Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byNora Watson Modified over 9 years ago
1
An Internet World, the Cable Industry, and the Future Washington Metropolitan Cable Club The Information Revolution in Mid-Stream Douglas E. Van Houweling, President and CEO University Corporation for Advanced Internet Development
2
Overview History & Background Today’s Internet Applications Information -> Collaboration Technology Distributed Organizations Intangible Value Implications for an Internet World Implications for the Cable Industry
3
Internet History ARPAnet origins 1987-NSFnet 1995 -- Privatization 1996 -- Internet2 34 > 127 research university members/33 corporate members 1996 -- Next Generation Internet Clinton/Gore Administration
5
The Challenge of Today’s Internet Growing at over 15% 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
6
Internet2 Goals Enable new generation of applications Re-create leading edge R&E network capability Transfer capability to the global production Internet
7
American Sign Language and English Captions Gallaudet University Georgetown University
9
Distributed Image SpreadSheet University of Missouri- Columbia
11
Teleimmersion University of Illinois-Chicago University of Illinois-NCSA Old Dominion University
12
The CAVE Source: University of Illinois-Chicago
13
Immersadesk Source: University of Illinois-Chicago
14
Virtual Temporal Bone Source: University of Illinois-Chicago
15
Applications and Engineering Applications Engineering Enables Motivate
16
Technology 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
17
vBNS & Abilene 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
18
Abilene Announced 14 April
19
Internet2 Member Universities 127 Members as of May 1998
20
Corporate Members/Partners* 3Com* Advanced Network & Services* Alcatel Apple Ameritech AT&T* Bay Networks* Bell Atlantic Bellcore Cabletron* Cisco Systems* Deutsche Telekom Digital Equipment Corporation FORE Systems* GTE Internetworking IBM* 3Com* Advanced Network & Services* Alcatel Apple Ameritech AT&T* Bay Networks* Bell Atlantic Bellcore Cabletron* Cisco Systems* Deutsche Telekom Digital Equipment Corporation FORE Systems* GTE Internetworking IBM* Lucent Technologies* MCI Communications* Newbridge Networks* Nokia Nortel* Novell Packet Engines Perot Systems Qwest Communications* SBC Technology Resources Siemens Sprint StarBurst Communications* Sun Microsystems Torrent Technologies William Communications Lucent Technologies* MCI Communications* Newbridge Networks* Nokia Nortel* Novell Packet Engines Perot Systems Qwest Communications* SBC Technology Resources Siemens Sprint StarBurst Communications* Sun Microsystems Torrent Technologies William Communications
21
Trend -- Information -> Collaboration Today’s Internet focuses on access to and delivery of information and entertainment Tomorrow’s Internet will support human collaboration in an information and media rich environment Dramatic implications for the cable industry
22
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
23
Distributed Organizations VISA International The Internet Higher education All created to convey intangible value All dependent on information and flexible interorganizational and interpersonal relationships
24
Implications for an Internet World The future will undoubtedly be different than we can predict, but we can observe a powerful confluence: intangible value represented in and transportable through information technology increasing success of distributed global organizations and communities an Internet which supports a world built on human collaboration
25
Electronic Commerce Explosion Trends and implications Enabling Online Business Applied Encryption Technology Services Multimedia and Video Service Embraced by Industry: eg: Automotive Network Exchange Internet Transactions projected at over $300 Billion by 2002
26
Internet and Multimedia A new world of advanced communications Internet multicast “video”, telephony and radio Transport of Internet traffic on cable, direct broadcast satellite; radio and broadcast TV Real-time quality of service support Mutual Reinforcement among media (print, TV, radio, web, email)
27
Opportunity for the Cable Industry Significant applications and engineering breakthroughs Cable modems, digital TV, Web TV, Internet phone New application opportunities Multimedia impact Impact on delivery of content Broad impact of technology transfer and market making
28
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 Is government, education, industry collaboration the answer?
29
Your Comments and Questions?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.