Interplanetary Internet Tested In Space 124
Anonymous Coward writes "After Vint Cerf planned the Interplanetary Internet, there's a press release saying that the Interplanetary Internet is now being tested in space, using the Bundle Protocol developed by the Delay-Tolerant Networking Research Group. There's a conference paper with details on the testing too. These guys were previously the first to test IPv6 in space. Now they've found something with even fewer users than IPv6 to play with!"
Nonsense! (Score:1, Funny)
This is impossible. How the hell is are interplanetary tubes supposed to work?
String theory (Score:1)
Think of the strings as wires and tubes as insulation.
Re:Nonsense! (Score:5, Funny)
More importantly, can we adapt the technology for these tubes to build a space elevator?
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Willy Wonka has prior art.
No space elevator needed. Willy Wonka just needs to fart...
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My user database is ready (Score:3, Funny)
To all the people who said I was crazy to have a planet table in my user database for Suso webhosting, *pfftt*
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*LHC experiment begins*
tubes? what tubes?
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How the hell is are interplanetary tubes supposed to work?
They're not. If you RTFA, they're using a big truck instead.
Can you hear me now? (Score:5, Funny)
Does VoIP work when there's no sound in space?
Cue packet-sending spacedwelling overlord jokes in 0101, 0011, 0001, ...
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Your countdown must not like even numbers...
drop ed pac ets (Score:5, Funny)
The e ar stil few b gs in the sy tem.
Re:drop ed pac ets (Score:5, Informative)
This allows for retransmissions from inside the network rather than having to retransmit data from the source, as is the case with TCP.
No, this is not a best-effort protocol. Retransmission is required as in TCP, except in this case intermediary nodes along the route can take responsibility for retransmission of packets, whereas in TCP the source of the packet must carry out this role.
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Naahhh, I think it's ok. It's just been slashdotted.
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Tttthhhhhaaaatttt''ssss wwwwwhhhyyyyy tttthhhheeeeeeeyyyy bbbbuuuuiillllttt eeeexxxxtttrrraaaaa rrrrreeeeddddduuuuunnnnnddddddaaannnnnccyyyy iiiinnnnnnn tttthhhhhheee sssssyyyyysssssttttttteeeeemmmmm.....
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:5, Funny)
Yep. It works like this.
Peter: Hello.
Malcom: (After 1 hour) Hello.
Peter: (After 1 hour) Take the Nitro away from Sun.
Malcom: (After 1 hour) What?
Peter: (After 1 hour) Take the Nitro out of Sunshine U idiot.
Malcom: NO CARRIER.
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You still missed 0100
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F5hahhhhhhhh!
It's the Internet, Jim (Score:5, Funny)
But not as we know it.
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ET (Score:5, Funny)
Intergalactic Phising Expedition (Score:5, Funny)
Dear Blessed, I am writing you from Europa deeep ocean cause I halve heard you have Jen Rus heart and a sound mined.
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Since your govment do not know yet of our existent, there is no risk too you. You will keep Sixty ( 6 0)per centage of sulfur that works out to 35.4 microgramms. I will collect theremainder when I have rode to yur plant on your spacecraft Galileo. My jupiter friend on Jupiter sent me that they have found this craft deliverd right to them.
Do not bee concrnd word. I will be Benevolent dict-ator. Sulfuric economy be flourashing.
Send yor contact lens numbers and sulfur banque code with which to strat transacshin now.
Sincerelty,
Royal Honnroble Emmannue^328*() 4532.4
Banke of Europa
Re:Intergalactic Phising Expedition (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, gawd. Now I'm scared. (Score:2)
"Contact lens code". Very nice.
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Ahm no' gonnae invest, so ahm oot.
</bannatyne>
ET's finger (Score:2, Funny)
can now get harassed to make savings on his long distance calls to his home planet
And also receive e-mails about pills that make his finger longer.
Lame..... (Score:2, Funny)
And you thought latency was bad on Earth... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:And you thought latency was bad on Earth... (Score:5, Funny)
It's just 20 minutes.. if you play a Hunter, none of your guildmates will notice the difference.
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Wait till you try to play World of Warcraft from MARS!
An hour and a half (round trip) grind before you get anywhere whatsoever? Won't that be an improvement?
space pr0n (Score:5, Funny)
can't wait for the space pr0n sites to pop up
Re:space pr0n (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh, god... Could you imagine bodily fluids being shot around in space? It'd be like tubgirl but WORSE...
Although, zero-g fucking would be pretty awesome to watch :D
Re:space pr0n (Score:5, Funny)
"Although, zero-g fucking would be pretty awesome to watch :D"
Spoken like a true-blue /.'er!
Anyone else would have left off the 'to watch' part.
Congrat's! Enlarge and frame your /. Geek Certificate and show it off proudly!
P.S. Sadly, I too thought the same thing.
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It would be a good way to earn "hard" currency :)
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LOL this brings to mind an article from the last issue of Wired about the Russian cosmonaut training city - apparently the Russians have experimented with sex in orbit, but because of reduced bloodflow to the lower part of the body it's not as easy as it sounds.
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/people/magazine/16-09/ff_starcity?currentPage=5 [wired.com]
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out.
from my auto-erotic asphyxiation.
Re:space pr0n (Score:5, Funny)
You mean like THIS?
http://www.filecabi.net/video/et-sex.html [filecabi.net]
Rule #34, baby! Rule #34!
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Yuk !!!!!
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Yeah. First I thought, that maybe a "NSFW" paragraph would protect me from downmodding.
But then I figured, that if someone clicked the link without reading the URL, I just helped natural selection a bit, which is a good thing. ;)
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Oh, and I hope you still haven't seen the pterodactyl porn video. Although the granny style of that ET thing is worse. ;)
simple... (Score:2)
oh great (Score:2, Informative)
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Department of Redundancy Department (Score:2, Funny)
Interplanetary Internet Tested In Space.
Uhh, where else would they test it?
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On a different planet?
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You mean from a different planet, which I would count as "in space". Two nodes on Mars would be an intraplanetary network.
'In Space?' Where are you, and how is your pr0n? (Score:3, Funny)
"You mean from a different planet, which I would count as "in space"."
It is a matter of perspective, Earthling. :)
Hams had it in 1985 (Score:5, Interesting)
Bruce
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You could literally hear your packet being relayed from point to point.
I am not surprised! Morse keys make a racket!
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...inspired by the Venus Equilateral stories of George O. Smith in the 1940's: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venus_Equilateral [wikipedia.org]
Finally (Score:1)
I can move to Mars without regrets.
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One thing for sure: broadband connections on Mars will be capped.
Prior Interplanetary Art (Score:4, Interesting)
Vint Cerf may have worked on the development, but the idea was covered by Vernor Vinge in 1992 ("A Fire Upon The Deep"). Yes, it was fiction, but Vinge drew on his knowledge as a computer scientist. He also betrayed himself as having more than a passing familiarity with the pitfalls and pratfalls of usenet message threads. "Hexapodia As The Key Insight" (Thanks, Jack.)
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I agree on the Usenet references... It was eerily accurate, and very enjoyable. Also, I liked his concept of aliens, which were actually alien, rather than most sci-fi.
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Also, I liked his concept of aliens, which were actually alien
And also eerily like Usenet. Have you read some the fringe posters from the late '80s? Scarier than the "Alliance for the Defense" posts in the book.
Yah, I thought about the Net of a Million Lies when I read this /. article headline. I wonder what kind of lag you'd get playing WoW from, say Relay. I hope the realm server is in the Upper Beyond.
(If none of this makes sense, kind reader, get the book or ignore me. Thank you.)
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Crypto: 0
As received by: Transceiver Relay03 at Relay
Language path: Cloudmark -> Twiskweline, SjK units
[Cloudmark is a High Beyond trade language. Despite colloquial rendering, only core meaning is guaranteed.]
From: Transcendent Bafflements Trading Union at Cloud Center
Subject: Matter of life and death
Summary: Arbitration Arts has fallen to Straumli Perversion via a Net attack. Use Middle Beyond relays till emergency passes!
Key phrases: Net attack, scale interstellar warfare, Straumli Perversion
Distrib
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I see I'm not the only fan.
"Fire" is available as an audiobook. Handy, but it loses the effect of network traffic as compared to the print version. Reading the headers as headers gives almost a sub-plot.
Asshole!!! (Score:1, Funny)
Imagine the horror (Score:2)
vulcanary 108 years old/biological male but engineered female/YU5567. XH558, Vulcan
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You'd be his age by the time you get a reply.
Star pr0n (Score:1)
Evolution of internet (Score:2)
V 2.0 IPV6, much faster, light speed is the limit
V 3.0 SSWW aka Solar System Wide Web, why run in a superhighway if you can crawl in the space?
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
So those limited robotic probes can communicate of course. Not having to invent a whole new protocol and being able to re-use existing sattelites for retransmission is a big win for future missions.
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The point is that the robotic probes will be accessible through the internet if you catch my drift ;)
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Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, Delay-tolerant Networking has applications that go beyond just space. One prime example is acoustic networks for oceanic monitoring - http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/iel5/4302188/4302189/04302341.pdf [ieee.org] has a nice paper about the application. Also, battlefield communications where there may be intermittent connectivity benefits from DTN.
Anyway, the reason for getting direct IP connectivity to space probes is to reduce the overhead: If you can just say wget http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/mars/opportunity/todayspic.jpg [nasa.gov] to access Oppy's camera instead of having to go through various hoops it makes everyones work easier. Combine this with dynamic and automatic routing (for example, for solar oppositions)..So yes, mostly the benefits are for scientists and engineers in space projects.
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Oh, sure, the practical uses. I hear 'Delay-Tolerant Networking', and I think 'carrier pidgeon' [faqs.org].
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Another real-world application (Score:2)
I attended a talk given by Vint Cerf at the local Google office (in Tempe, AZ, though it's referred to as "Google Phoenix"), and he discussed another application: text messaging between soldiers, and between soldiers and commanding officers, in battlefield conditions. The devices might not have exposure to a network all the time, so they relay messages to the next node when it becomes visible/available.
Vint Cerf said this was already being used in the field.
Of course, sending cheaper robotic probes out int
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You're talking like working on a way of networking things excludes *also* working on a way to get people to Mars.
It seems unlikely to me that the people working on this are the same set of people designing propulsion systems, and ways of sustaining life on other planets.
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Finally ... (Score:1)
... I get my .mars email address.
Prior Art (Score:2)
Arthur C. Clarke envisaged this problem years ago for 2001.
Interplanetary wifi charges (Score:1)
Wonder if the larger planets will charge higher for the wifi like hotels do. Stay at a 1st class hotel/space station, charge exuberant wifi prices. Stay at a Motel 6 / Planet 6 and get free wifi
Interstellar internet next (Score:1)
Don't know if has been said but... (Score:1)
Prior art, FidoNet (Score:2)
Nothing new here. FidoNet [wikipedia.org] has been providing latency tolerant networking since the 1980s. Just ask our friends in Cuba, they're still using something similar, but thumb drives and USB key fobs means the packet size can be well over a Gigabyte. Put that in your pipe I mean 'series of tubes', and smoke it!
DTN is not IP for space (Score:2, Interesting)
Just to clear up what seems to be a common confusion, DTN is *not* IP for space. It is a new networking stack that can work *over* IP, but fundamentally uses a store and forward architecture, and can uses other physical or transport layers. It will work with minibuses driving around rural africa, and it will allow "bundles" to be eventually delivered to probes that are in the shadow of a planet. See dtnrg.org
How about a webcam on the moon! (Score:2)
Then we place one one Mars...
Fun, and we get to test this "interplanetary internet" thing...
Doesn't seem all that hard to do...
Wait (Score:2)
Can we get confirmation on this? I'm pretty sure nothing has fewer users than IPv6.
One Word (Score:1)
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But (Score:1)
"After Vint Cerf planned the Interplanetary Internet"
I thought Al Gore planned the Interplanetary Internet...
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Make it worth our while. We want to read trollposts of epic proportions. We want to see that you've done your homework. We want to feel the cognitive dissonance of simultaneous +1 informative and -1 troll(though -1 flamebait is also acceptable).
We've read niggers, goatse, coprophilia, homosexual anal sex, and bestiality. The clock is ticking -- the more others post, the less likely that you will innovate before they do.
It's a tough world, man. Getting the firs
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