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Three Wheels on Amazon’s Wagon

How did that old Burt Bacharach song go? - “Three wheels on my wagon, and I’m still rolling along”. That’s the Internet today - we are merrily “singing a happy song” on a network built in the 90’s, operated by for-profit organisations, and being used increasingly for large scale multimedia file transfers.

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In a recent post I wrote …

A study by Nemertes Research predicts that the U.S. Internet of 2015 will be at least 50 times larger than it was in 2006. Internet growth at these levels will require a dramatic expansion of bandwidth, storage, and traffic management capabilities in core, edge, metro, and access networks. It estimates that these changes will entail a total new investment of some $137 billion in the worldwide Internet infrastructure by 2010. In the U.S., currently lagging Asia, the total new network investments will exceed $100 billion by 2012.

As some telcos already feel the pinch and are beginning to block capacity, or ‘traffic manage’, it is clear that the bolts have already been loosened. Like the initiatives on global warming, its time for us to pull the various Governments, technical communities and Corporations, to pull together and develop a coherent and deliverable strategy that will ensure the wings don’t fall off this great network of networks.

Well suffered a major network failure today losing it’s S3 storage service, EC2 and SQS. The failure affected a number of high profile services including . Although it’s the first major failure have suffered it just goes to show that the cloud computing model assumes a reliable network is in place. Without it the model doesn’t fly (or should I say ‘roll’?).

Anyway seems like it could be a very big wagon we are riding not an aeroplane. Three wheels to go.

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Pownce Raises Small Investment

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At last night’s -sponsored Bay Area Girl Geek Dinner, Pownce cofounder Leah Culver told EPICENTER that her -meets-file sharing startup finally raised a round of outside funding after being self-funded and bootstrapped since its summer launch. Culver didn’t reveal the amount raised, but she noted that the round was “small” yet “enough to hire another developer” to assist her — Culver had been the sole developer on since it was founded. Investors include prolific angel Ron Conway and Mike Maples of Maples Investment.  ’s other cofounders include Daniel Burka, Shawn Allen, and cofounder Kevin Rose.

is a social networking and micro-blogging site started by Internet entrepreneurs Kevin Rose, Leah Culver, Daniel Burka, and Shawn Allen. It is centered around sharing messages, files, events, and links with already established friends. is a way to send stuff to your friends. Users can send music, photos, messages, links, events, and more via the web site or through lightweight desktop software. Only the people you choose get to see what you sent. A kind of private Twitter if you like.

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Twitter Your Life

A global community of friends and strangers answering one simple question: What are you doing?

This very simple concept is strangely engrossing. you post very short notes about what you are doing for others to see. you can follow your friends as they their every move. You can link to your cell phone, IM or just view on the web.

www.twitter.com

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