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The Future of the Net

Fuzzball963 writes "Kevin Kelly has an interesting article over at Wired on the development and future of the web. In it, he argues that in ten years the desktop OS will become obsolete in favor of a Web based one, and that content on the web will be automatically customized according to the device being used to access it (PDA, smartphone,etc)." From the article: "Today the nascent Machine routes packets around disturbances in its lines; by 2015 it will anticipate disturbances and avoid them. It will have a robust immune system, weeding spam from its trunk lines, eliminating viruses and denial-of-service attacks the moment they are launched, and dissuading malefactors from injuring it again. The patterns of the Machine's internal workings will be so complex they won't be repeatable; you won't always get the same answer to a given question. It will take intuition to maximize what the global network has to offer. The most obvious development birthed by this platform will be the absorption of routine. The Machine will take on anything we do more than twice. It will be the Anticipation Machine."

14 of 317 comments (clear)

  1. Riiiiiiight by HyperChicken · · Score: 5, Funny

    Today the nascent Machine routes packets around disturbances in its lines; by 2015 it will anticipate disturbances and avoid them. It will have a robust immune system, weeding spam from its trunk lines, eliminating viruses and denial-of-service attacks the moment they are launched, and dissuading malefactors from injuring it again. The patterns of the Machine's internal workings will be so complex they won't be repeatable; you won't always get the same answer to a given question. It will take intuition to maximize what the global network has to offer. The most obvious development birthed by this platform will be the absorption of routine. The Machine will take on anything we do more than twice. It will be the Anticipation Machine.

    Yeah! And we'll have flying cars, jet packs, and nanobots working through our blood stream. And McDonalds food that causes you to loose weight and reduces your cholesterol. Plus TVs at the bottom of toddlers bowls. Don't forget money trees, they'll be there too. Oh, and California will break off and float into the ocean. Not to mention IPv6, HDTV, and hydrogen cars.

    All predictions of the future have been wrong. Why will this one be any different?

    --
    Free of Flash! Free of Flash!
    1. Re:Riiiiiiight by dsginter · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeah! And we'll have flying cars, jet packs, and nanobots working through our blood stream.

      And maybe I'm a Chinese Jet Pilot.

      --
      More
    2. Re:Riiiiiiight by MindStalker · · Score: 5, Funny

      The rest I almost believed.. But IPv6.. come on....

    3. Re:Riiiiiiight by jdludlow · · Score: 4, Funny

      Don't forget elevators that have "... the capacity to see dimly into the immediate future."

    4. Re:Riiiiiiight by truthsearch · · Score: 4, Insightful

      C'mon people. At least try to read between the lines. He's not trying to make an exact prediction of what's to come. He talking like a dreamer of what could be. He believes it's possible and phrases it as straight fact to drive the point harder.

      Lighten up. It's not a news article. It's an opinion, a different view of the world.

    5. Re:Riiiiiiight by Tongo · · Score: 5, Funny

      Heh, I just think the folks at wired found a new place to buy their pot from, and it has to be some pretty damn good shit.

  2. Didn't they say this ten years ago? by Kenja · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Didn't they say this ten years ago? Seems that every now and then somthing comes along that pulls the idiots from the woodwork. HTML, Netscape, Java, Active-X, .net etc have all been claimed as the end of desktop applications.

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    1. Re:Didn't they say this ten years ago? by toddbu · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Or the marketing guys. Seriously, isn't this how Microsoft works? Paint a rosy picture of the future and then tell everybody to hang onto their cash and avoid buying competing products until you can get one from "someone you trust" who obviously has enough foresight to predict the future years in advance. I had to laugh when I saw the recent pictures of Microsoft execs pumping up a room full of people while showing off Vista. You'd think that they'd just cured cancer. Now just wait until sometime late in 2006 and you too can live in a better world.

      --
      If you don't want crime to pay, let the government run it.
  3. Dumb terminals? by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In it, he argues that in ten years the desktop OS will become obsolete in favor of a Web based one, and that content on the web will be automatically customized according to the device being used to access it (PDA, smartphone,etc).

    Wouldn't that be returning to the "dumb terminals" of ye olde times? Instead of having a computer, you just had a keyboard and monitor. Now you have a web browser.

  4. What a load of... by Space+cowboy · · Score: 5, Interesting


    Unjustified rhetoric will only take you so far: "the plausibility of the impossible", "This view is spookily godlike" etc. etc. Yes, the net has now got some useful services and some cool ideas have become almost mundane - searching for papers used to be a day-long job at the university library, now it's a google away...

    The problem with saying, we've come this far this fast is that (as insurance agents say) past performance is no guarantee of future performance. The key word is guarantee. Any "vision" statement is necessarily an extrapolation of the current state, not an interpolation, and the two have wildly different error-bars associated with their predictions...

    As for the rise of the machines (which seems to be the postulate), there is a theory that intelligence is a sort of "heat" effect - a result of interconnectivity rather than a creator of it.First, however, you need state at every node, control transmissions between nodes, and *meaning* to be understood by the nodes. The first tentative step towards this could be the semantic web that people have been trying to get work for years now - without significant success...

    Suns slogan may be "the network is the computer", but that doesn't mean every network is a computer! It doesn't "process" emails, it's a transport for them. It doesn't "process" web-searches, again it's a transport. The computation is done at the nodes, not within the network.

    I suppose you could make the argument that these are micro-ops compared to the macro-results, if you consider the internet a computer, but I still don't think it stands up. In fact, I think (apart from the history lesson) the whole piece is just page-filler.

    Simon

    --
    Physicists get Hadrons!
  5. Haha, sure. by FLAGGR · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just like we're about due for flying cars and moon bases by now, right?

    The internet isn't going to drastically change, it's too much of a (working) mess to just roll out v2.0.9-r11. I happen to like having my OS the way it is, and I'm assuming everyone here on slashdot would rather waste the raw materials it takes to make the cpu's that power our computers than run our OS in Internet Explorer and a Java VM. Heh. I want my 10GHz geforce card, 500THz cpu and 5TB of RAM, my stage 1 installed gentoo, my OSX, and everything else. Crazy predictions of the "future" by some random guy with a keyboard can bite my ass.

  6. Okay by jetkust · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well, I, for one, welcome our new omnipotant internet Machine God overlords 10 years into the future.

  7. "Ten Years" by pojo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Whenever I hear someone predicts something for ten years in the future, I know they chose that number because

    -it's too long to be demonstrably false and
    -it's just short enough to seem relevant.

    But yeah, this is just nonsense.

  8. Re:Largely bollocks.. by Rei · · Score: 4, Funny

    > What is 1+1?

    Two.

    > What is 1+1?

    An equation.

    > What is 1+1?

    The same question that you asked twice previously.

    > What is 1+1?

    A way for you to harass me.

    > What is 1+1?

    I'm leaving, and taking your music collection with me.

    --
    POTUS Witch Hunt tracker: 75 charges filed against 19 witches, 4 witches cooperating and 5 witches have pled guilty.