Posted on 05/13/2005 11:50:04 PM PDT by HAL9000
Inflection Point
This Week Changed the World of High Tech Forever, Though Most of Us Still Don't Know It
It's an expression made popular in Silicon Valley years ago by Andy Grove of Intel: "inflection point." It's that abrupt elbow in a graph of growth or decline when the new technology or paradigm truly kicks in, and suddenly there is no going back. From that moment, the new stuff takes off and the old stuff goes into rapid decline, whether it is a new standard of modem, a new video game, a new microprocessor family, or just a new idea. I think we've just hit such an inflection point and -- though most of us still don't realize it -- the personal computer, video game, and electronic entertainment businesses will never be the same.
There are three pieces to this puzzle. First, as I noted last week, Bill Gates deliberately blabbed some details about the next xBox game system, which is to be officially announced this week. This gaffe, which I don't believe was a gaffe at all, came for specific reasons that are still not clear, but the implications of Gates' remarks ARE clear -- that xBox 360 will perform many functions that currently require a home computer. Not only will xBox 360 play video games, it will play music and movies, surf the web and probably even offer a non-PC platform for voice-over-IP.
What message does this send to Microsoft's hardware OEM customers that make home computers? What is Microsoft saying to Dell, HP, Gateway, and others? For all the customer bullying we saw proof of in the Department of Justice's anti- trust case against Microsoft, one thing the kids in Redmond never did was propose to undercut their hardware OEMs by building a Microsoft PC. But now that's precisely what Gates has proposed, and it is coming in time for this Christmas.
I don't know why Microsoft would make this move at this time. Maybe the game business has become more important to them than home PCs, maybe some particular advantage over the PlayStation3 just has to be touted, Maybe Microsoft feels at a disadvantage to Apple's upcoming movie service. Whatever the reason, there is no going back now: Microsoft is in direct competition with its own customers.
The second inflection point this week was made by Google with its Google Web Accelerator. The company has generally downplayed the Accelerator as simple research -- a test that required a few thousand users. But it is much more than that. First, Google hasn't yet announced a beta, and then changed its mind about what it's beta testing. Every Google service that has begun as a beta turns eventually into an official extension of the Googleplex. Froogle, their comparison buying service, isn't going away, nor are image and video search or GMail. The same goes for this Google Web Accelerator.
The application itself isn't anything new. It is precisely like the Web Page Accelerator (WPA) application that was the key component of the old Starband satellite broadband service I used for awhile when I lived out in the wilds of Sonoma County. WPA was intended to overcome the inevitable latency of that 89,200 mile double round trip required to fetch any web page over the geosynchronous satellite connection. It did this by anticipating the user's next page request and delivering that in advance in a compressed form. For every Starband (and DirecWay) user, there is a proxy session at the satellite downlink location utilizing more computing power than the Starband or DirecWay user probably has on the desktop being served.
The only differences between WPA and Google's Accelerator is the lack of a satellite, and Google's willingness to offer the service ultimately to any Internet user. This is an absolutely brilliant strategy -- brilliant both because of the staggering technology effort it represents and brilliant because it promises -- as does any inflection point -- to change things forever.
Think about the scale of Google's eventual effort here. With efficient caching, let's say that Google can get away with devoting half the power of the average home computer to each active user. In the U.S. that's 200 million users, though of course they aren't all active at once. But there will be worst-case moments every week when a lot of them are active at once, so I'd plan for 60 million simultaneous users, which means 30 million desktop equivalents, which has to be vastly more than Google's present 200,000+ servers offer. No wonder there has been all this talk about Google buying-up dark fiber. They are going to need it.
But why? Why spend all this money, make this heroic effort, just to make web surfing twice as fast? The first reason is because Google can do it. The company likes big stretches like this. The second reason is because everybody else CAN'T do it. The technology required is so breathtaking and audacious that even a Microsoft or IBM wouldn't dare to try it and certainly Yahoo won't. The best Yahoo can hope for is that Google fails, which they probably won't. And the final reason for doing this is because it co-opts every ISP and web page owner. If surfing can be doubled in speed for nothing, of course nearly everyone will go for it. But that means every AOL customer becomes a de facto Google customer and this page becomes a de facto Google service that costs them nothing to produce.
The big question is where Google will go with this? Will they put ads on this page? Will they eventually put AOL and MSN and Earthlink out of business? Only Google knows. But what I DO know is that the Google Web Accelerator effectively turns every user into a thin client, whether they know it or not. Consider the obvious upshots of this. If Google adds power to its part of the Accelerator, you don't have to add power to your end, meaning your old PC can last longer. Part of that has to come from Google assuming a larger role over time, taking responsibility for rendering Flash, for example. And they'll do it. And we'll let them. At some point, Google might even offer its own hardware device, optimized for the Accelerator. At that point, you'll buy your PC from Google, use Google as your ISP, surf an Internet that is really the Google cache, be fed ads and sold content from Google servers. Its a GoogleWorld that requires no AOL, no Microsoft, no Intel, no HP or Dell -- only Google, cable companies, telephone companies, users, and of course advertisers and web page producers.
There is no going back.
Inflection point number three comes from Apple, where it is finally becoming clear just how the company is about to remake the music and movie businesses.
But first a few words about Yahoo's new $6.99 per month music subscription service. The most interesting aspect of this offering to me is the price -- $6.99 per month -- which has to reflect the actual cost of providing such a service. Yahoo can afford to do this for no profit, but they can't afford to do it at a loss, so the difference between $6.99 and $14.99 shows just how much profit there probably is for Rhapsody and Napster -- a LOT.
Yahoo is trying to do three things at once. It is trying to kill the iTunes pay-per-title pricing model, replacing it with the subscription model that has emerged as preferred by the record companies. And at $6.99 Yahoo's move has to worry Apple. The second thing Yahoo is trying to do is to take out Rhapsody and Napster. Both other services probably will have to match Yahoo pricing, but neither has Yahoo's deep pockets. Real, for one, has to be looking for a buyer and will probably find one in Microsoft. And finally, Yahoo is trying to position itself as the premier media company for the 21st century. If it works for music, movies, TV, and video games will follow and Yahoo will have turned its huge user base into a retail channel.
Maybe it will work, maybe not. It is audacious, to be sure.
Now to Apple. A Slashdot poster (it's in this week's links) purporting to be an Apple employee dropped a couple tidbits that fill-in the blanks for understanding Apple's still unannounced movie download service. The man or woman said that Apple would be fudging somewhat its definition of High Definition video to save bandwidth and required processing power, starting instead of 720p-24 with half-HD and anamorphic 720-by 486 (look in the links for what anamorphic means). Apple may well offer those sub-HD versions of HD, but from the music videos they are already starting to offer in HD I think they'll offer 720p and 1080i, too. Remember, the real market is download-and-play, not streaming.
The more interesting item in this Slashdot post, however, was the idea of Apple doing a video equivalent of its AirPort Express WiFi repeater that has audio output to link iTunes to your stereo system. This AirPort extension is the last piece needed for Apple's video service and answers a lot of questions. Why doesn't the Mac Mini have an optical audio port? Because the AirPort has one, instead. Why isn't the Mac Mini more powerful? Because it doesn't have to be. The Mini becomes a storage and downloading device and H.264 decoding is handled in the AirPort gizmo using one of the H.264 hardware decoder chips coming on the market for around $20.
So Apple takes over video and movies while Yahoo threatens with a low-priced music subscription service and Google threatens to take control of, well, everything.
And Microsoft? Microsoft kicks the dog.
I don't think so. I think the great majority of the PPC chips made are going to DOD. As far as I know, all new military embedded processors have been PPC for years now, since Intel bailed out of the market five years ago.
It can pipeline large video payloads but it won't compete with Intel.
BUMPO
The only reply I can think of is....
"All your base are belong to us!"
sorry.
VoIP phones *are* real phones. And those with cable broadband and VoIP service are completely off the telephone company grid, e.g., not a trace of Verizon in the house.
In a world of global directories there is no rational reason to marry a VoIP telephone *exclusively* to a numeric address, i.e., 202-555-xxxx
"VoIP phones *are* real phones. And those with cable broadband and VoIP service are completely off the telephone company grid, e.g., not a trace of Verizon in the house."
Except when the voice packet is terminated on a PSTN service to complete the call. It could then still be going over Verizon's Network. With VOIP the future would be dialing an IP address instead of a traditional POTS number. But that is still down the road a bit.
Correct, but we're way beyond proof-of-concept here, and it's demonstrable that Verizon is no longer technically necessary for precisely the reason you state below:
With VOIP the future would be dialing an IP address instead of a traditional POTS number. But that is still down the road a bit.
Think about it.
You're on an IP "telephone", so you have IP and presumably Web access, which means you can Google. You look up "Joes Pizza, Anytown" and get a result.
If Joe's Pizza *also* has its VoIP IP address associated with that Google directory entry, you're done. Click on the (imagined) GoogleDial button.
Even if you're on a DHCP network with private address space, there's no reason Google couldn't have a small app update the Google directory entry with your IP address every 10 or 15 or 30 minutes. Thus, clicking on your Google directory entry would eliminate the need for a telephone number.
I give it one year or two (max) to go experimental on Google.
Bye bye Verizon.
Bump.
Microsoft is specifically refusing to say either way, whether old XBox games will play on the new system. My guess is "probably not" which means you would have to buy the same games over again.
with each PS3 sporting 4 (!!!!) IBM CELL chips (*each* CELL w/ a G5 and 8 Altivec processors on steroids) which boils down to what, the theoretical power of 16 or so Opterons?
the XBOX was reported now, (faked like all get out since it wasn't ready) to beat the PS3 gala. if they had tried to roll XBOX out after that, they would have been laughed off the stage...
the author of this piece is pretty ignorant IMHO. the PS3 is designed for everything he claims the XBOX will be able to do, and about 10 times faster, and IT is coming out in just a few weeks... the XBOX is *NOT* the upward bend in the knee by any means whereas the CELL really is. if Apple can stuff the CELL into a MAC, watch out!
I don't buy it. The cable company doesn't have long haul digital lines. They buy T1 -> OC16 connectivity from a phone company to host the connections to the internet. The telcos may be out of the class 5 end office switch business for VoIP, but they are still carrying the traffic.
I thought all you needed was a broadband connection... otherwise you'd be paying the phone company to use their phone jacks which would be kinda' redundant.
That may be what I was trying to say in clearer terms..
As I recall, ( and it's been some years,) was that the Motorola 6809e CPU loaded everything at boot-up, starting at lower (lowest?) memory address, on up..
It was one, contiguous piece of memory, rather than a divided architecture like the x86/x88...
I always liked the 6800/68000 series chips.. ( 68000 was used in the original MacIntosh )
I would have gone Mac instead of PC if it hadn't been for the cost and software development issues...
I still think the Mac is an excellent machine, it's just been habit over the years to continue in the PC tradition..
bump
I imagine using Excel with a joystick from across the living room is quite a challenge.
If you want on or off the Mac Ping List, Freepmail me.
Nah. Lot of embedded PPC chips in the military, for sure, but not nearly exclusively. The F/22's avionics are built around a modified i960, as one quick example.
I want to say it here first: Longhorn may be a feint. The OS marketplace is about to change, and MS may be moving past it.
The thing about the corporate computing marketplace is that, relative to the home market, its a mess of integration.
There is so much money that can be made from regular joes that hasn't been made yet.
Once an Xbox like device starts to integrate phone, media,logistics, and messaging, it isn't hard to see it extend to the average automobile. If you can have an IPod, why can't your car synchonize itself with the Xbox via bluetooth? Why can't you download mapquest routes to your car's internal navigation system? Why can't the car synchronize itself along the Interstate using WIFI to route traffic off the interstate and on to surface streets in the commute bands? Why can't we say "Chinese" and have the car reply "4 choices within 5 minutes". You then say "best rated" and it vectors you in?
Folks, this is way easier to manage than the 634 applications within a company the size of HP for example.
The ONLY thing my minivan lacks is the real connectivity necessary to make full use of the onboard nav (Nissan Quest).
Add the possibilities that Satellite radio adds and forget it.
Why can't you work on a file at your house, get in the car, realize you've forgotten to transfer it to your laptop, and simply tell the car "Search, Home Office, Third Quarter Sales (followed by a command like) Maybe." Computer comes back with "Three possibles". You reply "Sort by edit date and list". It lists the one you were just working on. You then say "Transmit Last File to ZMobile" Zmobile is the designation of the memory stick that is in the USB port of the car's computer in the dash.
You park the car, pull the memory stick, and walk into the office. Whole thing done using any number of methods (Cell, Sat, or WiFi).
Tolls would be managed by the car's PC. So would gas, car's engine diagnostics, fluid levels, tire rotation warnings.
You could shout a password at the car and the doors would open. Shout a panic word and it calls 911 and opens the external mic and video and transmits mpeg to the police.
None of this is all that hard anymore technologically, and the standards are pretty much all there now.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.