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CS6204 - WWW: Beyond the Basics
Internet for the masses
by Theodoros P. David
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The Challenge
Despite the explosive growth of the WWW
and the Internet in general, the percentage
of the world's population that gets online
is not as impressive.
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Problem #1: Internet can be accessed only through a computer.
Personal Computer vs Television
97% of US homes own a TV
65% of US homes do not own a PC
Why ?
PCs require technical sophistication to operate them
PCs are expensive (to buy & to maintain)
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Problem #2: Low Bandwidth to home users
Network Media
Most common Internet access: Analog Modem (14.4, 28.8, 33.6 kbps)
New Telecommunications Bill of 1996:
- Computer & Communications industries are free to
- provide their services in any telecommunication domain.
High Bandwidth to the home through existing networks.
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Internet Appliances
Network Computer (NC)
Oracle, Apple, IBM, Sun, Netscape
Network PC (NetPC)
Intel, Microsoft
-
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Network Computer - A family of Network Devices
Standard Desktop NC (
picture)
- For office or home. Includes keyboard & monitor.
NC TV
-
- For living room. Mostly for web access & entertainment use.
-
- Screen phone. For email, online yellow pages, travel reservations.
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Who will use the NC ?
- Corporations
- Intranets
- Home Consumers
- Web Browsing, Email, Entertainment, Simple applications.
- Education
- "A computer in every student's desk"?
- Developing Countries
- Lower cost than PCs.
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How the NC works ?
- Comply with Internet Standards
- Text, Pictures, Audio, Video
- Standards are either stored on the NC or downloaded from the network
as needed
- Central Processing Unit (CPU)
- Depends on the market each NC type is targeted at.
- (Pentium, 32-bit RISC down to a simple FPGA)
- Network Interface
- Currently: Analog modem, ISDN, Ethernet adapter, T1, ATM
- Future: Cablemodem, ADSL modem, Fast Ethernet
- Input/Output Interface
- Supports standard PC I/O interfaces
- Infrared Remote interfaces (remote control, wireless keyboard)
- Television Viewing (High quality (S)VGA monitor -> NTSC screen)
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Network Connections
Observations
- Often the bottleneck is the Last mile connection to the user.
- Home users are "consuming" much more information, than they are
"producing".
Asymmetric Network Technologies
- Huge Downstream Bandwidth
- Small Upstream Bandwidth
- Can be achieved using existing networks to the home.
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Cable TV Networks
- Cover 94% of US homes
- Problem: Most are one-way (downstream). Need to be upgraded to
two-way.
- Cable modems
- - Downstream bandwidth: (Shared) 500 kbps - 30 Mbps
- - Upstream bandwidth: (Shared) 96 kbps - 2 Mbps
- - Telephone return path option for one-way networks (analog modem)
- - Connected to PC/NC through Ethernet adapter (soon Fast Ethernet)
- Internet over cable (img)
- IEEE 802.14 working group committee.
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Telephone networks
Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN)
- - Advantage: It's already in the market.
- - Symmetric 56 or 128 kbps bandwidth over one telephone line (BRI).
- - Digital "modem": almost instantaneous connection.
Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL)
- - Downstream bandwidth: (Dedicated) 1.5 - 9 Mbps
- - Upstream bandwidth: (Dedicated) 16 - 640 kbps
- - 4kHz frequencies reserved for Plain Old Telephone System (POTS)
- conversations (can use telephone & Internet at the same time)
- - Sample ADSL connection
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Satellite Networks
- Hardware required:
- Satellite dish
- Analog line & modem
- Downstream Bandwidth: (Shared) 400 kbps
- Upstream bandwidth: 33.6 kbps (analog modem)
- Connects to PC/NC through ethernet adapter.
- DirectPC (shipping today)
- Sample satellite connection
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Conclusions
Network Computers mirror our world and our lives.
- People in everyday life do not maintain their
own electric, gas, and water supply.
- NCs will not exterminate PCs but they will complement them.
Asymmetric networks give to the hungry-for-bandwidth
"masses" an all-you-can-eat access to the Internet.
- Automobiles weren't very practical before governments
began paving roads. Internet appliances will not be very
usefull until users will have enough bandwidth.
- Don't solve all the bandwidth problems (e.g. video-conferencing).