The Internet Society of Australia (ISOC-AU), the Australian Centre for
Advanced Computing and Communications (ac3), and the Smart Internet
Technology Cooperative Research Centre (SIT CRC) hosted the
forum Connecting the Future'03 on Thursday 2nd October
2003 in Sydney.
Slides and abstracts from the presentations are
available here.
The forum went extremely well. We had a fantastic collection of
opiniated, experienced and very amusing speakers, whose talks
complemented each other in unexpected and interesting ways. The venue
was the old locomotive workshops at Redfern, now a modern business
centre with the industrial skeleton of the old buildings - quite
amazing! The day went very smoothly, mainly due to the sterling efforts
of Lisette Cochineas from SIT and Phil McCrea, CEO of ac3.
We started with Loftus Harris's snapshot of the energetic and
sophisticated NSW IT industry, then talks ranged from Fred Baker's
amusing depiction of the troubled adolescence of the Internet, to
Ramin Marzbani's irreverent analysis of current
takeup of web services. Narelle Clark had some
illuminating comparisons of wireless in terms of bandwidth, mobility
and proximity. Martin Dawson and Tony Hain both focussed on emergency
services as drivers of location detection in wireless and IPv6.
Paul Boustead described the challenges of scaling world-wide massively
multi-player games (ah, the pain of research!), Tim Mansfield
energetically revealed the mysteries of machines talking to each other,
and Grenville Armitage called the Internet an "irritating, opaque
(often antagonistic) companion"... and wants operators, developers,
researchers and government to get together and make it invisible.
Our final session had Roger Kermode on the convergence of devices and
home connectivity, Geoff Huston entertainingly examining the holes in
the "folklore" of IPv6, and Mike Biber pointed out a few holes in
Geoff's arguments too - but they agreed to differ and may get together
for a fiery debate at next year's Linux conference and launch of the
IPv6 Forum in Australia - an event not to be missed.
Many thanks to everyone who attended, presented, and helped arrange such a
high-calibre conference, and thanks too to sponsors Optus, T-Systems and Cisco.
Kate Lance
Executive Director, ISOC-AU
7 October 2003
The Internet Society of Australia is a non-profit, user-focussed
organisation that promotes development of the Internet in Australia to
benefit the whole community, including business, academic, professional
and individual Internet users.
The Australian Centre for Advanced Computing and Communications is a
specialist centre providing high performance computing services to
commerce, industry government and academia. The ac3
state-of-the-art supercomputers and mass storage are accessible by
secure means over the Internet for computational or storage-intensive
applications.
The Smart Internet Technology CRC combines research in Artificial
Intelligence (AI), Social Interaction and Network Development to create
enabling technologies for smart Internet applications that will allow
users and network providers to manage this complexity.