UK Boffins Lead Way to Preserve the Internet


LONDON, May 7 /PRNewswire/ --     A British computer software research company may have solved the growing
problem of the Internet slowing down.

The software, called "C-THRU" is in the final stages of production, at
Bubblephone Ltd, based at the University of Sussex Innovation Centre, near
Brighton.

Experts predict that demand for Internet bandwidth, already growing at
60% a year, will start to exceed supply from as early as next year because of
more people working online and the soaring popularity of bandwidth-hungry
websites such as YouTube and services such as the BBC's iPlayer. The volume
of traffic generated each month by YouTube is now equivalent to the amount of
traffic generated across the entire Internet in all of 2000.

The company originally planned to build a piece of software that would
join up lots of different telephone networks, hence the name, but soon
realised its software could solve problems effecting Internet traffic flow
and reliability.

"If you imagine a congested road, full of traffic running through a High
Street," said company Managing Director, Sean Curtis-Ward, "then C-THRU is
the bus lane that allows essential traffic to move along the road, without
obstruction. We don't make the road wider, we just make sure that there's
always a route open regardless of how bad the traffic is."

The software was invented by Tom Flavel and Jonathan Turrall, two former
students of Artificial Intelligence at the University of Sussex.

C-THRU has enormous potential for anyone running time sensitive services
over the Internet such as telephony, streaming TV and financial transactions.
"It works by constantly testing the internet connection, then adapting itself
to always keep open the best possible connection," said Turrall. "The user is
oblivious to this - all they experience is a perfect, rock solid connection."

This ability to "adapt" itself on the fly also enables C-THRU to connect
different computer systems that previously could not talk to each other.
"Only now are we beginning to grasp the commercial potential of all this,"
said Curtis-Ward.

With the right backing C-THRU could be in production in less than a year,
just at the time when experts say the slowdown will start.

"It's really is very exciting. This has the potential to put the UK at
the forefront of the battle to preserve the Internet," said Turrall.

For further information contact:

Sean Curtis-Ward. Telephone: +44-(0)20-7617-7206

http://www.bubblephone.com

© PR Newswire Association LLC.

News archive

Subscribe to AfterDawn's weekly newsletter.