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hbgator
Sun 06 Apr, 2008

THE internet could soon be made obsolete.
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THE internet could soon be made obsolete.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> The scientists who pioneered it have now built a lightning-fast replacement capable of downloading entire feature films within seconds.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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At speeds about 10,000 times faster than a typical broadband connection,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>œthe gridâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> will be able to send the entire Rolling Stones back catalogue from Britain to Japan in less than two seconds.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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The latest spin-off from Cern,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the particle physics centre that created the web,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the grid could also provide the kind of power needed to transmit holographic images;<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> allow instant online gaming with hundreds of thousands of players;<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> and offer high-definition video telephony for the price of a local call.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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David Britton,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> professor of physics at Glasgow University and a leading figure in the grid project,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> believes grid technologies could <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>œrevolutioniseâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> society.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>œWith this kind of computing power,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> future generations will have the ability to collaborate and communicate in ways older people like me cannot even imagine,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> he said.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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The power of the grid will become apparent this summer after what scientists at Cern have termed their <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>œred buttonâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> day <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>-<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the switching-on of the Large Hadron Collider <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>(LHC)<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the new particle accelerator built to probe the origin of the universe.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> The grid will be activated at the same time to capture the data it generates.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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Cern,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> based near Geneva,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> started the grid computing project seven years ago when researchers realised the LHC would generate annual data equivalent to 56m CDs <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>-<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> enough to make a stack 40 miles high.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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This meant that scientists at Cern <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>-<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> where Sir Tim Berners-Lee invented the web in 1989 <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>-<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> would no longer be able to use his creation for fear of causing a global collapse.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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This is because the internet has evolved by linking together a hotchpotch of cables and routing equipment,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> much of which was originally designed for telephone calls and therefore lacks the capacity for high-speed data transmission.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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By contrast,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the grid has been built with dedicated fibre optic cables and modern routing centres,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> meaning there are no outdated components to slow the deluge of data.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> The 55,000 servers already installed are expected to rise to 200,000 within the next two years.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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Professor Tony Doyle,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> technical director of the grid project,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> said:<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>œWe need so much processing power,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> there would even be an issue about getting enough electricity to run the computers if they were all at Cern.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> The only answer was a new network powerful enough to send the data instantly to research centres in other countries.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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That network,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> in effect a parallel internet,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> is now built,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> using fibre optic cables that run from Cern to 11 centres in the United States,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Canada,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the Far East,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Europe and around the world.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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One terminates at the Rutherford Appleton laboratory at Harwell in Oxfordshire.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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From each centre,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> further connections radiate out to a host of other research institutions using existing high-speed academic networks.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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It means Britain alone has 8,000 servers on the grid system <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>“<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> so that any student or academic will theoretically be able to hook up to the grid rather than the internet from this autumn.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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Ian Bird,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> project leader for Cernâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>™s high-speed computing project,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> said grid technology could make the internet so fast that people would stop using desktop computers to store information and entrust it all to the internet.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>œIt will lead to whatâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>™s known as cloud computing,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> where people keep all their information online and access it from anywhere,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> he said.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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Computers on the grid can also transmit data at lightning speed.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> This will allow researchers facing heavy processing tasks to call on the assistance of thousands of other computers around the world.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> The aim is to eliminate the dreaded <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>œfrozen screenâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> experienced by internet users who ask their machine to handle too much information.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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The real goal of the grid is,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> however,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> to work with the LHC in tracking down natureâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>™s most elusive particle,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the Higgs boson.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Predicted in theory but never yet found,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the Higgs is supposed to be what gives matter mass.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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The LHC has been designed to hunt out this particle <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>-<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> but even at optimum performance it will generate only a few thousand of the particles a year.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Analysing the mountain of data will be such a large task that it will keep even the gridâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>™s huge capacity busy for years to come.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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Although the grid itself is unlikely to be directly available to domestic internet users,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> many telecoms providers and businesses are already introducing its pioneering technologies.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> One of the most potent is so-called dynamic switching,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> which creates a dedicated channel for internet users trying to download large volumes of data such as films.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> In theory this would give a standard desktop computer the ability to download a movie in five seconds rather than the current three hours or so.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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Additionally,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the grid is being made available to dozens of other academic researchers including astronomers and molecular biologists.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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It has already been used to help design new drugs against malaria,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the mosquito-borne disease that kills 1m people worldwide each year.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Researchers used the grid to analyse 140m compounds <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>-<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> a task that would have taken a standard internet-linked PC 420 years.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>œProjects like the grid will bring huge changes in business and society as well as science,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Doyle said.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>œHolographic video conferencing is not that far away.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Online gaming could evolve to include many thousands of people,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> and social networking could become the main way we communicate.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>œThe history of the internet shows you cannot predict its real impacts but we know they will be huge.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>

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Grim
Fri 18 Apr, 2008

Re: THE internet could soon be made obsolete.
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Sweet,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> I could download everything I could ever need with a connection that fast.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> I want it!<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>:D
