Cisco predicts the zettabyte era; Elvis offers doubt

According to Cisco there’ll be an average of two internet connected devices per person by 2015. The company also believes there’ll be almost three billion internet users by that date.

The stats are part of the company’s latest “Visual Networking Index” forecast, which aims to predict future net use and its contributing factors.

The headline figure is that by 2015, the total amount of traffic throughout the year will be right around the one zettabyte mark: in other words, one trillion gigabytes. To put that into context, the company is forecasting that the data growth between 2014 and 2015 will be more than the total data used in 2010.

While the logic of more users and more internet devices meaning more traffic makes sense, some of the company’s other arguments are more shaky. It claims average broadband speed doubled over the past year from 3.5 Mbps to 7 Mbps, and will reach 28 Mbps by 2015.

The current 7 Mbps figure sounds very high for a global average, and even if that is the case it may simply be advertised theoretical maximum speeds, which bear little resemblance to reality.

Of course, if that’s applied consistently, the trend might still be valid. However, this ignores the point that just because maximum speed increases, total traffic may not increase at the same rate. In many cases, people may simply download the same amount of data in a shorter time.

The biggest problem with the forecasts is that they appear to fall into the inferential statistics trap. Put simply, this means looking at a historical trend and assuming that it will continue to grow in the future, without taking into account limitations on that trend. In this situation, the limit is that the new Internet users are most likely to be in locations where for either economic or geographic reasons, maximum speeds are considerably lower than today’s average.

The best example of this is a case study noting that there were an estimated 37 Elvis Presley impersonators worldwide in 1977, a figure that grew to 48,000 by 1993. Extrapolating that trend would mean that by 2010, there would be 2.5 billion Elvis impersonators, around one-third of the world’s population.

That proved not to be the case.

(Picture credit: Paul Smith / Martin Fox)



Awesome Portal Fan Film: Outside Aperture [Video]

Outside Apaerture is an 8-minute fan film based on the original ending of Portal and documents the life of Chell right in between the two games.

[Youtube]

Amazon’s Amazing Father’s Day Sale: Up to 58% Off DVDs and Blu-Rays + More!

In honor of Father’s day, Amazon is offering some pretty awesome deals on over 4000 Blu-ray and DVD titles. Since there are so many, you can sort the list by format, genre, price, and other categories, via the site’s navigation menu located on the left of the page.

Alternatively, you can also check out Amazon’s official section dedicated to Father’s day right here.

[Amazon’s Father’s Day Sale: Up to 58% Off DVDs and Blu-Rays]



World’s Fastest Rubik’s Cube Solving Robot [VIDEO]

Created by students at the Swinburne University of Technology, this robot can solve a fully scrambled rubik’s cube in about 10 seconds, which includes the time it takes to scan each face of the cube. Check it out:

[Via]

“Time for a Reboot.” – DC Comics

On Tuesday afternoon, DC Comics announced “a historic renumbering” of their entire universe of comics, debuting 52 first issues beginning August 31. On that date, Justice League’s new #1 issue will be released, marking the beginning of a collaborative project between DC Entertainment Chief Creative Officer Geoff Johns and bestselling artist and DC Comics Co-Publisher Jim Lee. Johns and Lee are promised to offer a “contemporary take” on Batman, Superman, Green Lantern, The Flash, Wonder Woman and Aquaman.

Expect fully redesigned costumes and more current threats to our superheroes across the board. The focus will be on the characters’ relationships with one another and society at large. “What’s the human aspect behind all these costumes?” Johns asks. “That’s what I wanted to explore.”

In the same post, DC announced that they will be releasing the issues in print and digitally on the same day, a first-ever move in real time digital distribution for any major comics publisher.

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