OSI Reference Model Published
1984NetworkingStandard publishedDate precision, yearEvidence grade, primary2 primary sources
Drivers:
ISO and ITU sought to create international standards for computer networking to enable interoperability across national boundaries and vendor equipment.
The OSI model is like a recipe that breaks down how computers communicate into seven steps (layers). Each layer has a specific job, from the physical cables (Layer 1) to the applications you use (Layer 7). Even though most real networks use simpler systems, the OSI model is how networking is taught worldwide because it makes complex ideas easier to understand.
OSI Reference Model Published event plate
Structured atlas record showing date, domain, evidence grade, source count, and predecessor and successor links.
Forecasts and counterfactuals stay labelled as opinion in the event data. Source: Computer History Museum.
Before
Different manufacturers developed incompatible networking protocols. There was no common framework for discussing and comparing network architectures. The lack of interoperability hindered international communication.
What changed
The OSI (Open Systems Interconnection) Reference Model provided a standardised seven-layer framework for understanding network functions. It became the canonical teaching model for networking and influenced subsequent protocol design.
How it happened
ISO began work on networking standards in the late 1970s. The OSI Reference Model was developed to provide a framework for developing interoperable standards. ISO 7498 was published in 1984, defining seven layers: Physical, Data Link, Network, Transport, Session, Presentation, and Application.
Outcomes
- Established universal framework for teaching networking
- Influenced design of subsequent protocols
- Enabled structured comparison of different protocols
- Created common vocabulary for network engineers
Limitations
- OSI protocols themselves were largely superseded by TCP/IP
- Seven layers sometimes criticised as overly complex
- Session and Presentation layers often collapsed in practice
- Commercial implementations were expensive and slow
Lessons learnt
- Good models outlast specific implementations
- Market timing matters: TCP/IP was established before OSI protocols were ready
- Complexity can hinder adoption even with international backing
- Teaching value and commercial success are independent
Stakeholders and artefacts
Organisations
- ISOstandards_bodyPublished standard
- ITU-Tstandards_bodyCo-developed standard (X.200)
- CCITTstandards_bodyTelecommunications input
Individuals
- Hubert ZimmermannContributor, IRIA (France)Key contributor to OSI architecture
Artefacts
- OSI Seven-Layer ModelframeworkConceptual framework dividing network functions into seven layers
Key terms
Causality
Preceded by: TCP/IP Protocol Suite Specified.
On this course
Read in the path Standards Bodies: How Technology Gets Standardised.