DocumentCode
2948328
Title
The Internet and consumer electronics
Author
Frankston, Bob
Author_Institution
Microsoft Corp., Redmond, WA, USA
fYear
1997
fDate
2-4 Dec 1997
Firstpage
288
Lastpage
291
Abstract
The Internet is the new infrastructure. It requires that we rethink the nature of devices. They no longer need be isolated. The cost of tapping into the global network is very low and the new capabilities are compelling. The designs need not be limited by what the device can do alone. We need to learn how to create such devices. What capabilities should be available locally and which can be shifted to a more sophisticated device such as a personal computer. How does a device maintain a relationship to the manufacturer? In order to take advantage of these opportunities we need simple and robust protocols. Unlike an isolated device where one manufacturer can take full responsibility for the devices´ function, the new device can be affected by the misbehavior of other devices and must be resilient even when other devices fail. A device that cannot cooperate with other devices will be like the typewriter-a story for one´s grandchildren. Like the days we used to multiply numbers by using a slide rule
Keywords
Internet; consumer electronics; transport protocols; Internet; Internet protocol; VCR; consumer electronics; global network; personal computer; products design; telephony; Application software; Consumer electronics; Economies of scale; Explosives; IP networks; Internet telephony; Power generation economics; Protocols; Telecommunication traffic; Web sites;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Consumer Electronics, 1997. ISCE '97., Proceedings of 1997 IEEE International Symposium on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-4371-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISCE.1997.658409
Filename
658409
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