Home arrow News arrow Start the Internet again from Scratch
Start the Internet again from Scratch PDF Print E-mail

Start the Internet again from Scratch

While it has taken the better part of four decades for the internet to get to where it is today, the explosion of computer power and internet bandwidth has led some US researchers to argue that the internet should be built again from scratch to achieve stability and security, and cure many of the problems with today's web.

The internet has grown so fast it far beyond what it was originally designed for, leaving a mesh of different technologies to work together on a creaking infrastructure built well before broadband and quad-core cpu’s were even thought about. While it works well for some applications, according to Rutgers University professor Dipankar Raychaudhuri it’s a miracle that the web works as well as it does today.

Raychaudhuri is one of a growing number of voices calling for a clean slate and radical re-thinking of underlying architecture to improve future traffic flow and quell security concerns.

According to AustralianIT, universities such as Rutgers, Stanford, Princeton, Carnegie Mellon and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are among US universities researching clean slate projects. The US Department of Defence is also looking into a system, as is the European Union with its Future Internet Research and Experimentation (FIRE).

If one of the competing projects gets off the ground, billions will be required to update infrastructure, hardware and software, with the new internet growing slowly over a period of around 15 years before a complete switch over is made.

This time around too, instead of a bunch of computer geeks plugging away in a basement on their own there will be a lot of eyes following the development of the real Web2.0.

Are you not sure about web technology? Call us on 0800 0430764 to discuss what's best for you

 

More News

Newsfeeds

EQ Newsfeed

Join our Mailing List


Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional   Valid CSS!  payments powered by worldpay

©1997-2008 EQ MEDIA Limited. All Rights Reserved. Website Design , Development and Marketing.
Designated trademarks and brands appearing in this website are the sole property of their respective owners.
Use of the EQ MEDIA website www.eqmedia.co.uk constitutes acceptance of the EQ MEDIA Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.