> with the popularity of Unix and its descendants
and with that the Internet. In 1990 UK higher education sites had "high speed" (megabit sometimes!) networking but they used X.25 "Coloured Book" protocols. There were a handful of well developed applications for services such as email, but experimenting with novel software on X.25 was difficult. In 1991 JANET (the people providing these network services to Universities, then and now) began JIPS, an experiment to try out Internet protocols.
Enthusiasm for JIPS was enormous. You could buy or, since you have an electronics department and an essentially inexhaustible supply of nerds, build, a Unix computer, and just like, write your own BSD sockets software. I hear a guy over a CERN has invented a World Wide Web we should check out... In less than a year JIPS ceased to be an "experiment" and by the time I arrived at a University a few years later X.25 was deprecated and few people cared that it was still technically available somewhere.