
Systems Approach
For almost three decades we have been helping to explain the Internet: its technology, architecture, and ongoing evolution. We started with Computer Networks: A Systems Approach, a textbook by Peterson & Davie, published in 1996 just as the Internet was finding its way into widespread use. With the fifth edition of that text, we made the entire contents of the book available as an open source project. Our goals continue to be: to document the design decisions that have shaped the Internet; explain emerging trends that will impact its future; and to provide a sense of perspective as to what is important versus what is hype or irrelevant detail. We are now producing, with an expanding set of co-authors, a series of books that bring the systems approach lens to a range of emerging technologies such as 5G and SDN. Our newsletter provide a running commentary on that process.

The “Systems Approach” refers to the field of design and implementation of computer systems. The term is used commonly by computer science researchers and practitioners who study the issues that arise when building complex computing systems such as operating systems, networks, distributed applications, etc. The key to the systems approach is a “big picture” view – you need to look at how the components of a system interact with each other to achieve an overall result, rather than simply optimizing each component. In the networking context, that often means going beyond the traditional layered view to see how an issue is best tackled in a way that might touch several layers. The Systems Approach has a strong focus on real-world implementation, with the Internet being the obvious example of a widely-deployed, complex networking system.
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Bridges
You can find lots of bridges around this web site and on our books. This goes all the way back to our first edition (pictured above) when we were looking for a nice architectural image to go on the front jacket of our book. Bridges are a natural metaphor for networking: they connect things together, and of course there is even a type of networking device called a bridge. We were neither the first nor the last networking book to use a bridge on the cover, and we eventually stopped doing so with the fifth edition of our textbook. But since we both appreciate the architecture of physical bridges, and they do work so well as a metaphor, we retained a bridge logo for our Systems Approach book series.

We created this logo for t-shirts and other merch, in a sort of homage to our first edition cover. And since Bruce has a soft spot for Scotland (where he was a student) we have a special fondness for the Forth Rail Bridge (which graced our Fourth edition cover).

Photo of the Forth Rail Bridge by Jonny McKenna on Unsplash
