Your company is undergoing a major review of its use of digital technology. How would Butter's Law be most likely to impact your review?
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The amount of data communicated through a single optical fiber doubles every nine months.
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His discovery—later known as Butters' Law—showed that the speed at which information may be transmitted across fibre optic circuits has been doubling every nine months.
Explanation:
- A study of semiconductors, transmission mediums like fibre optics, metal conductors, waveguides, and free-space propagation of light or radio wave signals—which isn't really "free" in the proper meaning of the word—resolves to the rules of physics.
- It is because of this collection of information that Moore's law and other laws must be observed.
- These combine observations on the effects of technological advancements in each area to take use of natural principles as they have been articulated in markets.
- Consider Martin Cooper's Law: Several years ago, I had the pleasure of speaking with Marty. In a group-action law I called "Moore, Cooper, Alimoti's Law of wireless," I had blended a number of the laws.
- Moore's Law uses the influence of semiconductors as a starting point for the advancements in other industries, such as fiber-optic and wireless communications.
- A basic technology used in the bulk of today's communications systems, including 4G-5G mobile, 802.11n and beyond WiFi, and fiber-optic communications during the past 15 years, is space-time coding, which was invented by engineer Siavash Alamouti.
- The inclusion of the lesser-known Alamouti is justified in order to recognise the influence he and other engineer-scientists have had on the larger field and to advance knowledge of the connections between the inter-disciplines.
- What might be referred to as the "interacting disciplines of social commerce" are constructed upon the fundamental, physics-bound applied technology domains.
- An understanding of how these effects are developing can be developed by combining fiber-optic and other wired/point-to-point, free-space wireless that is "exploded" by multi-dimensional "space-time" smart-antenna systems (SAS) technologies with the explosion into the usage dimensions that exploit social interactions.
- The ability to enable an explosion of personal communications has been crucial to the creation of companies like Amazon, eBay, Google, Facebook, YouTube, etc.
- One of the practical impacts of Butters' Law is that the time it takes to download or upload a music, a snapshot, or a high-definition video using a modem connected to fibre optics definitely won't be noticeable by the end of this decade. People who are currently old enough to remember dial-up modems may find that unbelievable, but by 2020, at the current rate of Butters' law, the entire collection of texts currently housed by the U.S. Library of Congress could be downloaded in under a minute, as well as the entire film library of a major Hollywood studio (though still only one film) in under five.
Hence we can say that, the phrase "waiting to download" won't have any relevance to the younger generation.
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