280 likes | 380 Views
Intangible Value, Distributed Organizations, and the Internet World. Marshall Symposium The Information Revolution in Mid-Stream: An Anglo-American Perspective Douglas E. Van Houweling DVH@Internet2.edu. Overview. Introduction History & Background Today’s Internet Applications
E N D
Intangible Value,Distributed Organizations, and the Internet World Marshall Symposium The Information Revolution in Mid-Stream: An Anglo-American Perspective Douglas E. Van Houweling DVH@Internet2.edu
Overview • Introduction • History & Background • Today’s Internet • Applications • Information -> Collaboration • Technology • Distributed Organizations • Intangible Value • Implications for an Internet World
Internet History • ARPAnet origins • 1987 -- NSFnet • First large scale deployment of Internet technology • NSF, Merit, IBM, MCI, State of Michigan • 1995 -- Privatization • 1996 -- Internet2 • 34 -> 125 research university members • More than 30 corporate members today
Internet2 Goals • Enable new generation of applications • Re-create leading edge R&E networkcapability • Transfer capability to the global production Internet
Today’s Internet • Growing at 10 - 20% per month • Challenges to higher education • The “world wide wait” • Human interaction awkward • Virtual meetings and seminars • Shared authoring • Browsing publications • Distributed large scale computing and data base efforts not feasible
American Sign Language and English Captions Gallaudet University Georgetown University
Remote Scanning Electron Microscope University of Michigan
3D Brain Mapping: “Watching the Brain in Action” University of Pittsburgh Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
Upper AtmosphericResearch Collaboratory University of Michigan
Teleimmersion University of Illinois-Chicago University of Illinois-NCSA Old Dominion University
The CAVE Source: University of Illinois-Chicago
Immersadesk Source: University of Illinois-Chicago
Virtual Temporal Bone Source: University of Illinois-Chicago
Today’s Internet focuses on access to and delivery of information Tomorrow’s Internet will support human collaboration in an information-rich environment Trend --Information -> Collaboration
Applications and Engineering Applications Motivate Enables Engineering
Single-Lane Road ->Multi-lane Superhighway Special-purpose lanes Access control Tolls where appropriate End-to-end performance guarantees Quality of Service across multiple providers Support for Internet-based broadcast Authentication & security Faster circuits Technology
Leading edge connectivity for Internet2 Speeds ranging from 60 million to 1 billion characters/second Very high performance Backbone Network Service (vBNS) -- sponsored by NSF and MCI Abilene sponsored by the University Corporation for Advanced Internet Development, with support from Qwest, Nortel, and Cisco vBNS & Abilene
Intangible Value • The world is moving from an economy based on tangibles to one based on intangibles • slower growth in physical flows of material goods & products • faster growth of ethereal streams of data, images, and symbols • Supporting human interaction less constrained by geography & time
Distributed Organizations • VISA International • The Internet • Higher education • The Internet could have scaled nowhere else • All created to convey intangible value • All dependent on information and flexible interorganizational and interpersonal relationships
Implications for an Internet World • The future will undoubtedly be different than we and predict, but we can observe a powerful confluence: • intangible value represented in and transportable though information technology • increasing success of distributed global organizations • an Internet designed to support a world built on human collaboration in an information-rich environment
Are We Ready? • Public support is high -- 78%of Michigan residents say “Michigan is ready for the information age • Connectivity is growing -- 44% of Michigan residents have a network-connected computer, 62% of the national population exchange email at least once/week
Are We Ready? • We still think about mass media, not personal communication • We still measure the economy in terms of tangibles • We still assume organizations are hierarchical • Can the higher education community provide the model for our future?