Re: Internet 2010 - Predictions for 2010 from a Content Forum and NANOG 37 in San Jose

2006-06-21 Thread William B. Norton


Wow - so many private messages surrounding this. I'll summarize and
group the comments across the predictions below, but first answer some
of the questions I received.

One suggestion was to bury these in a timevault to be opened at NANOG
in 2010. Another suggestion was to bury these where I want the crops
to grow. Thanks for that suggestion.

Of course, predictions are not certain as this person put it: Unlike
market focus groups which pick the color of the product, the error
rate of groups of humans predicting the future is multiplicative

Several of you asked who provided the data.  These were engineers,
peering coordinators, some Director and VP level folks, network
planners and architects from Content and ISP Companies that you
probably all have heard about of and a handful of those you have not.
There was no glue sniffing involved.

Keep in mind too that to answer the initial question, the events had
to be both *plausible *and* remarkable* to the group assembled around
the table in 2010. I personally think many of these in the list fit
the criteria, but a few of the usual suspects said that they believe
almost none of these things are plausible (Stating this politely).
Below are a couple data points from the field surrounding the
predictions for 2010.

Content Provider Predictions for 2010
--
Here is the question I put to a group of Content Providers at a content forum:

We are sitting around this table in 2010 and we are commenting how
remarkable the last few years have been, specifically that:
1.  Video streaming volume has grown 100 fold
2.  Last mile wireless replaced local loop

These first two were echod by both the Content and ISP folks with a
variation only regarding the degree. Personally I don't see the local
loop going away in the next 4 years but a new wireless offering that
is being taken up big time is possible. Video traffic for YouTube was
said at the Peering BOF to grow 20%/month so there is a possibly
compounding growth rate here, so maybe we would debate the degree of
and length of the scaling growth. Clearly 100 fold increase would be
remarkable.

3.  Botnets (DDOS attacks) are still an issue

I'm surprised noone protested this one - if botnets are still a
problem for the much large capacity 2010 internet then we may have a
much more significant problem to deal with.

4.  Non-mechanical (i.e. Flash) Drives replaced internal hard
drives on laptops

One comment that this is not realisitic.

5.  10% of all cell phones are now video phones
6.  We have cell phones that we actually like

There appears to be debate surrounding this one - the person positing
this believes all the cell phones on the market suck (everyone has
some complaint about whatever phone and provider they have) and that
there will be a PDA + service that overcomes these objections and
become the new thing.

7.  The U.S. is insignificant traffic wise relative to the rest of the world
8.  Most popular question discussed around the table: 'How do we
operate business in China?'


9.  No online privacy. And the gov't watches everything


anonymous note to me
the future is now:

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/06/21/BUG9VJHB9C1.DTL
and
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2006/06/21/att_nsa/


10. 18-25 demographic is best reached w/ads on the Internet
11. Next Gen 3D on-line Social Networks are so successful
12. No physical network interfaces are needed


For laptops, phones, desktops, upto the DSL modem that's certainly the
case today. Beyond that we are into the wireless last mile stuff.


13. We will big brother ourselves (video cams 'who scraped my car?')
14. So many special purpose Internet apps – in car google maps, live
traffic updates, etc.
15. So much of our personal information is on the net


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060620/ap_on_bi_ge/police_phone_data


16. Video IM emerged as a dominant app
17. P2P will emerge for non-pirated videos – DRM in place and embraced


Most comments back suggested that the studios don't move this fast
releasing their crown jewels to unfamiliar and historically shameful
technology.


18. Voice calls are free, bundled with other things


Softbank in Japan does this now at least to other Softbank customers,
and pennies per minute elsewhere.  Come on, phone calls are almost
free already!


[some additional notable predictions from this group, but did not
receive simple majority validation]
IPTV replaces cable TV
IPv6 is adopted
Massive Internet Collapse – Metcalfe regurgitates his column
Flexible screen deployment
SPAM is no longer a problem in 2010
Windows embraces distributed computing
Net is not Neutral
Powerline Broadband emerges
FTTH massive deployment

Internet Service Providers Predictions for 2010
--
We didn't get to do this at the Peering BOF at NANOG, but I did some

Re: Internet 2010 - Predictions for 2010 from a Content Forum and NANOG 37 in San Jose

2006-06-20 Thread Jake Khuon

### On Tue, 20 Jun 2006 09:13:16 -0700, William B. Norton
### [EMAIL PROTECTED] casually decided to expound upon nanog@merit.edu
### the following thoughts about Internet 2010 - Predictions for 2010 from
### a Content Forum and NANOG 37 in San Jose:

WBN Content Provider Predictions for 2010
WBN --
WBN Here is the question I put to a group of Content Providers at a content 
forum:
WBN 
WBN We are sitting around this table in 2010 and we are commenting how
WBN remarkable the last few years have been, specifically that:

I think it might have been hedged upon in the responses you heard but I'm
suprised it wasn't specifically mentioned that there will be a rise in
customized content aggregation at the consumer level supported by mobility
aspects.  Think of RSS feeds but on steroids.  This will be promoted by the
next generation of portable PIM and communication devices (3G/4G?).  It will
incorporate the ability to rogram or dynamically figure out a workflow for
pulling content (or setting up content services for specific push) and will
be situationally aware for the user so as to present the right things in the
right format at the right time through the right interface.  A simple
example:

You're walking down the street and get hungry.  You pick up your
phone and tell it to find you a nearby restaurant that serves
gyros.  The phone would consult from its local cache of inromation
and if it throws a miss, will go out to one of the local searches
and after exchanging your locale, will get the names and locations
of several restaurants in the area.  It will also have gotten the
directions to them from where you are.  It also knows that you are
on foot so it will calculate several transportation options
depending on what's available including walking, taxi, busses,
trams, etc.  Say you pick the bus.  it will then determine where the
busses are and when the next available one will arrive by consulting
the bus service's information server which tracks bus locations via
GPS.  It can even be smart enough to determine if that bus will have
seats available by a combination of usage pattern data gathered over
the last week for the time of day and the current number of riders
on the bus.  It will then signal the bus to stop at the closest stop
to you and also tell you how to get to the bus stop.

At the same time, it'll go out and do other things like search for
the wait-time at the restaurant, pull up a menu, gather reviews of
the food, make reservations if necessary... etc.  Now mind you that
you might not use all the information that's being gathered but it
will still be available.  In addition to performing these tasks for
just the immediate need, the phone may also be constantly updating
itself with news stories (in a multimedia format) so you can read
during your trip to the restaurant.  If an accident occurs that's
along your bus route, it will determine if the bus service intends
to reroute around it and also calculate alternate routes for you so
you can get off at another stop and take some other form of
multimodal transportation to your destination.

Although I've just describe the function of but one device in one specific
situation, you can see the content access is numerous and diverse.  And of
course all this information will need to be compiled and presented in a
unified integrated format that's easy for the user to quickly digest without
getting information overload.  Now maybe the device doesn't do this all by
itself.  Maybe it talks to an information broker service which simply
streams the precompiled content back.  Now despite everything I've written
above, I've only very lightly touched the surface.


WBN Internet Service Providers Predictions for 2010
WBN --
WBN 
WBN We are sitting around this table in 2010 at NANOG and we are
WBN commenting how remarkable the last few years have been, specifically
WBN that:

Given the example from above, content providers will require more
geodiversity/georedundancy.  Local peering will become increasingly
important... especially with the wireless carriers.  ISPs will have to
become more savvy with regards to IP mobility.  This will probably be the
eventual driver for native IPv6 deployment.  Customers will engage in more
dynamic traffic shaping at the CPE.  There will be an increase in
service-based peering clubs/unions.  There will be ann increase in demand
for seamless layer-1 handoff.  The ability to go from wireline to wireless
to content push direct to a third-party display and input interface will
become smoother regardless of how the end devices are network homed.


--
/*===[ Jake Khuon [EMAIL