By Daniel Pimienta,
FUNREDES Head
[email protected]
In INET93, wonderful works have been presented on the evaluation of the Internet, in term of existing and projected node figures and therefore user figures (by Tony Rutkowsky and John Quarterman). The offered figure, as for 10/93 (John Quarterman: [email protected], see December issue of Matrix News for details), is of around 2 millions nodes and an estimated 15 million end-users for pure Internet, and an estimated 40 millions for all Internet gatewayed network together (this did not include videotex users, such as minitel users). The pursuit of the growth pattern shows that each human beings will be part of Cyberspace by the end of the century... Nobody believes it: so what are the tricks which torn the forecast?
We are very good in evaluating the node figures, but we are so far incapable of any credible estimation of the user base. This situation, a persistent heritage of the technology driven emergence of the networks, is less and less acceptable when the Internet is entering a market driven pattern. Hereafter, we analyze why this have to change rapidly and suggest some possible actions.
SOME GOOD REASONS TO START COUNTING SERIOUSLY THE USERS
The computer market, has been the first to be concerned by the networking phenomena. This is, between mid 70's and mid 80's, when Bitnet was in geometrical growth (measured in a constant figure of new nodes each day). The computer industry was having both a close follow-up and a good support for the networking growth.
The second market taking over, with the strength of the Internet (mid 80's to mid 90's), is clearly now the telecommunication market (bandwidth, protocol converters, routers and other telecom products). This is why the key measurement unit should be now the traffic pattern, rather than the number of node.
The next coming will be the information providing market: in the foreseeable future, the global revenues in the emerging information market may go much beyond the computer and telecommunication one's. Assuming that almost every Internet user is a potential customer, the forecast for the information consumed from the Internet are directly derived from the number of users, and much less concerned by the technical infrastructure. Information industries need to know TODAY the growth of the Internet in term of users in order to forecast their products for tomorrow.
Beside this basic and strong reason, there is a question of credibility and seriousness in the way the Internet growth is measured in new geographical area. Larry Landweber is doing a fine work filling flags over the world map. The color of the flag tells us the type of connectivity (Internet, OSI, BITNET, UUCP, Fidonet) but in noway the real impact in the flagged country. John Quarterman's Matrix Map Quarterly is providing a much more complex (and though closer to reality) perception, but is not yet providing user figures.
What real effect have a full Internet node accesed by 0.1% of the potential user base? Is not a Fido or UUCP solution reaching 20% of the potential users far more important? What makes us believe that a few users node benchmark will easily transform into a nation-wide network? What comparative value has a framework with identical flags measuring few users in some case and a strong penetration of the potential market in another one? What if the user growth pattern is lower than the demographic rate in some developing countries (ref. Syd Goodman's Inet93 presentation: [email protected])? What is the point in flagging a country where the network access is reserved to non nationals users (as in Africa, ask Michel Perdreau: [email protected])?
THE LIMITATIONS OF COUNTING THE USERS BY AVERAGING METHODS.
THE HIDDEN PROBLEM BEHIND THE LACK OF USER DEFINITION
What is a "real user"? Is somebody having an Internet address without using it to be accounted? Or a person connecting just once a week only to read some listservs messages? How about someone practicing daily e-mail but not yet capable to navigate within the information ressources? Obviously, the information market forecasters do appreciate the difference. So are doing the people who try to evaluate the real impact of networking in the developing countries and the effectiveness of the budget invested to create the user base...
A field study conducted in Venezuela (by Fabio Chacon:
[email protected]) shows than only 30% of the user base makes
efficient use of the services. Our field experience makes us
convinced this is not a local curiosity. Our guesstimate says
(totally empirical, in developing countries):
-60% are infrequent users (they have an e-mail address but do not
use it),
-from the remaining 40%,
--60% are few times a week e-mail only users,
--20% are frequent e-mail users, but are not yet skilled in
information access,
--20% are fully skilled users,
from the last categories how many strongly participate to the
open circulation of the information (the one's who make listservs
live)?
---Probably less than 10%...
Can we be so sure this is very different in the industrial world? The lack of user count strategy may be hiding a serious concern in the Internet and it's capability to sustain the predicted growth.
RECOMMENDATIONS:
Time has come to face the challenge of Internet users counting.
| Counting methods are hardly |
applicable, |
some |
statistical |
| oriented methodology have to |
be applied. There |
is enough |
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| creativity and resources around |
the Internet |
to react |
against the |
| actual paralyzed state. |
Hereafter |
are some doable |
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| recommendations: |
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