The Internet has now turned our existence as to nothing. It has revolutionized communications, to the extent that it is now our preferred medium of everyday communication. In almost everything we do, we use the Internet. Ordering and booking items, buying and selling things, sharing a moment with a friend, sending a picture over instant messaging. Before the Internet, if you wanted to keep up with the news, you had to walk down to the newsstand when it opened in the morning and buy a local edition reporting what had happened the previous day. But today a click or two is enough to read your local paper and any news source from anywhere in the world, updated up to the minute.
The Internet was no longer concerned with information exchange alone: it was a sophisticated multidisciplinary tool enabling individuals to create content, communicate with one another, and even escape reality. Today, we can send data from one end of the world to the other in a matter of seconds, make online presentations, live in parallel “game worlds,” and use pictures, video, sound, and text to share our real lives, our genuine identity. Personal stories go public; local issues become global.
The rise of the Internet has sparked a debate about how online communication affects social relationships. The Internet frees us from geographic fetters and brings us together in topic-based communities that are not tied down to any specific place. Ours is a networked, globalized society connected by new technologies. The Internet is the tool we use to interact with one another, and accordingly poses new challenges to privacy and security.
The challenge arise, this Cloud Computing Generation whereby every services has to be hosted on internet and provide remote access to individual mobile phone and devices. How much space may be required on the device to get all applications you love and use on daily basis? How many apps can you you manage to use at same time on the device without draining your power? And how much data bundle may you need for each app on daily basis, monthly or annually?
"The maximum amount of data transmitted over an internet connection in a given amount of time. Bandwidth is often mistaken for internet speed when it's actually the volume of information that can be sent over a connection in a measured amount of time – calculated in megabits per second (Mbps)". says Malawian Network Architect
"That's why we had to invent for ourselves an Internet revolution gateway of all major and popular apps and services on a single app for not just a specific classy people but for everyone who can afford smartphone to join the electronic classy community called e-classic". Said Aublic
Click this link to download the app e-classic