Home

Medical Pages

Car Reviews

Archives

New Archives

RSS Feed

Subscribe

Links

Letters

Advertise

Bogota Free Planet


CFP Menu

CFP Archives

CFP Automotive

CFP Magazine





terrorism




broken watermains
Profitable Property For Retirement…Overseas!
International Living
Brent MacLean  Bio
Email Article
Email Us
printPrint friendly

Development in speed, bandwidth, and functionality

The Future of Today’s Internet

 By Brent MacLean  Sunday, October 7, 2007

The architecture of the Internet has always been driven by a core group of designers, but the form of that group has changed as the number of interested parties has continued to grow. With the success of the Internet, has come a proliferation of stakeholders - stakeholders now with an economic as well as an intellectual investment in the network.

We now see, in the debates over control of the domain name space and the form of the next generation IP addresses, a struggle to find the next social structure that will guide the Internet in the future. The form of that structure will be harder to find, given the large number of concerned stakeholders.

At the same time, the industry struggles to find the economic rationale for the large investment needed for the future growth, for example, to upgrade residential access to a more suitable technology. If the Internet stumbles, it will not be because we lack for technology, vision, or motivation. It will collapse because we cannot set a direction and march collectively into the future.

Just as the Internet revolutionized how the world accessed information and communicated through the 1990s, the ongoing development in speed, bandwidth, and functionality will continue to cause fundamental changes to how our world operates for decades to come. Some of the major trends shaping the future of the Internet are summarized below, along with extrapolated predictions:

Globalism
The future of the Internet global distribution of information and knowledge at lower and lower cost will continue to lift the world community for generations to come. People will have access to any information they wish, get smarter sooner, and become more aware of the world outside their local environment. A better-informed humanity will make better macro-level decisions, and an increasingly integrated world will drive international relations towards a global focus. Attachments to countries will marginally decrease, and attachments to the Earth as a shared resource will significantly increase.

Communities
The future of the Internet communications revolution is ongoing, now uniting communities as it recently united networks. Not everything about the Internet is global; an interconnected world is also locally interconnected. The Internet will increasingly be used for communications within communities as much as across countries. Local communities will organize in virtual space and take increasing advantage of group communication tools such as mailing lists, newsgroups, and web sites, and towns and cities will become more organized and empowered at the neighborhood level.

At the same time, communities will be as profoundly affected by the capabilities the Internet is bringing to individual communications, providing individuals in the once isolating city the ability to easily establish relationships with others in their local area by first meeting in cyberspace. From hobby clubs to political organizations to social networking, Internet applications will change expectations of geographically oriented community organizations, and provide increasingly wide choices to individuals who wish to participate in local communities that share their interests.

Virtual reality
The future of the Internet technological revolution will continue to be made in man’s image. Experiments with wide area voice and video communications on the Internet began to be held in the early 1990s. Voice over IP (VOIP) began to be used regularly for long distance voice communications in 2002. Internet video phones won’t be far behind. With the continued doubling of computer capability every couple of years, the ability of technology to process the complex analog environment that humans live in—“reality”—will continue to increase, and will be increasingly integrated with the Internet.

Three-dimensional graphics will become more sophisticated, and virtual reality interfaces such as viewers and tactile feedback systems will become more realistic. The technology will be applied to innovative ways to navigate the Internet’s information universe, for hyper-realistic gaming, and for group communications. There will come a day when you will be able to have dinner with a group of friends each in a different city, almost as though you were in the same room, although you will all have to bring your own food.

Virtual reality applications will not only better and better reflect the natural world, they will also have the fluidity, flexibility, and speed of the digital world, layered on the Internet, and so will be used to create apparently magical environments of types we can only now begin to imagine. These increasingly sophisticated virtual experiences will continue to change how we understand the nature of reality, experience, art, and human relations.

Bandwidth
The future of the Internet growth in bandwidth availability shows little sign of flattening. Large increases of bandwidth in the 10 Mbps range and up will continue to be deployed to home users through cable, phone, and wireless networks. Cable modems and telephone-based DSL modems will continue to spread high speed Internet throughout populated areas. High-resolution audio, video, and virtual reality will be increasingly available online and on demand, and the cost of all kinds of Internet connections will continue to drop.

Wireless
The future of Internet wireless communications is the end game. Wireless frequencies has two great advantages: (a) there are no infrastructure start-up or maintenance costs other than the base stations, and (b) it frees users to become mobile, taking Internet use from one dimension to three. Wireless Internet networks will offer increasingly faster services at vastly lower costs over wider distances, eventually pushing out physical transmission systems.

The Internet’s open TCP/IP design was originally inspired by use of radio communications networks in the 1970s. The wireless technologies experimented with in the 1990s was continually improved. By the early 2000s, several technologies provided reliable, secure, high bandwidth networking that worked in crowded city centers and on the move, providing nearly the same mobility for Internet communications as for the cellular phone.

Grids
The future of the Internet grid movement is as inevitable as the spread of the Internet seems now. The connection of thousands of computers on the Internet together to solve problems, often called grid computing, will continue to evolve and change many areas of human endeavor. In a large-scale example of the connected Internet fostering technological cooperation, un-used computer cycles from home users across the world will be harnessed together to provide enormous reservoirs of computer power for all sorts of purposes. Increasingly used for scientific and engineering research, grids can create processing powerhouses far larger than any one organization by itself.

Integration
The future of the Internet integration with an increasing number of other technologies is as natural as a musician’s experimentation with notes. The Internet will become increasingly integrated with phones, televisions, home appliances, portable digital assistants, and a range of other small hardware devices, providing an unprecedented, nearly uniform level of integrated data communications. Users will be able to access, status, and control this connected infrastructure from anywhere in the world.

One of the leading efforts to define the future of the next generation Internet is the Internet2 project, which grew out of the transition of the NSFNET to the Very High Speed Backbone Network Service (vBNS). The vBNS supported very high bandwidth research applications, and was established in 1995 as a cooperative agreement between MCI and the National Science Foundation.

Two-thirds of the experts predict at least one devastating attack on network information infrastructure or the country’s power grid in the next 10 years. Some experts believe serious attacks will become a regular part of life.

59 percent of these experts predict increased government and business surveillance as computing devices are embedded in appliances, cars, phones and even clothing.

57 percent of these experts predict more virtual classes in formal education, with students grouped by interests and skills, rather than by age.

56 percent of these experts predict changes in family dynamics and a blurring of the boundaries between work and leisure as telecommuting and home schooling expand.

54 percent look for a new age of creativity in which people use the Internet to collaborate with others and share music, art and literature.

53 percent predict that all video, audio, print and voice communications will stream to coordinating computers in homes and offices via the Internet.

The Internet experts believe the news and publishing industries will undergo the most dramatic changes over the next decade, with new “digital media titans” forming connections across media, entertainment, advertising and commerce. They also predict major changes ahead for educational institutions, workplaces and health care institutions. Fewer changes are predicted for religious organizations.

While some experts look for the development of a “more thoughtful” Internet, others are more pessimistic, calling the increasing online data “drivel,” diluting the quality of information that is available.

Privacy remains a concern for sophisticated Internet users as new convenience technologies expand the ability to track users and their activities. Some experts predict increasing numbers of arrests based on surveillance by government, while others are concerned about “social surveillance” by businesses that track the habits of their customers.

The wondrous future of the Internet is just that, the future; but the above observations and statistics can hopefully enable us to integrate with these dramatic changes...only time will tell.

Posted 10/7 at 04:19 AM   Email  (Permalink

 This piece is in Category: Security




What's New On CFP:
  1. Murdered Lebanese can Thank UN (Cover Story) May 11, 2008
  2. Force is the only Language that Hezbollah knows and understands (Middle East) May 11, 2008
  3. Do your part to fight Bill C-51 (Canada) May 11, 2008
  4. When you Call tech support… (American Politics) May 11, 2008
  5. Left with no market, growers destroy trees (Cover Story) May 11, 2008
  6. Living on the Edge of Destruction: Israel’s 60th Anniversary (World News) May 11, 2008
  7. The Facts about Institutional Campaign Funding (American Politics) May 11, 2008
  8. Does the Rule of Law Still Matter at All in America? (American Politics) May 11, 2008
  9. Former Leftist Talk Show Host, Child Pornographer Headed to Slammer! (Media - Media Bias) May 11, 2008
  10. The Immigration Disintegration (Immigration) May 11, 2008
  11. Hillary’s All or Nothing. (American Politics) May 11, 2008
  12. They’re Just Newfies… (Atlantic Canada) May 11, 2008
  13. Must We Suffer Global Famine Again? (Energy & Environment) May 11, 2008
  14. US Indicts Top Int’l Arms Dealer for Conspiracy to Kill Americans, Terrorism (True Crime) May 11, 2008
  15. Canadian Catholic priest and CFP columnist Father Bernard F. Heffernan is returning to Cannes (Entertainment) May 10, 2008
  16. “Without Adherence to Principle, There is Chaos!” (American Politics) May 10, 2008
  17. Obama & Ahmadinejad: Trust But Don’t Verify (American Politics) May 10, 2008
  18. Global warming hysteria: how the pendulum has swung (Global Warming) May 10, 2008
  19. Government of the People or By the Faction? (Collector's Corner) May 10, 2008
  20. American unions and their about face on immigration (American Politics) May 9, 2008
  21. The Charisma Kid (American Politics) May 9, 2008
  22. Colombian Paramilitary Leader Extradited to US to Face Drug Charges (True Crime) May 9, 2008
  23. The great strength of gold (Business News) May 9, 2008
  24. Electronics Recycling Tax Grab Between $105 and $210 million Per Year (Financial, Business, Economy) May 9, 2008
  25. The Troop Talk Scam (American Politics) May 9, 2008
  26. Let everyone, especially students, hear the whole story about climate science (Previous Covers) May 9, 2008
  27. Afrocentric schools- an exercise in self-marginalization (Canada) May 9, 2008
  28. Referrals: The Easiest Form of Advertising - How to Grow Your Client Base (Financial, Business, Economy) May 9, 2008
  29. PM Harper of Canada stands up for Israel, unequivocally (Canada) May 9, 2008
  30. Open Doors USA Urges Prayer for Cyclone Victims in Burma (Christianity) May 8, 2008
  31. Forecasting expert says polar bear models critically flawed (Global Warming) May 8, 2008
  32. Airport Wayfinder Arrives in Toronto - Travel Just Got Easier (Travel) May 8, 2008
  33. Gold’s “win-win situation” May 8, 2008
  34. Act Now to Stop Oklahoma NAFTA Superhighway! (American Politics) May 8, 2008
  35. Aid Urgently Needed in Myanmar (Burma) (Christianity) May 8, 2008
  36. Molly the heroic pony (Pets) May 8, 2008
  37. The Race is Now About “Race” (American Politics) May 8, 2008
  38. Tribune Covers for Obama’s Terrorist Friends (American Politics) May 8, 2008
  39. Operation Chaos and Hillary’s Future (American Politics) May 8, 2008
  40. New Study: Conservatives are Happier Because They Hate Everyone (American Politics) May 8, 2008

Pursuant to Title 17 U.S.C. 107, other copyrighted work is provided for educational purposes, research, critical comment, or debate without profit or payment. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for your own purposes beyond the 'fair use' exception, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

Views are those of authors and not necessarily those of Canada Free Press. Content is Copyright 2008 the individual authors.

Site Copyright 2008 CanadaFreePress.Com Privacy Statement
 
Fear no man












Powered by ExpressionEngine