Student Information Processing Board

The Student Information Processing Board (SIPB) is a student group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) that helps students access computing resources and use them effectively.

History

SIPB was founded in 1969 by Bob Frankston.[1][2] At the time, computers in universities were still expensive resources reserved for funded research projects. Through an arrangement with the MIT administration, SIPB administered student accounts on university-owned computers.

In 1983, MIT launched Project Athena, an initiative to create a distributed computing system for educational use.[3] SIPB was instrumental in the creation of Project Athena[2] and helped to provide MIT students with access to computing resources for independent projects.[3] Project Athena led to several important Unix technologies such as X11, instant messaging, and network filesystems.

SIPB set up a Web server at www.mit.edu in 1993, when the number of public web servers was roughly 100 and long before university Web sites became common. When MIT finally did set up an official website, it was at web.mit.edu.

Projects

SIPB has been instrumental for funding technical software projects that benefit the MIT community. These have included:[4]

gollark: I was thinking word count and edit distance from previous version.
gollark: This is a minoteaur "recent changes" page for a page. The metadata there is kind of useless for any actual purpose, so what should be there?
gollark: I'm going to boycott your assembler by never using it.
gollark: ++remind 01/10/2021 exist and be good, I should say
gollark: ++remind 01/10/2021 macron IS to exist or lyricly is a great stellated dodecahedron

References

  1. Denning, Peter J.; Metcalfe, Robert M. (2012-12-06). Beyond Calculation: The Next Fifty Years of Computing. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 293. ISBN 9781461206859.
  2. Van Vleck, Thomas (ed.). "Multics Glossary -S-". www.multicians.org. Retrieved 2016-03-06.
  3. Garfinkel, Simson L. (November–December 1988). "A Second Wind for Athena" (PDF). Technology Review. Retrieved 25 January 2016.CS1 maint: date format (link)
  4. "Projects and Services". sipb.mit.edu. Retrieved 2020-05-04.
  5. "Building and reconnecting MIT in Minecraft". MIT News. Retrieved 24 May 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.