New York Web Design News June 6 2003, the latest breaking New York Web design news brought to you by,
Web Designs Now,Website Designs Now,New York Web Design Homepage,Web Design Services for New York, Connecticut, Long Island,New York Web Design Client Testimonials,Website Portfolio of New York Web Design, About this New York Web Design Firm,Contact this New York Web Design Firm

Internet 6,000X Faster?
Web Design & Technology News, June 6, 2003

XML & Unicode: Mix with Care
Yahoo! & BT Team
Internet 6000X Faster?
Bugbear.B Continues Rampage
Experts Warn of Worm Variant

More Web Design News:
2008 Current News
2008 June
2007 June
2007 May
2007 March
2006 November
2006 September
2006 August
2006 July
2006 June
2006 May
2006 April
2006 March
2006 February
2006 January
2005 December
2005 November
2005 October
2005 September
2005 August
2005 July
2005 June
2005 May
2005 April
2005 March
2005 February
2004 March
2004 February
2004 January
2003 December
2003 November
2003 October
2003 September
2003 August
2003 July
2003 June
2003 March - May



June 6, 2003

A research team has unveiled a new system to turbocharge the Internet, claiming to be able to achieve speeds so high an entire movie can be downloaded in mere seconds.
By Staff

According to the journal New Scientist, the breakthrough was achieved by a team from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). The team is already talking to Microsoft and Disney to look into using the system to deliver high-quality video over the Web.

The new system, coined Fast TCP, can boost download speeds dramatically while using the existing Internet infrastructure. Currently, all Internet traffic uses a system developed in the 1970s called Transmission Control Protocol (TCP), which breaks down large files into smaller data packets of about 1,500 bytes.

During transmission, the sending computer transmits a packet, waits for a signal from the recipient which acknowledges its safe arrival, and then sends the next packet.

If there is no receipt, the sender will transmit the same packet at half the speed of the previous one, and repeats this process until the data is sent. The report said even minor glitches en route can result in sluggish connections.

With Fast TCP however, software and hardware installed on the sending computer continually measures the time taken for sent packets to arrive and how long acknowledgements take to come back.

This provides early warning of likely packet losses. As a result, the Fast TCP software can predict the highest data rate the connection can support without losing data, said the report.

Last November, teams from Caltech, Stanford and CERN (European Laboratory for Particle Physics) near Geneva in Switzerland, sent data 10,000 kilometers from Sunnyvale, California, to CERN at an average rate of 925 megabits per second. Ordinary TCP managed just 266 megabits per second on the same network.

With 10 Fast TCP systems working in unison, the researchers have hit speeds of over 8.6 gigabits per second, more than 6000 times the capacity of ordinary broadband.

Web Designs Now
Back to the Top


 © Copyright 2007, All rights reserved  |  Privacy Web Design Forums  |  Web Design News  |  Advertise  |  About Us  |  Contact Us  |  W3C HTML 
 Related Websites: New-York-WebDesign.com