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Stanford Researchers Set Internet Speed Record

 
 
Reply Sat 8 Mar, 2003 08:07 am
Quote:
Stanford Researchers Set Internet Speed Record
Fri March 7, 2003 07:33 PM ET
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Researchers at a Stanford University-affiliated research center said on Friday they had found a way to send data across the Internet more than 3,500 times faster than the typical broadband connection.
The technical breakthrough set an Internet speed record too fast to be of use with present-day computers, but could open the way for scientists to share and ship massive databases around the world, researchers said.
In a recent trial, a team of scientists at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, California Institute of Technology, Dutch research institute NIKHES, and the University of Amsterdam sent the equivalent of four hours of DVD movies nearly 7,000 miles across fiber-optic lines in less than a minute.
The uncompressed data sped along at 923 megabits per second for 58 seconds from Sunnyvale, California, to Amsterdam via Chicago during the test.
Findings from the trial may be applied in networks over the next one to two years for scientists working in the data-rich field of particle physics, said Les Cottrell, assistant director of Stanford Linear Accelerator Center's Computing Services.
"People will no longer have to ship large planeloads of packages around the world," Cottrell said.
"It brings to people's attention that the way we do science today and the way we conduct business could change radically," he said. "Scientists will be able to really collaborate without ever having to leave their homes."
Cottrell said researchers are conducting further trials in a bid to set even higher transmission speeds.
For their recent trial, the researchers set up their network with personal computers in Sunnyvale and Amsterdam running the Linux operating system and connected locally to network routers at one gigabit per second.
Additionally, routers in Sunnyvale, Chicago and Amsterdam were connected to each other with 10-gigabit fiber-optic links.
The cost of the trial was about $2.2 million, showing the investment needed to create such a network is within the reach of many businesses, though such a network's capacity is likely more than what most businesses require, Cottrell said.
"It shows you can do this today with standard off-the-shelf components and the best of today's networks," Cottrell said. "We didn't have to do any magic to do it."


Link to Internet Speed Story


Will a tchnnology like this affect your business in any way? Personally? Do you think that the average internet consumer would want, or would pay for this sort of speed were it available? When it becomes available, what would YOU pay for it?
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 905 • Replies: 3
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Dartagnan
 
  1  
Reply Mon 10 Mar, 2003 10:49 am
I just hope this doesn't provide spammers with a quicker delivery system. There's enough of that flying around already!
0 Replies
 
JoanneDorel
 
  1  
Reply Mon 10 Mar, 2003 02:08 pm
No matter how fast it goes after using it for a while it will seem slow. Remeber before cable, before laser printing and bubble jet. Remember when it took a Xerox machine about five minutes to make a copy. The faster we go the slower it gets.
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roger
 
  1  
Reply Mon 10 Mar, 2003 02:11 pm
For sure, and whenever Intel makes a faster processor, Microsoft trots out a bigger, fatter, memory hog of an operating system - preinstalled on your computer.
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