
At 10:27 AM 9/5/96 -0700, Timothy C. May wrote:
Robert Metcalfe, inventor of Ethernet and founder of 3COM, and how publisher of "Infoworld" and sailing enthusiast, was interviewed on CNBC a few minutes ago. He repeated his prediction of an "Internet collapse" in 1996, based on overuse, on bad pricing models, on lack of controls, and on other concerns.
Some are griping just to gripe. Metcalfe may have a valid prediction here. I have a machine that I use for work that is connected to the net via ethernet. No 28.8k bottlenecks involved. Most of the time I am lucky if I can exceed 14K bps to anything outside the local area. When I run traceroutes, the blockage is in MCI or Sprintnet land. (Except for the one to ftp.funet.fi early this week where where two of the machines somewhere in California were caught in some sort of weird DNS loop.) The bandwidth to the net has been oversold. If the government were *Really* concerned about "protecting the net", they would be on MCI and Sprint's cases, not looking for virtual terrorists. (Virtual Terrorists are to Terrorists the same way that Virtual Reality is to actual reality.) There have been days where you could not move anything at any reasonable speed from certain areas of the country. Yes, people have been predicting the end of the net (GIF/JPEG/WAV at 11!) since it was founded. In this case, I think that the person has enough network experience to be right. With the way things are now with oversold bandwidth, the DNS numbers getting close to being used up, many of the routers needing to be replaced and/or upgraded, and software that uses bandwidth like candy (phone conversations, video conferencing, huge interactive web page animations (like shockwave), real audio, and more as the marketing droids can sell you on it.), the chances of a west coast power-system style collapse does not seem that far from reality. (There are many who I know in the industry that are amazed that it has lasted this long.) On a smaller scale, those collapses happen in a small regional area, get fixed and things go on. But just like the earthquakes in California, everyone is waiting for "the Big One". (At least this one is preventable. Lets hope that the fixes can occur before the government gets involved, otherwise the net *IS* really doomed.) --- Alan Olsen -- alano@teleport.com -- Contract Web Design & Instruction `finger -l alano@teleport.com` for PGP 2.6.2 key http://www.teleport.com/~alano/ "We had to destroy the Internet in order to save it." - Sen. Exon "Microsoft -- Nothing but NT promises."