Autostrade dell'informazione e velocità. Chrome per creare "ulteriori", "nuove" e "sorprendenti" applicazioni Web
Information highways and speed. Chrome for “more,” “new” and “amazing” Web applications
Sep 9th, 2008 by Ivo |
Email This Post
| Permalink
According to several journalists and bloggers, it seems that the world expansion of Internet broadband would be almost the answer to the world’s problems, involving the right to knowledge, overcoming the digital divide, and the opportunity of spreading human rights.
Is the high-technology version of the same message, of the need to “civilize” the world through Western values and to believe that bringing the market system everywhere will bestow welfare and comfort to everybody? Countries which still havn’t “reached” our standards are called “developing,” as it was unavoidable that they would have to traverse a similar path.
The race for larger bandwidth discriminates between who does and doesn’t have it and affects the development of websites and software which are more and more complex and bandwidth-greedy. Software downloads and updates are quite “heavy”: just think about antivirus updates or operating systems, or the “heaviness” of websites like Facebook.
Often myself being in countries where there is no fast connection to the Net, it becomes impossible to update the operating system and sometimes even to do ordinary activities. My blog itself, quite simple in its architecture, is very slow to initialize with an ordinary connection through a modem. In the good old times in the mid-80s I could let up to five people work at the same time with Unix with terminals through a very humble Intel 8086 processor.
The more the bandwidth expands, the more the Net goes towards the visual and risks seeming like a hyper-TV with a predominance of videos and virtual environments to immerse in, evermore hungry of speed and resources. We get further away from narrative to favor disconnected fragments of information; we get further from words and from a path which goes in depth.
As software applications and sites need more power, the more it gets jammed to manage the information. It is just like car traffic. But the solution to car traffic is not about constructing or widening roads. That’s the problem. Expanding the road network feeds only car and truck traffic to the detriment of different forms of transportation and is harmful for the environment. Furthermore, it encourages non-local production of food and goods, and leads to the abandonment of the non-urbanized territory and local traditions.
One of the most acclaimed features of Chrome, the new browser from Google, is, again, speed. Lars Bak, one of the main computer scientists of the Chrome project, said to Wired magazine: “As soon as developers get the taste for this kind of speed, they’ll start doing more amazing new Web applications and be more creative in doing them.” So this better speed is not actually for the sake of having faster access to the existing web, but to create “more,” “new,” and “amazing” Web applications, which probably will eat more bandwidth.
Nothing against new applications in themselves, but it seems that challenging the need to do “more” and “faster” digitally is similar to the challenge of producing faster cars in the early stages of development of the car industry. Childish notions of “more,” “bigger” and “faster” don’t die easily in the collective psyche.
Even when talking about digital technology, the environmental impact of that “more” remains “more” anyway. A faster connection to the Net requires the user having ever-faster computers which can keep up with the growing information stream and, on the server side, powerful data centers which process data on the “cloud.” Chrome itself, if it speeds browsing on one side, requires the user having a computer with more memory on the other side.
Every two years at the most computers have to be changed to keep up with the latest software developments, with an incredible waste of raw materials. The possibility of having many windows open at the same time or of processing video or images incites the whim to buy bigger screens (whose production requires nitrogen trifluoride, or NF3, a greenhouse gas 17,000 times as potent as carbon dioxide), and so on in a new race for “bigger and faster” which traces the addiction to “doing” and producing which has already given bitter results for the planet.
When I look at pictures of kids in the developing world smiling in front of their laptops it reminds me of the priests who took the Bible to “civilize” populations. Bill Gates itself, in his humanitarian efforts, said a few years ago that the problem of developing countries certainly isn’t lack of computers or the Internet but the scarcity of potable water and support for defeating malaria. I thank Uncle Bill for this statement and might even forgive him for pissing me off in years of using his software. Perhaps the problem of those countries is as well of not becoming the poisonous technological dumping ground of a world wanting more power and speed.




It seem, for me, that we are like the bird who like shinny thing, be it gold or the latest gizmo in technology. And this probably has to do with our perpetual insatisfaction with what we have, a problem enhanced with the publicity that show us constantly that we should get something new, leaner, faster, bigger, shinnier!
That, and the fact that we think our civilisation model is the best, so our values should (again) rules the world. I don’t think so… I dream of a world where art, meditation/spirituality, well being and simply being alive are the prevalent values and not wealth, work. Another way to live, fully?