Background
Quarterman grew up in the Bemiss community, near Valdosta, Georgia, United States of America.
Quarterman grew up in the Bemiss community, near Valdosta, Georgia, United States of America.
Harvard University.
He wrote one of the classic books about networking prior to the commercialization of the Internet. He has also written about risk management. He first used the ARPANET in 1974 while attending Harvard, and worked on Uniplex Information and Computing System ARPANET software at Bolt, Beranek and Newman Technologies (the original prime contractor on the ARPANET) from 1977 to 1981.
He was twice elected to the Board of Directors of the USENIX Association, a professional association related to the Uniplex Information and Computing System operating system.
While on that board, he was instrumental in its vote in 1987 to approve the first funding received by UUNET, which, along with PSINet, became one of the first two commercial Internet Service Providers (ISPs). He co-founded the first Internet consulting firm in Texas (TIC) in 1986, and co-founded one of the first ISPs in Austin (Zilker Internet Park, since sold to Jump Point).
Quarterman published the first maps of the whole Internet. Conducted the first Internet Demographic Survey and started the first continuing series of performance data about the entire Internet in 1993, on the web since 1995 in the Internet Weather Report, and also visible as Internet Average, plus comparisons of ISPs visible as Internet service provider Ratings.
Interctive Week listed John Quarterman as one of the 25 Unsung Heroes of the Internet in 1998, saying.."As president of, Quarterman, 43, is to Net demographics what The Gallup Organization is to opinion polls." Internet World interviewed Quarterman at length with a full page picture in its June 1996 issue, as Surveyors of Cyberspace.
He also organized a November 2, 2006 panel on Net Neutrality for EFF-Austin, featuring Quarterman and Hank Hultquist, Michael Hathaway, and Austin Bay. At RIPE-58 it was revealed by Daniel Karrenberg that John Quarterman originally came up with the acronym RIPE after seeing a slide made by Karrenberg that said: Réseaux Intellectual Property Européens at a meeting in Brussels, 1989.
On September 21, 2006, Quarterman served as a panelist with Hank Hultquist and Michele Chaboudy at a joint meeting of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Central Texas Section and Communications and Signal Processing Chapters titled "Network Neutrality: Altruism or Capitalism" at Saint Edward"s University in Austin, Texas.