This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2000/1002bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
Vague remembrances of
home
By Scott Bradner
Network World, 10/02/00
I
seem to remember that this Internet thing was supposed to cut down on travel by
supporting videoconferencing. Thirty-five thousand feet over Kansas and a few
days into a 15-day series of trips that has me sleeping in my own bed only two
nights of the 15, I am deep into the realization that the reverse seems to be
true.
Not that long ago, pundits of every stripe, a myriad of
start-ups and Wall Street analysts evaluating airline stocks said
videoconferencing was going to reduce the need for business travel. What
happened to those predictions? Does the reliability of those predictions teach
us anything about what technologies will and will not change our lives in the
future?
Videoconferencing did not fail to reduce flights because the
technology could not be made to work. I was at two companies in the last two
days that make use of high-quality videoconferencing systems. Large screens,
good resolution (you could see that the person on the other end was smiling
when he made a snide remark), and near-TV rate screen updates make these
systems effective. They are not cheap and require reasonable bandwidth (384K
bit/sec) to operate, but they convey most of the information humans use for
communication. Such a system was in use in one of the meetings I was in, but in
spite of this, all but one of the visitors had flown hundreds or thousands of
miles to take part in this four-hour meeting.
What happened to the
predictions is they did not adequately take into account human behavior. If
this seems like a rather obvious thing to take into account, it should be. But
it is constantly being discounted. In the case of videoconferencing, it seems like
most humans still interact better when they are face to face
("Better" might not be the right word for some people - let's say
"more efficiently"). Thus, airlines are seeing more business travel
than ever before.
Other predictions that might be suspect include the
assumption that Internet phone users will always demand, and be willing to pay
for, high-quality calls. Or that major, studio-produced content will be more
valuable than person-to-person interaction. Or that complex, slow Internet
services will make the Wireless Application Protocol successful, and make the
tens of billions of dollars being spent on wireless frequencies a worthwhile
investment.Or the assumption that users will want wireless service providers to
know where they are so they can be told where the nearest McDonald's is. Or
that consumers would never pay for rationally priced music on the 'Net.
An
awful lot of money is riding on the above and other assumptions about people
and their use of the Internet. I cannot predict for sure which assumptions are
right, but I will predict that most of the above are wrong because the people
making the assumptions forget to look into the mirror.
Disclaimer: Harvard
has lots of mirrors and they are used some of the time, but the above is my
prediction - not Harvard's.
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