What Will Replace The Internet?...share your view on this....

@farazkh1 (1153)
Pakistan
January 31, 2009 12:54pm CST
First it will become wireless and ubiquitous, crawling into the woodwork and perhaps even under our skin. Eventually, it will disappear BY VINTON CERF The Internet seems to have just arrived, so how can we possibly imagine what will replace it? In truth, early versions of the Net have been around since the 1960s and '70s, but only after the mid-1990s did it begin to have a serious public impact. Since 1994, the population of users has grown from about 13 million to more than 300 million around the world. About half are in North America, and most--despite significant progress in rolling out high-speed access--still reach the Internet by way of the public telephone network. What will the Internet be like 20 years from now? Like the rest of infrastructure, the Internet will eventually seem to disappear by becoming ubiquitous. Most access will probably be via high-speed, low-power radio links. Most handheld, fixed and mobile appliances will be Internet enabled. This trend is already discernible in the form of Internet-enabled cell phones and personal digital assistants. Like the servants of centuries past, our household helpers will chatter with one another and with the outside help. At some point, the armada of devices we strap to our bodies like tools on Batman's belt will coalesce into a smaller number of multifunction devices. Equipped with radio links, a pda can serve as an appliance-control remote, a digital wallet, a cell phone, an identity badge, an e-mail station, a digital book, a pager and perhaps even a digital camera. There is sure to be a catchy name for this all-purpose Internet-enabled thingy, perhaps Wireless Internet Digital Gadget for Electronic Transactions, or WIDGET. So many appliances, vehicles and buildings will be online by 2020 that it seems likely there will be more things on the Internet than people. Internet-enabled cars and airplanes are coming online, and smart houses are being built every day. Eventually, programmable devices will become so cheap that we will embed them in the cardboard boxes into which we put other things for storage or shipping. These passive "computers" will be activated as they pass sensors and will be able to both emit and absorb information. Such innovations will facilitate increasingly automatic manufacturing, inventory control, shipping and distribution. Checkout at the grocery store will be fully automatic, as will payment via your digital wallet. The advent of programmable, nanoscale machines (see "Will Tiny Robots Build Diamonds One Atom at a Time?" in this issue) will extend the Internet to things the size of molecules that can be injected under the skin, leading to Internet-enabled people. Such devices, together with Internet-enabled sensors embedded in clothing, will avoid a hospital stay for medical patients who would otherwise be there only for observation. The speech processor used today in cochlear implants for the hearing impaired could easily be connected to the Internet; listening to Internet radio could soon be a direct computer-to-brain experience! 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. How will this pervasive Internet access affect our daily lives? More and more of the world's information will be accessible instantly and from virtually anywhere. In an emergency, our health records will be available for remote medical consultation with specialists and perhaps even remote surgery. More and more devices will have access to the global positioning system, increasing the value of geographically indexed databases. Using GPS with speech-understanding software that is emerging today, we will be able to get directions from our WIDGETS as easily as we once got them at a filling station. One can imagine driving in the car, asking our WIDGET for the name of the nearest Thai restaurant, getting an answer, asking for reservations and then for directions. Indeed, the car may be smart enough to handle the entire transaction and drive us there itself. Is there any downside to a society suffused with information and the tools to process it? Privacy will come at a premium. Enormous quantities of data about our daily affairs will flow across the Internet, working to make our lives easier. Despite our penchant for giving up privacy in exchange for convenience, our experiences online may make us yearn for the anonymity of the past. Who should have access to our medical records and our financial information, and how will that access be controlled? Will we be able to search and use the vast information stored online without leaving trails of personal cookie crumbs scattered across the Net? How will business transactions be taxed, and in what jurisdictions will disputed electronic transactions be resolved? How will intellectual property be protected? How will we prove that contracts were signed on a certain date, or that their terms and conditions have not been electronically altered? There are technical answers for many of these questions, but some will require international agreements before they can be resolved. Perhaps even more daunting, in the face of Internet-wide virus attacks, is the realization that we will depend in larger and larger measure on the network's functioning reliably. Making this system of millions of networks sufficiently robust and resilient is a challenge for the present generation of Internet engineers. Failure could portend an increasingly fragile future. But I am an optimist. I believe we are going to live in a world abundant with information and with the tools needed to use it wisely. http://www.time.com/time/reports/v21/tech/mag_web.html
5 responses
@amitksing (1323)
• India
5 Feb 09
I don't think internet will ever have any replacement. The web world is another world that is revolving round the clock just like the earth, the only difference, the former being a virtual one.
1 person likes this
@amitksing (1323)
• India
6 Feb 09
OK, actually I didn't go through your entire article since its too long. I read few lines and thought it to be about the internet. Thanks for the + anyways!
1 person likes this
@farazkh1 (1153)
• Pakistan
6 Feb 09
The discussion is About the technology which will replace the present one not alternate/myth and now as we are feeling the frequent change in this technology is booming therefor i have wrote the discussion regarding the technology..... however i have given you + for your response....ty
• United Arab Emirates
2 Feb 09
while reading through it my first impressions were that this guy has had a lot of time on his hands and has done a lot of thinking but you really crossed the line with your interplanetary net idea. i mean, seriously, do you really think that 20 years from now people will be able to get to mars and even set up a base there so that they could use the net to contact earth. i don't really mean to flame but after reading that its hard not to. some of the ideas sounded reasonable but most of them looked like they came out of some sci-fi novel. and to answer you question about what will replace the net; well atleast for the next 20 or so years it will be replaced by a faster technology called the internet2 / Abilene Network. check out the following links http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_2 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abilene_Network in short certain universities are developing new ways to get very high speed internet access and using different means. data transfer speeds have already exceeded 10 Gbps and they are aiming much higher. read the wikipedia links and you will understand. as far as nanobots making diamonds and doing a physical on us internally, i don't think it will happen in the next 20 years.
1 person likes this
@farazkh1 (1153)
• Pakistan
3 Feb 09
Indeed speed is the crucial part of the "Internet" as we all know's as we get better speed the more work can be done in the short span of time and "internet" is becoming important part of our live's so we need more work to be done by it therefor we need better machines and better connection as well. and the future will be amazing of this astonishing technology. however,we cannot deny the concernes have mentioned in this article too.security and privacy will be greater concern in the future for the "INTERNET" users!
@dio123 (1788)
• India
31 Jan 09
Internet will not be replaced but the technology may be changed after few years although we are now start using wireless internet services their may be new technology to access internet with more speed and comforts via various media, may be we cannot even having any idea about that as we know before the invention of the internet no body can even guess about this technology
@farazkh1 (1153)
• Pakistan
31 Jan 09
Internet is the most Amazing technology i think it might be considered as a myth if we could talk about it 100 years back or more,people would call us crazy but how about now it has grownup so fast and i wonder how this magic makes-up in future.lets hope for the best! ty
@Lindery (853)
• Latvia
2 Feb 09
I doubt Internet will be replaced that soon as 20 years later. Internet has a very important part of business activities in whole world. Too many things are settled on the internet, too many things are depending on it. There will be more services similar internet but I doubt in 20 years internet will disappear.
@farazkh1 (1153)
• Pakistan
3 Feb 09
Hi! So why do you think that "Internet" will disappear within next 20 years,i have not yet understood what does your mean by saying that.as i guess you were saying that there will be another technology,which would be more effective fast and reliable as an alternate to "Internet".?..!
• India
31 Jan 09
I will put in some science fiction. Its the year 2050. The whole of earth has turned into a giant apartment. There are no roads or rails or airports. There is no life outside the apartment. Every single human being is inside the apartment ,strapped to an easy chair. The walls have been replaced by LED screens. The right hand has been transformed to a pointing device(can we call it mouse?). The mind is connected to a system through telepathic bluetooth(just kidding). That system was called the internet in 2009. Now its called the matrix. The rest you can imagine. Am i being mental?????
@farazkh1 (1153)
• Pakistan
31 Jan 09
Good imagination but about roads and airpots seems impossible to be rommoved because internet cannot replace the personal experience as well as travelling needs.however there will be less need for travelling due to human adjustment with trusted information regarding business,products financial issue's but our natural instincts will remain the same etc....! ty