798 lines
37 KiB
Plaintext
798 lines
37 KiB
Plaintext
BEGIN LINE_NOIZ.10
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I S S U E - ! ) F E B R U A R Y 2 4 , 1 9 9 4
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>LiNE NOiZ< >LiNE NOiZ<
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- - - - - L - i - N - E - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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!#@&$%$(^ N % O * i ! Z _&@)$!^$_!(_)(_@$(#)*$*&)(@(_!%)*@)&#*_(^))%$)*$@
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CYbERPUNk I N f O R M A t i O N E - Z i N E
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| L i N E N O i Z ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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I S S U E - ! ) F E B R U A R Y 1 4 , 1 9 9 4
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: File !
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: Intro to Issue 10
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: Billy Biggs <ae687@freenet.carleton.ca>
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: File @
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: Information Superhighway
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: Billy Biggs <ae687@freenet.carleton.ca>
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: File #
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: Square One (Part One)
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: Kipp Lightburn <ah804@freenet.carleton.ca>
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: File $
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: "I'm Slaving" v 1.2
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: @Man of Silicon Valley Style <shaunc@faceplant.gvg.tek.com>
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: File %
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: Cyberhouse
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: Kajetan Hinner - Eye of the Shadow <uf341ea@sunmail.lrz-muenchen.de>
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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File - !
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Here we go wrapping up ten issues of Line Noiz! So, please write me to tell
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me what you think and how I can improve. I've been putting off sending out
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this issue because I have been writing up the big article on Information
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Superhighway. Well, I finally finished (it took me 5 times longer than it
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should have).
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Of course since it came out so late, I have had an accumulation of stuff to
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send out. LN11 will be out VERY shortly.
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-Billy Biggs, editor.
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--NOTICE:
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IF you subscribed and HAVEN't recieved any issues, mail me and I'll fix the
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problem.
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-*- Subscription Info -*-
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Subscriptions can be obtained by sending mail to:
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dodger@fubar.bk.psu.edu
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With the words:
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Subscription LineNoiz <your address>
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In the body of the letter.
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Back Issues can be recieved by sending mail to the same address with the
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words BACK ISSUES in the subject.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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File - @
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--> INfORMAtiON SUPERhIGhWAY <--
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"Life is a (information) highway"
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"a seamless high-speed network carrying data, voice and video"
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"Buisiness without boundaries"
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"Now, eat your fibre deary..."
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The world is changing faster than people think. Either that, or people
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are thinking faster than the world is changing. Lately, media attention in
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the world of technology has focused on the "information superhighway", a
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high-speed network carrying data, voice and video. The possibilities of this
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are endless, the list of advantages extend for miles. But just how far is this
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away? Technically, we are now using the data superhighway, with Internet.
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Anyways, this is a compilation of interesting facts associated with the
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superhighway. How this superhighway will be paid for, used and hacked will
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have to be discussed later on.
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----- What it is ------------------------------------------------------------
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[ In essence, the superhighway wants to become Internet. The advantages of ]
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[ Internet and the way in which it is administrated make it the perfect ]
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[ example for how this 'superhighway' should be run. ]
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[Financial Post]
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[...] While it may hook up with the copper wires of the phone system, or
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the coaxial cable of cable companies, the highway will be built primarily of
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high-capacity, lightning-fast fibre-optics cable.
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[...] In the home, an integrated home entertainment/education system
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will allow easy access to a range of services.
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The heart of the beast will be a multimedia personal computer with vast
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storage capacity, and the ability to record and store whatever content
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emerges from the highway - television or cable programming, music or computer
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data. PCs with this type of multimedia capability already exist: notably
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the Indy from Silicon Graphics Inc., which comes with a built-in camcorder.
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[The Globe and Mail: Report on Buisiness]
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[...] This industry, predicts Apple Computer Inc., could be worth $3.5
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trillion (U.S) by the turn of the century.
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[DISCOVER: Jan. 1994]
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[...] But what's needed even more is a coordinated effort by government
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and industry to create a system that's seamless: one that will have all the
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equipment necessary to respond simultaneously to millions of requests by users
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in millions of homes and buisinesses - and then instantly send reams of data
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to the right addresses. And the entertainment and buisiness communities must
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offer enough products to create demand in the first place. "It doesn't seem
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likely that it will be a `Field of Dreams' situation - build it and people
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will come," says Stu Personick, assistant vice president for information
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networking at Bellcore, the research lab run by the regional telephone
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companies.
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----- Al Gore's Plans for the U.S.A. ----------------------------------------
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[ Al Gore has been a long time advocate for the data superhighway. Here is ]
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[ an excerpt from the sept. 91 Scientific American, an entire issue focusing]
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[ on Communications, Computers and Networks. A facinating read, I reccomend ]
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[ it very highly. ]
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[Scientific American: sept. 91, Communications, Computers and Networks]
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Infrastructure for the Global Village : Al Gore
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[...] As in the past, original thinking is required to develop a system
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that will enable our civilization to make the most sensible use of this potent
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technology. There are valid concerns that computer networks threaten the
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privacy and personal freedom of individuals. There are equally valid worries
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that existing laws do not adequately protect the rights and liberties of
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computer users to express themselves in the new medium.
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Even so, such concerns should not - and indeed, probably cannot - halt
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the sweeping changes that are already taking place. Just as the information
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sweeping forth from the printing press was soon protected in democratic
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states by a fair and workable legal and ethical code, so too, a new body of
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common law is being built to cope with the new medium of the computer network.
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Rather than holding back, the U.S. should lead by building the information
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infrastructure, essential if all Americans are to gain access to this
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transforming technology.
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[Gore goes on to talk about the benifits of computer networking. He says that
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countries must built networks to cope with new technologies/new communications.
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U.S. must make a commitment to built the high-speed data highways. They must
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build a fibre optic tel-link. Gore goes on to mention more benifits of the
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info-superhighway.]
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[...] We face the "chicken and egg" dilemma. Because there is no nerwork,
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there is no apparent demand for the network; because there is no demand, there
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is no network.
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[ And here is the Gore remarks on the NII, or National Information ]
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[ Infrastructure ]
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Date: Tue, 11 Jan 1994 14:46-0500
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>From: The White House <75300.3115@compuserve.com>
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Subject: Remarks by Vice President Al Gore 1994-01-11
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[...] Let me be clear. I challenge you, the people in this room, to
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connect all of our classrooms, all of our libraries, and all of our
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hospitals and clinics by the year 2000. We must do this to realize the
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full potential of information to educate, to save lives, provide access
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to health care and lower medical costs.
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[...] To take one example of what competition means, cable companies,
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long distance companies, and electric utilities must be free to offer
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two-way communications and local telephone service. To accomplish this
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goal, our legislative package will establish a federal standard that
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permits entry to the local telephone markets. Moreover, the FCC will be
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authorized to reduce regulation for telecommunications carriers that
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lack market power.
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[...] Preserving the free flow of information requires open access, our
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third basic principle.
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How can you sell your ideas, your information, your programs, if an
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intermediary who is also your competitor has the means to unfairly block
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your access to customers? We can't subject the free flow of content to
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artificial constraints at the hands of either government regulators or
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would-be monopolists.
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We must also guard against unreasonable technical obstacles. We
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know how to do this; we've seen this problem in our past. For example,
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when railroad tracks were different sizes, a passenger could not travel
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easily from a town served by one railroad to a town served by another.
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But the use of standardized tracks permitted the creation of a national
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system of rail transport.
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Accordingly, our legislative package will contain provisions
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designed to ensure that each telephone carrier's networks will be
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readily accessible to other users. We will create an affirmative
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obligation to interconnect and to afford nondiscriminatory access to
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network facilities, services, functions and information. We must also
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explore the future of non-commercial broadcasting; there must be public
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access to the information superhighway.
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----- The American National Information Infrastructure ----------------------
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[ Here is the statement made explaining the american NII ]
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All Americans have a stake in the construction of an advanced National
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Information Infrastructure (NII), a seamless web of communications
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networks, computers, databases, and consumer electronics that will put
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vast amounts of information at users fingertips. Development of the NII
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can help unleash an information revolution that will change forever the
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way people live, work, and interact with each other:
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- People could live almost anywhere they wanted, without foregoing
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opportunities for useful and fulfilling employment, by telecommuting to
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their offices through an electronic highway;
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- The best schools, teachers, and courses would be available to all
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students, without regard to geography, distance, resources, or disability;
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- Services that improve Americas health care system and respond to other
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important social needs could be available on-line, without waiting in
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line, when and where you needed them.
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Private sector firms are already developing and deploying that
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infrastructure today. Nevertheless, there remain essential roles for
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government in this process. Carefully crafted government action will
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complement and enhance the efforts of the private sect or and assure the
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growth of an information infrastructure available to all Americans at
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reasonable cost. In developing our policy initiatives in this area, the
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Administration will work in close partnership with business, labor,
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academia, the public, Congr ess, and state and local government. Our
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efforts will be guided by the following principles and objectives:
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- Promote private sector investment, through appropriate tax and
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regulatory policies.
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- Extend the universal service concept to ensure that information
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resources are available to all at affordable prices. Because information
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means empowerment and employment the government has a duty to ensure that
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all Americans have access to the resources and job creation potential of
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the Information Age.
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- Act as a catalyst to promote technological innovation and new
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applications. Commit important government research programs and grants to
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help the private sector develop and demonstrate technologies needed for
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the NII, and develop the applications and ser vices that will maximize its
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value to users.
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- Promote seamless, interactive, user-driven operation of the NII. As the
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NII evolves into a network of networks, government will ensure that
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users can transfer information across networks easily and efficiently. To
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increase the likelihood that the NII will be both interactive and, to a
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large extent, user-driven, government must reform regulations and policies
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that may inadvertently hamper the development of interactive applications.
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- Ensure information security and network reliability. The NII must be
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trust-worthy and secure, protecting the privacy of its users. Government
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action will also ensure that the overall system remains reliable, quickly
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repairable in the event of a failure and, perhaps most importantly, easy
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to use.
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- Improve management of the radio frequency spectrum, an increasingly
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critical resource.
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- Protect intellectual property rights. The Administration will
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investigate how to strengthen domestic copyright laws and international
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intellectual property treaties to prevent piracy and to protect the
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integrity of intellectual property.
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- Coordinate with other levels of government and with other nations.
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Because information crosses state, regional, and national boundaries,
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coordination is critical to avoid needless obstacles and prevent unfair
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policies that handicap U.S. industry.
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- Provide access to government information and improve government
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procurement. The Administration will seek to ensure that Federal agencies,
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in concert with state and local governments, use the NII to expand the
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information available to the public, ensuri ng that the immense reservoir
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of government information is available to the public easily and equitably.
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Additionally, Federal procurement policies for telecommunications and
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information services and equipment will be designed to promote important
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technic al developments for the NII and to provide attractive incentives
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for the private sector to contribute to NII development.
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The time for action is now. Every day brings news of change: new
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technologies, like hand-held computerized assistants; new ventures and
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mergers combining businesses that not long ago seemed discrete and
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insular; new legal decisions that challenge the sepa ration of computer,
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cable, and telephone companies. These changes promise substantial benefits
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for the American people, but only if government understands fully their
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implications and begins working with the private sector and other
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interested parties to shape the evolution of the communications
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infrastructure.
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The benefits of the NII for the nation are immense. An advanced
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information infrastructure will enable U.S. firms to compete and win in
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the global economy, generating good jobs for the American people and
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economic growth for the nation. As importantly, th e NII can transform the
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lives of the American people ameliorating the constraints of geography,
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disability, and economic status giving all Americans a fair opportunity to
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go as far as their talents and ambitions will take them.
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----- Canada's Information Superhighway -------------------------------------
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[ In Canada the information highway has been started through CANARIE, or ]
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[ the Canadian Network for the Advancement of Research, Industry and ]
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[ Education. ]
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[Ottawa Citizen]
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[...] A joint private and public non-profit consortium that is thought
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to be the prototype for Canada's information superhighway. The group is
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upgrading CA*net, Canada's leg of Internet, so that it can carry multimedia
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signals.
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[CANARIE]
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CANARIE Inc. is a non-profit corporation whose objective is to
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support the development of the communications infrastructure
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of a knowledge-based Canada., by the promotion, management and
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participation in research and development and educational
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activities with respect to Canada's communications networking
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infrastructure. In so doing, CANARIE Inc. will contribute to
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Canadian Competitiveness in all sectors of the economy.
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EMAIL: info.canarie.ca
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Industry and Education
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CANARIE Has captured the imagination and commitment of Canadians
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from St.John's to Victoria. Facilitating the exchange of ideas and
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the development of new products and services, it will significantly
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influence Canada's communications infrastructure for the 21st
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century. Through the provision of better test facilities and
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upgrading our skills and knowledge, CANARIE will also enable Canada
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to participate fully in the developing global information economy.
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MISSION
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To support the development of the communications infrastructure for
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a knowledge-based Canada, and thereby contribute to Canadian
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competitiveness in all sectors of the economy; to job creation, and
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to our quality of life.
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CANARIE Objectives
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To strengthen existing network communications infrastructure, to
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support the rapid transfer of technology from the laboratory to the
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marketplace, and to provide an open systems environment for the
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far-flung industrial, educational and research resources of Canada.
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To support research, development and education through enhanced
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collaboration and access to information and resources worldwide.
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To support the diffusion of network technologies on a broad
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national scale, and to ensure the widest possible exploitation of
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research results by Canadian Industry.
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The Elements of CANARIE
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There are three interrelated elements to CANARIE. The first is the
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upgrade of the operational network from 56kb/s to T1 (1,544 mb/s)
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or higher with the objective of expanding to multi-gigabit per
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second rate over a seven-year period. The second element is the
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establishment of a gigabit test facility to support the development
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of next-generation network technology. The third element of
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CANARIE is the Technology Development and Technology Diffusion
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Program (TD)2, known as the CANARIE program.
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The CANARIE Program - (TD)2
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CANARIE Inc. will support, on a 50:50 cost sharing basis, the
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following types of projects:
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Technology Development - support the research and development of
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new information technology products, applications, software and
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services, based on lightwave technologies and emerging
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international standards for communication applications and
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information covered by the Open Systems Environment, or,
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Technology Diffusion - support the testing, applications or
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showcasing of advanced information technology into the mainstream
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of economic and educational activity.
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[ Also in Canada there is OCRInet. It is also being hailed as the beginning ]
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[ of Canada's information superhighway. ]
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[Ottawa Citizen]
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[...] A research network linking 12 locations in the Ottawa area
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[...] OCRInet is this proposed electronic expressway in microcosm. Using
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the same technology accross wider areas, within the next few years a
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sppecialist in British Columbia will be able to examine a patient in London,
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Ont.
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[ Here is some other information concerning the regulatory climate in ]
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[ Canada for the superhighway venture ]
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[Financial Post]
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[...] In theory, Canada should be prefectly poised to take advantage of
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the convergence of telecommunications, computers and consumer electronics.
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This is because a single regulator, the Canadian Radio-television and
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Telecommunications Commission, has jurisdiction over both telecommunications
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and broadcasting.
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Currently, CRTC regulations do not permit Canadian telephone companies
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to enter the cable television buisiness, although former Bell Canada CEO
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Robert Kearney has repeatedly called for this.
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He has also invited cable companies at the same time to jump into
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providing local telephone service.
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This convergence theme was a major subject of the recently concluded
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CRTC hearings on reform of the telecommunications industry. Nothing
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definitive has yet emerged from those hearings, but there is a consensus that
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the commission should next conduct a single unified hearing to address both
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telecommunications and broadcasting.
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In the U.S, Gore's plan provides a framework for competition between
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long-distance and local telephone companies. Regulatory power would be
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transferred from the courts to the Federal Communications Commission and the
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Department of Justice. The FCC would be granted an expanded role in setting
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telecommunications policy.
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----- How the Superhighway Works --------------------------------------------
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[ It looks as though the new superhighway will be conducted using ATM ]
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[ protocol techniques. ]
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[Ottawa Citizen]
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[...] Asynchronous transfer mode allows television, telephone, data and
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images to be squeezed down a fibre optic line. This is the first time a
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standard has been developed to carry all these elements.
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[DISCOVER magazine]
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[ This begins explaining how the Internet works, using the example of a ]
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[ University professor sending e-mail... ]
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[...] ...the message is typically broken into smaller electronic chunks
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called packets. Each packet might travel around different byways of the
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Internet, merging with traffic containing millions of other packets. Yet the
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various packets of the professor's message still arrive at the correct
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recieving end, where they're reassembles. If they take different paths they
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might even arrive out of sequence, but the recieving terminal will be
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inteligent enough to re-sequence them.
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Such a scheme, known as packet switching, is what distringuishes the
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Internet from the telephone and cable TV, which use circuit switching. In a
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phone conversation, for example, a single circuit stays open for exclusive
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use between two telephones. Voice signals flow continuously, in real time,
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back and forth along this pathway. The same is true with cable TV, in which
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a circuit is left open to allow a continuous barrage of video into your home.
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But in packet switching, a pathway between two terminals can be travelled
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by thousands of pairs of terminals rather than being monopolized by a single
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transmission.
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Packet switching works very nicely for discrete bundles of data. But
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but it's not ideal for voice or video, which require a sequential flow of
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information in real time to be meaningful. "There have been various
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experiments to communicate video images over the Internet," says Dale Harris,
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director of Stanford's Center for Telecommunications. "But the images aren't
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good and the speed isn't high."
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Yet voice and especially video are envisioned as major components of the
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traffic stream on the information superhighway. If the Internet provides a
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model for the superhighway, and the Internet relies on packet switching,
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how is the superhighway going to handle voice and video?
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One solution, says Harris, may be the nascent technology called
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asynchronous transfer mode, or ATM. ATM is a communications protocol - a set
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of rules that a network of communicating terminals shares to process
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messages and ensure that they arrive intact. Harris likens ATM to a way of
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merging traffic, of ushering packets of data from a local route onto the
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information superhighway while millions of other packets are speeding by.
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Although it's a packet-switching protocol, in theory ATM is supposed to
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handle voice, video and data with equal efficiency. The way it does this is by
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giving video and voice priority, delaying data to allow a convoy of sequential
|
|
packets to enter the highway. At first glance that might not seem fair. But to
|
|
compensate, ATM operates at much higher speeds than today's computer-to-
|
|
computer protocols, so you really wouldn't notice any delays. It would also
|
|
compress video, a medium that would otherwise break down into enourmous
|
|
quantities of packets, congesting the highway. The result should in principle
|
|
be an egalitarian system.
|
|
|
|
----- Other Information -----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
[Ottawa Citizen]
|
|
|
|
[...] The Japanese and Europeans, too, are speeding down their own
|
|
versions. Japan is dishing out $250 billion to lay expensive fibre wire to
|
|
each home by 2015.
|
|
|
|
[Somewhere on Usenet]
|
|
|
|
The New Yorker: Bill Gates on ITV
|
|
|
|
In this week's issue of the New Yorker, John Seabrook discusses the future
|
|
of interactive television and its users with Bill Gates, president of
|
|
Microsoft, via electronic mail. The following is an excerpt from that article:
|
|
|
|
-----------------
|
|
|
|
I wrote a message [to Bill Gates] titled "TV as the Opium of the People":
|
|
|
|
Some people are afraid of interactive TV. TV is a drug, goes the
|
|
argument, and the technology that Microsoft and others are supplying is
|
|
going to make the drug stronger. People will be inside more than ever,
|
|
cut off from their neighbors, watching interactive monster truck
|
|
contests.
|
|
|
|
Or porno. They will pile up large cable and credit card charges. A "T.
|
|
S. Eliot wasteland . . . a nation of housebound zombies," as Michael
|
|
Eisner put it recently in a speech. Do you think this could happen? What
|
|
difference does it make if you invent smart boxes to deliver dumb
|
|
programming?
|
|
|
|
Gates wrote:
|
|
|
|
Interactive TV is probably a really bad name for the in-home device
|
|
connected to the information highway.
|
|
|
|
Lets say I am sitting at home wondering about some new drug that was
|
|
prescribed to me. Or wanting to ask a question to my children's teacher.
|
|
Or curious about my social security status. Or wondering about crime in
|
|
my neighborhood. Or wanting to exchange information with other people
|
|
thinking about visiting Tanzania. Or wondering if the new lawn mower I
|
|
want to buy works well and if its a good price. Or I want to ask people
|
|
who read a book what they thought of it before I take my time reading
|
|
it. In all of these cases being able to reach out and communicate by
|
|
using a messaging or bulletin board type system lets me do something I
|
|
could never do before. Assume that the infrastructure and device to do
|
|
this is easy to use and it was funded by the cable or phone company
|
|
primarily because I like to watch movies and video-conference with my
|
|
relatives.
|
|
|
|
All of the above is about how adults will use the system. Kids will use
|
|
it in ways we can't even imagine.
|
|
|
|
----- Conclusion ------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
So maybe we have to wait a while for the superhighway. So maybe that
|
|
instead of the unmapped landscape of the Internet we will have a user-friendly
|
|
cable-TV box. But the highway is comming, like it or not.
|
|
|
|
[DISCOVER]
|
|
|
|
"The real challenge for the superhighway is how to take the good part of the
|
|
Internet, scale it up, and at the same time make it totally reliable and
|
|
secure"
|
|
- Stu Personick
|
|
|
|
--Billy Biggs
|
|
--ae687@freenet.carleton.ca
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
File - #
|
|
>From: ah804@freenet.carleton.ca (Kipp Lightburn)
|
|
|
|
---Square One (Part One)---
|
|
---------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
They can't run faster.
|
|
They can't run faster than me.
|
|
|
|
The thought screams in my head like a whistle. Adrenaline
|
|
is pumping from sources I had expended days ago. Bare feet
|
|
slapping down on tile, dilutes the sound of my thought. Have to
|
|
run faster. Cold tile, on bare feet, pushing the sensation to
|
|
the front of mind, concentrating on it. Numb my pain riddled
|
|
body with my doped, and hazy mind.
|
|
Hurried steps. Feet in creaking, leather boots, stomp the
|
|
floor a few corridors away. The metallic slam of clips entering
|
|
weapons, and the coiled signature of loading. Hard to tell,
|
|
maybe a half dozen of them. Right now, in my chipped out funk,
|
|
one footstep occasionally sounds like twenty.
|
|
Civilians cleared the hospitals halls as soon as the
|
|
security alert went off. Better this way. They only stand a
|
|
chance at hitting me. I'm dead now anyways. Woke up a week ago
|
|
in a hospital bed, no personal memories. I was tired of staring
|
|
at a stranger so I shattered the mirror in my room. Thats when
|
|
they started drugging me. Saying that the procedure may have
|
|
effected my brain in inconceivable ways. Possible psychotic.
|
|
Scratch 'possible', I want to snap all their bloody necks.
|
|
Though the memories were cleared out, my knowledge was still
|
|
there. Still know how to mix a Long Island, still know how to
|
|
drive a car, and more clearly in my head, I still know how to
|
|
kill a man in every conceivable way. With my fists, with
|
|
weapons... christ even with a friggin stapler if I had to.
|
|
Boots coming closer. Sound travels like crystal now. With
|
|
the drop of the boot comes an accompanying noise of wet rubber on
|
|
tile. Wet rubber?
|
|
At the dead end of the corridor behind me, a window sits
|
|
comfortably. Rain glances off of it, leaving behind a webwork of
|
|
droplets that distorts the view of the city beyond.
|
|
Stagger towards the supply cart, haphazardously strewn in
|
|
the middle of the hall. Supplies free of their four wheeled
|
|
prison, carpeting the floor. Toilet paper, gauze, boxes,
|
|
bottles.. the boots are about to turn into the corridor when I
|
|
see them. Hypo-patches. Instant pain killers. I frantically
|
|
slap them all over my naked body, drugs begin kicking in
|
|
immediately. My body starts convulsing into numbness.
|
|
They start screaming as they see me force myself into a
|
|
sprint.
|
|
"What the heck's he got all over him?" One of them puzzles,
|
|
as I slap the last Hypo-patch onto my chest and brace for impact.
|
|
"No! Plug him quick!!"
|
|
Pain killers stop pain. I'm hoping that this many will
|
|
prevent it.
|
|
This body, which even after a week still seems foreign to
|
|
me, hurtles through the glass. The gunshots begin to cry out. I
|
|
see clouds of blood all around me, as shards fly past me. I see
|
|
two bullets exit my body, one through my stomach and one through
|
|
my thigh. The bullets take streams of my blood with them.
|
|
I don't feel the wind on my skin as I plummet, gravity
|
|
strung, earthbound. A self service, computerized, hot dog vendor
|
|
breaks my fall. Feet first. I see my right leg snap out at an
|
|
awkward angle, as it takes the weight of my fall. The hot dog
|
|
vendor folds inward like aluminum foil.
|
|
Sights flutter past as my vision toys with me.
|
|
A thin woman leans over my body, "Kyle? Kyle, don't move,
|
|
we'll get you out of here." Frantic look over shoulder, her pale
|
|
hand hammers into her coat.. searching. "Spiro! Ash! Stop
|
|
screwing around and get over here! I can't carry him!"
|
|
Two more figures pull into my peripheral. Tall, stocky,
|
|
both of them.
|
|
Her, "Get him into the van, I'll cover..." Frantic look
|
|
turns to terror, as she pulls a gun from her coat, and the two
|
|
lift me off of the ground. As I'm lifted my sights change. A
|
|
dozen of the security who were chasing me spill out from the
|
|
hospitals front doors. The rain is no match for their full body
|
|
security armor.
|
|
I'm being dragged to a nearby van, as the girl starts
|
|
unloading her clip into them. Gunshots and flashes. My mind
|
|
begins misinterpretting the two as thunder an lightening, while
|
|
the rain continues to stream down my face.
|
|
The girl and the gun. Almost opposites. Love and war.
|
|
Beauty and beast. They would be opposites if she didn't use it
|
|
so well.
|
|
Sixth sense forces me to peer down. Cartilage and bone
|
|
protrude out of my right leg, at the knee. The sight forces me
|
|
into blackness.
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
[[Kipp Lightburn - ah804@freenet.carleton.ca]]
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
File - $
|
|
>From: shaunc@faceplant.gvg.tek.com (Sweet n Sour Pope)
|
|
|
|
[ Here's something somebody sent me <duh>. He was quoted as saying: ]
|
|
>
|
|
>I usually don't care for cyberpoetix. They are almost always cliched and
|
|
>impersonal.
|
|
>
|
|
>I don't like complaining without offering alternatives, so here's a satire
|
|
>of LA Style's "I'm Raving" that I wrote to lament the trend of hiring
|
|
>cheap offshore programmers to cut development costs.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"I'm Slaving" v 1.2
|
|
by @Man of Silicon Valley Style
|
|
|
|
I'm slaving
|
|
You see I'm slaving
|
|
All night long
|
|
And I can't go home
|
|
|
|
A code sample for a new generation
|
|
Offshore programmers
|
|
Hard working consultant slammers
|
|
Turbanized techno gear jammers
|
|
Work all night long
|
|
|
|
Oh na na oh na na na na oh na na
|
|
You have spilled my grape squishy
|
|
|
|
I'm slaving
|
|
Yeah, I'm slaving
|
|
All night long
|
|
The urge to eat is strong
|
|
|
|
Here we go, y'all
|
|
|
|
Silicon Valley Style in your face x 4
|
|
|
|
Some drop breakpoints 'stead of beats
|
|
Some move their fingers instead of feets
|
|
|
|
1, 2, 4, 8
|
|
Get that bug, don't hesitate
|
|
Slave to the rhythm all night long
|
|
33 megaHertz pumping strong
|
|
Both clock edges are what I need
|
|
Survival depends on 2x clock speed
|
|
Living a life you've never seen
|
|
No clock can stop the slave machine
|
|
|
|
Na na oh na na oh oh nan
|
|
What has been implied here?
|
|
|
|
I'm slaving
|
|
Oh god I'm slaving
|
|
All night long
|
|
Even lawyers don't work this long
|
|
|
|
Silicon Valley Style in your face x 4
|
|
|
|
Oh na na oh na na na na oh na na
|
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
File - %
|
|
>From: uf341ea@sunmail.lrz-muenchen.de (Kajetan Hinner)
|
|
AKA Eye of the Shadow <My IRC-Nick: Shadow_I>
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cyberhouse
|
|
|
|
We discussed the past. He told me about introducing music into
|
|
Netspace.
|
|
"You must know, the most important thing in AI development was to
|
|
become aware of time."
|
|
I didn't understand, so I asked him to tell me more.
|
|
"It's not the old questions, when time began, if it ends, and the
|
|
quantization of time wasn't hip also. It's the periodic upcomings
|
|
of certain events, say, measures. Every computer needs a clock to
|
|
run and we didn't care about that in AI software development.
|
|
Until we understood that man also relies on time, and way strong
|
|
too."
|
|
He said that psychologists and CS specialists did some experiments
|
|
with people at the end of the 20th century. They analyzed their
|
|
brain intelligence system while playing loud music. And the Mega
|
|
Base of house music was responsible for interesting effects not
|
|
found while giving other kinds of music the tested' ears. The
|
|
whole brain's working was altered while the human system tried to
|
|
sync with the low frequency measure. To be short: They found out
|
|
that this was the missing link in AI research. Not only computer
|
|
hardware needs a clock, but also software to become really
|
|
intelligent.
|
|
"After that it was no real problem any more to build intelligent
|
|
computers. And with the new 12th computer generation's help we
|
|
could easily develop the jack-port to link cyberdecks and human
|
|
biological systems. Now we have half mankind connected to
|
|
Netspace."
|
|
Actually I didn't know where his physical location was. I just
|
|
know him from the Net, and I've only seen his Public Image. He
|
|
lives in a weird building with altering borders. As I was
|
|
tiptoeing through Netspace some time ago, I found his fancy
|
|
coloured tower jumping up and down and widening and narrowing with
|
|
a very attractive measure. This was special even for a Nethiker
|
|
like me. I went in and found him in a bad mood.
|
|
"You know, now the future has become the presence, at least for
|
|
the A-World. Most of us live in good condition, but what's up with
|
|
the B-Worlders? No one is caring about them any more. When did you
|
|
see the last report in the Net about them?"
|
|
I didn't care about these losers. They physically lived in another
|
|
part of the globe, that's all I knew that time. For me other
|
|
things were more important.
|
|
"I care more about our kind of Net-ppl. Can't you see what's wrong
|
|
now? OK, we have a good Net Society. Everyone's got the same
|
|
rights, everyone is free, no one has to starve or to fear.
|
|
Everyone can do anything, create his own Sub-Space or destroy it.
|
|
No one has to feel minor than someone else. So the only way is to
|
|
make it as long as possible. That's the only thing that counts
|
|
today: How to keep yourself as long as possible in the Net. To
|
|
live forever..."
|
|
"Yo" he shouted. "We've lost our past and our memories. Nothing is
|
|
for sure any more. History has gone. The Net Data Center can't
|
|
keep track of everything happening in the sSpace. Nothing is
|
|
important any more, nothing is unimportant. Everything is one huge
|
|
noise. If someone can't jack in any more he won't even survive in
|
|
memories. I'll stop that."
|
|
And he pressed the button which gave us time back. I was thrown
|
|
out of his Sub-Space and found myself flying through colourful
|
|
tunnels while being hurt by loud base drum beats.
|
|
At home I found a message from him, scrolling through my Space
|
|
Editor's menu. He wrote that he had found the resonance frequency
|
|
of the Net. It'll be from now on always present and won't go away,
|
|
it's self-feeding. He had wanted to be the one who entered Net
|
|
History as the punk who destroyed speech frequencies
|
|
communications.
|
|
Finally I saw a <jacking out> scrolling over the screen. He left
|
|
the Space... RIP
|
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
>> <<
|
|
>> Watch out for LN11 comming this week....... <<
|
|
|
|
END LINE_NOIZ.10
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
Billy Biggs Ottawa, Canada "When all else fails,
|
|
ae687@Freenet.carleton.ca read the instructions"
|