Friday, December 7, 2012

Telecommunications management


TELECOMMUNICATIONS: A VIEW OF THE FUTURE
This research provides an overview of what the future may hold in store in the area of telecommunications. While specific technologies and applications are addressed in this overview, the broader thrust of the research considers the coordinated\telecommunications infrastructure which must be developed and expanded, if the potential of telecommunications technologies are to be realized over the next decade or two. Although this overview is developed from a private sector‑business, industry, and professional‑perspective, it is obvious that telecommunications are equally as important for public sector organizations, for households, and for individuals.
Telecommunications transmission technologies blossomed in the decade of the 1980s, and the pace of innovation is quickening in the 1990s. The new technologies create opportunities for organizations‑public sector and private sector, households, and individuals to improve both the effectiveness and the efficiency of their communications. Unfortunately, these opportunities are often thwarted by the chaos which accompanies dynamic technological innovation. The tremendous promise of telecommunications technology for the future may not be fully realized in the absence of the development of a telecommunications infrastructure for both the American economy and the international economy.
The pervasive use of telecommunications technology in general and the Internet in particular is so great that, at first glance, it may seem odd to suggest that the Internet raises moral questions. Yet the fact that information is so readily available via computer creates a double effect. On one hand there are obvious benefits in having a wealth of research and life-management resources available to anyone equipped to tap into the Internet. On the other hand, at a time when much personal information is stored online in data banks used by financial, commercial, and government institutions, the very availability of information puts individual privacy at risk. Investigators, marketers, officials, and unscrupulous persons may intrude on individual privacy with impunity and potentially threaten the individual's well-being as a result. Indeed, marketers are ubiquitous on the Internet. It is a rare online session that is not affected by so-called popup ads, which are unsolicited invitations to users to buy something and which interrupt the data-processing objectives of the Internet user. Meanwhile, the availability of socially controversial information on the Internet--from sexually obscene to hate-mongering political Web sites--has raised questions of who may or should have access to some or all of the Internet.