Doug Gale
Doug Gale is an early developer of the Internet. Gale earned a Ph.D. in Physics from Kansas State University in 1972, and served as a tenured Associate Professor of Physics at East Texas State University for eight years, during which time his research interests shifted to computer science.
Contributions to the Internet
Gale changed careers in 1980 to the management of information technology. Subsequently, he served as Chief Information Officer at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and the George Washington University,[1] and Director of OARnet, a regional Internet Service Provider.[2][3] In 2003 he founded a consultancy Information Technology Associates, LLC.
In 1986 Gale founded MIDnet, one of the original mid-level networks on the NSFnet and the first to become fully operational.[4] He later served as the NSFnet Program Director at the National Science Foundation[5] where he was responsible for adding colleges and universities to the fledgling network[6] and upgrading the backbone to DS-3. In 1996 he prepared the white paper that led to the creation of Internet2.[7]
Gale founded the Internet Legacy Institute in 2010 to preserve and archive information and original source materials about the creation and evolution of the Internet.[8]
Major Awards
In 1991 he received the “Director’s Award for Program Officer Excellence” at the National Science Foundation for his contributions. In 2008 he received the Catalyst Award from Educause on behalf of the Regional Networks on the NSFnet.
References
- ↑ "History of the Internet: A Great Plains Perspective". Sigma Solutions.
- ↑ SWE. The Society. 1998.
- ↑ "Alliance wants to catch next Net wave". Cincinnati.com
- ↑ David J. Wishart (2004). Encyclopedia of the Great Plains. U of Nebraska Press. pp. 515–. ISBN 0-8032-4787-7.
- ↑ "Illuminating the net's Dark Ages ". BBC News.
- ↑ Brian Kahin; John F. Kennedy School of Government. Science, Technology, and Public Policy Program; John F. Kennedy School of Government. Strategic Computing and Telecommunications in the Public Sector Program (1994). Building information infrastructure: issues in the development of the National Research and Education Network. McGraw-Hill Primis.
- ↑ "History of OSC and OARnet (1994-2001)". Ohio Technology Consortium.
- ↑ Ancient History Ramblings: Internet History Museum
External links
- Internet Legacy Institute
- NSF - NSF and the Birth of the Internet - Special Report
- Bruce Mitchel Kogut (2004). The Global Internet Economy. MIT Press. pp. 473–. ISBN 978-0-262-61204-3.