Deutsch | English | Español | Français | Italiano | Português | Русский | العربية | 日本語 | 简体中文 | 繁體中文 | 한국의 | Türk | Polski
LOGO
Global B2B portal for electronics and ICT industry
Product / Service Supplier Catalogs & Literature    
Search
or
home Product News Catalogs Web TV News & Topics Featured Articles Trade Shows Sourcing Help My allitwares
Featured Articles Content
allitwares > Featured Articles > Future internet aims to sever links with servers

Future internet aims to sever links with servers
Author: University of Cambridge Pressroom
Source From: University of Cambridge
Posted Date: 2013-11-01

A revolutionary new architecture aims to make the internet more “social” by eliminating the need to connect to servers and enabling all content to be shared more efficiently.

The prototype, which has been developed as part of an EU-funded project called “Pursuit”, is being put forward as a proof-of concept model for overhauling the existing structure of the internet’s IP layer, through which isolated networks are connected, or “internetworked”.

The Pursuit Internet would, according to its creators, enable a more socially-minded and intelligent system, in which users would be able to obtain information without needing direct access to the servers where content is initially stored.

Instead, individual computers would be able to copy and republish content on receipt, providing other users with the option to access data, or fragments of data, from a wide range of locations rather than the source itself. Essentially, the model would enable all online content to be shared in a manner emulating the “peer-to-peer” approach taken by some file-sharing sites, but on an unprecedented, internet-wide scale.

 

That would potentially make the internet faster, more efficient, and more capable of withstanding rapidly escalating levels of global user demand. It would also make information delivery almost immune to server crashes, and significantly enhance the ability of users to control access to their private information online.

While this would lead to an even wider dispersal of online materials than we experience now, however, the researchers behind the project also argue that by focusing on information rather than the web addresses (URLs) where it is stored, digital content would become more secure. They envisage that by making individual bits of data recognisable, that data could be “fingerprinted” to show that it comes from an authorised source.

Dr Dirk Trossen, a senior researcher at the University of Cambridge Computer Lab, and the technical manager for Pursuit, said: “The current internet architecture is based on the idea that one computer calls another, with packets of information moving between them, from end to end. As users, however, we aren’t interested in the storage location or connecting the endpoints. What we want is the stuff that lives there.”

“Our system focuses on the way in which society itself uses the internet to get hold of that content. It puts information first. One colleague asked me how, using this architecture, you would get to the server. The answer is: you don’t. The only reason we care about web addresses and servers now is because the people who designed the network tell us that we need to. What we are really after is content and information.”

In May this year, the Pursuit team won the Future Internet Assembly (FIA) award after successfully demonstrating applications which can, potentially, search for and retrieve information online on this basis. The breakthrough raises the possibility that almost anybody could identify specific pieces of content in fine detail, radically changing the way in which information is stored and held online.

For example, at the moment if a user wants to watch their favourite TV show online, they search for that show using a search engine which retrieves what it thinks is the URL where that show is stored. This content is hosted by a particular server, or, in some cases, a proxy server.

If, however, the user could correctly identify the content itself – in this case the show – then the location where the show is stored becomes less relevant. Technically, the show could be stored anywhere and everywhere. The Pursuit network would be able to map the desired content on to the possible locations at the time of the desired viewing, ultimately providing the user with a list of locations from which that information could be retrieved.

The designers of Pursuit hope that, in the future, this is how the internet will work. Technically, online searches would stop looking for URLs (the Uniform Resource Locator) and start looking for URIs (Uniform Resource Identifiers). In simple terms, these would be highly specific identifiers which enable the system to work out what the information or content is.

This has the potential to revolutionise the way in which information is routed and forwarded online. “Under our system, if someone near you had already watched that video or show, then in the course of getting it their computer or platform would republish the content,” Trossen explained. “That would enable
you to get the content from their network, as well as from the original server.”

“Widely used content that millions of people want would end up being widely diffused across the network. Everyone who has republished the content could give you some, or all of it. So essentially we are taking dedicated servers out of the equation.”

Any such system would have numerous benefits. Most obviously, it would make access to information faster and more efficient, and prevent servers or sources from becoming overloaded. At the moment, if user demand becomes unsustainable, servers go down and have to be restored. Under the Pursuit model, demand would be diffused across the system.

“With a system like the one we are proposing, the whole system becomes sustainable,” Trossen added. “The need to do something like this is only going to become more pressing as we record and upload more information.”

Further information about the PURSUIT project can be found at: http://www.fp7-pursuit.eu/

 

 

Tags:

Original Hyperlink: http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/future-internet-aims-to-sever-links-with-serv..

For more information from this magazine/website? Please click here http://www.cam.ac.uk/

Note: The copyright and the ownship of the brand, product names, product numbers, and content mentioned belongs to their repective companies.

comments powered by Disqus
Latest News

‧2014-05-22
Organizations Unprepared to Tackle Next Wave of Technology Trends

‧2014-05-09
Smaller Microchips Keep their Cool

‧2014-04-30
Information storage for the next generation of plastic computers

‧2014-04-29
Smart physical fusing can help secure datacenter uptime

‧2014-04-28
Gas Technology: Digital Age management

Related Catalogs
Featured Pages
5 Axis Machining CenterActuatorsAir ToolsAll-in-One Computers
Aluminum ExtrusionsAntennaAudio Power AmplifierAutomatic Coil Winding Machine
Brushless DC MotorsCable AssembliesCapacitorsCar Drive Recorders
CCTV CameraCircuit BreakersCircular ConnectorsClamp Meters
CNC EDMCNC Precision Machining PartsComputer CaseComputer Cooling Fan
Control ValvesCPU Heat SinksCrystal OscillatorsCustom PCB Manufacture
CylindersD-subminiature ConnectorsData Acquisition BoardDC/DC Converters
Die CastingDigital SignageDimmers and Lighting ControlsEarphone and Headset
Ethernet I/O ModulesFanless Embedded ComputerFlash Memory DeviceGear Reducer
Global Position SystemGrinding CenterHeating ElementIC Sockets
InductorIndustrial Ethernet SwitchesIndustrial RobotInjection Molding
iPhone/iPad AccessoriesKeyboard & KeypadKVM SwitchLCD Modules
Lead FramesLED Driver ICsLED LightsMachining Center
Metal EnclosuresMetal Stamping MoldsMicroprocessorOpen Frame Monitor
OscilloscopesPCB EquipmentPlastic FilmsPlastic Housing and Parts
PLCsPOS SystemsPower AdapterPower Supply
Power ToolsRAID ServersRelaysResistor
RF Microwave ConnectorsRFID DevicesSecurity Intercom SystemsServer
Servo MotorSingle Board ComputerSmart PhoneSolenoids
Switching HubTablet PCsTouch Panel ComputerUPS
VoIP Gateway and PhoneWireless Networking  
Contents
· Home
· Product News
· Catalogs
· Web TV
· News & Topics
· Features Articles
· Trade Show
· Sourcing Help
· My Allitwares
Special Zone
· Directory
· Trade Show Supplement
2014 Hannover
Allitwares.com
· About Us
· Promote Your Business
· Advertise
· Partner with Us
· Press Release
· Contact Us
· Term of Use
· Privacy Policy
· Starter Program
· Sitemap
B2B Web Portal Alliance
· Allitwares.com
· Allmetalworking.com
· Allbiomedical.com
· Allautowares.com
Buy Engineer Sample Kits
OEM Sourcing
Language
· Deutsch
· English
· Español
· Français
· Italiano
· Português
· Русский
· العربية
· 日本語
· 简体中文
· 繁體中文
· 한국의
· Türk
· Polski
 
   

Copyrights © 2012 Allitwares Corporation All Rights Reserved. www.allitwares.com is a Division of Allitwares Corporation
www.allitwares.com is a B2B Trade Portal | B2B Web Portal |B2B Marketplace for Electronics and ICT Industry