New Internet Capabilities Fueling Innovative Science

Editor's Note: This second part of a two-part series looks at the Internet's growing capabilities for scientists. For more and more researchers, the network is making crucial information resources available online. In addition, several ongoing demonstration projects in remote instrument control and in networked laboratories suggest a much-changed future for science as a result of the Internet. The first part of this series, which ex

Written byFranklin Hoke
| 7 min read

Register for free to listen to this article
Listen with Speechify
0:00
7:00
Share

The global Internet, with millions of individuals and thousands of computer networks, is changing fundamental aspects of the way scientists work. But the present, researchers agree, should be seen as prelude to a future in which an ever greater diversity of networked resources will allow scientists to approach new and currently unanswerable questions.

Today, electronic mail and an array of other data exchanges move collaborative investigations forward that might otherwise be difficult or, perhaps, impossible, researchers say. Also, sophisticated online information resources are giving scientists ready access to needed journal and other databases.

Tomorrow, researchers foresee, the Internet will offer still more to the growing number of disciplines dependent on the extensive network. It will support online, multimedia collaborations among scientists at different laboratories, for example, and sophisticated information retrieval from federated databases. The Internet of the future will also provide remote control of expensive or unique scientific instruments through ...

Interested in reading more?

Become a Member of

The Scientist Logo
Receive full access to digital editions of The Scientist, as well as TS Digest, feature stories, more than 35 years of archives, and much more!
Already a member? Login Here

Related Topics

Meet the Author

Published In

Share
Image of small blue creatures called Nergals. Some have hearts above their heads, which signify friendship. There is one Nergal who is sneezing and losing health, which is denoted by minus one signs floating around it.
June 2025, Issue 1

Nergal Networks: Where Friendship Meets Infection

A citizen science game explores how social choices and networks can influence how an illness moves through a population.

View this Issue
An illustration of green lentiviral particles.

Maximizing Lentivirus Recovery

cytiva logo
Unraveling Complex Biology with Advanced Multiomics Technology

Unraveling Complex Biology with Five-Dimensional Multiomics

Element Bioscience Logo
Resurrecting Plant Defense Mechanisms to Avoid Crop Pathogens

Resurrecting Plant Defense Mechanisms to Avoid Crop Pathogens

Twist Bio 
The Scientist Placeholder Image

Seeing and Sorting with Confidence

BD

Products

The Scientist Placeholder Image

Waters Enhances Alliance iS HPLC System Software, Setting a New Standard for End-to-End Traceability and Data Integrity 

The Scientist Placeholder Image

Agilent Unveils the Next Generation in LC-Mass Detection: The InfinityLab Pro iQ Series

agilent-logo

Agilent Announces the Enhanced 8850 Gas Chromatograph

parse-biosciences-logo

Pioneering Cancer Plasticity Atlas will help Predict Response to Cancer Therapies