Everyone, connected: packet switching to the platform economy in fifty years. Walk the cases — press a lit plate to look closer.
ARPANET (1969–1990) was a packet-switched computer network funded by the U.S. Department of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. It pioneered distributed, resilient communication architecture and birthed the Internet protocols that transformed global connectivity.
TCP/IP—the packet-switching protocol suite standardized 1974–1983—enabled decentralized, resilient digital communication. Developed by Cerf, Kahn, and DARPA researchers, it transformed isolated computer networks into the Internet, founding the age of universal connectivity.
Email emerged from packet-switching networks in the 1960s–70s, enabling asynchronous text communication across distributed computer systems. By the 1990s it became the Internet's killer application, transforming commerce, governance, and daily life—a revolution in correspondence as profound as the printing press.
The World Wide Web (1989–present) transformed information exchange from centralized archives to distributed, hyperlinked documents. Tim Berners-Lee's invention at CERN democratized access to knowledge and enabled the platform economy, reshaping society as profoundly as the printing press.
The browser—software that renders hypertext and mediates human access to networked information—emerged from packet-switching protocols and graphical interfaces in the 1980s–90s, democratizing digital communication and anchoring the platform economy that now structures global commerce, politics, and daily life.
The Internet emerged from Cold War packet-switching research (ARPANET, 1969) into a decentralized global network. By 1989, the Web's invention democratized information access. This exhibit traces the revolutionary technologies and ideas that connected humanity across continents in fifty years.
Social media platforms emerged from packet-switching networks and Internet protocols (1960s–1990s), transforming into mass communication systems (1995–2005) that democratized publishing, then concentrated power in algorithmic feeds (2005–2024). This exhibit traces the technological and social revolution from ARPANET to TikTok.
E-commerce emerged from packet-switching networks (1960s–70s), matured through the World Wide Web (1989–91), and transformed retail through encrypted transactions, logistics automation, and platform marketplaces (1995–2024), completing a revolution in how goods move from maker to consumer.
Wikipedia, launched 2001, democratized knowledge through crowdsourced encyclopedia editing. Born from Internet packet-switching infrastructure and Enlightenment ideals of universal access, it embodies the Age of Revolutions' radical premise: collective intelligence can overturn gatekeeping.
Streaming—the real-time transmission of audio and video over packet-switched networks—emerged from 1990s internet infrastructure and became the dominant media distribution model by 2020, displacing broadcast television and physical media through technological innovation and platform consolidation.
Undersea telegraph and telephone cables, laid from 1858 onward, created the first global communication network. These fiber-optic and copper conduits, buried beneath oceans, enabled instantaneous transmission of information across continents and revolutionized commerce, diplomacy, and human connection.
The data center—a climate-controlled cathedral of servers, routers, and fiber-optic cables—emerged in the 1990s as the physical infrastructure enabling the Internet Revolution. These facilities transformed information from scarce to abundant, democratizing knowledge and commerce across the globe.
The platform economy emerged from packet-switching networks (1969–) into a revolutionary system of intermediation, matching supply and demand at scale. By 2010–2020, platforms like Uber, Airbnb, and Amazon reshaped labor, commerce, and social life—a digital-age transformation as disruptive as steam and electricity.
Encryption—the mathematical transformation of plaintext into ciphertext—emerged from military necessity during the Age of Revolutions and became foundational infrastructure for digital communication, enabling secure transmission across open networks from the 1970s onward.
The Attention Economy emerged from packet-switching networks (1960s–70s) into a revolutionary platform system (1990s–2020s) that monetized human focus itself—a transformation as disruptive to social order as steam power or democratic revolution.
The Internet Revolution (1969–2024) transformed human communication from isolated mainframes to a globally connected ecosystem. Packet switching, TCP/IP protocols, and the World Wide Web enabled unprecedented information sharing, culminating in today's platform economy where billions connect instantaneously across borders.