Sunday, October 7, 2007

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"Internet? It's old stuff. " Word of its creators






That's right: according to the pioneers of the Net, Internet infrastructure is now obsolete. This was revealed by an article in the Wall Street Journal. In 1969, Larry Roberts of the Pentagon's Advanced Research Projects Agency designed a program for research bodies, called ARPAnet that would allow multiple computers to stay connected with each other at a distance. For decades later, Roberts has tried it, spending about $ 340 million to improve its own technology, but getting to the point that today is obsolete.

"We can no longer count on this technology, which is forty years old, "said the programmer who is now 69 years. His latest invention is a "flow router, which does nothing but analyze the network traffic channeling on" roads "data from different Web pages, e-mail, VoIP calls, and so on. But Roberts is not the only one of the "creators" of the network to think so.

the same opinion Len Bosack, fifty five co-founder of Cisco Systems: "The network as it is today - he said - is quite inadequate, which is why we have announced plans to create a system that allows enterprises to connect to cable submarine have a speed a hundred times better than the current infrastructure. " The debate, therefore, is on, especially in recent years that many times we talked about network overload, mainly due to advancing technology and increasingly used in low-cost phone calls over the Internet.

"The Internet has been made to allow people to watch television - Roberts said - and I know, because I created myself." And if we think that access, according to research expected to increase by 264 per cent by 2011, more and more experts theorize that, sooner or later, there may be a big crash of the global Internet.

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