On Thu, 29 Aug 1996, Perry E. Metzger wrote:
Vadim Antonov writes:
Perry E. Metzger <perry@piermont.com> wrote:
Raw bandwidth is inherently cheap. Undersea lines are even fairly cheap, except nasty government price fixing keeps them expensive. Switching equipment is expensive right now but Moore's Law takes care of that over the years.
Excuse me, but bandwidth demand doubles in about half year, while Moore's law is that semiconductor capacity doubles every 2 years. There's no indication that this will change any time soon.
Nice brick wall :)
I doubt it. The curve is racing upward now because of all the people who are suddenly connecting to the net. Once a large fraction of them are on the curve will slow dramatically -- demand for bandwidth will continue to increase, but only as fast as the customers can eat it, which is by definition related to how fast their equipment runs.
This whole thing is very reminiscent of what happened with fax machine production a decade or so ago, and what happened with phone installs about a century ago.
There will be some problems between now and the time things slow down, but...
Networks are by definition designed for one computer to talk with many other computers. Under the ideal situation the computers would talk to each other at the same speed it talks to its self (bus bandwidth, memory speed) creating a single virtual computer. Due to the engineering constraints of doing this, using the bandwidth that is available, applications have been written that are "network specific" eg. slow. This constraint will always drive bandwidth to higher speeds. Thus it follows Moore's Law as chips get faster, so will computers and conversly - bandwidth. There is no end in sight for the need of more bandwidth. /stb --- Stephen Balbach "Driving the Internet To Work" VP, ClarkNet due to the high volume of mail I receive please quote info@clark.net the full original message in your reply.