[governance] A View From Planet.UNI.X (http://www.Uni.X)
Jim Fleming
JimFleming at Ameritech.NET
Mon Oct 10 10:40:06 EDT 2005
A View From Planet.UNI.X (http://www.Uni.X)
UNI.X to UNI.X communication technology has been connecting people on
Planet.Earth for
a very long period of time. Some people attempt to discount that fact, and
THE Big Lie Society
of course attempts to claim they invented all .NET technology and services
and they present you
with only that view. That is just one of the many lies THE Big Lie Society
circulates. They recycle
the same group of 52 people who lie to the media, the governments, the ISPs,
and netizens. They
steal technology and rename it and call it their own. They only reference
their cronies and construct
a complex network of lies to convince people on Planet.Earth that their way
is the only way. It
is unfortunate that some people point to one government as endorsing THE Big
Lie Society. That
is not the case. Many governments, in fact all of the G8 governments, have
been duped by THE
Big Lie Society and are their prey. It Seeks Overall Control.
In lands far far away from THE Big Lie Society, UNI.X to UNI.X communication
technology
continues to evolve. The 160 bits commonly sent between UNI.X nodes are
being reshaped.
The kernel software continues to get SMALLER and more reliable. The systems
of hardware
and software continue to become lower-cost and easier to connect. Soon,
rather than connecting
systems via radio only a few 100 feet, large numbers of people will be able
to connect within
a 10 mile radius of their location. A digital island which was once the size
of a home, now
becomes the size of a small city. UNI.X to UNI.X communication technology
will be at the
heart of the communication bit streams. THE Big Lie Society will have a more
difficult time
controlling what people learn about communications and how the market place
evolves. Each
person will be better able to stand up to the 52 members of THE Big Lie
Society who will
never go away or change their view of who invented what or when that
happened. It is their
way or the highway. It Seeks Overall Control.
UNI.X to UNI.X communication technology was once mostly focused on
communication
bewtween processes, software abstractions inside large computers which
create the illusion
of many small communicating computers. Low-cost hardware now available and
long-distance
wireless connections allow those large computers with many small processes
to become a
large number of computers with only a few processes. Processes and the
kernel of the O/S
become smaller and more streamlined with the evolving technology.
How does that impact UNI.X to UNI.X communication technology ?
If one looks at the 160 bits used in UNI.X to UNI.X communication
technology, that breaks
down into 5 times 32 bits. Some people find it easier to think of it as 5
words. The truth is,
it is 160 bits (ones or zeroes) that stream from one device to another
without any notion of
32 bit boundaries. It is very important to consider the 160 bits as a raw
stream because the
first 49 bits can be separated from the other 111 bits for performance
reasons. You might
find two devices sending the first 49 bits in reverse order.
In most cases, the devices send the first 49 bits in an order with the first
4 bits as the channel
number. Channel number 4 is commonly used. That is a bit pattern of 0100.
That will likely expand
as more and more small wireless devices begin to communicate on
Planet.Uni.X. Some people
already use Channel 6 (0110) for their home wireless systems.
The first 4 bits are followed by 4 more bits with the pattern 0101. In some
research and
military systems, those bits were used to signal that secret extensions
followed the first 160
bits. Because many of those secret extensions are military secrets and of
little interest to the
general public the 0101 bits with the value 5 are available to use for
additional addressing
or a sub-channel number. The software that once attempted to process other
combinations
besides the value 5 has been REMOVED from the Uni.X kernel to make the
kernel smaller
and more reliable and LESS likely to be hacked or infected with a virus.
Reviewing the first 8 bits, the first 4 are currently set to 0100 for
Channel 4 and the next 4 are
set to 0101 with the value 5. Because wireless experts and regulatory
agencies prefer to contain
communication into small bands of spectrum, 16 channels are commonly
considered to be
enough for many small local areas. The first 4 bits can encode all 16
channel numbers, with
4 being the most commonly used, followed by 6 commonly in use on home LANs.
While the second 4 bits set to 0101 could be viewed as a sub-channel number,
the consensus
has been to freeze that field for a very long period of time with an SSDD
format. The SSDD
format indicates 2 additional Source (SS) and Destination (DD) address bits
to augment the
other address bits used to route packets. With both SS and DD set to 01, the
pattern 0101
appears as two bits indicating communication between network planes (01).
That is called,
intra-planar or intra-planer communication. If the bits were viewed as SDSD
then the 0101
would appear to indicate INTER-planer communication between S=0 and D=1. The
consensus
appears to be that humans can more easily understand the SSDD format and
human-factors
experiments on low-cost consumer devices prove that to be the case.
Since the Uni.X kernel only currently checks for the value 5 (0101) and
rejects any packets
without 5, those 4 bits are available for experimentation once the
long-distance wireless
hardware is available. With the interest in 64-bit addressing and One-Way
packet transports
the two traditional 32-bit fields for Source and Destination are combined
into one 64-bit
field. When that occurs, there is no notion of Source and Destination, there
is only Source
or only Destination depending on which way the transmission is intended.
When One-Way
64-bit Source addressing is used, a large number of Sources send their data
into the "ether"
for anyone to listen. When One-Way 64-bit Destination addressing is used, an
anonymous
source message is sent to one of a very large population. Since not all 4
bits are needed to
specify two-way unicast from One-Way Uni.X Cast messaging, The 4 bits can be
divided
into 2 fields of 2 bits each. In that arrangement, the 01 and 01 are viewed
as separate fields.
There are various ways to view the 0 and 1 in both two-way and one-way
packet transport.
At the present time, the field is set to 0101 and checked for that value and
only packets with
that value are processed. There is no code to process any other values. That
code has been
removed. Less is more. Less chance of being hacked or infected and less code
to debug
and port and more stable as a result.
As you can see, the above only discusses the first 8 bits of the 160 bits
used in Uni.X to
Uni.X communication technology. As the bits are defined, they are worked
into the Uni.X
kernel. All of the new small hardware devices are able to update their
kernels in the same
time-frames. There is only one (Uni) way the bits are processed. The devices
are smart
enough to update themselves and evolve as the technology changes. There is
expected to
be more awareness of how this technology works, when various regulatory
agencies relax
the unlicensed rules and allow the range to extend to 10 miles. THE Big Lie
Society will have
a very difficult time, continuing to promote their non-technical political
agendas filled with
artificial scarcity and taxation of network resources which are as free as
the air you breathe.
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