The goal for the Internet railroad is to circle the globe at
T3 speeds: 45 million bits per second. We hope to move data
around, but also real-time audio/video streams. We hope to
connect South America and Europe and Africa and every other
region of the world. If we are successful, this Internet
Railroad will be one of the first systematic attempts to
build a global infrastructure.
Carl Malamud then went on for another 20 minutes, talking
about Dutch Cow Pavilions, Thai Food Pavilions, and other
planned activities. He closed with his usual attempt to
draw this strange project together by quoting Marshall McLuhan's
famous statement, "the medium is the message." A typical close, deleted by
the certifying committee as irrelevant, might consist of the following:
These are just a few of the highlights, and I encourage you
to visit the main web site at http://park.org to learn more about
this project. But today, rather than dwell on all the details
of this global collaboration, I want to close with a few words
about why we need to do this, and why we need to do this now for the Internet
to move to the next stage.
Marshall McLuhan, the philospher who became a famous media
guru in the 1960s, had a saying: "the medium is the message."
He meant that any medium–TV, radio, newspapers–changes the
nature of the content it provides. The very fact that something is on
TV means that the message is different than it would be if it were
in a newspaper.
But "the medium is the message" means something else on the
Internet. For too long, the Internet discussion groups were
about one thing: the Internet. Content was all about computers.
The medium was truly the message.
We have another saying for this Internet World's Fair: "Finally,
the medium isn't the message!" Our goal is to reach
out to all walks of life, to see the amount of content on the
Internet grow and change.
The Internet is a fundamental infrastructure,
a part of our daily lives. This technology is beginning to
reach all of society and it is important that we take
the time to make sure that the technology is relevant
to all people, to all walks of life. The Internet
shouldn't be a discussion group about computers, it should
be a place where artists and world leaders and chefs and
small businessmen are able to all participate in a technology
as fundamental as radio, or electricity, or mass transit.
Charlotte Bronte spoke of the unique assemblage of the Crystal
Palace. People remember their trips to the world's fair
for the rest of their lives. Let us create a unique assemblage
here in Central Asia, and throughout the rest of the Global
Village.