The following text is copyright 1998 by
Network World, permission is hearby given for reproduction, as long as
attribution is given and this notice is included.
Getting smaller by
getting bigger
By Scott Bradner
Network
World, 08/10/98
I was not there at
the start of BBN's network business, but I was an
instigator of the
organization's restart. Now it's hard to tell if BBN is
having another start
or the start of its end.
BBN, once known as
Bolt Beranek and Newman, was the first ISP.
In the beginning,
the Internet was called the nationwide ARPANET,
and starting in
1969, BBN ran the ARPANET under contract from the
U.S. government.
Peaking at only a few hundred sites, the
ARPANET started to
fade away by the late 1980s, replaced by
fast-growing
regional data networks interconnected with the NSFnet.
In this same
timeframe, it became clear to a bunch of us techies at
Harvard, Boston
University and M.I.T. that we could put together
one of these
regional networks of our own. We wanted to call it the
NorthEast Regional
Data NETwork, but the powers that be objected
to the acronym and
settled for the name NEARnet. While we wanted
to be involved with
the network's details, we did not want to run it
and selected BBN to
do so.
This began the
second phase of BBN's involvement in the Internet.
The company
eventually bought NEARnet along with a number of
other regional
networks, formed BBN Planet and became one of the
largest ISPs in the
U.S.
But a large ISP is
still small potatoes in the telecommunications
world, and BBN
became an attractive trinket that was snapped up by
GTE in mid-1997. BBN
is now externally visible thanks to a
"Powered by
BBN" tagline used in some of GTE's advertising. GTE
Internetworking,
BBN's new guise, is still one of the largest ISPs.
The company is
holding its own against the likes of UUNET, MCI
and Sprint.
Then along comes the
announcement that GTE is about to merge with
Bell Atlantic, with
GTE's Internet prowess noted in the press releases
as a key asset of
the new combined company. I have to admit that I
worry about my
friends at whatever will be left of BBN when it's
buried deep inside
of a traditional local telephone company.
Traditional
telephone companies have demonstrated a remarkable
inability to
understand the Internet. Their fears, misunderstandings
and assumptions could fill a black hole. In general, considering
carriers' level of understanding, they can be said to possess an excess of
"anti-clues." With all of its history, BBN is one of the more
clued-in ISPs. But I fear that when BBN come in contact with Bell Atlantic, the
result will be clue annihilation.
My friends may be strong enough to overcome their fate as an
internal Bell Atlantic body part. But my concern is that they will disappear
into the morass or feel they have to escape from the land of the living Dilbert
cartoon, and what was BBN will fade away without even a whimper.
Disclaimer:
Harvard tends more to bravado than whimpering, but the above is my own worry.