International Journal of Computer Applications |
Foundation of Computer Science (FCS), NY, USA |
Volume 184 - Number 47 |
Year of Publication: 2023 |
Authors: Romal Bharatkumar Patel |
10.5120/ijca2023922578 |
Romal Bharatkumar Patel . Next Generation of Internet - Current Status and Plans. International Journal of Computer Applications. 184, 47 ( Feb 2023), 12-16. DOI=10.5120/ijca2023922578
The Internet is crucial to modern media, but it is also a dynamic technology that is continually developing as people embrace and reject new features, devices, and apps and utilize them in unexpected ways. Governments, scientists, and institu-tions are seeking new methods to deliver information swiftly and powerfully as the Internet gets larger and more congested. Since its start in the early 1980s, the Internet has evolved into a massive network. Today’s Internet has three fundamental limitations: speed, address, and security. This conversation on the assignment report sheds light on the advent of new patterns of Internet access in everyday life and work via several devices, some of which are portable. Those that implement this new attitude are referred to as ’next-generation users.Internet2 and Next Generation Internet (NGI) play critical roles in today’s world for quick and reliable communication. Both new Internets aspire to create new, quicker technologies to boost research and communication, and it is predicted that both efforts will eventually improve the present commercial Internet. In contrast, first-generation Internet users remain reliant on one or more personal computers in the home or business to access the Internet. The research demonstrates how this developing pattern of access is transforming Internet use and effect, such as by facilitating the creation of user- generated content. The present Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) cannot supply a sufficient number of unique IP addresses for all Internet- connected components. The report demonstrates how next -generation access is socially dispersed, resulting in a new digital gap perpetuating social inequalities