TED演讲之身体语言 互联网可能会崩溃,怎么办?(1)
So, this book that I have in my hand is a directory of everybody who had an email address in 1982.
呃,我手里的这本书是1982年所有拥有电邮地址的人的通讯录。
Actually, it’s deceptively large.
它看起来很大,其实不然。
There’s actually only about 20 people on each page, because we have the name, address and telephone number of every single person.
这本通讯录实际上每页只记录了大约20个人,因为我们每一个人都有自己的姓名,地址和电话号码。
And, in fact, everybody’s listed twice, because it’s sorted once by name and once by email address.
同时,每个人的信息都出现了两次,因为有两种排序方式:根据名字和根据电子邮件地址。
Obviously a very small community. There were only two other Dannys on the Internet then.
当然这是个很小的社区。当时,互联网上只有另外两个名字也叫丹尼的人。
I knew them both. We didn’t all know each other, but we all kind of trusted each other,
他们两个我都认识。虽然我们彼此之间并不全都认识,但是我们互相信任,
and that basic feeling of trust permeated the whole network, and there was a real sense that we could depend on each other to do things.
这种基本的信任感充满了整个网络,并且大家可以感觉到我们能彼此信赖的去完成一些事情。
So just to give you an idea of the level of trust in this community,
因此,为了让你们能体会到当时该社区的那种信任程度,
let me tell you what it was like to register a domain name in the early days.
下面让我来告诉你在早期是如何注册域名的。
Now, it just so happened that I got to register the third domain name on the Internet.
现在,假如我刚注册了我的第三个互联网域名。
So I could have anything I wanted other than bbn.com and symbolics.com.
于是我可以起任何我想要的名字作为域名,除了”bbn.com”和”symbolics.com”之外。
So I picked think.com, but then I thought, you know, there’s a lot of really interesting names out there.
于是我注册了”think.com”,但是我又想,除此之外还有很多有趣的域名。
Maybe I should register a few extras just in case. And then I thought, “Nah, that wouldn’t be very nice.”
也许我应该多注册几个以备不时之需。我又想:“呐,这样不太好吧。”
That attitude of only taking what you need was really what everybody had on the network in those days,
在那时,这种只取己需的态度在网络上几乎人人拥有,
and in fact, it wasn’t just the people on the network,
而且事实上,不仅仅是使用网络的人有这种态度,
but it was actually kind of built into the protocols of the Internet itself.
这种态度也植根于互联网协议自身。
So the basic idea of I.P., or Internet protocol,
所以,I.P.,或者互联网协议的基本思想,
and the way that the — the routing algorithm that used it, were fundamentally “from each according to their ability, to each according to their need.”
以及路由算法用到的工作方式,从根本上来说是“各尽其能,各取所需。”
And so, if you had some extra bandwidth, you’d deliver a message for someone. If they had some extra bandwidth, they would deliver a message for you.
因此,如果你有额外的带宽,你代别人发送信息。如果他们也有额外的带宽,他们也可以代你发送信息。
You’d kind of depend on people to do that, and that was the building block.
你将会逐渐依靠于他人才能来完成信息的交换,而这就是构建的基石。
It was actually interesting that such a communist principle was the basis of a system developed during the Cold War by the Defense Department,
有趣的是,虽然这样一个共产原则居然是国防部在冷战期间开发的一个系统的核心,
but it obviously worked really well, and we all saw what happened with the Internet.
而很明显它的效果非常好,我们已经目睹了互联网发生的一切。
It was incredibly successful.
毋庸置疑,非常的成功。
演讲简介:
在1970年代和1980年代,互联网充满了慷慨的精神,那时互联网用户数量少,而且相距遥远。但如今,网络无处不在,它将数以十亿的用户、机器和重要的基础设施紧紧的联结在一起。让让我们非常容易受到网络攻击或崩溃。互联网先锋Danny Hillis认为互联网不是为这样的规模设计的,为我们吹响了设计B计划的号角:一个在互联网失效或者崩溃时可以运作的并行系统。