Date: Fri 15-May-1998
Date: Fri 15-May-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
iinfo-internet-100-days
Full Text:
INTERNET INFO FOR REAL PEOPLE: Every 100 Days
On April 15, 1998, the US Department of Commerce posted "The Emerging Digital
Economy" (TEDE) on its website. Direct quotations from the report quickly
ricocheted through mass media and across the Net." TEDE contains quotes from
some of the most acclaimed luminaries in Information Technology (IT) today
including Gordon Moore, Nicholas Negroponte and of course the "Father of the
Internet," Vint Cerf. This one-liner stuck: "Traffic on the Internet has been
doubling every 100 days.
Here are a few more quotes that make the entire report worth reading:
"The Internet's pace of adoption eclipses all other technologies that preceded
it. Radio was in existence 38 years before 50 million people tuned in; TV took
13 years to reach that benchmark. Sixteen years after the first PC kit came
out, 50 million people were using one. Once it was opened to the general
public, the Internet crossed that line in four years."
"In 1994, three million people, most of them in the United States, used the
Internet. In 1998, 100 million people around the world use the Internet. Some
experts believe that one billion people may be connected to the Internet by
2005. This expansion is driving dramatic increases in computer, software,
services and communications investments."
"Computing power has been doubling every 18 months for the past 30 years. At
the same time, the average price of a transistor has fallen by six orders of
magnitude, due to microprocessor development. In just six years' time, the
cost of microprocessor computing power has decreased from $230 to $3.42 per
MIPS (Millions of Instructions Per Second). No other manufactured item has
decreased in cost so far, so fast."
"In 1996 and 1997, declining prices in IT industries lowered overall inflation
by one full percentage point. Without the contribution of the IT sector,
overall inflation, at 2.0 percent, would have been 3.1 percent in 1997."
"The impact of IT is also reflected in the capital IT firms currently
represent. The collective market capitalizations of five major companies --
Microsoft, Intel, Compaq, Dell and Cisco -- has grown to over $588 billion in
1997 from under $12 billion in 1987, close to a 50-fold increase in the space
of a decade."
A Dark Cloud
While the future looks rosy indeed, when Vint Cerf offers a warning, I listen
carefully. At a keynote address at Red Herring's Herring on the Enterprise
(broadcast live on the Internet from San Francisco in early April), Dr Cerf
said, "Every morning, I worry that the Net's routers will be unable to handle
increasing data loads." He stated further, "What is needed is a `BFR' (where
"B" stands for "big" and "R" stands for router). This requires at least one
miracle from the routermakers." He added, "I need that BFR so I can build a
BFN" (where "B" stands for "big" and "N" stands for "network")."
What This Means
The router is special server hardware that holds a "telephone book" of
Internet addresses that allow all Internet message packets to find their
destinations. If big routers are not available to hold addresses of all the
locations on the Net, whole sections will become unreachable. This is not a
pretty GIF.
In mid 1995, Bob Metcalfe predicted the Internet would "go spectacularly
supernova and in 1996, catastrophically collapse." It never happened and
Metcalfe has had to literally "eat his words" at the Sixth International World
Wide Web Conference schmooze-fest. Nevertheless, the kudzu growth of the
Internet (especially in the commercial sector) reminds us of Metcalf's dire
prediction.
The next time you see the message "waiting to connect" on the bottom of your
browser screen, it could mean some packets are hung up somewhere. They could
be stuck in a router that Vint Cerf would like to retire.
URLs (Uniform Resource Locators) of interest:
http://www.ecommerce.gov/
http://www.redherring.com/insider/1998/0407/cerf.html
http://www.dern.com/metcfall.html
This is the 103rd of a series of elementary articles designed for surfing the
Internet. Next, "The Case Against Microsoft" is the subject on tap. Stay
tuned. Until next week, happy travels through cyberspace.
Previous issues of Internet Info for Real People (including links to sites
mentioned in this article) can be found at http://www.thebee.com. Please
e-mail comments and suggestions to rbrand@JUNO.com or editor@thebee.com.