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Into the Stratosphere: An Entirely New Model of Wireless Networks

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An excerpt from Telecosm... | External Advertisement Man Who Called NVIDIA’s Rise Warns: Next P

An excerpt from Telecosm... [Gilder's Daily Prophecy] September 20, 2019 [ARCHIVES]( | [UNSUBSCRIBE]( External Advertisement Man Who Called NVIDIA’s Rise Warns: Next Phase Of 5G Is Here Jeff Brown, a former Silicon Valley CEO, holds live event off-campus of Yale University for a select audience to reveal new[Man speaking at conference]( "5G Device". [Click Here to Learn More]( Into the Stratosphere: An Entirely New Model of Wireless Networks [George Gilder]Dear Daily Prophecy Reader, For today’s Prophecy I’d like to share an excerpt from an article that was first published in Forbes ASAP, March 29, 1993 called “The New Rules of Wireless.” It is a portion of my book, Telecosm. At first glance, Vahak Hovnanian, a homebuilding tycoon in New Jersey, would seem an unlikely sort to be chasing rainbows. Yet in the converging realms of computers and communications that we call the Telecosm, rainbows are less a matter of hue and weather than they are a metaphor for electromagnetism: the spectrum of wavelengths and frequencies used to build businesses in the Information Age. An Armenian Christian from Iraq, Hovnanian ran a business building high-quality "affordable" housing. His first coup came on Labor Day in 1958 when, together with his three older brothers, he bought an apparently undesirable property near the waterfront in Toms River for $20,000. From this modest beginning has arisen not only one of the nation's largest homebuilding enterprises (divided among the four immigrant brothers), but also a shattering breakthrough on some seemingly bleak frontiers of the electromagnetic spectrum. Together with maverick inventor Bernard Bossard, Hovnanian has launched a wireless cellular TV business in frequencies once thought usable only in outer space. Perhaps the reason Hovnanian feels comfortable today pioneering on the shores of the Telecosm is that some 35 years ago he was an engineer at Philco Semiconductor following in the theoretical steps of AT&T Bell Laboratories titan William Shockley. Shockley led the team that plunged into the microcosm of solid-state physics and invented the transistor. At the heart of all-digital electronics, this invention still reverberates through the world economy and imposes its centrifugal rules of enterprise. This law of the Microcosm dictates exponential rises in computer efficiency as transistors become smaller. It is this law that drives the bulk of the world's computations to ever-cheaper machines and pushes intelligence from the center to the fringes of all networks. Today the Microcosm is converging with the telecosm and igniting a new series of industrial shocks and surprises. Is “$7 Internet” Coming to Your State This Year? [Tek Halo](Is “$7 Internet” Coming to Your State This Year? "America’s Most Hated” cable companies are mad as hell. A brand-new internet technology with the code name “Halo-Fi” promises to be faster than cable yet, by my estimates, over 7 times cheaper, which could save you an easy $19,494. Everything shifts ASAP, so there’s no time to lose. [Discover the full story here...]( The convergence of the Microcosm and Telecosm in an array of multimedia industries – from personal intelligent communicators to video teleputers to digital films and publishing – is now the driving force of world economic growth. John Sculley, chairman and CEO of Apple Computer, has projected that by 2002 there will be a global business in multimedia totaling some $3.5 trillion – close to the size of the entire US economy in the early 1980s. This new world of computer communications will break down into two domains – the fibersphere and the atmosphere. The fibersphere is the domain of all-optical networks, with both communications power-bandwidth and error rate improving by factors in the millions. In "Into the Fibersphere" (Forbes ASAP, December 7, 1992), we saw that the potential capacity for communications in the fibersphere is 1,000 times greater than all the currently used frequencies in the air – and so radically error-free that it mandates an entirely new model of wired telecommunications. Now we will discover that the atmosphere will offer links as mobile and ubiquitous as human beings are. It thus will force the creation of an entirely new model of wireless networks. In one sense, Sculley's $3.5 trillion dream can be seen as the pot of gold at the end of Maxwell's rainbow. In 1865, in a visionary coup that the late Richard Feynman said would leave the American Civil War of the same decade as a mere "parochial footnote" by comparison, Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell discovered the electromagnetic spectrum. Encompassing nearly all the technologies imagined by Sculley, Maxwell's rainbow reaches from the extremely low frequencies (and gigantic wavelengths) used to communicate with submarines all the way through the frequencies used in radio, television and cellular phones, on up to the frequencies of infrared used in TV remotes and fiber optics, and beyond that to visible and ultraviolet light and X- rays. In a fabulous feat of unification, Maxwell reduced the entire spectrum to just four equations in vector calculus. He showed that all such radiations move at the speed of light - in other words, the wavelength times the frequency equals the speed of light. These equations pulse at the heart of the information economy today. Virtually all electromagnetic radiation can bear information, and the higher frequencies, the more room they provide for bearing information. As a practical matter, however, communications engineers have aimed low, thronging the frequencies at the bottom of the spectrum, comprising far less than one percent of the total span. The vast expansion of wireless communications forecast by Sculley, however, will require the use of higher frequencies far up Maxwell's rainbow. This means a return to the insights of another great man who walked the halls of Bell Labs in the late 1940s at the same time as future Nobel laureate William Shockley, who left the world transformed in his wake. In 1948, the same year that Shockley invented the transistor, Claude Shannon invented information theory that underlies all modern communications. At first encounter, information theory is difficult for nonmathematicians, but computer and telecom executives need to focus on only a few key themes. In defining how much information can be sent down a noisy channel, Shannon showed that engineers can choose between narrowband high-powered solutions and broadband low-powered solutions. I will share more excerpts from this article in future Daily Prophecies. Regards, [George Gilder] George Gilder Editor, Gilder's Daily Prophecy P.S. A Few Important Updates Great news! Our website is officially live. You can view all of your content at[www.GilderPress.com.]( If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to contact our Customer Service team [here](mailto:support@gilderpress.com?). Also, if you’ve signed up for my research newsletter The George Gilder Report, I’m pleased to announce that the inaugural issue is available to download. Head over to the website to access this information. One other thing: If you’re a member of Gilder’s Moonshots — my research service that isolates smaller stocks that promise faster gains — we are sending weekly updates about our positions. Biggest innovation since the Internet [Diamond Internet](Within just a few years, the Internet changed the way we do business. It changed the way we communicate. And it created a LOT of new millionaires and billionaires. Now, history is about to repeat itself… A brand-new technology is about to replace the Internet as we know it. Forbes calls it the… “Biggest disruptor in technology since the 1990s.” [Click here for the full details…]( Editor's Note: See George Gilder speak at The Money Show in Dallas October 13! [Click here to sign up.]( [Gilder Press] To end your Gilder's Daily Prophecy e-mail subscription and associated external offers sent from Gilder's Daily Prophecy, [click here to unsubscribe](. If you are having trouble receiving your Gilder's Daily Prophecy subscription, you can ensure its arrival in your mailbox by [whitelisting Gilder's Daily Prophecy.]( Gilder's Daily Prophecy is committed to protecting and respecting your privacy. Please read [our Privacy Statement.]( Gilder Press, a division of Laissez Faire Books, LLC. 808 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202. Nothing in this e-mail should be considered personalized financial advice. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized financial advice. We expressly forbid our writers from having a financial interest in any security recommended to our readers. All of our employees and agents must wait 24 hours after online publication or 72 hours after the mailing of a printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended in this letter should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. © 2019 Gilder Press, a division of Laissez Faire Books, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. This newsletter may only be used pursuant to the subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying, or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of Gilder Press, a division of Laissez Faire Books, LLC.

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