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Topic: Steve Crocker


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In the News (Mon 7 Dec 09)

  
  ICANN | Biographical Data on Dr. Stephen D. Crocker   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Crocker sits on the ICANN board as a non-voting liaison representing the Security and Stability Advisory Committee.
Crocker earned his BA in math and PhD in computer science at UCLA, and he studied artificial intelligence at MIT.
Steve Crocker was selected as non-voting liaison to the ICANN Board by the Security and Stability Advisory Committee.
www.icann.org /biog/crocker.htm   (283 words)

  
 washingtonpost.com: No End to New Ideas
Crocker, who in 1969 developed many of the rules for how host computers communicate with each other on a network that became the Internet, has lived in his Bethesda home for 13 years but in many rooms it looks more like 13 weeks.
Crocker's answer was a letter titled "Request for Comments," which summarized the work that had been done and solicited ideas for the emerging network.
Crocker noticed that many telecom firms were losing millions of dollars because of the difficulty of getting their systems -- from billing to order entry -- to communicate.
www.washingtonpost.com /ac2/wp-dyn/A5581-2002Jun30?language=printer   (2134 words)

  
 [No title]
Steve Crocker suggested that a new protocol might be developed as a private experimental protocol between two or three sites.
Steve Crocker made the suggestion that when using a line oriented system transmission be in lines.
Steve then proposed that connections could be established with a declared byte size and a maximum record length in bytes.
ftp.snt.utwente.nl /pub/docs/rfc/rfc77.txt   (2580 words)

  
 RFC49   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
NWG/RFC 49 Conversations with Steve Crocker (UCLA) happy result is that the difficult question of character sets does not have to be resolved at this protocol level.
Steve said that he disliked our UCC strategy (RFC 46) because it requires maintaining two full-duplex connections to the requestor process and switching between them.
NWG/RFC 49 Conversations with Steve Crocker (UCLA) I still think that the UCC proposal we advanced in RFC 46 is a good workable scheme.
rfc.net /rfc0049.html   (1865 words)

  
 [No title]
Steve pointed out that the implementation of INT as a "quit" should not necessarily preclude a HOST's interpretation of a control character in the input stream from also acting as a "quit".
Steve put forth an alternate proposal: a process wishing to create a user process at a foreign HOST issues RFCs to sockets 0 and 1 belonging to the user whose process he wishes to create.
Steve expressed the thought that there need not be an initial standard UCC, that there might be several UCCs.
ftp.snt.utwente.nl /pub/docs/rfc/rfc49.txt   (1874 words)

  
 Steve Crocker
Steve Crocker is the author of several RFCs, including the April 1st RFC RFC 1776.
He was a graduate student of Len Kleinrock[?] at UCLA.
The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/st/Steve_Crocker.html   (45 words)

  
 History of ARPANET - Part II: The Network Working Group
Steve Crocker remembers in the RFC Reference Guide (RFC 1000) that the first meeting was chaired by Elmer Shapiro, who initiated the conversation with a list of questions.
Crocker replaced Shapiro as the Chairman of the NWG after the initial meeting.
Steve Crocker appointed Alex McKenize and Jon Postel to replace him as Chairmen of the Network Working Group.
www.dei.isep.ipp.pt /docs/arpa--2.html   (1663 words)

  
 RFC 2555 (rfc2555) - 30 Years of RFCs
Steve Crocker is a modest man and would likely never make the observation that while the contents of RFC 1 might have been entirely forgettable, the act of writing RFC 1 was indicative of the brave and ultimately clear-visioned leadership that he brought to a journey into the unknown.
Steve proposed 2 experiments in RFC 1: "1) SRI is currently modifying their on-line retrieval system which will be the major software component of the Network Documentation Center [or The SRI NIC as it soon came to be known] so that it can be modified with Model 35 teletypes.
Steve may think RFC 1 was an "entirely forgettable" document; however, as an information person, I beg to differ with him.
www.faqs.org /rfcs/rfc2555.html   (5523 words)

  
 rfc1012
54 - Crocker, Steve, Jon Postel, John Newkirk, and Mike Kraley, "An Official Protocol Proffering", RFC 54 (NIC 4756), UCLA/NMC and Harvard, 18 June 1970.
55 - Newkirk, John, Mike Kraley, Jon Postel, and Steve Crocker, "A Prototypical Implementation of the NCP", RFC 55 (NIC 4757), Harvard and UCLA/NMC, 19 June 1970.
111 - Crocker, Steve, "Pressure from the Chairman", RFC 111 (NIC 5815), UCLA/NMC, 31 March 1971.
ietfreport.isoc.org /idref/rfc1012   (14090 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
On April 21 and 23 Thomas P. Skinner and I had telephone conversations with Steve Crocker at UCLA relating to the network protocol, specifically regarding our proposal in NWG/RFC 46.
Steve stated that he felt that a need for dynamic reconnection would later be recognized by the network participants.
Steve supported the implementation of the INT network command described in NWG/RFC 46.
www.rfc.members.pl /rfc-php/rfc49.php   (1961 words)

  
 [No title]
Eastlake, Crocker & Schiller [Page 6] RFC 1750 Randomness Recommendations for Security December 1994 These sequences may be adequate in simulations (Monte Carlo experiments) as long as the sequence is orthogonal to the structure of the space being explored.
Eastlake, Crocker & Schiller [Page 18] RFC 1750 Randomness Recommendations for Security December 1994 6.2 Non-Hardware Sources of Randomness The best source of input for mixing would be a hardware randomness such as disk drive timing affected by air turbulence, audio input with thermal noise, or radioactive decay.
Eastlake, Crocker & Schiller [Page 25] RFC 1750 Randomness Recommendations for Security December 1994 8.2.2 Meet in the Middle Attacks If chosen or known plain text and the resulting encrypted text are available, a "meet in the middle" attack is possible if the structure of the encryption algorithm allows it.
www.ietf.org /rfc/rfc1750.txt   (9106 words)

  
 [No title]
Dave Crocker, one of the original authors discussed this document with the IAB and was satisfied with the edits proposed by the IAB.
Steve Hardcastle-Kille joined the IAB in discussing several of the X.500 documents.
Crocker will make sure the document is routed to them.
ftp.sunet.se /pub/Internet-documents/iesg/iesg.91-10-17   (1951 words)

  
 About the PEM Working Group   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Steve, With respect to your comment about PEM never dealing with MIME messages very cleanly, a handful of us spent considerable time working on this and developed the MOSS specification.
The design was harder than one might have expected it to be because the combination of (1) the underlying mail protocol, (2) PEM and (3) MIME all imposed constraints which came from different traditions.
I would characterize the result as "clean" in the sense that it was complete and consistent, but I would agree it wasn't elegant.
bs.mit.edu /pipermail/saag/2000q3/000104.html   (292 words)

  
 CV Steve Crocker   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Steve is a Research Assistant Co-ordinator in the Department of Surgery, Faculty of Health Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
He has a BA in Psychology from McMaster University and is heading for a Masters program in the hopeful near future.
Steve has a background in typesetting, military communications intelligence, clinical databases and medical office administration.
www.neurosurvival.ca /AboutThisGuide/SteveCV.htm   (66 words)

  
 Request For Comments (RFC's) History - Steve Crocker
RFC's were invented by Steve Crocker to help provide a record of the Network Working Group's design of the ARPANET.
Steve Crocker volunteered to organize the NWG notes.
At an ARPA meeting in March, 1969 in Utah, Crocker created the first Request For Comments document, titled "Host Software", RFC 001, to document the work of the NWG.
www.livinginternet.com /i/ia_rfc_invent.htm   (624 words)

  
 Steve Crocker - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
Steve Crocker - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
Steve Crocker is the author of several Request for Comments documents, including the very first RFC, and the April Fool's RFC 1776.
He was a graduate student at University of California, Los Angeles.
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/Steve_Crocker   (87 words)

  
 Coach Steve Crocker   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Prior to returning to Western, Crocker was a coach for five years with North Coast Aquatics (NCA) and was a partner in the Carlsbad, Calif. business the last two years in addition to his coaching duties.
The largest team program in the San Diego area, Crocker had a hand in developing a program that produced swimmers who won three events at national champinships meets, three at the Junior National Championships and team titles at the last four LSC (Local Swimming Committe) Championships.
Crocker spent 1993-95 and 1997 as the director of the Sprinters Paradise Camp, a program for elite swimmers of all ages, where his goal was to improve the starts, turns, strokes and finishes for all competitive swimmers.
www.wku.edu /Athletics/mswimming/crocker.html   (215 words)

  
 [No title]
Membership is not closed.The Network Working Group (NWG) is concerned with the HOST software, the strategies for using the network, and initial experiments with the network.Documentation of the NWG's effort is through notes such as this.
Steve has asked that we elaborate on the errors, queries, and HOST status that were mentioned in NWG/RFC #39.
Steve suggested that we put out an RFC to alert the network community to this point.
www.mnot.net /sw/citation/rfc.n3   (10397 words)

  
 Internet Society (ISOC) 2003 BOT Election - ISOC Members Only
Crocker is CEO and co-founder of Shinkuro, Inc., a start up company focused on dynamic sharing of information across the Internet.
He is also chair the the Internet Society's Jon Postel Award committee and ICANN's Security and Stability Advisory Committee, and he is a volunteer Senior Counselor in the Office of the Chief Technology Officer in the District of Columbia, focusing on the District's creation of a new technology magnet high school.
For this work, Dr. Crocker was recently awarded the 2002 IEEE Internet Award.
www.isoc.org /members/vote/2003election/profiles/o-crocker.shtml   (235 words)

  
 uBio Advisory Board   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Steve Crocker Associates, LLC is a consulting and RandD company specializing in current Internet and electronic commerce technologies.
Steve Crocker was one of the founders and chief technology officer of CyberCash, Inc., the leading Internet payments company.
Crocker served as the area director for security in the Internet Engineering Task Force for four years and as a member of the Internet Architecture Board for two years.
www.ubio.org /people/advisory_board.html   (626 words)

  
 SPACE AVAILABLE FOR BILL POWELL AND STEVE CROCKER SWIM CAMPS'   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Bowling Green, Ky. - - Western Kentucky Head Swimming and Diving Coach Bill Powell and assistant coach Steve Crocker will be holding the final session of "Get Ready for Summer Competition Swim Clinics," June 14-18, at E.A. Diddle Arena Pool on the WKU campus in Bowling Green.
Crocker, a Franklin, Ky. native, toured with the USA national team after leaving WKU in 1985.
Questions and phone registration for the clinic may be directed to Coach Powell at (270) 745-6075 or Steve Crocker at (270) 745-4676.
www.wku.edu /Athletics/mswimming/camp.html   (229 words)

  
 Shinkuro, Inc. - Tools for Collaboration
Shinkuro was founded in early 2002 by Internet veterans Steve Crocker and Jeffrey Kay.
Crocker has been a program manager at Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), a senior researcher at USC's Information Sciences Institute, founder and director of the Computer Science Laboratory at the Aerospace Corporation and a vice president at Trusted Information Systems.
In 1994, Crocker was one of the founders and chief technology officer of CyberCash, Inc. In 1998, he founded and ran Executive DSL, a DSL-based ISP.
shinkuro.com /about.php   (358 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The Network Working Group (NWG) is concerned with the HOST software, the strategies for using the network, and initial experiments with the network.
Steve Crocker, UCLA Reproduction if desired may be handled locally.
These are both titled HOST Software and are by Steve Crocker and Bill Duvall, separately.
www.ietf.org /rfc/rfc0003.txt   (298 words)

  
 ColombiaLink.com - STEVE CROCKER - Biografia - Biography - Fotos - Photos - Pics   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Steve Crocker era un estudiante de postgrado en UCLA.
Según explica el propio Steve, "la mayoría de nosotros éramos estudiantes de postgrado y esperábamos que en cualquier momento vendría un grupo de profesionales para hacerse cargo y resolver los problemas que estábamos tratando".
Steve es ahora el Dr. Stephen Crocker y está en el consejo de administración de CyberCash y otras varias empresas.
www.colombialink.com /01_INDEX/index_tecnologia/gurus/crocker.html   (590 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Network Working Group Steve Crocker, Chairman Request for Comments: 102 at BBN, Cambridge NIC#5763 22, 23 February 1971 OUTPUT OF THE HOST/HOST PROTOCOL GLITCH CLEANING COMMITTEE At the NWG meeting in Urbana on 17-19 February 1971, a committee was established to look at the Host/Host protocol and see what changes were immediately desirable or necessary.
The committee is chaired by Steve Crocker, and has eight other members: Ray Tomlinson BBN (Tenex) Jim White UCSB Gary Grossman Illinois Tom Barkalow Lincoln (TX2) Will Crowther BBN (IMPs) Bob Bressler MIT (Dynamic Modeling Doug McKay IBM (Yorktown) Dan Murphy BBN (Tenex) A number of topics were discussed.
On some of these topics, a consensus was reached on whether or not to recommend a change, and if so, what the change should be.
ftp.cerias.purdue.edu /pub/doc/rfc/rfc102.txt   (1004 words)

  
 RFC 1012   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
This RFC is a reference guide for the Internet community which provides a bibliographic summary of the Request for Comments numbers 1 through 999 issued between the years 1969-1987.
RFC 1012 - Bibliography of RFCs 1 - 999 June 1987 73 - Crocker, Steve, "Response to NWG/RFC 67", RFC 73 (NIC 5416), UCLA/NMC, 25 September 1970.
RFC 1012 - Bibliography of RFCs 1 - 999 June 1987 614 - Pogran, Ken, and Nancy Neigus, "Response to RFC 607 - Comments on the File Transfer Protocol", RFC 614 (NIC 21530), BBN, 28 January 1974.
library.n0i.net /rfc/html/rfc1012.html   (15502 words)

  
 Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Steve Crocker Associates, LLC is a consulting and R&D company specializing in current Internet and electronic commerce technologies.
In the late 1960¹s and early 1970¹s, Dr. Crocker was part of the team which developed the protocols for the Arpanet and laid the foundation for today¹s Internet.
Crocker has been a program manager at Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), a senior researcher at USC¹S Information Sciences Institute, founder and director of the Computer Science Laboratory at the Aerospace Corporation and a vice president at Trusted Information Systems before joining CyberCash.
www.xiwt.org /events/Bios/Crocker.html   (236 words)

  
 RFC 1 (rfc1)
Crocker [Page 2] RFC 1 Host Software 7 April 1969 Links The link field is a special device used by the IMPs to limit certain kinds of congestion.
Again the priority scheme comes into Crocker [Page 5] RFC 1 Host Software 7 April 1969 play, for the higher priority HOST sends a message over link 0 while the lower priority HOST waits for it.
We believe that most console interaction can be divided into two Crocker [Page 6] RFC 1 Host Software 7 April 1969 parts, an essentially local, immediate and trivial part and a remote, more lengthy and significant part.
www.cse.ohio-state.edu /cgi-bin/rfc/rfc1.html   (2069 words)

  
 Zvon - RFC 48 [Conversations with Steve Crocker (UCLA)] - Conversations with Steve Crocker (UCLA)
Zvon - RFC 48 [Conversations with Steve Crocker (UCLA)] - Conversations with Steve Crocker (UCLA)
The pronouns "I" and "we" are used to distinguish between these.) On April 21 and 23 Thomas P. Skinner and I had telephone conversations with Steve Crocker at UCLA relating to the network protocol, specifically regarding our proposal in NWG/RFC 46.
We at MAC think that the first method is an undesirable implementation within the network (while the second is impossible).
www.zvon.org /tmRFC/RFC49/Output/chapter1.html   (1880 words)

  
 RFC84   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Crocker (UCLA) NWG/RFC 49 25 April 1970 NIC 4728 Conversations with Steve Crocker E.
Crocker (UCLA) NWG/RFC 71 25 September 1970 NIC 5414 Reallocation in Case of Input Error Tjaart Schipper (UCLA) NWG/RFC 72 28 September 1970 NIC 5415 Proposed Moratorium on Changes to Network Protocol R.D. Bressler (MAC) NWG/RFC 73 25 September 1970 NIC 5416 Response to NWG/RFC 67 S.
Crocker (UCLA) NWG/RFC 74 16 October 1970 NIC 5417 Specification for Network Use of the UCSB On-Line Systems J.
rfc.net /rfc0084.html   (865 words)

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