Title: Internet and Society
1Internet and Society
2Introduction
- 50 minutes is a very short time to compress what
I wish to say about the internet and todays
society. I will try and bring up the important
events, people and technology to give you a
sampling of the development of the Internet and
in particular, the WWW and it effects on Society.
Hopefully, during the talk we will use the WWW
for reference.
3Objectives and style of talk
- Objectives
- Give audience the feel for how modern computer
technology, political and economic events have
lead to todays Internet world - Show that there are many different views of how
thing took place and the importance of each. - Style
- Chronological look at events and technological
developments, may go back when look at different
aspects of the talk - Present different points of view (not necessarily
the view of the speaker).
4The development of the modern Internet and its WWW
- What was needed to develop Internet technology?
- Needed a political and economical environment
that motivates key people to develop concepts
that use technological enablers that in turn
leads to and, sometimes can, facilitate a
technology that produces new and original uses of
the technologies.
5Society - Global digital divide
- The global digital divide is a term used to
describe - great disparities in opportunity to access the
Internet and the information and
educational/business opportunities tied to this
access between developed and developing
countries - Lu, Ming-te (2001). Digital divide in
developing countries. Journal of Global
Information Technology Management (43), pp.
1-4. - Retrieved from http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globa
l_digital_divide
6(No Transcript)
7- The World Is Flat A Brief History of the
Twenty-first Century - Thomas L. Friedman (an Economist) looks at
globalization with a special emphasis on the
early 21st century. It was first released in 2005
and was later released as an new edition in 2006.
- Friedman examples explains that companies in
India and China are becoming part of large global
complex supply chains that extend across national
boundaries through a process called outsourcing
providing everything from call centers to X-ray
interpretation by overseas medical staff to
component manufacturing. - Friedman defines ten "flatteners" that have
leveled the global playing field and allowed the
world to become flat.
8Friedmans ten "flatteners"
- Friedman feels that his first three flatteners
have become a crude foundation of a whole new
global platform for collaboration. - 1 Collapse of Berlin Wall-(11/09/1989) The
collapse of the Berlin wall which ended the cold
war Friedman sees as the starting point for
leveling the global playing field. Friedman
believes that this event not only marked the end
of the Cold war, it has allowed people from other
side of the wall to join the economic
mainstream. - 2 Netscape - (8/9/1995) with their Web
Browser broadened the audience for the Internet.
Expanding the role from its roots as a
communications medium used primarily by
scientists. - 3 Workflow software The ability of machines to
talk to other machines with no humans involved. - 4 Open sourcing Communities uploading and
collaborating on online projects. Friedmans
examples include open source software, Blogs, and
Wikipedia. Friedman considers Open sourcing "the
most disruptive force of all to the old order. - 5 Outsourcing Friedman postulates that
outsourcing has allowed companies to split
service and manufacturing activities into
components, where each component performed in
most efficient, cost-effective way.
9Friedman lists ten "flatteners" that have leveled
the global playing field
- 6 Offshoring Offshoring, the manufacturing
equivalent of outsourcing. - 7 Supply chaining Friedman compares the modern
retail supply chain to a river, and uses Wal-Mart
as the best example of a company using technology
to streamline item sales, distribution, and
shipping. - 8 Insourcing Friedman uses UPS as a prime
example for insourcing, where the company's
employees perform services--beyond shipping--on
behalf of another company. For example, UPS
itself repairs Toshiba computers on behalf of
Toshiba. The work is done at the UPS hub, by UPS
employees. - 9 In-forming Google and other search engines
are the prime example. "Never before in the
history of the planet have so many people-on
their own-had the ability to find so much
information about so many things and about so
many other people", writes Friedman. - 10 "The Steroids" Personal digital equipment
like mobile phones, iPods, personal digital
assistants, instant messaging, and voice over IP
or VOIP
10Flattener 1 Collapse of Berlin
Wall-(11/09/1989)
- After WW II a cold war was in place causing a
bi-polar world order between communism vs.
liberal democracy with capitalism meant that a
technology race was still on. - The end of the cold war following the break up of
the Soviet Union Left the world with one super
power and the end of the Bi-polar world order.
11Flattener 1 Search for new World Order
- Francis Fukuyama
- The End of History and the Last Man (1989)
- "What we may be witnessing is not just the end of
the Cold War, or the passing of a particular
period of post-war history, but the end of
history as such that is, the end point of
mankind's ideological evolution and the
universalization of Western liberal democracy as
the final form of human government."
12Flattener 1 Search for new World Order
- Samuel Phillips Huntington Countered Fukuyama
with The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking
of World Order - It is my hypothesis that the fundamental source
of conflict in this new world will not be
primarily ideological or primarily economic. The
great divisions among humankind and the
dominating source of conflict will be cultural.
Nation states will remain the most powerful
actors in world affairs, but the principal
conflicts of global politics will occur between
nations and groups of different civilizations.
The clash of civilizations will dominate global
politics. The fault lines between civilizations
will be the battle lines of the future.
13Samuel Phillips Huntington
- His ideas LETS USE THE WWW TO LOOK AT HIS
IDEAS! - The clashes of civilizations
142 Netscape - (8/9/1995)
- with their Web Browser broadened the audience
for the Internet. Expanding the role from its
roots as a communications medium used primarily
by scientists. - Why Netscape? Let us explore the start of the WWW
(World Wide Web (or the Web)). The WWW was
invented by Tim Berners-Lee but it was for
Scientists to put their papers in a public
domain. - Definition of the WWW? The World Wide Web (or
the "Web") is a system of interlinked, hypertext
documents accessed via the Internet. From
Wikipedia - ALSO SEE CERN
- The 2 WWW components are hypertext and the
Internet, lets look at these two technologies - What influenced Berners-Lee?
15Hypertext
- A key person with a revolutionary idea 1945
Vannevar Bush describes a memory extender device
- memex - in an article in the Atlantic Monthly
titled As We Think - Bushs memex device, as defined in the article
describes - Storage of all records/articles/communications
- Items can be retrieved by indexing, keywords,
cross - references (now called hyperlinks)
- One of Bushs thoughts was that retrieval was to
be Interactive and nonlinear
16Hypertext Supporting Technology at the time of
Bushs article
- Due to the technology of the time Bush envisioned
the system on microfilm - Computing Technology at the time of Bushs
article! (See the web site Bad Predictions) - Thomas Watson, chairman of IBM, 1943
- "I think there is a world market for maybe five
computers." - Where a calculator on the ENIAC is equipped with
18,000 vacuum tubes and weighs 30 tons, computers
in the future may have only 1,000 vacuum tubes
and weigh only 1.5 tons." -- Popular Mechanics,
1949
17Hypertext Importance of Bush?
- Bush had defined concepts that could be called
Hypertext and Browsing - Bush did not have the technological enabling
underpinning, he was thinking of microfilm as the
enabling technology.
18Business and Computers
- Prediction The editor in charge of business books
for Prentice Hall, 1957 - "I have traveled the length and breadth of this
country and talked with the best people, and I
can assure you that data processing is a fad that
won't last out the year." --.
19Hypertext Key Person Ted Nelson Professor of
Sociology Vassar College
- 1965 Ted Nelson coins the term hypertext
- Think of information not as linear flow but as
interconnected nodes - Nelson stated that - Computers can help people,
not just scientist and business - Nelson was greatly influenced by Bushs MEMEX
- Non-linear browsing structure
- Project Xanadu was first attempt to use hypertext
- Original documents of the definition of hypertext
are on http//xanadu.com/XUarchive/
20Hypertext Technology enablers
- Nelson was too early!
- The enabling technology of the time was not up to
what was needed! - 1960s was an interesting Decade - Computers
still too expensive for individuals. However,
computers were making major inroads into the
business world. - Computer hardware and computer programming
languages made big advances
21Some additional work on Hypertext
- 1968 Van Dam others at Brown University
develop a Hypertext Editing and File Retrieval
Systems - Basically, when Burners-Lee defined the Spec for
the WWW a lot of work had been done before him.
22The second component of the WWW the Internet, the
method of data transmission
- ARPAnet
- Intended for Military and defense research
- Implemented in 1969 by ARPA (Advanced Research
Projects Agency of DOD) - Networked computer systems of a dozen
universities and institutions with 56KB
communications lines - Grandparent of todays Internet
- Intended to allow computers to be shared
- Became clear that key benefit was allowing fast
communication between researchers
electronic-mail (email) - Did not have hypertext documents!
23ARPAnets goals
- Allow multiple users to send and receive info at
same time - Network operated using a packet switching
technique - Digital data sent in small packages called
packets - Packets contained data, address info,
error-control info and sequencing info - Greatly reduced transmission costs of dedicated
communications lines - Network designed to be operated without
centralized control - If portion of network fails, remaining portions
still able to route packets
24Design Philosophy (I have not verified, seen this
in textbooks and presentations)
- In case of a nuclear attack, if a section of the
network disappeared, the entire network would not
be destroyed. To that end, the network was
decentralized, data was distributed among all the
network computers, and data was transferred in
small packets. - The network design was based on observations of
the human brain, since brain functions don't rely
on a centralized set of cells. Brain circuitry
can be rerouted around damaged cells and neural
networks can be re-created over new pathways.
25More perditions (Personal Computer development)
- 1968 "But what...is it good for?" -- Engineer at
the Advanced Computing Systems Division of IBM,
commenting on the microchip. - 1977 "There is no reason anyone would want a
computer in their home."- - Ken Olson, President, Chairman/Founder of
Digital Equipment Corp.,
26Enabler Personal Computers (PC)
- PC were were originally Text and command-based
- Initially For businesses sold lots
- Performed lots of tasks the
- general public wanted done
- Major advance to allow home use was Graphics
Users Interface (GUI) WYSIWYG or the - WIMP environment
- Windows
- Icons
- Menus
- Pointers
27Moore's Law and PCs
Processor Year of Transistors 4004 1971
2,250 8008 1972 2,500 8080 1974 5,000
8086 1978 29,000 286 1982 120,000386
processor 1985 275,000 486 DX processor 1989
1,180,000 Pentium 1993 3,100,000 Pentium II
1997 7,500,000 Pentium III 1999 24,000,000
Pentium 4 2000 42,000,000
28Computer Operating Systems from Batch up to WIMP
interaction
?
WIMP (Windows)
User Adoption (not productivity!)
Command Line
Educated
Batch
Professionals
Experts
?
1940s 1950s
1980s - Present
1960s 1970s
29WWW
- Tim Burners-Lee gave the world the WWW.
- As we have seen most of the NEEDED components of
the WWW were already defined independently. It
need an organization to support it and the
network. - The network gained a public face in the 1990s.
On August 6, 1991, CERN publicized the new
World Wide Web project, two years after
Burners-Lee had begun creating Hypertext markup
Language (HTML), Hypertext transfer protocol
(HTTP), Uniform Resource Locator (URL) and the
first few Web pages at CERN very important. - Right man in the right place at the right time!
30The bloom of the WWW
- Why did ARPAnet allow the use of the Internet to
the public? - Perhaps because of flattener 1 (the cold war is
over)? - Why did Friedman used Netscape as flattener 3
instead of Tim Burners-Lee? - CERN was still for scientist with static web
pages displaying research papers - Netscape became became aggressive with developing
a browser that had dynamic web pages (good
example is JavaScript) were attractive to
businesses and individual users.
31Netscapes JavaScript
- Allowed program code to be executed in the users
PC - sandbox metaphor - web pages code could not
alter the users computer outside of the web
pages HTML - Could keep history by storing cookies
- This put part of the processing in the users
computer reliving the server of its great
processing burden
32 The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
- As a reaction to Netscapes domination of the WWW
in the 1990s with its browser technology, the W3C
was formed. - W3C is the main international standards
organization for the World Wide Web (W3). - The Consortium is headed by Sir Tim Berners-Lee,
the primary author of the original URL (Uniform
Resource Locator), HTTP (HyperText Transfer
Protocol) and HTML (HyperText Markup Language)
specifications, the principal technologies that
form the basis of the World Wide Web. Wikipedia
33Flattener 9 In-forming
- Search engines are the tools to find the
information on the WWW. Google was a major
pioneer of the search engine - Google was co-founded by Larry Page and Sergey
Brin while they were students at Stanford
University, and the company was first
incorporated as a privately held company on
September 7, 1998. Google's IPO took place on
August 19, 2004, raising US1.67 billion, making
it worth 23 billion. Wikipedia
34New term, 1997, Extelligence
- Extelligence is a term coined by Ian Stewart and
Jack Cohen in their 1997 book Figments of
Reality. - Definition - Extelligence is defined as all the
cultural capital that is available to us in the
form of tribal legends, folklore, nursery rhymes,
books, videotapes, CD-ROMs, etc. - Extelligence is in contrast with intelligence.
Intelligence is the knowledge and cognitive
processes within the brain. - The WWW is the ultimate Extelligence source!
35The World is Spiky IS Freidman right? Just when
we were getting used to the World becoming Flat
now it is reported as spiky by another
academic.
- THE ATL ANTIC MONTHLY OCTOBER 2005 THE AGENDA THE
ATL ANTIC MONTHLY - Richard Florida, the author of The Flight of the
- Creative Class, is the Hirst Professor of Public
Policy - at George Mason University.
- Florida use indicators of which there is
- SCIENTIFIC CITATIONS
- The worlds most prolific and influential
- scientific researchers overwhelmingly
- reside in U.S. and European cities.
- PATENTS
- Just a few places produce most of the worlds
- innovations. Innovation remains difficult
without - a critical mass of financiers, entrepreneurs,
- and scientists, often nourished by world-class
- universities and flexible corporations.
36Florida's indicator 1 Population
- The most obvious challenge to the flat-world
hypothesis is the explosive growth of cities
worldwide. - A shows the uneven distribution of the worlds
population. Five megacities currently have more
than 20 million inhabitants each. Twenty-four
cities have more than 10 million inhabitants,
sixty more than 5 million, and 150 more than 2.5
million. Population density is of course a crude
indicator of human and economic activity. - Causing a divide between the urban and rural
population of nations which is causing a friction
in their societies
371 Population - Stronger Economic Production
- New Yorks economy alone is about the size of
Russias or Brazils, and Chicagos is on a par
with Swedens. Together New York, Los Angeles,
Chicago, and Boston have a bigger economy than
all of China.
38The World is Spiky Population
Map by Tim Gulden, University of Maryland. From
Richard Florida, The World is Spiky, The
Atlantic Monthly, October 2005
39Light Emission as indicator 2 Stronger Economic
Production
- Unfortunately, no single, comprehensive
information source exists for the economic
production of all the worlds cities. A rough
proxy is available, though is the widely
circulated view of the world at night, with
higher concentrations of lightindicating higher
energy use and, presumably, stronger economic
productionappearing in greater relief. U.S.
40The World is Spiky Light Emissions
Map by Tim Gulden, University of Maryland. From
Richard Florida, The World is Spiky, The
Atlantic Monthly, October 2005
41Indicator 3 Innovation theengine of economic
growth(WIPO Patents)
- The World Intellectual Property Organization
recorded about 300,000 patents from resident
inventors in more than a hundred nations in 2002
(the most recent year for which statistics are
available). Nearly two thirds of them went to
American and Japanese inventors. Eighty-five
percent went to the residents of just five
countries (Japan, the United States, South Korea,
Germany, and Russia).
42Innovation theengine of economic growth(U.S.
Patents)
- In 2003 India generated 341 U.S. patents and
China 297. The University of California alone
generated more than either country. IBM accounted
for five times as many as the two combined. - Nearly 90,000 of the 170,000 patents granted in
the United States in 2002 went to Americans. - The next ten most innovative countries including
the usual suspects in Europe plus Taiwan, South
Korea, Israel, and Canada produced roughly 25,000
more (patents).
43The World is Spiky Patents
Map by Tim Gulden, University of Maryland. From
Richard Florida, The World is Spiky, The
Atlantic Monthly, October 2005
44Indicator 4, Scientific advances The residence
of the1,200 most heavily cited scientists
- Scientific advance is even more concentrated
than patent production. Most occurs not just in a
handful of countries but in a handful of cities
primarily in the United States and Europe.
Chinese and Indian cities do not even register.
As far as global innovation is concerned, perhaps
a few dozen places worldwide really compete at
the cutting edge.
45The World is Spiky Scientific Citations
Map by Tim Gulden, University of Maryland. From
Richard Florida, The World is Spiky, The
Atlantic Monthly, October 2005
46Some of Florida's comments
- This is not to say that Indians and Chinese are
not innovative. On the contrary, AnnaLee
Saxenian, of the University of California at
Berkeley, has shown that Indian and Chinese
entrepreneurs founded or co-founded roughly 30
percent of all Silicon Valley startups in the
late 1990s. But these fundamentally creative
people had to travel to Silicon Valley and be
absorbed into its innovative ecosystem before
their ideas became economically viable. Such
ecosystems matter, and there arent many of
them. - Creative people cluster not simply because they
like to be around one another or they prefer
cosmopolitan centers with lots of amenities,
though both those things count. They and their
companies also cluster because of the powerful
productivity advantages, economies of scale, and
knowledge spillovers such density brings. - So although one might not have to emigrate to
innovate, it certainly appears that innovation,
economic growth, and prosperity occur in those
places that attract a critical mass of top
creative talent. - On Friedman - In his view (Friedmans) , for
example, the emerging economies of India and
China combine cost advantages, high-tech skills,
and entrepreneurial energy, enabling those
countries to compete effectively for industries
and jobs. The tensions set in motion as the
playing field is leveled affect mainly the
advanced countries, which see not only
manufacturing work but also higher end jobs, in
fields such as software development and financial
services, increasingly threatened by offshoring.
47Conclusions
- Ideas can have influence many years after their
conception. - Many new ideas need technological underpinnings
that may not be available at the time of their
conception. - There is a debate about the future world order
and the distribution of wealth is the world
staying spiky or is it truly become flat. - My view The world is an evolving place. Look at
Japan in 1945, South Korea in mid-1950s and now!
I feel that Florida only gave us a snapshot of
today. Friedman could be right in that we are
evolving towards a flat world. - Things that are impeding this flatting process
are the friction between nations and war!
48Conclusions
- It is up to developing countries to create their
own versions of the environment of Silicon Valley
(co-operation between Industry, government and
academia). - The world will again be different in another
decade! - There has been more scientific development in the
last 50 years than all of human history prior. - I often point out to my students that the paces
of scientific discovery is in parallel with
Moores law. This is greatly assisted by ICT
development I use as an example how long did it
take it took Henry Biggs to calculate the log
tables. - There is bound to be new centers of excellence in
other countries in the future.