Its Creators Call, Internet Outdated, Offer Remedies...

By BOBBY WHITE

In 1969, at the Pentagon's Advanced Research Projects Agency, Larry 
Roberts oversaw a program of connected research computers called ARPAnet 
that became the foundation for the Internet. Four decades later, he has 
spent nearly $340 million trying to redo that same technology, which he 
now believes is far behind the times.

"We can no longer rely on last-generation technology, which has 
essentially remained unchanged for 40 years, to power Internet 
performance," says Mr. Roberts, who is 69 years old. Last month, his 
start-up, Anagran Inc., introduced a piece of gear called the flow 
router that he says can help modernize the Internet. The equipment 
analyzes Web traffic to discern whether it is an email, a movie or a 
phone call and then carves out the bandwidth needed for transmission.

Mr. Roberts isn't the only networking pioneer dissatisfied with earlier 
achievements. Len Bosack, the 55-year-old co-founder and former chief 
technology officer of networking giant Cisco Systems Inc., helped 
commercialize routers, the core piece of networking equipment that 
allows computers to communicate with one another. Yet he now terms such 
gear "less and less adequate" for today's Internet needs. Last month, 
his company, XKL LLC, unveiled a system that allows businesses to 
connect to underground cables that have nearly 100 times the capacity of 
current telecommunications pipes.

The actions of Messrs. Bosack and Roberts fuel the growing debate over 
whether the Internet's current infrastructure is sufficient to handle 
the explosion of bandwidth-hungry services such as Internet telephony 
and video. In a recent report, Cisco calculated that monthly Internet 
traffic in North America will increase 264% by 2011 to more than 7.8 
million terabytes, or the equivalent of 40 trillion email messages. If 
such Internet traffic continues increasing, many believe networks could 
crash or at least slow to a crawl.

more...
http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB119128309597345795.html?mod=blog
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