Yes. This is nothing new. It's simply fiber optic networking. Those (idiotic) reporters makes it sound all like "OMFG TEH INTRNETS R GNA COLLUPZ!!11!1 THIS R NEW INVENTIAAAAN GNA SAVE OUR TUBEZ!!11", but it isn't. This won't replace the ADSL and cable links that reach out into the suburbs.mikkel wrote:
It wouldn't beat what's available in the market today.GC_PaNzerFIN wrote:
LOL I think it would beat my current conenction hands down, don't you think?.... and I'll move to a big city soon so yeah. I expect to have fast connections around.mikkel wrote:
How would you get that for cheap? How would you even convince anyone to lay fibre to your home? How do you think the network would perform when congested with hundreds of millions of households? I'll give you a hint on that last one. The Internet.
edit: and wtf is this projects goal then if not make fast connections available to "main steam"?
Geographically separated distributed computing is the purpose of this network. It's shoddy journalism that makes it sound like some sort of internetworking revolution.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP