03/25/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 03/25/2026 16:27
Internet pioneer Leonard Kleinrock joined host Evan Lovett for a brand-new episode of "L.A. in a Minute," where the UCLA distinguished professor opened up about his path toward engineering, the birth of the internet and the future of artificial intelligence.
Kleinrock spoke about how he and a small team sent the very first messages between two computers - one at UCLA and the other, more than 300 miles north at Stanford - in 1969, the dawn of the internet. "There was a culture and an atmosphere among we nerds," Kleinrock told Lovett. "We were solving a good, difficult engineering problem with great promise, but we were focused on making it work."
The professor emeritus also detailed the many people along the way who made an impact on his engineering studies - from the World War II GI classmates in night school who brought real-world knowledge to class, to the working engineers who doubled as evening instructors, teaching him the foundations of the discipline.
He also revealed why he took a pay cut and left a job as an engineer to become an assistant professor at UCLA after marveling at the beauty of Westwood before skyscrapers. Kleinrock shared his thoughts on AI during the hourlong chat. (Lovett cuts interviews down for his "L.A. in a Minute" segments.)
Watch above or on YouTube.