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Communications

Submission + - Tech Scare - Quantum Depression from Quantum Communications? (esciencenews.com) 4

aisnota writes: Recently it looks as though despite naysayers, quantum communication with electrons is more than just imminent. The economic impact of near limitless broadband has yet to be predicted in any real sense until the following scenario shaped up after a bit of musing after reading this sort of motivated engineer.

"Our dream is to make quantum mechanics fully engineerable," said William Koehl, lead author and a graduate student in the Awschalom lab. "Much like a civil engineer is able to design a bridge based on factors such as load capacity and length span, we'd like to see a day when there are quantum engineers who can design a quantum electronic device based on specifications such as degree of quantum entanglement and quality of interaction with the surrounding environment."
Quantum Communications will impact the valuation before actual conversion to the technology in a profound way ahead of actual delivery of the technology itself. The long term value of telecommunications carriers is in the highest risk category from the whiff of this hitting because of market structures.

Picture this, you hear a background discussion of prices suddenly dipping for long haul communications. The telecommunications sales people chattering away on how all of the prospects vanished seemingly, mysteriously overnight.

Instead of the grousing generally though, you see near abject fear they know something ferocious has come upon their scene, their turf.

Quantum Communications apparently in this near future vision gets sold to long haul customers so they can avoid the high costs of renewals. The technology is barely produced at scale, it is just some magic boxes replacing end point fiber gear, but wait. They are using electrons instead of photons, so the fiber is superfluous and the chip set transceivers are only located geographically as a mere convenience.

Then the economics really hit home as this play by play simulation illustrates as a series of stages:
1.) Sudden changes in sales ability of long haul optical fiber transcontinental and transoceanic varieties slow rapidly to zero.
2.) Quant traders short carriage and transport to reflect that long haul fiber goes from asset to a liability nearly instantly.
3.) Technology placement actually occurs where IRU values are now zero with the bond or debt reset to worse than junk status.
4.) Carriers panic sell remaining links at unforeseen low prices thereby crushing revenues into a near suicide frenzy of last chance business.
5.) Cable companies realize that they are also vulnerable with their telecommunications side line business and follow suit.
6.) Bankruptcies of tier 2 regional carriers and tier 1 international carriers first start as orderly liquidations because of IRU value collapse.
7.) Cell phone carriers realize their underlying infrastructure is now in jeopardy with dependance on carriers going insolvent.
8.) Major cell phone carriers get abandoned because smart phone leaders decide they must sell direct, those cell phone carriers in turn loose all high end business.
9.) Phone services become sporadic in a panic with switches, segments revert to limited government controls via FCC mandate with military provisional orders.
10.) A difficult evolution occurs because the market is less patient than ever with disruptive technology chance while bandwidth availability shoots to 10 gigabit standard.

Okay the above is still just a guess of the impact. But the premise is real as it has been for any disruptive unstoppable technology. Just as unstoppable as the invasion of the new world by gun powder toting individuals looking for conquest and gold.

With so many wins for the disruptive player, read the contrast of value we see out there. Have you seen a modem lately, analog?

Change occurs very quickly and it is important to share your thoughts of quantum communications. Some physics major or others may say it is just going to be a very long time to never. Maybe the same kinds of people with no clue about the transistor or power of miniaturization.

But can you really put much stock when they say stop, will not happen?

History repeatedly shows this is the case where technology marches forward, faster than any anticipation of pundits.

Quantum Communications is the next big throw into the ring of change.

Please post your new ideas on how this near magical, yet dramatic set of changes are possible in numbered order.

Comment Always Wrong - Studio Executives are Short Sighted (Score 1) 417

The key here is that these executives want to feel important. Installation of a publicly mandated kill switch is a great ploy for power. The money is also key, plus think of the factor that those kill switches also may thwart competitive offerings.

Total world domination is all they care about.

Best bet is to not pirate or even watch their content but to produce your own and make it more popular to dilute their power. Do it quick before they strangle the last vestige of creativity away from the many so their few retains the media heroin pirated so much.

Comment Fair-Isaac also fails right siders in Credit Score (Score 0) 320

Note, right siders always seem to get the shaft.

ContentID, Fair-Isaac is more egregious in that they give little or no points to those paying early.

But if you miss one or two bills, then even if your history says you paid early dozens of times, guess what! They ding you hard!

Wish that Fair-Isaac gets class action sued over that penalty heavy system they monopolize as a close source score on your credit!

John Corzine probably has a high score, and you probably have a lower one, hmmm. something is wrong here, mighty wrong, ContentID wrong again!

No good deed goes unpunished. Welcome to be part of the ninety-nine percent.

Comment Adobe get James Gosling Debug Flash for Apple+G1 (Score 1) 510

Flash is woefully buggy as heck. Face facts, it only works good and does not shield the respective host systems from its weaknesses. Endless loops that sap power from the host machines occur regularly. All of it can be fixed, but Adobe just does not get it when it comes to sheer quality.

Now James Gosling, he knows how to make a bullet proof host environment with a similar type of state machine. Hire him to fix Flash and even Apple will be happy about it.

Plus perhaps James Gosling can get Flash recoded in a tight small team to actually even work natively in the Android Browser on a G1, that would prove it can work on iPhone with no problem given a chance.

Until then, HTML 5 will take all the thunder.

Rescue Flash? James Gosling is currently unemployed and unchallenged! Adobe, just recruit James Gosling and hand him the keys to the Flash kingdom with authority to absolutely rule upon its quality with his name splashed on it for reputation quality control.

Bingo Bango Enough Said...

Comment Where is Mark Lottor? IPV4 has plenty left to it! (Score 4, Interesting) 281

The large telecoms and cable outfits have tons of unused IP space that could be CIDR blocked out, think of the class A 24.X.X.X for instance that used to be @Home and Rodgers, large portions are empty! AT&T moved @Home to 12.X.X.X and then subsequently provides managed space to cable outfits like Mediacomm etc.

Now Mediacomm has just finally got around to getting its own space, is AT&T offering to CIDR out their precious class A?

No of course not, like some of the others, they get allocations from ARIN and sit on them instead of consolidating. They have scads of CIDR blocks used by all sorts of companies out there. Heck ARIN should just re-map some of those AT&T direct to the customers, let them keep the 12.X.X.X A Space.

Back in the day, Mark Lottor did mapping of all live ping able IP's before firewalls were so common and NAT extremely rare. If he were to make a comparison with whomever does like mapping today to those legacy maps and IP allocations, it would be a fascinating graphic to show the transformations and if by carrier, show how greedily the Worldcom/UUNets Sprints and Baby Bells have asked for space, color to their identity and now look to see many time those scattered CIDR blocks are empty. Sprint, old UUNet and Baby Bell CIDR's if unused, should get back into the pool.

Where is Mark Lottor and these newer guys with the latest IPV4 utilization's mapped out for the comparison analysis.

Enough said.

 

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