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122 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
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The Information Superhighways of Tomorrow
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Albert Gore, Jr. (C) ACADEMIC COMPUTING Magazine
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U.S. Senate from November 1989 Volume 4 Number 3
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Tennessee Reprinted by permission
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In the next decade, we'll face many great challenges -- from finding
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shelter for two million homeless men, women, and children to giving the
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next generation of Americans the best schools on earth. But there will
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be no greater economic challenge than the battle to ensure America's
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leadership in advanced computer technology.
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Supercomputers and networks to connect them are not just another
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modern convience. I believe they will soon prove to ge the steam engines
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of the Information Age.
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In the next century, American competitiveness will depend largely on
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how well we exploit our advantage in high performance computing. Super-
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computers are going to change the way America thinks and does business.
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In the next few years, supercomputers will enable us to design more
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efficent car engines and home appliances, forcast the weather more
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accurately and further in advance, test new kinds of molecules with
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miraculous medical potential, and enhance oil recovery. With high speed
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computer networks, a surgeon in Nashville can send a CAT-scan picture
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to a colleague at the Mayo Clinic and get a second opinion instantly.
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We'll even be able to use computers to design better chips.
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But supercomputers will never be able to do all these things in the
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future unless we increase access through high speed networks right away.
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Last year, I chaired the first major Senate hearing on the state of
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supercomputer technology and policy. The message of that hearing was
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overwhelmingly clear: If the United States is going to be a supercomputer
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superpower in the 1990's we had better start building a high capacity
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national research computer network today.
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Three years ago, I sponcered the Supercomputer Network Study Act to
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explore a fiber optic network to link the nation's supercomputers into
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one system. I introduced the bill on the 30th anniversary of the
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Interstate Highway System because I believe that high capacity fiber
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optic netowrks will be the information superhighways of tomorrow. I
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envision a national network linking academic researchers and industry,
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clustering research centers and businesses arund network interchanges,
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and using the nation's vast data banks as the building blocks for
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increasing industrial productivity and creating new products. My
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legislation, which was passed as part of the 1986 National Science
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Foundation authorization, led to a wide-ranging report on high performance
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and supercomputer networks by the Office of Science and Technology Policy.
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There are more than one hundred networks in the country, but coordination
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among them is limited. The OSTP report found that these superhighways of
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tomorrow were more like left-turn lanes at rush hour today -- low capacity,
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overloaded, and unable to keep up with demand. Anyone who has used one
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can attest to the difficulty of shifting from network to network to find
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the right data bank, supercomputer, or colleague.
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Dr. John Connolly from the University of Kentucky's Center for
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Computational Sciences testified at my hearing that computer users will
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be able to send high quality pictures and graphics through supercomputer
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networks, but that demand for capacity far exceeds supply. He said the
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nation may soon find itself in a "graphic jam".
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Obviously, we cannot afford to let American competitiveness die of
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frustration on the turnpike. We're making some progress. NSFNET, which
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links regional networks to the five national supercomputer centers, now
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transmits 1.5 megabits -- the equivalent of 50 pages of single spaced text
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per second. By next year, the NSF expects to be running this network 45
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megabits, or an entire Sunday newspaper every second.
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The Office of Science and Technology Policy and the National Academy of
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Sciences have proposed a three-stage, multibillion-dollar program to
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boost data transmission speed on the national research network to 3 gigabits
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per second - 2,000 times the current speed -- over the next 15 years. In
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my legislation, I called for making the 3-gigabit network a top priority.
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The federal government is going to have to take the lead in making sure
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our high-performance computing needs are met. We cannot afford to be
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Complacement. Can we rely on the market system to provide this kind of
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infastructure? We certianly couldn't where the Interstate Highway System
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was concerned. Private industry benefited a great deal from the government's
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leadership and investment. If companies are not yet interested in building
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the networks we need, the federal government needs to get them interested.
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This year, in May, I introduced the National High-Preformance Computer
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Technology Act of 1989 which will accelerate the development of a national
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information infrastructure. We must promote networks, services, databases,
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and the common standards to develope a coherent national network. We must
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forge ahead with research and development into artificial intelligence,
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software, and hardware. And we must train our students to use and apply
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technology. We must also examine telecommunicatins regulations that may
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hinder the development of a network, and ease any unnecessary restrictions
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that may stand in the way.
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We manufacture 72 percent of the supercomputers in the world and we like
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to tell ourselves that we're "ahead". But the real benifits of super-
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computing don't come from making the machines. They come from using the
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machines.
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That is something our competitors understand. In France, for example, the
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Minitel network of small home computer terminals has become a national
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obsession. In Japan, the organization that targets key technologies came
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up with a list of top priority projects that include a ten billion bit per
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second fiber optic network.
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Another reason to begin developing a bigger, faster, national network is
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that our progress in other scientific fields is generating unprecedented
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amounts of data. For instance, the mission to Planet Earth, an immensely
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important project ot study the earth's environment from space, is going to
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provide more information about the planet than we can handle. The Magellan
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probe scheduled to depart for Venus later this year will send back a
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trillion bytes of data -- enough information to fill 25,000 hard disks,
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with more image data than has been collected by all previous planetary
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probes combined.
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America has made great strides in computer network technology and
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development in the recent years. But for all our progress, we are still
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just a few steps ahead of our competitors.
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When you're in high speed, high stakes competition with the Japenese,
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words of encouragement aren't good enough. Those who invent, build, perfect,
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and apply the supercomputers that are going to make the American economy
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more productive tomorrow deserve to know that the United States government
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is ready to go all out for them today.
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The Japenese have proved what a nation can accomplish with one powerful
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idea and boundless determination. Now, it's America's turn to do the same -
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- and after all, we were the ones who showed them how. Its up to us to renew
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the American spirit, and make sure that the American people are ready for
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the choice:to ride the bullet train of technological progress or shake our
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heads in wonder as we watch it whizzing by.
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Note: This article is based on remarks prepared for National Net `89.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Albert Gore, Jr
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U.S. Senate
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Tennessee
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