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March 27, 2011
Paul Baran, Internet Pioneer, Dies at 84
By KATIE HAFNER
https://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/28/technology/28baran.html
Paul Baran, an engineer who helped create the technical underpinnings for
the Arpanet, the government-sponsored precursor to today?s Internet, died
Saturday night at his home in Palo Alto, Calif. He was 84.
The cause was complications from lung cancer, said his son, David.
In the early 1960s, while working at the RAND Corporation in Santa Monica,
Calif., Mr. Baran outlined the fundamentals for packaging data into discrete
bundles, which he called ?message blocks.? The bundles are then sent on
various paths around a network and reassembled at their destination. Such a
plan is known as ?packet switching.?
Mr. Baran?s idea was to build a distributed communications network, less
vulnerable to attack or disruption than conventional networks. In a series
of technical papers published in the 1960s he suggested that networks be
designed with redundant routes so that if a particular path failed or was
destroyed, messages could still be delivered through another.
Mr. Baran?s invention was so far ahead of its time that in the mid-1960s,
when he approached AT&T with the idea to build his proposed network, the
company insisted it would not work and refused.
?Paul wasn?t afraid to go in directions counter to what everyone else
thought was the right or only thing to do,? said Vinton Cerf, a vice
president at Google who was a colleague and longtime friend of Mr. Baran?s.
?AT&T repeatedly said his idea wouldn?t work, and wouldn?t participate in
the Arpanet project,? he said.
In 1969, the Defense Department?s Advanced Research Projects Agency built
the Arpanet, a network that used Mr. Baran?s ideas, and those of others. The
Arpanet was eventually replaced by the Internet, and packet switching still
lies at the heart of the network?s internal workings.
Paul Baran was born on April 29, 1926, in Grodno, Poland. His parents moved
to the United States in 1928, and Mr. Baran grew up in Philadelphia. His
father was a grocer, and as a boy, Paul delivered orders to customers in a
small red wagon.
He attended the Drexel Institute of Technology, which later became Drexel
University, where he earned a bachelor?s degree in electrical engineering in
1949. He took his first job at the Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corporation in
Philadelphia, testing parts of radio tubes for an early commercial computer,
the Univac. In 1955, he married Evelyn Murphy, and they moved to Los
Angeles, where Mr. Baran took a job at Hughes Aircraft working on radar data
processing systems. He enrolled in night classes at the University of
California, Los Angeles.
Mr. Baran received a master?s degree in engineering from U.C.L.A. in 1959.
Gerald Estrin, who was Mr. Baran?s adviser, said Mr. Baran was the first
student he ever had who actually went to the Patent Office in Washington to
investigate whether his master?s work, on character recognition, was
patentable.
?From that day on, my expectations of him changed,? Dr. Estrin said. ?He
wasn?t just a serious student, but a young man who was looking to have an
effect on the world.?
In 1959, Mr. Baran left Hughes to join RAND?s computer science department.
He quickly developed an interest in the survivability of communications
systems in the event of a nuclear attack, and spent the next several years
at RAND working on a series of 13 papers ? two of them classified ? under
contract to the Air Force, titled, ?On Distributed Communications.?
About the same time that Mr. Baran had his idea, similar plans for creating
such networks were percolating in the computing community. Donald Davies of
the British National Physical Laboratory, working a continent away, had a
similar idea for dividing digital messages into chunks he called packets.
?In the golden era of the early 1960s, these ideas were in the air,? said
Leonard Kleinrock, a computer scientist at U.C.L.A. who was working on
similar networking systems in the 1960s.
Mr. Baran left RAND in 1968 to co-found the Institute for the Future, a
nonprofit research group specializing in long-range forecasting.
Mr. Baran was also an entrepreneur. He started seven companies, five of
which eventually went public.
In recent years, the origins of the Internet have been subject to claims and
counterclaims of precedence, and Mr. Baran was an outspoken proponent of
distributing credit widely.
?The Internet is really the work of a thousand people,? he said in an
interview in 2001.
?The process of technological developments is like building a cathedral,? he
said in an interview in 1990. ?Over the course of several hundred years, new
people come along and each lays down a block on top of the old foundations,
each saying, ?I built a cathedral.?
?Next month another block is placed atop the previous one. Then comes along
an historian who asks, ?Well, who built the cathedral?? Peter added some
stones here, and Paul added a few more. If you are not careful you can con
yourself into believing that you did the most important part. But the
reality is that each contribution has to follow onto previous work.
Everything is tied to everything else.?
Mr. Baran?s wife, Evelyn, died in 2007. In addition to his son, David, of
Atherton, Calif., he is survived by three grandchildren; and his companion
of recent years, Ruth Rothman.
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