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The State Of The Web; It’s Not The Medium That’s The Message
The Internet is so big, so powerful and pointless that for some people it is a complete substitute for life.—Andrew Brown Recently Adobe’s CEO Bruce Chizen announced that all their applications would move online within 10 years. The same day I saw a headline that “Comcast Blocks Some Internet Traffic,” referring to the nation’s second largest broadband provider interfering with attempts by its high-speed Internet subscribers to share files. OK, working with Photoshop online may not be file sharing but it’s still pumping big files back and forth and if companies like Comcast decide that’s too much bandwidth they could resort to tactics described by Peter Svensson in a recent AP story. “The practice of managing the flow of Internet data is known as ‘traffic shaping,’ and is already widespread among Internet service providers. It usually involves slowing down some forms of traffic, like file sharing, while giving others priority.” So if your Internet service seems slow today, you may be a victim of traffic shaping or just crappy service. Sometimes it’s hard to tell the difference. I don’t want my Photoshop work affected by these practices and prefer to keep my imaging offline and under my control. Are you listening, Mr. Chizen?
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