Elon University
The prediction, in brief:

Wireless has a major potential role to play in the last 100 meters of network systems by allowing rapid easy interconnection without a jumble of wires.

Predictor: Baran, Paul

Prediction, in context:

Paul Baran made the following statement in a 1994 speech on 21st century communications: ”Wireless has a major potential role to play in the last 100 meters of network systems by allowing rapid easy interconnection without a jumble of wires. Wireless can allow the user to separate the terminal for maximum convenience and effectiveness. The thick umbilical cords providing today’s lifeline connection between the computer and the network could be eliminated.”

Biography:

Paul Baran joined RAND in 1959 and investigated development of survivable communication networks capable of allowing the U.S. to reorganise and respond after a nuclear attack. By 1964, he developed the field of packet-switching networks, as outlined in 11 comprehensive papers titled “On Distributed Communications Networks.” This work eventually convinced U.S. officials that development of wide-area digital computer networks should be a priority. Others also say they were working on packet switching in this era, but Baran and Donald Davies were generally given the credit at this point in the 1990s. (Pioneer/Originator.)

Date of prediction: November 9, 1994

Topic of prediction: Information Infrastructure

Subtopic: Wireless Technologies

Name of publication: Keynote Talk Transcript, 8th Annual Conference on Next Generation Networks Washington, D.C.

Title, headline, chapter name: Visions of the 21st Century Communications: Is the Shortage of Radio Spectrum for Broadband Networks of the Future a Self-Made Problem?

Quote Type: Direct quote

Page number or URL of document at time of study:
http://www.eff.org/GII_NII/Wireless_cellular_radio/false_scarcity_baran_cngn94.transcript

This data was logged into the Elon/Pew Predictions Database by: Beckett, Angela