Archive for the ‘internet’ category: Page 314
Aug 18, 2015
Samsung says we can achieve Earth-wide Internet via 4,600 micro-satellites
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: internet
A new report from tech giant Samsung proposes that a fleet of roughly 4,600 micro-satellites orbiting Earth could solve our impending data crisis.
Predicting that by 2028, 5 billion Internet users around the world will be collectively chewing through at least 1 zettabyte per month — to put that in perspective, 1 zettabyte is 1,000 exabytes, 1 exabyte is 1,000 petabytes, and 1 petabyte is 1,000 terabytes — the report says we’re going to have to think seriously about how we can deliver that. A constellation of tiny Internet-beaming satellites could be a viable option, it says, and Samsung could be the one to build it.
The report, entitled Mobile Internet from the Heavens, describes an Internet satellite system that will avoid the latency issues of current communications satellites by being positioned much closer to Earth. “Most modern communications satellites live in geostationary orbit, roughly 35,000 kilometres above the surface, and this imposes a hard limit on speed due to travel time for the data transmissions,” Graham Templeton writes for ExtremeTech. “Samsung wants to position its constellation in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) and thus reduce this delay.”
Aug 18, 2015
Cryptographers Develop Encryption Method Resistant to Future Quantum Attacks
Posted by Phillipe Bojorquez in categories: computing, encryption, internet, quantum physics
Cryptographers are working on new encryption methods able to protect today’s Internet communications from future quantum computers that can be able to break today’s cryptography techniques. The researchers have developed upgrades to the Internet’s core encryption protocol that will prevent quantum computer users from intercepting Internet communications.
Aug 14, 2015
Google’s New Alphabetical Order — By Vauhini Vara | The New Yorker
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in categories: big data, business, innovation, internet
“In one sense, Page and Brin are just formalizing an arrangement that has evidently existed at Google for the past several years—the two of them at the helm of a company largely occupied with seeking out new and strange areas of innovation. The bet, it seems, is that this arrangement will improve the chances that Page and Brin’s unconventional investments will pan out—and that, if they don’t, the rest of the company will be better insulated from its founders’ mistakes. Until then, Sundar Pichai can focus on the boring, plodding business of actually making money.”
Tags: Google, investment, management, R&D
Aug 6, 2015
Japanese Court: Bitcoin Cannot be Owned
Posted by Philip Raymond in categories: bitcoin, cryptocurrencies, economics, government, internet
Responding to this nugget from Engadget:
Tokyo’s district court has ruled that it’s not possible for people to own bitcoin, and therefore they cannot sue for compensation in the wake of Mt. Gox’s collapse.
The ruling comes days after the head of the world’s largest bitcoin exchange was arrested on charges of fraud. Judge Masumi Kurachi felt that bitcoins do not possess “tangible qualities” to constitute owned property. Mt. Gox held thousands of individual accounts, and so there’s plenty of angry customers looking for compensation.
Continue reading “Japanese Court: Bitcoin Cannot be Owned” »
Aug 6, 2015
In Tech, the Smartphone is the Center | a16z
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in categories: hardware, innovation, internet, software
Tag: Smartphone
Jul 30, 2015
Google’s Internet balloons will soon connect all of Sri Lanka with Wi-Fi
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: internet
It will be the first country in the world to have universal Internet coverage.
Google has teamed up with the Sri Lankan government to deliver broadband Internet to every region of the island nation, making it the first country in the world to have universal Internet coverage. The initiative is part of Google’s Project Loon, which aims to provide cheap or free Wi-Fi to people in remote rural areas around the world via a fleet of huge helium-filled balloons floating way up in the stratosphere.
Jul 25, 2015
IBM believes blockchain is an “elegant solution” for Internet of Things
Posted by Rob Chamberlain in categories: automation, big data, bitcoin, complex systems, disruptive technology, information science, internet
Quoted: “IBM’s first report shows that “a low-cost, private-by-design ‘democracy of devices’ will emerge” in order to “enable new digital economies and create new value, while offering consumers and enterprises fundamentally better products and user experiences.” “According to the company, the structure we are using at the moment already needs a reboot and a massive update. IBM believes that the current Internet of Things won’t scale to a network that can handle hundreds of billions of devices. The operative word is ‘change’ and this is where the blockchain will come in handy.”
Read the article here > https://99bitcoins.com/ibm-believes-blockchain-elegant-solut…of-things/
Jul 18, 2015
The $100 Million Content Farm That’s Killing the Internet — Charles Buzz | Motherboard
Posted by Seb in category: internet
“This week, the viral aggregator ViralNova was acquired for $100 million dollars. Meanwhile, the Pitchfork spin-off film criticism site The Dissolve ceased operations with an internet_meaningful blogpost entitled “The End.” The divergence between the missions and lifecycles of these two media projects that both launched in 2013 leave me wondering, “WTF is value?” It is certainly not creating #niche content for ‘intelligent audiences.’ Over the past two years, we’ve learned that there isn’t any actual monetizable ‘cultural value’ in building a content farm with an authoritative voice or domination of a niche area. Instead, it is more important to chase quantifiable human metrics by shoving lowbrow content in front of Facebook users. This is exactly what ViralNova has done better than most content farms–it figured out the current system and #growth_hacked the hell out of it.” Read more
Jul 10, 2015
The Future of the Web Looks a Lot Like Bitcoin — Morgen E. Peck | IEEE Spectrum
Posted by Seb in categories: bitcoin, computing, internet
“We lack ‘true agency’ on the Internet. That is to say, all of the data we create online and all of the operations we execute are handled for us by centralized servers, most of which sit in massive data centers operated by corporations and government institutions. We depend on these servers for everything.”