2008: Predictions, Hopes and Fears

by Michael Hart on January 3, 2008
News

Every year I write my predictions, hopes and fears, but this year I think we can all agree that these predictions cross boundaries, concern advances, and declines, in both the technology and social world orders that are far beyond anything I previously predicted.

This year’s predictions include “personal libraries” on “personal computers” to rival the largest libraries in the world; USB 3.0– which will reduce overnight data copying and backups to ONE HOUR; and very inexpensive terabyte drives.

Prediction #1: The “Personal Computer” as “Personal Library”
Prediction #2: USB 3.0 Will Change The World of Copies/Backups
Prediction #3: USB 3.0 Terabyte Drives Will Do More Than. . . .
Prediction #4: Is “The Digital Divide” Half Empty Or Half Full?
Prediction #5: Rethinking “The Digital Divide”. . .More or Less

The World’s Largest Libraries, Will eLibraries Be Counted?

Prediction #1: The “Personal Computer” as “Personal Library”

In 2008, someone will create their own private “personal computer personal library” so large as to hold enough books to enter lists of the world’s 100 largest libraries based on total books.

As many of you know, I have been doing research on these “World’s Largest Libraries” for a couple months, concentrating mostly on a total number of books held by such libraries.

When I started this research, it was to write up some feasibility study parameters on building electronic libraries the same size.

This was prompted by the advent of the new terabyte drives we are seeing on the market at very inexpensive prices. [More Below]

The latest statistics I could find, officially being published in the upcoming new edition of “Library World Records,” indicate The Library Of Congress is still the world’s largest library with the grand total of around 32.5 million books, with several other huge libraries closer than one might think, in China and Russia.

32.5 million books.

Sounds like a lot.

Let’s break that down into these new modern day terabyte drives– these contain a trillion characters and are under $200 or e100.

A million books of a million characters = 1 trillion characters.

Each terabyte drive can hold a million books.

2.5+ million if you use any of the various compression programs, and these are so good today, that there is really never any need to actually uncompress the files to read them, sometimes even to edit them. . .it’s all done very transparently.

2.5 million books times 13 equals 32.5 million books.

13 terabytes to hold the entire Library Of Congress.

$3,000 bought my first 5 megabyte hard drive in 1979.

$3,000 today will buy you the average computer sold and add that
13 terabytes. . .NOT EVEN ACCOUNTING FOR INFLATION!!!

USB 3.0 Is Coming in 2008

Prediction #2: USB 3.0 Will Change The World of Copies/Backups

USB 3.0 will change how we view drives, backups, deletions and a host of other similar topics.

Starting in 2008 backups and copies that used to take from 10 PM to 8 AM will be so fast you can do them over your lunch break.

10 times faster.

The utility of outboard USB drives, USB flash drives, etc., will pass a breakthrough point at which the general public will think nothing of making backups, and we will have heard the last of an assortment of complaints of lost data from Nobel Prize laureates who just never got around to backing up their data.

You think I am joking? I don’t want to name names, but a plenty large sample of such took place right here in Illinois, at local universities where I used to hang out.

The “Big Change” will be how simply and easily entire libraries,
12 gigabytes worth, at 2,500 books per gigabyte, for the ~30,000 books in the average U.S. Public Library, will change hands in a literal minute or two with USB 3.0 being 10 times faster.

Terabyte Drives Will Become Totally Portable in 2008

Prediction #3: USB 3.0 Terabyte Drives Will Do More Than. . . .

The addition of USB 3.0 to terabyte drives means one hour copies of entire terabyte drives.

No one thought about the portability of terabytes before, simply because the TIME involved was too great even if the WEIGHT of an average terabyte had fallen to briefcase proportions.

However, at ONE HOUR copying time, you can now meet someone from another location and copy an entire terabyte during lunch hour.

Try sending a terabyte over the Internet, just for comparison.

Or even over your local network.

Your network gurus will likely be all over you.

The result is a freedom from the networks.

Worst case scenario, you SEND the terabyte drive a thousand mile journey for the person to copy. . .or just let them keep it, and have them send you something else back later.

There should be some opportunities for VERY inexpensive purchase of USB 2 drives and accessories, for those who don’t need speed, but just want LOTS of terabytes.

The combination of USB 3.0 and terabyte drives will provide some unexpected synergy and change the drive world.

Unexpected for those who do not think ahead.

You will see more and more drives carried from place to place.

Offsite backups will finally become a real reality.

As they should have been years and decades ago, and nearly were.

But that’s another story.

Will “The Digital Divide” Rear It’s Ugly Head? Again, Already?

Prediction #4: Is “The Digital Divide” Half Empty Or Half Full?

Given that there are well over 1 billion people on the Internet, and given that there are now at least 3 billion with cellphones, it appears that either side of “The Digital Divide” could claim, as legitimately as the other, that they are the larger, smaller, or whatever side they want to claim.

The FACT is that of all the people in the world who WANT to link up via the Internet or cellphone, that it can no longer be said, with any degree of truth, that most people are without access.

And it’s not going to stop at 4 billion or even 5 billion, but 6 billion electronically connected people is a possibility in just a few more years.

Given this kind of “market saturation” the only alternative from the corporate point of view will be to finally unleash all those “unsupported features” that have been lurking in cellphones.

“Unsupported Features???”

Oh, didn’t they tell you???

There are perhaps twice as many features IN your cellphones as a person is told are there, many of which are kept out of reach in some kind of hardware manner, others are hidden via software.

This means that “hackers” will soon reappear on the scene to add in the features your cellphone providers either “forgot” to tell you about, or actually intentionally disabled to keep you out of some other market for which they wanted to charge higher rates.

No kidding, the average cellphone out there might have dozens of “new” features you haven’t heard about, but that were there, all the time, ever since it was manufactured.

Why?

Up to now the world cellphone market was never 50% saturated.

That meant the companies could still dream market doubling.

Now they can’t.

Why?

Remember “The Dot Com Bust?”

That happened because the entire American computer industry were unable to consider the FACT that they had saturated half of what was their entire potential market.

They had doubled their market time after time after time, etc.

They would NEVER be able to double their market again once those saturation levels hit 50%.

Sounds simple, eh?

We had this stuff in math class in grade school.

How many times can something double.

Right up to just ONE doubling from saturation.

Duh!

And all the “Dot Com Billionaires” never figured this out. . . .

This time they will. . .at least I hope so, or else cellphone as we know it. . .could go through the same agonizing reappraisal.

So, the essence of this prediction is twofold:

First, get used to the idea the average world citizen has access.

Second, better get used to cellphone companies giving more to the customers, or they will lose market share to competitors.

Steve Jobs figured this out.

That’s why he created the iPhone.

Steve Jobs is NOT your average “Dot Com for Dummies” kinda guy.

Prediction #5: Rethinking “The Digital Divide”. . .More or Less

2008 is going to see a vast reappraisal of digital services.

For some the “agonizing reappraisal” quotation will come to mind as they remember other times their beliefs conflicted with quite literal actual realities.

The social engineering departments of various institutions, many of them libraries, have been considering limiting access to what services they can based on proof of local residency, i.e. living in the tax base supporting the particular institution.

Given that this is a social engineering issue and not technical, at least not in the sense of the technologies mentioned earlier, this section will simply predict the issue, not the outcome as I have learned that social engineering often flies in the faces of the more technical aspects.

However, one way or another, “The Digital Divide” has changed to being over half full, rather than over half empty.

Some people resist that kind of change.

Those people want to preserve the previous boundaries.

The political policies may be obvious; they simply won’t provide services to those they want to keep ignorant and illiterate.

2008 may be remembered as the year the conservative world made a conscious decision to cut off services to the masses, to provide their various services, library and others, ONLY to those proven to be legitimate residential members of their financial base.

I don’t really know what is going to happen here, but watching a movement of this nature should be very enlightening.

Thanks!!!

Michael S. Hart
Founder
Project Gutenberg

Recommended Books:
Dandelion Wine, by Ray Bradbury
For The Right Brain Atlas Shrugged, by Ayn Rand
For The Left Brain [or both] Diamond Age, by Neal Stephenson
To Understand The Internet The Phantom Toobooth, by Norton Juster
Lesson of Life…

If you liked this post, say thanks by sharing it.