From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.4.4 (2020-01-24) on inbox.vuxu.org X-Spam-Level: X-Spam-Status: No, score=-1.0 required=5.0 tests=MAILING_LIST_MULTI, RCVD_IN_DNSWL_NONE autolearn=ham autolearn_force=no version=3.4.4 Received: (qmail 26927 invoked from network); 10 Dec 2020 00:19:34 -0000 Received: from minnie.tuhs.org (45.79.103.53) by inbox.vuxu.org with ESMTPUTF8; 10 Dec 2020 00:19:34 -0000 Received: by minnie.tuhs.org (Postfix, from userid 112) id 771BE944DA; Thu, 10 Dec 2020 10:19:33 +1000 (AEST) Received: from minnie.tuhs.org (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by minnie.tuhs.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 7B64093D34; Thu, 10 Dec 2020 10:19:15 +1000 (AEST) Received: by minnie.tuhs.org (Postfix, from userid 112) id 316C993D34; Thu, 10 Dec 2020 10:19:14 +1000 (AEST) Received: from hop.toad.com (75-101-100-43.dsl.static.fusionbroadband.com [75.101.100.43]) by minnie.tuhs.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 4EBB393D28 for ; Thu, 10 Dec 2020 10:19:11 +1000 (AEST) Received: from hop.toad.com (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by hop.toad.com (8.12.9/8.12.9) with ESMTP id 0BA0J6Sb001480; Wed, 9 Dec 2020 16:19:06 -0800 To: Clem Cole In-reply-to: References: Comments: In-reply-to Clem Cole message dated "Wed, 09 Dec 2020 10:40:19 -0500." Date: Wed, 09 Dec 2020 16:19:06 -0800 Message-ID: <1479.1607559546@hop.toad.com> From: John Gilmore Subject: Re: [TUHS] Cole's Slaw X-BeenThere: tuhs@minnie.tuhs.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.26 Precedence: list List-Id: The Unix Heritage Society mailing list List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , Cc: The Eunuchs Hysterical Society Errors-To: tuhs-bounces@minnie.tuhs.org Sender: "TUHS" Clem Cole wrote: > My own take on this is what I call "Cole's Law" Simple economics > always beats sophisticated architecture. I'm with you, Clem! That certainly worked for closing the Digital Divide. Some suggested allocating billions in tax dollars to subsidize the un-networked in the 1990s and 2000's. Instead we mostly just waited a few years. Semiconductor economics plus consumer behavior (demand rises very quickly as prices drop, which provides economies of scale) solve most of the problem for you. (And in the 2020s Elon Musk and others have likely accumulated enough capital and tech to solve the Last 500 Mile problem -- aiming the dish straight up and to the horizons -- for rural and maritime digital divide issues.) Cole's Law has worked similarly for farm efficiency. Farms in 2020 are many times as efficient, on average, as they were 40 years ago, counting all the inputs (water, energy, land, human time, fertilizer, etc) and the outputs (food and waste products). That's why you can get whole cooked chickens for $8 at your local grocery, as just one example. That was not driven by detailed and complicated environmental regulations, or farm subsidies, but by straightforward economics. The more efficient producers drove out, or bought up, or trained, the inefficient ones. Information flowed from high efficiency farms to low efficiency ones, resources flowed the other way. Going back 140 years, it used to take 50% of the population to grow the food for 100% of us; now it takes less than 2% of the population. The US now has net farmland going back to wilderness every year, because we feed ourselves and the world with less land than it took last year. It also worked for scaling up the Internet. Not just from a few federally supported fat slow regionals and one skinny backbone, to thousands of ISP's (each of whom was self-supporting from customers, so their income would scale with the demand). Also worked for scaling to higher and higher bandwidths, riding both the Moore's Law economics of computation, and also the fiber optic economics of materials science and semiconductor laser/receiver evolution. Rather than complex systemantics around limiting, capping, scheduling, reserving, or otherwise restricting offered traffic, just cheaply make more headroom. Move everything to higher frequencies (including infrared light in fibers, and GHz in radio). Oops, a pandemic that scales up your traffic by 50% in a month and needs realtime latency for most of it? No problem, the economics caused us to build networks that handled that. (BTW, why is your home network still using 1-gigabit Ethernet, when 10-gig Ethernet cards are $100, cat6 or 6a cables cost almost the same as cat5, and 10GBASE-T switches are a few hundred dollars?) Humans tend to make poor decisions about exponential functions that go on for decades, because in evolution we so seldom saw that happen. But we're in the middle of one now, and it as much an exponential function in *economics* as it is in *technology*. John