The post social age is not the age built after the age of social media, it’s the age built on top of social media.
For more about Tac Anderson, (and my disclosures) go here.
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
Whatever it is, it’s not fast enough.
But don’t expect to find the new speed option on your next computer’s feature list. The standard, to be produced by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), will likely reach data-transfer speeds between 400 gigabits per second and 1 terabit per second. For comparison, that latter speed would be enough to copy two-and-a-half full-length Blu-ray movies in a second.
The UK recently rejected NFC in their Tube pass system because it wasn’t fast enough.
“We have carried out tests on NFC in both 2008 and 2010,” Transport for London customer experience director Shashi Verma told GigaOM.
“Unfortunately, during both of these tests, we found that the technology was not fast enough to complete the transaction in under 500 milliseconds, which we would require.
“The concerns are only around NFC technology and not EMV. We are keen to see any progress the industry can make in this area.”
The speed of the Internet isn’t about how fast can we download movies, it’a about how fast does technology need to be to be completely seamless.
1/3 is the magic number I look for. When a market reaches the point where 1/3 of the market has adopted a new technology it’s all downhill from there. At that point the technology has safely ‘crossed the chasm.’
(via US Households Turn Up Connected-TV Adoption - eMarketer)