A lowercase internet, on the other hand, is simply any network made up of multiple smaller networks using the same internetworking protocols. An internet (little "i") isn't necessarily connected to the Internet (big "I"), nor does it necessarily use TCP/IP as its internetworking protocol. There are isolated corporate internets, and there are Xerox XNS-based internets and DECnet-based internets.
The relatively new term " intranet" is really just a marketing term for a TCP/IP-based "little i" internet, used to emphasize the use of technologies developed and introduced on the Internet within a company's internal corporate network. On the other hand, an "extranet" is a TCP/IP-based internet that connects partner companies to each other, or a company to its distributors, suppliers, and customers.
HOSTS.TXT was maintained by SRI's Network Information Center (dubbed "the NIC") and distributed from a single host, SRI-NIC.[4] ARPAnet administrators typically emailed their changes to the NIC, and periodically FTPed to SRI-NIC and grabbed the current HOSTS.TXT. Their changes were compiled into a new HOSTS.TXT once or twice a week. As the ARPAnet grew, however, this scheme became unworkable. The size of HOSTS.TXT grew in proportion to the growth in the number of ARPAnet hosts. Moreover, the traffic generated by the update process increased even faster: every additional host meant not only another line in HOSTS.TXT, but potentially another host updating from SRI-NIC.
[4]SRI is the former Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park, California. SRI conducts research into many different areas, including computer networking.And when the ARPAnet moved to the TCP/IP protocols, the population of the network exploded. Now there was a host of problems with HOSTS.TXT:
The ARPAnet's governing bodies chartered an investigation into a successor for HOSTS.TXT. Their goal was to create a system that solved the problems inherent in a unified host table system. The new system should allow local administration of data, yet still make that data globally available. The decentralization of administration would eliminate the single-host bottleneck and relieve the traffic problem. And local management would make the task of keeping data up to date much easier. The new system should use a hierarchical namespace to name hosts, thus ensuring the uniqueness of names.
Paul Mockapetris, then of USC's Information Sciences Institute, was responsible for designing the architecture of the new system. In 1984, he released RFCs 882 and 883, which described the Domain Name System. These RFCs were superseded by RFCs 1034 and 1035, the current specifications of the Domain Name System.[5] RFCs 1034 and 1035 have now been augmented by many other RFCs, describing potential DNS security problems, implementation problems, administrative gotchas, mechanisms for dynamically updating name servers and securing zone data, and more.
[5]RFCs are Request for Comments documents, part of the relatively informal procedure for introducing new technology on the Internet. RFCs are usually freely distributed and contain fairly technical descriptions of the technology, often intended for implementors.