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In July, 1964, Licklider went to work for IBM, and handed over directorship of the IPTO to its second Director, Ivan Sutherland, who had created the Sutherland's program. On a historical day in early September, 1969, a team at Kleinrock's NMC connected one of their SDS Sigma 7 computers to an Interface Message Processor, thereby becoming the first node on the ARPANET. Describing communications standards for different computers, and presented it at the DARPA Principal Investigators meeting in June, 1968. The Network Control Protocol (NCP) was the first standard networking protocol on the ARPANET. NCP was finalized and deployed in December 1970 by the Network Working Group. TCP/IP, originally inspired by low-reliability wireless packet radio networks, has now become now the most reliable and widely deployed network in the world. To ensure that it remained the standard, TCP/IP was made available for free to CSNET sites, and so became the common standard across the network. However, Dave Mills had the job of maintaining a machine called a Fuzzball which incorporated all of the approved Internet standards. In the early 1990's, EUnet Ltd. became a commercial spin-off from the European Unix systems User Group (EUUG, later renamed to EurOpen) under the efforts of an American named Glenn Kowack.