Weblore
Ways to support the podcast: Buy Me a Coffee: ☕ https://bmc.link/philipthompson [https://bmc.link/philipthompson] Donate via PayPal: 💸 paypal.me/PhilipT284 [paypal.me/PhilipT284] Every device in your home speaks Ethernet. Your laptop, your phone, your smart TV—they're all connected through a technology that, by all rights, should never have won. Before Ethernet, connecting computers meant either walking floppy disks between machines or paying phone companies a fortune for slow, dedicated lines. Bob Metcalfe changed everything with a radical idea: let computers shout randomly into a shared wire and crash into each other like bumper cars. In 1985, IBM was pouring millions into Token Ring, an elegant system where network access was orderly and controlled. Ethernet looked like chaos. The experts said it would never scale. They were wrong. This is the story of how a simple, open, "good enough" technology beat sophisticated, expensive perfection. From drilling into live cables with vampire taps to guerrilla marketing that bypassed corporate IT departments, this is the protocol war that determined the infrastructure of the internet age—and how Bob Metcalfe's chaotic invention became the heartbeat of the digital world. Hosted by Philip Thompson. Weblore is a production of Thompson Media Ltd. Write to me: philip@thompsonmedia.uk
9 episodios
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