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Ch. 2: When They’re Everywhere

Rivier College, CS699 Professional Seminar. Ch. 2: When They’re Everywhere. Vinton G. Cerf (from Beyond Calculation ). Internet Predecessors. Facsimile concepts in the mid 1800s; Facsimile interoperability (infrastructure) over 125 years later;

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Ch. 2: When They’re Everywhere

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  1. Rivier College, CS699 Professional Seminar Ch. 2: When They’re Everywhere Vinton G. Cerf (from Beyond Calculation) Ch. 2: They're Everywhere

  2. Internet Predecessors • Facsimile concepts in the mid 1800s; • Facsimile interoperability (infrastructure) over 125 years later; • Television was demonstrated in the late 1920s; • Television become marketable in the late 1940s; • Television really took off with color television in the 1960s; • Internet was supported by the U.S. Defense Department, then through the National Science Foundation, department of Energy, NASA; • Internet expanded by Telecom and Software industries; • In 1997, rapid development of Internet-based radio, television, telephony, new media devices. Ch. 2: They're Everywhere

  3. Internet Essentials • Interoperability; • Telephone interworking as infrastructure (supporting facsimile, computer communication via modem, voice); • Basic IP Layer will be a key element in the system utility; • Common address space; • Binding and Mapping from other address spaces; • 128-bit address space of IP version 6; • Unified Storage for e-mail, fax messages, telecalls, voice; • “Horseless Carriage” (cars) and “Internet telephony”. Ch. 2: They're Everywhere

  4. Statistics • World’s Population: 5.8B (1996) vs. 11.5B (2047); • Internet Penetration Rate similar to TV and Telephony (+ personal and vehicular devices, fiber optics, broadband); • 3-4 Billion devices (present Telephone has 660M - impact on all aspects of the global economy and social structure); • Data rates: maximum for optical fiber (38THz range per fiber); • End-User Data rates: Gigabit range; • New Methods to replace TCP/IP; • Global Networks; • Packet and Circuit-like Services. Ch. 2: They're Everywhere

  5. Sensor Networks • Sensor Systems have become an integral part of our world; • Global Positioning Information Systems. Ch. 2: They're Everywhere

  6. Media Integration • Merging in Communication Media through Internet; • Internet will emulate functions of radio, TV, Telephone; • Initiation of phone calls through Internet; • Internet content of the TV broadcasts; • Private discussion groups; • Multicast communications groups (emergency commands); • Consumer Electronics; • Management and Control of individual devices; • Programmable VCR via Internet; • Speaker-independent recognition, translation, understanding. Ch. 2: They're Everywhere

  7. Mobile Software & Virtual Worlds • Mobile Software technologies; • Security systems; • “Smart” devices: interacting with network services; • Tax software; • Multiparty games; • Virtual stores, banks, schools, offices; • Video teleconferences. Ch. 2: They're Everywhere

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