Faster Than A Speeding Internet Packet!

Lost Cause

It's a wrap!
Joined
Oct 7, 2001
Posts
30,949
Manoman, this is going to be sooooo good!
Are you getting excited?
Mildly interested?
Chronic A.D.D.?


(CNN) -- Offering a glimpse of a faster digital future, researchers announced they have set a new Internet speed record.

Scientists at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center used fiber-optic cables to transfer 6.7 gigabytes of data -- the equivalent of two DVD movies -- across 6,800 miles in less than a minute.

Pushing the tech envelope
The team was able to transfer uncompressed data at 923 megabits per second for 58 seconds from Sunnyvale, California, to Amsterdam, Netherlands. That's about 3,500 times faster than a typical Internet broadband connection.

"By exploring the edges of Internet technologies' performance envelope, we are improving our ... ability to implement new networking technologies," said Les Cottrell, assistant director of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, a national laboratory operated by Stanford University for the U.S. Department of Energy.

The experiment could "bring high-speed data transfer to practical everyday applications, such as doctors at multiple sites sharing and discussing a patient's [heart test results] to diagnose and plan treatment," he added.

On average, the amount of information that can be transferred over the Internet has doubled every year since 1984, scientists said. That trend is expected to continue.


FACT BOX
The data was sent via fiber-optic cables from Sunnyvale, California, to Chicago, Illinois. From Chicago, the data was relayed to Geneva, Switzerland, and from there on to Amsterdam, Netherlands. The information traveled the 6,800 miles in less than a minute.

Already, Cottrell said he and other scientists have conducted further experiments that break their own record. But those tests have not been certified by Internet2, a consortium of 200 universities researching the future of the Internet, and they must wait for further confirmation before an announcement, he said.

Initially, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center employees expect to use the faster data transfer speeds to share massive amounts of research collected by physicists studying the fundamental building blocks of matter. But in the long term, Internet users and businesses could benefit from the findings.

"Imagine ... being able to download two full-length, two-hour movies within a minute," Cottrell said. "That changes the whole idea of how media is distributed."

Getting there won't be easy, said Harvey Newman, a physics professor at the California Institute of Technology who participated in the center's research.

Allowing clean transfers
You have this inversion where the limitations on advances will not be the speed of the Internet but rather the speed of your computer.
-- Harvey Newman, California Institute of Technology


Scientists were able to get 93 percent efficiency out of their record-setting connection because they didn't have to share bandwidth, they received donated equipment in excess of $1 million and they changed the setting of Internet protocols to allow faster data transfers, Newman said.

Even if they could transfer vast amounts of data tomorrow at reasonable prices, Newman noted that present-day computers are unable to handle such loads.

"You have this inversion where the limitations on advances will not be the speed of the Internet but rather the speed of your computer," he said.

Scientists said the finding announced Thursday hopefully will help researchers develop a clearer plan for faster online technologies.

"We don't have a vision of the future of the Internet yet," Newman said. "It's a whole new world for which you can see the first few ideas, but we don't really know what it will be about."


:D
 
Heck I just wish I could d/l one three minute song in under 25 minutes. *sigh*
 
Me too...

I've got about the slowest dial-up on the market.
Maybe they're working on "Bioware" that will be implanted in your brain (brain modem) along with your DNA for security. All you have to do is mentally access the song, and it will download immediately. The mental spam is what'll drive you crazy!
 
Well well well!

Now I know what all of my past partners have been up to lately. I guess calling them "Minute Men" would be exaggerating now.
 
Now they can design websites with so much complex content, nobody will be able to surf with last week's browser and last month's modem on last year's computer anymore.

The pop-ups will load several times faster, and will stuff your computer with advertisements unless you first cram it full of anti-spam programs.
 
Faster pop-ups.....

I could just see a computer handle a couple of gigs of pop-ups in a nano! Maybe they're working on a modem that can upgrade internally via the bioware manufacturer?
I keep saying "bioware" because at some point, chips will be too slow, so you'd have to find a more fluid, transferable medium that would be like a nerve relay to be fast enough to handle the new speeds continually.
Perhaps maybe transfer molecules?
 
Re: Faster pop-ups.....

Lost Cause said:
I could just see a computer handle a couple of gigs of pop-ups in a nano! Maybe they're working on a modem that can upgrade internally via the bioware manufacturer?
I keep saying "bioware" because at some point, chips will be too slow, so you'd have to find a more fluid, transferable medium that would be like a nerve relay to be fast enough to handle the new speeds continually.
Perhaps maybe transfer molecules?
Actually, I believe that biological circuitry is quite a bit slower than what we have now. The advantages to biological computers may be such features as self healing, ease of programming, and possibly self-learning.
 
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