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Buckle up and hold onto your phones, tablets, digital?video clips and Wi-Fi connections, because they're all?contributing to a global?explosion in Internet traffic. It's?expected to increase four times to 1.3 zettabytes by 2016, according to Cisco's VIsual Networking Index Forecast.
That's a lot of traffic and a whole?lot of bytes (one zettabyte is equal to a trillion gigabytes).
By 2016, Internet traffic globally is expected to reach 150 petabytes an hour, or "the?equivalent of 278 million people streaming an HD movie ...?simultaneously," Cisco says.?
The highest-traffic generating countries in 2016 will be the United States, followed by China, says Cisco.
What's driving this growth? A good part?of it are all the phones, tablets and other "smart devices," including TV sets with Internet connections, that we're adopting.
By 2016, there will be nearly 18.9 billion network connections ? "almost 2.5 connections for each person on earth" ? compared with 10.3 billion network connections in 2011, Cisco says.
Last year, while?PCs "generated 94 percent of consumer Internet traffic," by 2016, that will decrease to 81 percent. Meanwhile, mobile?Internet data traffic is forecast to increase 18 times from 2011 to 2016.
There are other factors, too, Cisco says:
- By 2016, there will be 3.4 billion Internet users; that's about 45 percent of the world's projected population.
- More than half of the world's Internet traffic is expected to come from Wi-Fi connections by 2016.
- Meanwhile, the average fixed broadband speed will increase "nearly fourfold," from 9 megabits per second in 2011 to 34 megabits per second in 2016.
- More video, video, video. By 2016,?1.2 million video minutes?will?"travel the Internet every second."?In 2011, there were an estimated 792 million Internet video users, Cisco says; by 2016 there will be 1.5 billion. For businesses worldwide, "desktop videoconferencing is projected to be the fastest-growing service, with 36.4 million users in 2011, increasing to 218.9 million users in 2016."
"Each of us increasingly connects to the network via multiple devices in our always-on connected lifestyles," said Suraj Shetty, Cisco's vice president of product and solutions marketing, in a statement. "Whether by video phone calls, movies on tablets, web-enabled TVs, or desktop video conferencing, the sum of our actions not only creates demand for zettabytes of bandwidth, but also dramatically changes the network requirements needed to deliver on the expectations of this 'new normal.' "
"New normal" or more digital insanity? Only you will be the judge of that.
Check out Technolog, Gadgetbox, Digital Life and In-Game on?Facebook,?and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.
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