berkeley internet name domain การใช้
- The acronym " BIND " is for " Berkeley Internet Name Domain ", from a technical paper published in 1984.
- This format was originally used by the Berkeley Internet Name Domain Server ( BIND ) software package, and is defined in RFC 1034 and RFC 1035.
- BIND, or Berkeley Internet Name Domain, is used on about 90 percent of domain name servers in the United States, said Jeff Carpenter, the center's manager.
- Bind, or Berkeley Internet Name Domain, has its roots in the Internet's first domain name system written by Paul Mockapetris, who was working on a U . S . government contract.
- Invisible Worlds is a new company with many of the Net's royalty on its boards, including Dr . Paul Mockapetris, who invented the Internet system for naming domains; Tim O'Reilly, president of O'Reilly & Associates, a publisher of books about Internet technologies; and Paul Vixie, a Metromedia Fiber Networks senior vice president who is best known as the creator of BIND ( Berkeley Internet Name Domain ).