Expect wireless hookups … with signals bouncing from transmitters like cell-phone relays. Or, tomorrow’s “information appliance” could be a TV, computer and phone all in one. Even cheaper, a device similar to an adaptor could feed Nextnet data into a regular TV. No telling what you can net with forethought.
Predictor: Cerf, Vinton G.
Prediction, in context:In a 1995 article for Newsweek magazine, Sharon Begley and Adam Rogers quote Vinton Cerf. They write:”The Clinton administration, which wants to make the Infobahn accessible to everyone, calls its vision of the wired future the National Information Infrastructure. Spearheaded by the Commerce Department, this ‘network of networks’ is already forming. Some of the 92 projects that received $67 million in NII grants last October establish the kind of local networks that, linked nationally, begin to look like a Nextnet. Expect wireless hookups, says Cerf, with signals bouncing from transmitters like cell-phone relays. Or, tomorrow’s ‘information appliance’ could be a TV, computer and phone all in one. Even cheaper, a device similar to an adaptor could feed Nextnet data into a regular TV. No telling what you can net with forethought.”
Date of prediction: February 1, 1995
Topic of prediction: Information Infrastructure
Subtopic: Internet Appliances
Name of publication: Newsweek
Title, headline, chapter name: MBones and Giganets: What Will Replace the Internet?
Quote Type: Partial quote
Page number or URL of document at time of study:
http://web.lexis-nexis.com/universe/document?%20m=a02afd22778df975b9d08447fcdbb115&%20docnum=1&wchp=dGLbVzb-1S1zV&%20md5=92599ec03d9870741b186ad102a9732d9
This data was logged into the Elon/Pew Predictions Database by: Vellucci, Amanda