Home » Articles » Future Trends » Currently Reading:

Defining the internet

November 30, 2004 pieter Articles, Future Trends No Comments

The traditional viewpoint of describing the Internet is fundamentally that the Internet is a utility. Just as electricity and water are described as utilities, the Internet is seen as the new utility. The implication of a utility is that an organisation cannot survive long without it.

How long would a bank, a hotel or university function without water or electricity? The length of time an organisation can continue with its daily activities without these core services can be measured in hours, or minutes at best. The Internet is already seen in this light in various organizations, where normal business activities are severely hampered without access to the Internet. Just as it is expected to find electricity and water in any commercial building you enter, so will the Internet be expected to be present.

Inexpensive and reliable access to broadband Internet, next to access to electricity and running water, will become one of the non-negotiable criteria as foreign firms analyse the infrastructure of a country with an eye on long term fixed investment.

Countries without broadband Internet will have the same chance of success in the foreign investment stakes as those without access to electricity.

This description of the Internet as utility is correct, yet still founded in the client-server paradigm. A more comprehensive description is required in order to understand the real nature of the Pervasive computing paradigm.

The description of the Pervasive computing paradigm is quite simple, yet it is deemed important to take a slightly longer route to provide a broader understanding of the Pervasive computing paradigm and the impact it will have on organizations, business and society at large.

Internet connectivity everywhere

The longer route to understanding where the Internet is going starts with this command to you, the reader.

Stick your finger in the air. In the 1 mm square space of air at the tip of your fingertip you will find waves that carry at least radio 200 radio stations and more than 60 television stations. (If you do not believe me, use a radio receiver and a TV satellite dish to verify my claims.) At your fingertip you will also find radio waves that you can use to access the Internet. Within a few seconds you can log onto any Internet server or website via your cellular phone or PDA with a press of a button.

The Internet will undergo substantial alteration as optical technologies allow the transmission of many trillions of bits per second on each strand of the Internet’s fiber-optic backbone network. The core of the network will remain optical, and the edges will use a mix of access technologies, ranging from radio and infrared to optical fiber and the old twisted-pair copper telephone lines. By then, the Internet will have been extended, by means of an interplanetary Internet backbone, to operate in outer space.

This simply means that Internet connectivity will be available everywhere you are. You will be able to access the Internet in the middle of the ocean, or if you find yourself in the International Space Station. Your access to the net will then be directly via satellite, whereas your choice of access on land will be far larger.

The most common link to the Internet when you are in travelling across the country is the data line provided by your GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) network, and in some cases their GPRS (General Packet Radio Service) service. In cities and towns you will find Wi-Fi hotspots (wireless Internet connectivity hubs). You will incidentally find these in airports and even in aircraft from 2004 onwards. The whole west coast of the USA will be covered before the decade ends. Bluetooth and Ultra Wide Band technology will also play its role in making the Internet accessible wherever we are. This is the true nature behind the Ubiquitous Commerce paradigm, as we become more and more connected, linked to the Internet 24 hours day, 7 days a week, wherever we are. No longer will an Internet server claim the sole right to be always connected to the Internet, we as humans will be always connected with the devices we carry in our pockets. If we like it or not, we are already part of the Internet.

No longer is mankind born into radio space, we are born into Internet space.

Related posts:

  1. The World of Tomorrow (If The Internet Disappeared Today) This is a great read (look) at what the world...
  2. Big news in Outer space and Cyber Space Over the past two months there have been a number...
  3. Was I only dreaming? Last night I had the wierdest experience. I woke up...

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

Comment on this Article:







Subscribe to this blog

Subscribe

Category Drop-Down

Posts about Technology Trends

How Gen Y sees the Gen gap

March 20, 2010 Graeme Codrington

How Gen Y sees the Gen gap

The 11 March 2010 edition of the TIME magazine had a great cover article on “10 ideas for the next 10 years“. In the same edition, Nancy Gibbs (who has often written on generational issues for TIME), wrote an interesting short piece on how young people perceive the generation gap these days. It’s [...]

Africa’s Gift to Silicon Valley: How to Track a Crisis

March 17, 2010 Graeme Codrington

Africa’s Gift to Silicon Valley: How to Track a Crisis

A report under this title appeared in the New York Times on 12 March 2010. It’s a great example of a few things, but especially of the power of social media, and the fact that innovation (and competition) can come from anywhere these days.
Read the story of how technology developed in the aftermath of [...]

The future of money

March 12, 2010 Dean van Leeuwen

The future of money

For years banks and credit card companies have held a strangle hold over the movement of money and charged exorbitant rates for doing so. Now this is changing and fast.
Michale Ivey the founder of Twitpay has devised a system, using code that PayPal made available to him, that allows people to make payments [...]

Twitter 10 Billion – quality not quantity

March 5, 2010 Barrie Bramley

Twitter 10 Billion – quality not quantity

In the last few hours the 10 billionth tweet was tweeted on Twitter. As one would imagine there was all kinds of hype and excitement, as Tweeps with the necesary skills attempted to predict the time it would happen, and I imagine even be ‘the one’?
My last tweet was 9999989724. Wild. Will be at 10 [...]

Recent Comments

  • Graeme Codrington: From: http://philippschaefer.posterous.com/the-participa...
  • Graeme Codrington: Here is an example of how social media changes the power rel...
  • stace: lazy and sensationalist - I couldn't agree more...
  • Graeme Codrington: Here's another example - a company that developed software t...
  • Graeme Codrington: I agree with you on this point, Barrie. BUT... I just had a...

Archives

Tweet Blender

tomorrowtodayza: Blog: Paragliding across the Himalayas with an iPhone http://bit.ly/9bkL0C
14 minutes ago
barriebramley: Give and take: Will Pepsi profit by enlisting the public in its philanthropic efforts? - http://ow.ly/1eKOv
37 minutes ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: Paragliding across the Himalayas using iphones to tell everyone about their Odyssey http://ow.ly/1pd6W
1 hour ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: March 22, 1995: Longest Human Space Adventure Ends http://ow.ly/1pd5n
1 hour ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: Five Things Palm can do to win the smartphone war against iPad http://ow.ly/1pd1e
1 hour ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: 10 rules for effective strategic planning PLUS one more http://ow.ly/1oESg
8 hours ago
workforcetrends: RT @loopdiloop: Customized ads on Facebook seem creepy not endearing http://ow.ly/1p7ef
10 hours ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: Talent is destroying shareholder value and giving businesses a bad name. Discover how to reboot your talent http://ow.ly/1oEML
10 hours ago