008
- First US Web site at SLAC
- SLAC network announcements, news etc., 2000-2013
- SCS Managers meeting notes 2005-2008
- Trip reports 1996-2004
- China
- Networking with China, paper published at CHEP 1994
- Burt Richter, the director of SLAC at the time was very instrumental in convincing DoE of the importance of this project and that it should be funded. See extract from Burt's 1990 trip to China report.
- China Internet Connection
- YouTube, Les Cottrell interview
- YouTube China's first Internet connection, 1994,
- SLAC Archives document on Les' role by Jean Deken
- China celebrates 10 years of being connected to the Internet, PCWorld article, May 17, 2004
- Les Cottrell: Bringing the Internet to China, Symmetry Magazine, 11/1/2005
- How Stanford and China first Connected, Cisco Blog, 10/17/2010
- Pioneer's of China's first Internet connection recall work, PCWorld article, Oct 18, 2010
- Foundation of HEPiX 1991, proposal presented by Les Cottrell, see last slide
- Future of Intersite Networking, Oct 1986 LBL, copies of viewgraphs etc presented at workshop, includes overview of multiple networks including BITNET (SLAC first national Lab Bitnet node 1983). 368 pages
- HEPnet 1985, slide created from a DEC network management tool called NMCC that shows HEPnet. Just for orientation, FNAL is in the center, SLAC is out to the left, CalTech is below SLAC, with BNL, LBL, and ANL just sort of single points. There's also a number of universities attached, mostly to FNAL. This was just about the time that HEPnet began to act as a network, and not just a bunch of individual network connections directly to the experiment location a university was involved with. The links, of course, were all 9.6 or 4.8kb/s, and the network design was cobbled (vs architected...). But it was one of the earliest really distributed networks (I think Bitnet & Milnet were the only other ones around at that point...). Phil Demar.
- STATUS OF NETWORKING FOR HIGH ENERGY PHYSICS IN THE UNITED STATES, SLAC PUB 3705 by Paul Kunz, SLAC, 1985
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