Friday, November 27, 2015

Bizarre Facts About the World Wide Web and the Internet


Although the World Wide Web is often referred to as the Internet, the two are not the same thing. The Internet is a huge network of networks that links computers together all over the world using a range of wires and wireless technologies. The World Wide Web is the collection of linked pages that are accessed using the Internet and a web browser.
Since the inception of the internet in the 1960's, it has grown from a military experiment into a gigantic living organism made of millions of oddities and thousands of subcultures.  Since the World Wide Web launched 25 years ago, the Net has seen truly explosive growth in tech, business, and culture.

Here are some of the bizarre facts that describe the Internet and the World Wide Web.

1. The Internet Requires Approximately 50 Million Horsepower in Electricity


Yes. With an estimated 8.7 billion electronic devices connected to the Internet, the electricity required to run the system for even one day is very substantial.  According to Russell Seitz and the calculation of Michael Stevens, 50 million brake horsepower worth of electrical power is required to keep the Internet running in its current state. More »


Russel Seitz is a physicist who has crunched some very precise numbers.  With some atomic physics assumptions, the billions upon billions of 'data-in-motion' moving electrons on the Internet add up to approximately 50 grams.  That is 2 ounces, the weight of one strawberry. More »

3. Of the 7 Billion People on Planet Earth, Over 2.4 Billion Use the Internet


While most of these calculations cannot be precisely confirmed, there is high confidence amongst most internet statistics that more than 2 billion people use the internet and the Web as a matter of weekly habit. More »

4. It Takes 2 Billion Electrons to Produce a Single Email Message.


According to Michael Stevens and Vsauce calculations, a 50 kilobyte email message uses the footprint of 8 billion electrons.  The number sounds ginormous, yes, but with electrons weighing next to nothing, 8 billion of them weigh less than a quadrillionth of an ounce. More »


5. Over 8.7 Billion Machines Are Currently Connected to the Internet.


Smartphones, tablets, desktops, servers, wireless routers and hotspots, car GPS units, wristwatches, refrigerators and even soda pop machines: the Internet is comprised of billions of gadgets.  Expect this to grow to 15 billion gadgets by 2015, and to 40 billion gadgets by 2020.  More »

6. Every 60 Seconds, 72 Hours of YouTube Video Is Uploaded


 ...and of those 72 hours, most of the videos are about cats, Harlem Shake dance moves, and insane things that no one is interested in.   Like it or not, people love to share their amateur videos in the hopes that it will go viral and achieve a small bit of celebritydom. More »

7. Electrons Only Move a Few Dozen Meters Before Stopping on the Net.


Yes, an electron doesn't travel very far through the wires and transistors of our computers; they move perhaps a dozen meters or so between machines, and then their energy and signal is consumed by the next device on the network. Each device, in turn, transfers the signal to the adjacent set of electrons and the cycle repeats again down the chain. All of this happens within fractions of seconds.  More »


8. The Internet's 5 Million Terabytes Weigh Less Than a Grain of Sand


Weighing even less that all the moving electricity, the weight of the internet's static data storage ('data-at-rest') is freakishly small.  Once you take away the mass of the hard drives and transistors, it boggles the mind that 5 million TB of data comprises less mass than a grain of sand. More »


9. Over 78% of North Americans Use the Internet


The USA and the English language were the original influences that spawned the Internet and the World Wide Web.  It makes sense that the great majority of Americans rely on the Web as a daily part of life. More »

10. 1.7 Billion of the Internet's Users Are in Asia


That's right: over half of the regular population of the Web resides in some part of Asia:  Japan, South Korea, India, China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore are just some of the countries with this high adoption rate.  There are a growing number of web pages published in these asian languages, but the predominant web language continues to be English. More »


Source : About.com 
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