By : Jim Pinto, The combination of the three technology laws will soon bring startling changes. Within the next decade many people will have a couple of hundred computers embedded in their clothes, communicating through a "personal-area-network" (PAN), with wireless connection to the Internet. |
These three laws are generally accepted as governing the spread of technology:
Inevitably, other technologies, such as bio-chips and nano-technology will come to the forefront to move the equivalent of Moore’s Law inexorably forward. In the age of the telephone modem, bandwidth seemed limited. But, already DSL and cable modems have extended everyday Internet communications to 500 Kbps, and the upper limits for optical media broadband communications is clearly following Gilder’s Law. At the low end, third-generation (3G) cell-phone technology is just now being introduced, already allowing wireless data interchange at baud-rates at least equivalent to DSL. As more and more "nodes" become connected - products, equipment, people, organizations - Metcalfe’s Law comes into play. The effectiveness and value of the Internet continues to increase exponentially. The three laws work togetherThe combination of the three technology laws will soon bring startling changes. Within the next decade many people will have a couple of hundred computers embedded in their clothes, communicating through a "personal-area-network" (PAN), with wireless connection to the Internet.Personal intelligence and local effectiveness will be enhanced significantly through effortless connection to the vast resources of the Internet. In a similar timeframe in the industrial automation business, we should expect that virtually all industrial I/O products and processes will have significantly expanded embedded intelligence and connectivity.
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