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Donald Davies

Donald Davies' work on packet-switched data communication heavily influenced the development of the Internet.

Donald Davies

1924 – 2000

Donald Davies' work on packet-switched data communication heavily influenced the development of the Internet

 

After earning both a BSc in Physics (1943) and a BSc in Maths (1947) from Imperial College London, and earning the Lubbock Memorial Prize as the best mathematician of his year at London University, Davies joined NPL in 1947.

He was first appointed to the Maths Division and was briefly Turing's assistant, before moving to work on the Test Assembly and the Pilot ACE. He later went on to use the Pilot ACE for traffic simulations and to assist with the development of the full ACE.

Davies' most influential work was the development of packet-switching while he was working on data communications: this is the way that today's internet works.

Watch a video: Davies' packet-switching work on YouTube.

Find out more: Data Communications at the National Physical Laboratory (1965-1975) in the IEEE Annals of the History of Computing by Martin Campbell-Kelly, Department of Computer Science, University of Warwick. 

Find out more: Packet Switching: The first steps on the road to the information society by  Dr Ed Smith FBCS FITP, University of the Third Age; Mr Chris Miller BSc; Prof Jim Norton OBE FREng, University of Sheffield.