Washington (AFP) - Superfast
Internet connections are likely to open up new kinds of communication
such as "telepresence" and improve services such as remote health care, a
survey of experts showed Thursday.
"People's basic interactions and their ability to 'be together' and collaborate will change in the age of vivid telepresence -- enabling people to instantly 'meet face-to-face' in cyberspace with no travel necessary," the report said.
Additionally, the report said that "augmented reality will extend people's sense and understanding of their real-life surroundings and virtual reality will make some spaces, such as gaming worlds and other simulated environments, even more compelling places to hang out."
The report is not
based on a random poll, but instead an opt-in survey of people deemed
experts or affiliated with certain organizations, taken between November
2013 and January 2014.
Pew invited more than 12,000 experts and
others who follow technology trends to share their opinions on the
likely future of the Internet and 2,551 responded to at least one of the
questions.
The report
focused on possibilities of "gigabit connectivity" or speeds of 1,000
megabits per second -- around 50 to 100 times faster than the average
fixed high-speed connection.
As
some systems with these speeds are being deployed by Google and others,
a number of Internet users have been questioning how useful these
connections will be, the report noted.
The experts said they believe a "killer app" is likely to emerge, but it is not yet clear what that will be.
"As
gigabit bandwidth becomes widespread later this decade, applications
will emerge which exploit the combination of big data, GPS location,
weather, personal-health monitoring devices, industrial production, and
much more," said William Schrader, co-founder of PSINet Inc.
"Gigabit
bandwidth is one of the few real 'build it and they will come' moments
for new killer apps. The fact that no one had imagined the other killer
apps prior to seeing them grow rapidly implies that no one can imagine
these new ones -- including me."
David
Weinberger, a researcher at Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet &
Society, said that with these connections, "There will be full,
always-on, 360-degree environmental awareness, a semantic overlay on the
real world, and full-presence massive open online courses. Plus Skype
won't break up nearly as much."
Marti
Hearst, a professor at the University of California-Berkeley, said the
new connections means people will "play sports and music virtually,
distributed, across the globe" and that some can have "virtual
Thanksgiving dinner with the other side of the family."
Higher
speeds will also lead to "higher adoption of telesurgery and remote
medical support" and more sensor data from medical devices being
collected and stored, according to Jason Hong of Carnegie Mellon
University, who predicted "far better telepresence, in terms of video
quality, audio quality (and) robotic control."