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he Culler-Fried Interactive Mathematics centre at the University of California at Santa Barbara was the third site added to the ARPANET, running on an IBM 360/75 computer using the OS/MVT operating system. Also in 1973, the University College of London in England and the Royal Radar Establishment in Norway become the first international connections to the ARPANET. The Internet's open and efficient TCP/IP protocol is the foundation of an inter-networking design has made it the most widely used network protocol in the world. In February, 1984, Israel became the first international node on the CSNET, soon followed by Korea, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, and Japan. In 1985, with the CSNET growing rapidly, NSF hired Dennis Jennings to lead the Jennings made three critical decisions that shaped the subsequent development of NSFNET. The European Network (EUnet) spread the ARPANET throughout the research community in Europe, and connected universities and research centres in a similar way to how the CSNet worked in the United States. In 1957, the Soviet Union launched the first satellite, Sputnik I, triggering US President Dwight Eisenhower to create the ARPA agency to regain the technological lead in the arms race. The final model was the largest computer ever built, and weighed 250 tons, took up twenty thousand square feet of space, and was delivered in eighteen large vans.