A worldwide self-organizing information grid

Define worldwide archiving systems, with communication protocols, mutual backup, and information merging.

Research opportunity

Abstract: The Internet, which is based on conventional computer technology, may soon be replaced by a worldwide information grid, based on Autosophy technology. This will have a dramatic impact on archiving and communication. Information will be stored in many specialized and separate archives, which would constantly communicate with each other to exchange and merge their knowledge. Unlike computer systems, Autosopher systems cannot be infected by viruses. Access to any information may use grammatical languages and logical reasoning similar to human communication. Using error-proof communication and storage, robots may never fail or provide erroneous information even after suffering physical damage. Communication would involve true knowledge, in effect only what is new and not already known by the receiver, instead of meaningless data files. The various archives will have mutual backup, where information is stored in many separate archives so that destruction of any one archive will not bring down the information grid. The purpose of this research would be to define the operations of this new information grid.

Applications: The Internet may soon be replaced by an Autosophy information grid. Advanced planning and research is required to anticipate the changes brought on by this new technology.

Keywords: Autosophy, Failure-proof systems, Dual-redundancy systems, DECAM memories, Global information grid.

Available downloadable documents:

Publication 2006 – Network-centric systems – Webpage htm

Publication 2005 – Failure-proof Memory – Webpage htm

Publication 2005 – Learning machines – Webpage htm

Publication 2004 – Archiving – Webpage htm

Publication 2002 – Autosophy Internet – Webpage htm

Proposal 2004 – Learning databases – Webpage htm

Demonstration 1988 – Autosopher – Webpage htm