Elon University
The prediction, in brief:

It won’t take too long for a few simultaneous users to gobble up a gigabit per second of bandwidth, especially as audio and video become commonplace on the Net. The second and bigger problem is symmetry. This topic is hotly contested by cable and telephone companies, who don’t believe consumers want to send out as many bits as they take in … As more and more people start entrepreneurial services from their home PCs, we will need symmetrical systems, designed without a “head-end prejudice.” The assumption that the average American is a couch potato involved in nothing but consuming advertiser-supported bits is wrong and, frankly, insulting.

Predictor: Negroponte, Nicholas

Prediction, in context:

In a 1995 article for Wired magazine, Nicholas Negroponte, founder of MIT’s Media Lab, makes his case for taking fiber all the way to people’s homes rather than settling for a combination of fiber to the neighborhood and coax to the home. Negroponte writes: ”The hybrid solution makes two enormous assumptions about how people will use networks. One is that a home will be happy sharing a gigabit per second with as many as 2,000 neighbors. The other is that all homes will consume more bits than they generate. Both assumptions are flawed … It won’t take too long for a few simultaneous users to gobble up a gigabit per second of bandwidth, especially as audio and video become commonplace on the Net. The second and bigger problem is symmetry. This topic is hotly contested by cable and telephone companies, who don’t believe consumers want to send out as many bits as they take in. Cable companies allocate the coax spectrum with copious bandwidth flowing into the home and precious little back to the head end. But that logic fails when you reconsider the notion of a head end. Where is the head end in a true, switched broadband system? The Net has shown itself to be a heterogeneous collection of nodes, each of which can be a source or a sink, a transmitter or a receiver. As more and more people start entrepreneurial services from their home PCs, we will need symmetrical systems, designed without a ‘head-end prejudice.’ The assumption that the average American is a couch potato involved in nothing but consuming advertiser-supported bits is wrong and, frankly, insulting.”

Biography:

Nicholas Negroponte, a co-founder of MIT’s Media Lab and a popular speaker and writer about technologies of the future, wrote one of the 1990s’ best-selling books about the new future of communications, “Being Digital.” (Pioneer/Originator.)

Date of prediction: January 1, 1995

Topic of prediction: Information Infrastructure

Subtopic: Bandwidth

Name of publication: Wired

Title, headline, chapter name: 2020: The Fiber-Coax Legacy – What We See in the Current Fiber-Coax Strategies is Fiscal Timidity, Justified by the Usage Patterns of an Old-Line Broadcast and Publishing Model, Not the Net

Quote Type: Direct quote

Page number or URL of document at time of study:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/3.10/negroponte_pr.html

This data was logged into the Elon/Pew Predictions Database by: Anderson, Janna Quitney