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More bytes in less time
WASHINGTON, JUNE 17. A Taiwanese businessman, Dr. Ding-Yuan Yang
(52), has devised a way to increase the speed of transmission of
internet information from megabytes to gigabytes on an ordinary
personal computer, according to a Washington Post report.
To achieve this, the Princeton and Stanford Business School-
educated Dr. Ding has used a glass cable with a coating developed
by Minneapolis-based Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company.
U.S., German and Japanese firms are also working on the problem
but Dr. Ding has beat them to the finish line.
Information on the internet moves as light pulses along fibre
optic cables at many gigabytes but once it reaches buildings or
local switching stations, that information gets off the fibre
optics line into the much slower copper wire. Gigabytes then
become megabytes. Frames freeze and downloading can seem to take
forever.
Dr. Ding, who heads a consortium of 14 Taiwanese companies, and
his team say that this last stage has kept users from an
explosion of opportunity from downloading a movie in seconds to
moving high resolution medical images at the touch of a switch.
To link the copper wires in most desktop computers to the high-
speed lines, the consortium is manufacturing another product
called VF-45.
This switch can turn the electric signals running along copper
wires into light pulses that moves on fibre optic lines. Snap it
into your computer and you will be measuring your speed in
``gigs'' not ``megs'', says Dr. Ding.
- PTI
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