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Corporate communications

 

At a corporate and business level internal (local and wide area) network connections generally use TCP/IP internetworking infrastructure but the data packets are securely sent from one location to another instead of into the public Internet cloud where they may go by any (generally unknown and unpredictable) route.  This is considerably more costly particularly over longer distances.  When such communications (including database interrogations) were exclusively text based they involved a small number of data bytes (see comments on file sizes above) but as employees have gained access to the Internet and files began to contain images logos and the like the volumes 'blew out'  crippling network speed and/or increasing data transfer costs. 

This has accelerated the trend to using the public, relatively free Internet to transmit corporate data. With an increase in the public bandwidth and an increase in the range of publicly available services, not supported on internal networks, this trend can be expected to continue.  This is expected to lead to a new business networking paradigm (embracing cloud computing) that will radically change business systems over the next ten years.

Conventional wide area networks that grew during the past decade may be replaced by cloud based communications.  In this environment local area networks (directly connected by dark fibre and/or copper – for example within a building or campus) will remain hardened against intrusion but will encompass an extranet or similar functionality that facilitates inter-node communications that allows users direct access to the cloud for such purposes as video conferencing and to use external cloud based business applications including market access and e-commerce.

These local networks will become autonomous nodes from the point of view of secure document storage data processing and security functions but more integrated through externally shared applications and data. The increasing use of the Internet and increasing spread of broadband communications will free these nodes from present geographical constraints. 

 

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Travel

Darwin after Europe

 

 

On our return from Europe we spent a few days in Darwin and its surrounds.  We had a strong sense of re-engagement with Australia and found ourselves saying things like: 'isn't this nice'.

We were also able to catch up with some of our extended family. 

Julia's sister Anneke was there, working on the forthcoming Darwin Festival.  Wendy's cousin Gary and his partner Son live on an off-grid property, collecting their own water and solar electricity, about 120 km out of town. 

We went to the Mindl markets with Anneke and her friend Chris; and drove out to see Gary, in our hire-car, who showed us around Dundee Beach in his more robust vehicle. Son demonstrated her excellent cooking skills.

 

Read more: Darwin after Europe

Fiction, Recollections & News

The Craft

 

Introduction: 

 

The Craft is an e-novella about Witchcraft in a future setting.  It's a prequel to my dystopian novella: The Cloud: set in the last half of the 21st century - after The Great Famine.

 Since writing this I have added a preface, concerning witchcraft, that you can read here...

 

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Opinions and Philosophy

The Prospect of Eternal Life

 

 

 

To die, to sleep;
To sleep: perchance to dream:
ay, there's the rub;
For in that sleep of death what dreams may come
When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,
Must give us pause:
… But that the dread of something after death,
The undiscover'd country from whose bourn
No traveller returns, puzzles the will
And makes us rather bear those ills we have
Than fly to others that we know not of?
Thus conscience does make cowards of us all;

[1]

 

 

 

 

When I first began to write about this subject, the idea that Hamlet’s fear was still current in today’s day and age seemed to me as bizarre as the fear of falling off the earth if you sail too far to the west.  And yet several people have identified the prospect of an 'undiscovered country from whose realm no traveller returns' as an important consideration when contemplating death.  This is, apparently, neither the rational existential desire to avoid annihilation; nor the animal imperative to keep living under any circumstances; but a fear of what lies beyond.

 

Read more: The Prospect of Eternal Life

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